Bad Bunny and the politics of the Super Bowl
The Super Bowl is a football game, an entertainment spectacle, a global billboard and a crucible of American political discord. CBS News chief Washington correspondent Major Garrett explains.
The Super Bowl is a football game, an entertainment spectacle, a global billboard and a crucible of American political discord. CBS News chief Washington correspondent Major Garrett explains.
Warning: Video contains offensive images. A racist video depicting former President Barack Obama and former first lady Michelle Obama as apes has been deleted from President Trump’s Truth Social page. CBS News White House reporter Aaron Navarro reports.
Top Border Patrol official Gregory Bovino allegedly used language offensive to Jewish federal officials on a recent call, sources said.
Lemon said federal officers arrested him “for something I’ve been doing for the last 30 years, and that is covering the news.”
Trump baselessly claimed Omar staged the attack, telling ABC News “She probably had herself sprayed, knowing her” after the incident.
Police groups to flex their influence amid governor’s race
Ukrainian tennis star Oleksandra Oliynykova has publicly called out Aryna Sabalenka, Diana Shnaider and Danill Medvedev for their actions amidst the Russia-Ukraine war.
A president on camera says only his own morality can stop him. That single line sets the tone for a high-stakes hour where we track real-time war signals around Iran, interrogate the Greenland fantasy, and examine how power bends rules when no one close is willing to say no. We connect the dots between rhetoric, [.].
Democratic Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts said that President Donald Trump called her on Monday following a speech in which she sharply criticized his record on costs and governance. “In my remarks, I made it clear that despite promising to lower costs On Day One, Trump has done nothing but raise costs for families,” she said in the statement. She said Trump called her after her remarks at the event on Monday. “I told him that Congress can pass legislation to cap credit card rates if he will actually fight for it. I also urged him to get House Republicans.
Former Fed Chair and Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said she was “surprised the market isn’t more concerned.”.