climate change, but with senator joe manchin pulling his support, what can the president really do? what the president said today and terry moran on that tonight. the primetime hearing tomorrow night from the january 6th committee. tonight we learn who the american people will hear from including former white house counsel pat cipollone, who has been asked about conversations within the cabinet involving the 25th amendment, which would remove a sitting president and what cipollone warned the president. jonathan karl tonight with new reporting. in washington today, the emotional appeal from ukraine s first lady addressing lawmakers on the hill. the images of the children she brought with her, the standing ovation and after u.s. intelligence warned of what putin could be planning next, what we re now hearing tonight from russia s foreign minister. rachel scott on the hill. it was the story that made national headlines. the turpin children, authorities say, trapped in thei
let s begin with these wise words from our 35th president. ask not what your country can do for you. ask what you can do for your country. keep that in mind. the problems facing us in the 60s ranked from civil rights, a huge deal, the vietnam war, a huge deal, to the plethora of assassinations. but we understood back then that america was the land of the fry, not the freeloaders. look what happened this week with the student loans. we are a nation who pays for college. or i should say used to know that. if you couldn t pay, you take out a loan. or you get to decide if you want a four-year degree tore you might be better suited for a trade school. all pathways were forges your own way. to get success in america you wrote your own ticket. now we are a country with 10 million job openings and 6 million jobless choose not to fill those job openings. we would rather be on tiktok than punch the clock. apple is having trouble getting their employees to go into work three days a we
positive for covid again. what we know about his symptoms and we re going to talk to an expert about how rebound cases work. plus, anger, outrage, and sheer frustration after senate republicans block a bill to help veterans impacted by burn pits. we ll talk to a woman who lost her husband to a burn pit exposure. you ll hear her message to lawmakers. and explosions rocked southern ukraine. some calling it the strongest shelling since the start of the war. our cnn team is live in kyiv with the very latest. we ll take you to ukraine. it is sunday, july 31st, thank you so much for waking up with us. good morning, sara. grateful you re starting your week with new day. we begin this morning with an update to the ongoing weather emergency in kentucky. the death toll there continues to rise as search and rescue crews are making their way through flooded areas and as we re expecting yet another round of heavy rain and flooding today. and the death toll rose from yesterday
search warrant set to be released but only after the department of justice submits its redactions. the judge giving the d.o.j. a thursday deadline to make that decision. team trump saying put it all out there quoting here, the whole affidavit should be released given the democrats penchant for using redactions to avoid government corruptions just like they did with the russia hoax. the burden is on the d.o.j. the burden is on the government to prove that this is not just a continuation of what has been a seven-year crusade to get trump. the senior membership of this agency has been targeting trump for years. they ve got the documents they went in for. i see no reason not to release this affidavit except for if they have confidential informants in it. mark meredith is live with more on this from palm beach. good morning. good morning. we re in a holding pattern here. the judge giving federal prosecutors until thursday next week to figure out which items in the affidavit
investigation as the testimony, of course, of them, themselves, as well, giving evidence about the coordination of trump s plans leading up to and on the day of the riot, about who spoke to the president that day, who also was in the when things were happening and what the president may have told them. maybe communications about what exactly was happening inside of the white house over those nearly 187 minutes. well over three hours. filling in the gaps. gaps between when donald trump told his supporters to go to the capitol and when he tweeted a video to the rioters telling them that he loved them and to go home. now, we know that s the very focus of thursday s primetime hearing and we have someone tonight who knows the people who were in the white house with then-president trump during those three hours and he knows them quite well. trump s former active chief of staff nick mulvaney, he knows matthew pottinger, one of trump s deputy national security advisors scheduled to t