okay. it has now been 10 days since the first presidential debate, and let s be honest those 10 days have felt like 10 years in the political world. the speculation about joe biden s future has been rampant. the panic inside the democratic party has definitely not gone away. i would venture to guess that the conversations you all are having at your worth of july barbecue parties this weekend or maybe just a little more political than they usually are. the questions i know i m getting in text message from friends and family are two fold. what s going to happen, and what is the best path forward? i m not going to sit here this afternoon and tell you i know the answer to either question. anyone who tells you they do know for certain exactly what s going to happen doesn t know for certain exactly what is going to happen. so the best thing i can do is tell you what is happening right now. i mean publicly, but i also mean my sense of what is happening behind the scenes. what is
girls said nassar had sexually abused them over the past two decades. he was sentenced up to 175 years in prison and the justice department found that the fbi officials who were investigating the allegations violated the agency s policies by making false statements and failing to properly document the complaints. among today s senate committee witnesses, simone biles, who said that, quote, the entire system enabled the abuse that she and her teammates suffered for so many years. to be clear, i blame larry nassar and i also blame an entire system that enabled and perpetrated his abuse. how much is a little girl worth? i sit before you today to raise my voice so that no little girl must endure what i, the athletes at this table and the countless others who needlessly suffered under nassar s guys of medical treatment. let s be honest, by not taking immediate action from my report, they allowed a child molester to go free for more than a year. this inaction directly allowed n
makes his first statement in thejob. people in england are very likely to be able to return to pretty much life before covid on i9july, we owe it to the british people, who have sacrificed so much to restore their freedoms as quickly as we possibly can. let s begin in north america. an extreme heat wave in parts of the us and canada is smashing records. however, forecasters warn the brutal temperatures haven t peaked yet, 20 million people are under a heat warning or advisory, from canada to the mexico border. washington and oregon states are under excessive heat. temperatures are expected to hit 47 celsius later. this that s hotter than dubai. warnings are also in place in parts of california, nevada and wyoming. meanwhile, in canada, states are under dangerous heat levels throughout the week. these areas have faced intense heat for days. have a look at this heat map of oregon and washington on sunday. some areas reached 45 celsius, while portland s international airport
compared with the first six months of last year. 38 officers are dead. you are watching outnumbered, i m harris faulkner. here today my co-host, kayleigh mcenany, host of kennedy on fox business, kennedy herself and 24 hour reporter carley shimkus and fox and friends weekend co-host, host of modern warriors, pete hegseth. welcome, everybody. let me fill in more on the story. dramatic video of a shocking attack in broad daylight in new york city. two children, ages five and ten, caught in the cross fire as gunman fired shots at a man in the bronx. the children had not hurt. the suspect expected to recover. police are searching for the gunman. experts are warning soft-on-crime policies are driving this trend. a new report finds many arrested for looting and rioting across new york city last summer had their charges dropped. criminals, go ahead, walk away, they said. out west in portland oregon police union going after not charging the rioters in last year s mayhem. you have
and they are on edge over this. a new monmouth poll shows 6 in 10 americans support the bill. just moments ago, the jobs report released. the numbers far better than expected. the u.s. economy added 379,000 sdwrobs last month. the unemployment rate fell slightly to 6.2%. the expectation has been around 200,000 new jobs. it is a positive signal for the labor market, but the nation is still down nearly 10 million jobs. nearly one year into the pandemic. 10 million americans. let s begin on capitol hill with cnn s jessica dean. as the senate finally begins three hours of debate on the coronavirus relief deal after they had to read every single word of that, kind of a ploy by republicans to delay this. despite all those delays, does a vote happen, and when that vote happens, does this pass? yeah, good morning, jim. the vote is certainly going to happen. the question is now timing. to get to your point, we don t know exactly how long this is going to take. i ll explain why all o