Top Senate Republican delays subpoena vote in Ukraine probe
Chairman Ron Johnson informed committee members of the decision to delay the vote to subpoena Andrii Telizhenko, a former Ukrainian diploma.
Chairman Ron Johnson informed committee members of the decision to delay the vote to subpoena Andrii Telizhenko, a former Ukrainian diploma.
Treasury chief Steve Mnuchin compare the outbreak to a "hurricane" in proposing to aid affected businesses.
Job growth has been a key driver of U.S. economic growth — now experts fear the coronavirus will dampen hiring.
World Health Organization is now calling the outbreak a pandemic, further roiling U.S. financial markets.
After a failed IPO, the once high-flying office-sharing company faces new threat from disease outbreak.
The coronavirus pandemic didn't stop thousands of Smurfs from gathering to break a world record.
The U.S. added 273,000 jobs in February, bringing unemployment to a near 50-year low. But job growth is threatened as the coronavirus spreads across the globe. David Lewis, CEO of the human resources consulting firm OperationsInc, joins CBSN to discuss the potential impact.
Project Python targeted members of the Cártel de Jalisco Nueva Generación, led by the drug lord known as "El Mencho."
Two well-known Russian tricksters reportedly called the prince saying they were the Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg and her father.
A federal appeals court had found the policy illegal, saying migrants subjected to it "risk substantial harm" and "even death."
Forensic experts are still at odds as to how Ellen Greenberg died of 20 stab wounds nearly a decade after the 27-year-old was found dead in her locked apartment. Could new technology help in the search for answers?
"This is the sort of event in the airline industry we only tend to see about once every ten years," Hayes said on "CBS This Morning" Wednesday.
"I've been convicted for a crime I didn't commit. Thirty-one years. That's enough to break a man. That's enough to destroy a man," Green told "48 Hours" correspondent Erin Moriarty.
Drivers and passengers could see their accounts suspended if they are at risk of getting COVID-19.
More than 1,030 coronavirus cases have been reported in the U.S., up from 126 one week ago.
The New York City Department of Corrections has created and distributed a 22-page manual outlining how to respond to a coronavirus outbreak behind bars. "The City" reporter Reuven Blau joined CBNS to explain what the manual says and why inmates are at a higher risk for infection.
"What's the point of going back and remaining in constant fear of getting attacked again," asked one victim of clashes that left 53 dead.
Psychologist and CBS News contributor Lisa Damour joins “CBS This Morning” to talk about the growing role technology plays in the lives of teenagers. A recent study reveals the links between teens’ social and mental health, and how they spend time online. Nearly 50% of adolescents say they use apps like YouTube, Instagram, Snapchat and Facebook almost constantly. Damour weighs in on what this could mean for their development.
As of Tuesday night’s primary elections, former Vice President Joe Biden leads Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders by 150 delegates, making it a difficult road ahead for the latter campaign. Sanders supporter Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez called it a “tough night” on Instagram. CBS News political contributors Robby Mook and Terry Sullivan weigh in on the path forward for both campaigns on “CBS This Morning.”
The coronavirus outbreak could cost airlines around the globe over $100 billion in revenue, according to an industry group. American airline JetBlue saw shares drop by more than 20% since the first confirmed U.S. case in January, despite a slight rebound on Tuesday. The airline cut domestic flights because of a decline in passengers while also vowing to increase how often planes are cleaned. JetBlue CEO Robin Hayes joins “CBS This Morning” to talk about how they and other airlines are responding to the crisis.
New York State is taking dramatic action to contain one of the country’s largest known coronavirus clusters. Governor Andrew Cuomo instated a three-square-mile “containment area” in the New York City suburb New Rochelle, a county with at least 108 confirmed cases. Meg Oliver reports from just outside the zone on the struggles some residents are facing already.
Confusion about coronavirus testing is widespread across the country as the government is racing to keep up with demand. In California, a state with about 40 million people, just over 1,000 people have been tested and 159 cases confirmed. HHS Secretary Alex Azar said on Wednesday morning that there is no federal barrier for doctors to get tests for patients. Dr. David Agus weighs in on the state of coronavirus testing on “CBS This Morning.”
New court documents reveals that U.S. Soccer claims women should not get paid as much as men because they argue that male players carry “more responsibility” and their job “requires a higher level of skill” than their female counterparts. A spokesperson for the U.S. national women’s team called the argument plain sexism. The women’s team filed a lawsuit against U.S. Soccer in March.
Washington Governor Jay Inslee is expected to ban gatherings of over 250 people in most of the Seattle metro area as the state braces for potentially tens of thousands more coronavirus cases. Public health officials say several long-term care facilities in the Seattle area have reported cases. Jonathan Vigliotti reports from the Life Care Center in Kirkland, where 20 elderly residents have already died from the virus.
Public health officials said at least 10 long-term care facilities in the Seattle area have reported cases.