[national anthem] [national anthem] hey, i heard you were a wild one, ooh will:ing good morning and welcome to las vegas, nevada, home of allegiant stadium and home of super bowl lviii where i am coming to you live this morning as part of fox & friends coverage of super bowl sunday. i m in las vegas, rachel and joey are back in new york. much warmer. we have reached a point in super bowl history [laughter] where the super bowl number is higher hand the degrees temperature of the host city, while at least i m broadcasting fox & friends. [laughter] joey: good morning, will. rachel: what is the temperature there? because with you know how cold the studio is. will: rachel, i don t think i can to this with you this morning. [laughter] it is in the 30s, so don t act like your 68-degree studio is roughing it. did you get your café mow a ca? rachel: not yet. i m waiting for it. by the way, will, what was the party like last night? you kind of look a little bit
currently we have got some rain pushing across the south east, clearing through this morning. behind it, a mixture of sunshine and showers, some of the showers heavy and thundery in northern and central scotland. another breezy day. details later. the parents of a young person at the heart of allegations against a bbc presenter are standing by their account, according the sun newspaper, after a lawyer representing the individual said their claims were rubbish. the newspaper first reported that the unnamed presenter had allegedly paid a teenager for sexually explicit photos last week. our correspondent charlotte gallagher has the latest. after days of damaging headlines, allegations and rumours, this story of a bbc presenter allegedly paying thousands for sexually explicit images is still dominating front pages. now a statement on behalf of the young person at the centre of this. they ve called the allegations, by their mother, rubbish. their lawyer says, nothing inappropriat
repercussions for the election this year and also for the future of american democracy. it is arguably the most important election case to reach the supreme court since bush v gore nearly a quarter century ago. the question before the court is pretty simple actually. does section 3 of the 14th amendment, which bars, quote, an officer of the united states who, quote, engaged in insurrection from holding public office actually apply to the man who incited the january 6th riot, who tried to disrupt the peaceful transfer of power for the first time since the civil war. the colorado state supreme court has already ruled that, yes, trump should be barred from the ballot in that state based on the insurrection that he clearly engaged in. quote, president trump is disqualified from holding the office of president under section 3 because he is disqualified it would be a wrongful act under the election code for the secretary to list him as a candidate on the presidential primary ballot
happening now, breaking news, donald trump appears to be on the verge of a major victory at the u.s. supreme court as the justices voice deep skepticism. we ll bring you the latest details on the largest and. also a damning special counsel report finds president biden willfully retained classified information after leaving the vice presidency, but will not, not face charges form the report laying out key differences between biden s cooperation with the instruction and trump s alleged obstruction of his own documents case. welcome to our viewers in the united states and around the world. i m wolf blitzer, you re in the situation room. announcer: this is cnn breaking news. we re following major legal developments affecting the two men likely heading toward a presidential rematch. paula reid has more on donald trump appearing to win over the supreme court. and a special counsel report of biden s handling of documents. this looks like a pretty good date across the cou
his top military adviser says a hold on military promotions by one republican senator is having a negative impact not just on those officers but their families. air force chief of staff general charles q. brown is up for the chair chairman of the joint chiefs of staff. alabama republican senator tommy tuberville is blocking more than 250 military promotions over opposition to the pentagon s abortion policy. chief national security correspondent jennifer griffin leads us off tonight with that from the pentagon. good evening, jennifer. good evening, bret. the pentagon said this months long standoff with the senator from alabama is now threatening readiness and benefiting russia and china. general c.q. brown is the president s pick to be the next chairman of the joint chiefs but his confirmation and that of 265 senior officers are being held up by one senator tommy tuberville of alabama. for the first time in 150 years, the marine corps is without a come dantd because of