admin administered yesterday alone. nearly 70 million americans have gotten at least one dose of a covid-19 vaccine, which means one out of five americans has received a shot. this as those $1400 stimulus checks are starting to hit bank accounts. despite the progress being made, thoupds of people are traveling and attending spring break events across the country. many not wearing masks. no protection. masks and social distancing don't seem to be priorities. health officials are warning of the potential consequences. saying the next few weeks will be critical in determining if we'll see another surge. >> even though the numbers have gone down, over the last couple of weeks, they've plateaued and when you see a plateau at a level as high as 60,000 cases a day, that is a very vulnerable time to have a surge to go back up. we can avoid that, if we continue to vaccinate people, get more and more protection without all of a sudden pulling back on public health measures. >> all right. spring break for many means florida is a state that is seeing an influx of people soaking in the sun, despite the warnings. cnn's natasa chen is in miami beach. how are local officials reacting to the crowds? >> reporter: well, fred, in talking to the people who are walking on ocean drive behind us, they're not justice caping colder weather, they're telling us, in some cases, they're escaping more stringent covid restrictions. they said there are people here more ready to have a good time and because of florida's state rules, the local jurisdiction can't actually cite anyone for not wearing a mask, even though there's a requirement to wear one in public here. so we're talking to spring breakers who said they're here to relax. we spoke to one person who is down here from massachusetts for the next two weeks. >> i already had covid once so i'm not worried about it. i just be concerned for other people's safeties that's why i would wear a mask in places. but personally i'm not worried about it. i don't like wearing a mask but, yeah. >> reporter: do you feel like other people are doing their part to keep everybody safe while having fun? >> umm, to be honest, around here it seems like it's not really concern. >> reporter: that doesn't bother you either? >> no. >> reporter: and just a few blocks away from where i'm standing on friday night, miami beach police said there was a large crowd. they were trying to disperse it. they got unruly and disorderly. two officers in the incident were injured and sent to the hospital. miami beach police tweeted last night, saturday night, they made 30 arrests here and the city tells me throughout the weekend, there have been likely about a hundred arrests. issues they typically deal with spring break tourists but with covid-19, the policing becomes twice as hard, fred. >> pretty tenuous situation in so many parts. natasa chen, thank you so much. currently in the u.s., there are three vaccines available and soon may be a fourth as astrazeneca is going to apply within the next few weeks for emergency use authorization. but a handful of countries are taking precautions against that partially or fully suspending the use of astrazeneca's covid vaccine following reports of patients developing blood clotds after being vaccinated in norway. ireland is the latest announcing it is halting the use of astrazeneca's vaccine out of an abundance of caution. astrazeneca said it supports the ongoing investigation and maintains its vaccine is safe. let's bring in the brown university school of public health doctor. so astrazeneca it wants to apply for emergency use authorization here in the u.s. but with what is taking place overseas, how will that impair the road ahead for astrazeneca? >> yes, so, fred, thank you. we don't know. we don't know what their usda data will look like. the u.s. fda is probably the toughest most regulatory body. they'll look at dat fa from europe. millions of people have been vaccinated with the astrazeneca vaccines, these clots, are pretty infrequent. we had to sort it out. i'm not worried it's going to be a major problem. >> okay. let's talk about spring breakers. there's a lot of travel taking place now. many people in coastal communities -- you predicted that life could return to normal very soon as a lot of experts and we're going to see coronavirus hospitalizations and deaths plummet in the coming weeks and months. nearly 7 million people have boarded airplanes over the last few days despite warnings against travel. so could we see the impact of this increase in travel affect the case numbers? and kind of get in the way of a lot of optimism that had been expressed? >> yeah, unfortunately right now the problem is that a majority of americans who are high risk from complications from the virus, people who are older, people who have younger who might have chronic diseases, a majority of those high-risk people haven't been yet fully vaccinated. it leaves a lot of people vulnerable. what will happen, what we saw last year with spring break and other instances, a lot of young people get together and many will get infected and many may feel fine or have mild symptoms but they'll pass it on to people who are high risk. this is why we have to be careful now. we're probably four to six weeks away from having the high risk people vaccinated. we've got to hold tight until then. >> uh-huh. four weeks away from high risk people being vaccinated but then if you have spring break this week and in the next week, what kind of timeline are we talking about, you know, where there could be another surge as a result of so many people con grating? >> yeah, we've typically seen a couple of weeks after the event. if this week coming sup spring break, i expect in two or three weeks we'll seat effects of that. we're doing a good job vaccinating a lot of people. there's so many vulnerable people out there. i think it's irresponsible to have big spring break events now. we're so close to the finish line. i wish we could hold off longer. >> the cdc data showing at least one in five americans have received at least one dose of the coronavirus vaccine. you have been calling for the u.s. to delay second shots in order to get more shots in arms as quickly as possible. are you satisfied with the progress? >> we called for it in january when we had a shortage. we're in a better place now. if we had done that, i think we would have saved a lot of lives. a lot of people have got infected and died in the last couple of months. we could have potentially saved. at this moment, given the vaccines coming, the strategy has to be go, go, go and vaccinating more people. i think we can do that and i think we're close to the finish line, again, where a large chunk of high risk folks have gotten vaccinated. >> and if it's available to you, go ahead and get it. don't wait. >> thank you so much. good to see you. one university is already seeing another surge of covid cases. duke university is now asking all undergrads to stay in place through next sunday. school officials say 180 students are in isolation following positive tests while another 200 are in quarantine based on contact tracing. that's the largest one week total on campus since the pandemic began. over a year ago, joining me now to talk about all of this is the editor in chief of duke's student-run newspaper, "the chronicle" matthew griffin. good to see you. duke does not have and has not had spring break this year, right? that's different because of this pandemic. so what might be behind this spike? what is being said? >> yes, so we don't have a full spring break. the last week we had tuesday and wednesday off of class and the reason that was sort of the short break in the middle of the week was both the semester was condensed and try to discourage travel. it's likely some students traveled. duke put new restrictions in place on those who do. so that's certainly one reason we could be seeing it this week. but what duke has been talking about a lot in official communications is fraternity rush. we saw them say middle of last week that there had been a big spike of cases and many were associated with rush for the durham interfraternity council, which is a group that formed fraternities who have broken formal ties with duke in order to not have to follow some new restrictions duke was putting in place on the rush processes. so duke has said these groups held in-person rush events and this contributed to some of the surge in cases. you saw them mentioning some of that again just last night saying selective recruitment was related to having to put the new restrictions in place. >> i see. a host of things. let's talk about the restrictions. the stay at home orders, how is it sitting with the student body? >> what duke has done is put rules on when on-campus students can leave their rooms. when off-campus students can come to campus. how students can gather. i think generally the students think it's reasonable. it's an important step taken to protect public health. students have really expressed, though, they're frustrated with those who broke duke's covid protocols and contributed in the spike of cases that made this necessary. we heard frustration last night about the speed at which this kind of came down from the administration of students saying they felt kind of blind sided by this happening. i mean, we had nope things were not great with the covid situation but this felt sudden to a lot of people. >> so has it been the feeling of the majority of student body has respected, you know, restrictions? most people have been safe? i mean, overall do you feel like everyone has been responsible and safe about all the restrictions? >> yeah, that's the sense i've gotten. i mean, we had several weeks of really low cases leading up to this. we had a pretty successful fall semester after big gatherings that initially took place in the beginning. i think we wouldn't have made it this far without those students respecting duke's rules and trying to keep the community safe, yeah. >> ahead of march madness, duke is always a major player. now with the stay at home orderers in place, with overall restrictions, how is the student body approaching what typically is a time to get together, gather, celebrate. whether they're at a game or watching it on tv? >> yeah, i mean, that's been one of the most sad parts of this season is, you know, just watching with a couple of friends instead of in groups or stadiums. there has been a lot of hype has been sucked out of the of the season, but, you know, it's fun to watch basketball. it was really crushing when we had to pull out of the acc tournament on thursday. as we understand it, we could still play in the ncaa tournament, if we were invited to go. that's looking pretty unlikely because we had to skip the rest of the acc tournament. >> yeah. so now you have to root for somebody else. >> yeah. >> delicately. >> yeah. i'm thinking gone zaga. >> very good. thank you. biden declares help is here as he prepares to hit the road to push his coronavirus relief package to several states. his strategy is to build support next. plus, a fall from grace for two once beloved governors. how early praise of the pandemic for andrew cuomo and gavin newsome virtually disappeared. crowds gathering outside of london's police headquarters after officers crack down on a vigil for a woman who had been murdered. details straight ahead. one for ? 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>> well, fred, the white house will essentially be engaging in this full court press as they try to promote this covid relief package across the country. you'll see the president, the vice president, and others deploy to sell the elements of the plan. from those $1400 stimulus checks to the child tax credit and unemployment benefits. take a listen to how the president describes their mission for the coming weeks. >> the coming weeks jill and i and kamala and doug and our cabinet, with all of you, members of congress, we're going to be traveling the country to speak directly to the american people about how the law will make a real difference in their lives and how help is here for them. >> reporter: so they want to emphasize two americans exactly what they will be receiving from this plan. over the course of the next few weeks, the president and vice president and their spouses will be fanning out across the country. if you take a look of the map of where they are going, there is pennsylvania where the president will be on tuesday. vice president harris is heading out west on her first solo trip as vice president. she'll be in nevada tomorrow and colorado on tuesday. then later in the week, the two will meet up in the state of georgia. five of those states they will be traveling to this week also have competitive senate races coming up in 2022. so part of this is trying to sell this package looking ahead to the midterms. even though no republicans supported this, the bill has popular support across the country when you look at polling. so the biden administration wants to reinforce to americans what exactly they'll be getting from the bill. another big question is implementation. the white house said they'll appoint someone to lead the oversight of implementing this plan. those details could come this week. >> arlett, thank you so much. suzanne, republican senator john barrasso is calling for bipartisan as lawmakers on capitol hill turn their attention to infrastructure this week. one republican voted for biden's relief deal. will infrastructure be any different? >> reporter: it has to be different, fred. there's a sobering reality among democratic lawmakers for the covid relief bill there was a sense of suurgency so they push it through. they have to negotiate more and comprise more, yes, they need republican support to get infrastructure through. there are a number of big challenges and they realize this is going to take weeks to actually unfold. the first thing is what is going to be in the infrastructure bill. there's already debate within the democratic party itself. will they focus more strictly on building roads, bridges, and broadband? that's something that moderates as well as some republicans will get on board with. those who represent districts of fossil fuel or gas industries. or will they focus on climate change, clean energy policies? that's something more of the progressives to looking to push for. secondly, how is it going to be paid for? the price tag will be in the trillions of dollars. we have heard from majority whip jim clyburn who rejected the idea of a gas tax but house speaker nancy pelosi was asked about it this morning how would they pay for such a thing? could they raise taxes? she demured and said potentially that everything was on the table. then finally, fred, how is this bill going to get through the senate? that is really the critical battle where that is going to play out. are they going to be able to break the filibuster, the 60 votes necessary to push it through as normal? or will they use the process of budget reconciliation? just a simple majority 51 votes to do that, which requires the senate parliamentary to jump in and to approve all the provisions inside of this massive bill. these will take weeks. democratic law makers are looking at potentially september to roll out an infrastructure bill because they know there's going to be a lot of behind the scenes negotiations. >> thank you to both of you. we appreciate it. still ahead, new york governor andrew cuomo fighting to stay in office as more of his former allies question whether he can lead effectively. we're live with the latest next. ♪ and a little bit of chicken fried ♪ ♪ cold beer on a friday night ♪ ♪ a pair of jeans that fit just right ♪ ♪ and the radio up ♪ get 5 boneless wings for $1 with any handcrafted burger. only at applebee's. this is wealth. ♪ ♪ this is worth. that takes wealth. but this is worth. and that - that's actually worth more than you think. don't open that. wealth is important, and we can help you build it. but it's what you do with it, that makes life worth living. principal. for all it's worth. it's moving day. and while her friends are doing the heavy lifting, jess is busy moving her xfinity internet and tv services. it only takes about a minute. wait, a minute? 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>> reporter: he said repeatedly he's not going to resign and repeatedly urged the public to wait for these investigations. multiple investigations now. two in the issues of sexual misconduct and harassment. he wants the public to wait for those to play out and wait for the facts. he said over and over again politics did not elect me to office. the people of the state of new york elected me to office. so i'm going to continue to do the work of the people and for the people of the state of new york. he also was asked a couple of questions recently whether it's too much of a distractions. he argued, look, i've handled distractions before. you know, we had to deal with negotiating the budget in the midst of the pandemic in new york last year. certainly i can still negotiate the budget this year. he said, you know, there have been investigations that lasted years long years in the past and we've been able to carry-on. that's how government works. you keep handling multiple issues. you walk and chew gum at the same time. as you said, he lost the support of a majority of new york's congressional delegation of prominent names. now two new york senators chuck schumer and kristin gillibrand saying the governor should resign on friday. now the "new york times" in an editorial is asking whether he can continue to lead. think said the governor jeopardized the publics' trust at the worst possible moment. it's hard to see how he can do the publics'' important business without political allies or public confidence. that's what we're hearing. we'll center to see. he doesn't look like he's going to resign. we'll have to see what happens. fred? >> athena jones in albany, thank you so much. on the other side of the country, another once-celebrated governor is feeling heat. organizers looking to recall california's gavin newsome. now saying they have more than enough signatures, over 2 million. they have to keep taking names. let's go to paul burke hammon in los angeles. much of the anger at the governor stems from his covid response, which early on was celebrated. what happened? we're going to bring in the owner of this restaurant. you've heard we're talking about what happened to your businesses during the pandemic. >> yes. >> how much did you lose in terms of profits? how much did you lose in terms of furloughing employees? >> this the profits went down 90% as soon as they shut us down. we furloughed 98% of staff, unfortunately, when it happened. i should note they've had a secret motif. >> it is. it's very old school. >> now to the seriousness of the governor's approval, you're a democrat. >> yes. >> you think the governor should be recalled? >> absolutely. he's handled the pandemic awfully. there's other states that have had the same numbers as california and they did not shut down their small businesses and kill their economy. i don't believe the massive shut downs did anything, frankly, for the numbers. >> reporter: wohat would you sa this is a extreme right attempt -- >> no. if you talk to people in california, right, left, moderate, everybody is upset with the way newsome handled this. they're out of touch. the politicians don't live in their same reality. they get the full pay and didn't have to worry about how to pay their christmas or thanksgiving meals. unfortunately, all my workers did. i think they don't understand. >> yeah. you'll be able to open up for first time in months this is wh -- what does it mean to you that they no longer have to eat outside? >> everything. it's the first step getting into normalcy and we're excited to have the opportunity and we hope that the state doesn't yank it from us again. but to have customers come back, as you said, have been coming here for decades. six decades. and be able to sit where they love means everything in the world to us. your father started this. sorry for your loss. >> thank you. >> we're glad to hear you're coming back online, if you will, and celebrating here. >> exactly. we're doing it for him. >> right. >> reporter: thank you so much. >> thank you. >> reporter: a perspective from a california restaurant. >> you've got all the threads in there. paul, thank you so much. next parts of the world now imposing new restrictions as health officials fear a surge ahead of easter weekend. we're live in italy. straight ahead. winter storms are threatening more than 7 million people. 2,000 flights have been cancelled and a high avalanche warning has just been issued in colorado. jennifer gray is in the weather center with the latest. >> that's right. we have avalanche warning for the area shaded in red mainly for the front range and the back country ski areas. be careful. blizzard warnings in effect, as well. we have the low that has been sitting over colorado stationary all up-and-down. i-25 has been relentless snowfall through denver and wyoming. we're able to measure the snow in feet. about 2.5 feet of snow for portions of wyoming and colorado. about a foot of snow and it's still falling. we will be back after the break. but it gets crazier. bring a friend every month and get every month for $5. boom! 12 months of $5 wireless. visible, wireless that gets better with friends. ♪ beds get sick too protection. lysol laundry sanitizer kills 99.9% of illness-causing bacteria detergents leave behind. proven to kill covid-19 many plug-ins are stuck in the past. they release a lot of scent at first but after a while, you barely know they're working. new febreze fade defy plug works differently. it's the first plug-in with built-in technology to digitally control how much scent is released to smell 1st day fresh for 50 days. it even tells you when it's ready to be refilled. upgrade to febreze fade defy plug. i'm greg, i'm 68 years old. i do motivational speaking in addition to the substitute teaching. i honestly feel that that's my calling-- to give back to younger people. i think most adults will start realizing that they don't recall things as quickly as they used to or they don't remember things as vividly as they once did. i've been taking prevagen for about three years now. people say to me periodically, "man, you've got a memory like an elephant." it's really, really helped me tremendously. prevagen. healthier brain. better life. new projects means new project managers. you need to hire. i need indeed. indeed you do. the moment you sponsor a job on indeed you get a short list of quality candidates from our resume database. claim your seventy five dollar credit, when you post your first job at indeed.com/home. ♪ jackson hewitt knows times have changed... ...both how and where you work. and your taxes could have changed too. let our tax pros work for you and fight for every dollar you deserve. man: condos, 150k. [ traffic passing by ] sorry, bud. thanks. switch to progressive and you can save hundreds. you know, like the sign says. alright, back to work. ♪ hey now, you're an all-star, get your game on, go play ♪ ♪ hey now, you're a rock star, get the show on, get paid ♪ ♪ and all that glitters is gold ♪ get 5 boneless wings for $1 with any handcrafted burger. only at applebee's. the covid vaccination rate in the u.s. is accelerated and cases are on the decline, it's a different story in some parts of europe and south america. let's check in with some of our international correspondents around the globe. >> reporter: i'm in london. more than a third of european countries have now partially or fully suspended astrazeneca vaccinations. ireland becoming the latest eu member state to do so on sunday after multiple reports of patients developing blood clots post inoculation. one vaccine recipient died in austria and denmark which prompted several countries to hit pause pending an investigation. this is precautionary. there's no evidence that the deaths were caused by a vaccine. a majority of european countries including france, germany, and spain are using it. and the european medicines agency is looking into the situation does not recommend suspension. astrazeneca said the product was extensively tested in clinical trials and well tolerated. >> reporter: matt rivers in brazil. just one of many brazilian states reeling during unquestionably the worst days during the pandemic so far. multiple single day coronavirus death records have been reported in the last week alone. there's not a lot of good news on the horizon, it would seem, when you look at hospital occupancy rates. of brazil's 26 states, 23 states are reporting icu occupancy rates of at least 80% or higher. 11 of them at 90% or higher. as the state of rio de janeiro was forced to suspend the vaccination campaign due to low supply. >> reporter: in rome, italians getting ready to head into another lockdown on monday. half of italy's 20 regions will be on full lockdown, it includes cities like rome, milan, and venice. easter weekend we'll see a national lockdown. now all though this is not yet an emergency situation in italy, the hospitals are still managing. they are seeing their numbers of daily cases rise. they are particularly concerned about variants increasing the rate of transmission. so the prime minister saying these measures are necessary to avoid a further deterioration. the prime minister is also promising to accelerate the vaccination program and they aim to have all adult italian vaccinated by the summer. >> thanks to our international correspondents. for more on the latest lockdown in italy now, let's bring in cnn producer antonio more tennyson in milan. it's good to see you. it was about this time last year when we were talking fairly regularly in italy when it was in its lockdown and then you had just had your baby and one of your only allowances to leave your home during that lockdown was to visit your baby in the hospital. how are you and the family doing? >> so good to see you again, fred. we're good. my daughter is actually home. we had quite a rough time. she was in the icu for six months. and, of course, it was during the lockdown so it was a tough period for us. luckily, you know, she's doing much better. she's still under care at home here. medical care. she's doing a lot better and very, very happy about that. >> very relieved for you and the family. >> yeah. and the hospital staff were amazing battling through this horrific period in this country. and we have to give them so much credit for everything they've done for us. >> oh, amazing. i know all hands were on deck. so now it's almost like a repeat performance, right? you have a lockdown in place now. how are people responding to that? i mean, do people feel like it's, you know, one step back? a couple of steps back? or is it simply, you know, everyone accepting it's necessary right now? >> look, i think there's a lot of fatigue. i think people felt like we had passed the worse so we were closer to the end. and of the new lockdown coming in and starting tomorrow with most of the country going into the toughest restrictions, feels like there's no end in sight again. i think that's getting to people and getting them down. the people i speak to are like, god, you know, here we're going to have another lockdown again. but we thought we had, you know, we had passed over the worse. i think people are just feeling really hopeless. is there any reasoning as to why? i mean, why in italy do you feel like you're having to be in this position again? what transpired? what are the experts saying about what put you in this place again? >> umm, well, we were in a position that where the rest of europe a couple of months ago and the rest of europe after the christmas holidays or the rest of europe was locking down, you know, the restrictions here were being eased because the infection rate, at that time, it seemed like it was under control. and the vaccination process had started. so, you know, it was quite quite good then. the restrictions were eased and people are going about daily business more freely than this time last year. what we've seen, you know, the variant, the uk variant and the other variants had a big impact on the number of cases rising again. so the fact that, like, with the more infections spreading, like, the infection curve has gone up. there's a direct correlation, according to the experts, and, of course, the vaccination process is not as fast as anyone expected. this is a country of over 60 million people now. right now 6 million doses have been administered. so according to experts, you know, those are the two main factors. >> so there's that impact on people's personal welfare and then the economic impact that all this has made. >> yeah. >> you have looked extensively into what it has done to lively hoods, big business. explain. >> you know i think going back to, like, we have been playing ping-pong here. the restrictions being lifted for one month and put back in. i think for the governor i-- government it's been a challenging balancing act. you know, the human cost has been hard hit. you can't forget over 100,000 people have lost their lives since the beginning of the pandemic. on a daily basis, for months on end, we've seen more than 300 people dying every day. and that economic cost is also really high. according to the bank of italy to a recent survey, almost half -- more than half of families had lost income here. so it's speaking to people i know businesses and my friends are -- it's been tough for them. in the periods where the government has, you know, lifted restrictions and allowed businesses to reopen, they've managed it get some of their business back; however, as soon as the restrictions are put in. a lot of them can't work anymore. >> yeah. >> and, i mean, what does it mean for the everyday person? it means that families are really some families are struggling. we visited some here and that were mainly visited by migrants before the pandemic. now you're seeing young people and families visiting for the first time. italian families who are asking for help. it's the first time ever they've had to do that. >> yeah. it was already going to be a long road to recovery and now it's that much longer. thank you so much. best to you and family. >> thank you. >> we'll be right back. at air wc fragrances to bring the essence of nature into your home. but nature can't thrive without wildflowers. since 2009, we've lost 33 million acres of grassland and wildflower habitat in the us great plains. air wick scented oils is partnering with world wildlife fund to reseed 1 billion square feet of native wildflowers and grasslands... making our connection to nature stronger. learn more at airwick.us ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ it was a life changing moment for me. ♪ i had no idea that my grandfather was a federal judge in guatemala. he was an advocate for the people... a voice for the voiceless. bring your family history to life like never before. get started for free at ancestry.com we started with computers. we didn't stop at computers. we didn't stop at storage or cloud. we kept going. working with our customers to enable the kind of technology that can guide an astronaut back to safety. and help make a hospital come to you, instead of you going to it. so when it comes to your business, you know we'll stop at nothing. in london, a peaceful vigil for a woman kidnapped and murdered turned violent and ended in four arrests. [ crowd chanting ] police clashed with large crowds last night for breaking covid protocol. the vigil was meant for mourning murder victim sarah everett. london's police chief faces calls to resign following the conflict. the vigil was canceled by organizers saturday but people showed up to peacefully pay tribute anyway including kate middleton. everett disappeared earlier this month while walking home, sparking a national debate about female safety on britain's streets. a london police officer was charged with allegedly kidnapping and murdering the 33-year-old woman. cnn's nina dos santos has more from london. >> reporter: london's main law enforcement body, the metropolitan police, has been coming under increasing pressure since scenes like these on saturday night when despite the fact that protesters were peacefully holding a vigil in memory of a young london woman who was snatched from the streets ten days ago, they still felt the need to intervene, pinning masked women down to the ground, handcuffing them, and leading them away. this because, they said, the protest was in breach of covid regulations and presented a health hazard to the public. the death of sarah everett, a woman just walking home from one residential part of the capital to another at 9:30 p.m. has galvanized the entire country into a broader conversation about toxic and dangerous misogyny and the consequences of that type of behavior. many women shared their stories of feeling unsafe on the capital's streets and many men had thoughts about what to do to help their plight. >> essentially women have a curfew now, as soon as it gets dark out, you have to be with someone or you have to be home. >> people need to be held accountable for not just the obvious things, like, you know, following a girl or catcalling someone or anything like that, but like just a lot of the things as well, being in a group of just mates and maybe just somebody says something sexist or mildly sexist or a little bit along those lines, you call them out. >> reporter: the suppression of these protests during the uk's third lockdown at a time when public gatherings have been banned for so long on health grounds has proved to become something of a political hot potato. there have been calls for the first woman to run the metropolitan police now to resign. and both the mayor of london and the home secretary have demanded an urgent explanation. nina dos santos, cnn in london. back in this country now, live pictures from colorado, where blizzard warnings have been extended and runways at the denver international airport are closed because of poor visibility. we'll take you there, straight ahead. you can try to predict the future or you can create it. we're driving it. everywhere. we emit optimism, not exhaust. we plug in our vehicles as naturally as we charge our phones. we. we are generation e. we want smart. clean. and safe. to also be fun, easy and powerful! ultium! a battery that charges fast. runs long. it fits everyone. nobody will be left out. and that, changes everything. ♪ ♪ (customer) movie night. 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