Watch live: White House press secretary holds first formal briefing in over a year
Kayleigh McEnany is holding her first news conference as White House press secretary.
Kayleigh McEnany is holding her first news conference as White House press secretary.
With millions of Americans under stay-at-home orders for weeks now, many are seeing how important personal connections with friends and family are for their mental health. How those connections are maintained has changed dramatically. Psychologist Lisa Damour joins "CBS This Morning" to discuss the pandemic's impact on mental health and how we are interacting with people in the new normal.
Mary Day, 13, went missing in California in 1981. Her disappearance went unreported for over a decade. Her parents said she ran away, but her two sisters suspected Mary was murdered. Fifteen years later, the case took a turn when investigators began looking into it after one of her sisters alerted authorities. Maureen Maher brings new insight into the case for a new "48 Hours" airing Saturday at 10 p.m. ET.
Did a man who said he had a "demon" in him kill the teen, bury her in a shallow grave, and then hire an impostor to take over the murdered teen's identity for cold hard cash?
Gregory McMichael told police he saw Ahmaud Arbery run by and said he recognized him from recent break-ins.
As the coronavirus pandemic continues, people across the U.S. are losing loved ones to the illness. The victims include engineer Richard Passman, acclaimed Chef Jesus Roman Melendez, and EMT and Pastor Billy Birmingham. Anthony Mason profiles them and others for our series Lives to Remember.
In 1981, 13-year-old Mary Day disappeared from her Seaside, Calif., home, with no sign of her anywhere. It would be 22 years before she reappeared, bringing along more questions than answers.
Many parents have said they are overwhelmed by remote learning, with a recent survey finding nearly 50% of parents are struggling to keep kids focused on school work. Meg Oliver speaks to a New York City math teacher who is juggling her students along with her young son's education and the added stress of a health care worker husband on the front lines of the pandemic.
Coronavirus testing and the accessibility of tests have been the subject of conversation across the U.S. as some areas grapple with shortages and others, like New York, roll out ambitious plans for antibody tests. Dr. Jon LaPook joins "CBS This Morning" to talk about diagnostic tests, antibody tests and everything else viewers want to know to stay safe.
CNN anchor and "60 Minutes" contributor Anderson Cooper announced the birth of his son on his primetime show, "Anderson Cooper 360." The anchor named his son Wyatt Morgan Cooper, after his father, Wyatt, who died when he was 10. The baby's middle name, Morgan, honors his late mother's family. Cooper thanked doctors and his surrogate during the touching moment.
Governor Newsom announced the crackdown over concerns that crowds last weekend were jeopardizing public health.
A look at what we've been covering on "CBS This Morning."
Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer extended the state's emergency order after its Republican legislature declined to do so. While the state has worked to ramp up testing, parts are still plagued by critical shortages in staffing and PPE, and some say the efforts to expand COVID-19 tests came too late. Adriana Diaz speaks to one woman who says her hospital worker mother died after being denied a test at the same hospital multiple times for our series, "State of Testing."
With U.S. deaths over 63,000, questions mount over the president's focus on a Chinese lab as he pushes for a vaccine to be made available at "Warp Speed."
The presumptive Democratic presidential nominee for the first time addresses the allegation by Tara Reade that he sexually assaulted her in the 1990s.
President refuses to offer details but U.S. intel agencies say COVID-19 wasn't manmade.
President Trump is pushing the country to reopen as key polls find him trailing presumptive Democratic nominee Joe Biden. CBS News' Major Garrett said that Trump's approval has so far coasted on a strong economy, which has since been heavily diminished by the coronavirus pandemic. He joins "CBS This Morning" to talk about how the pandemic is factoring into the 2020 election and the president's latest attacks on China.
A Georgia man was chased and shot to death while he was jogging, his mother said. Police say Ahmaud Arbery was followed by two men who thought he had committed a crime. An attorney for Arbery's family says that no indictments have been made because one of the alleged assailants is a former investigator for the local district attorney's office. Omar Villafranca speaks to Arbery's mother, who says an arrest should have already been made in the two-month-old crime.
Joe Biden was expected to respond Friday morning to an allegation of sexual assault in the early 1990s. His accuser, former Senate staffer Tara Reade, says then-Senator Biden sexually assaulted her in a Capitol hallway in 1993. A spokeswoman for Biden's presidential campaign called Reade's claim "untrue." Catherine Herridge breaks down the allegations.
California Governor Gavin Newsom is closing Orange County beaches once again after concerns that crowded beaches would jeopardize public health. The decision was met with frustration from some residents and a local official. Also, Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer extended the state's emergency declaration by executive order after the Republican-controlled legislature declined. Carter Evans reports on how states around the country are handling the pandemic, including some that have eased their precautions, like Texas.
President Trump is going after China, accusing the country of failing to stop the coronavirus from spreading to other countries. Mr. Trump said he is considering new tariffs on China to hold it accountable for the outbreak in the U.S. At the White House Thursday, the president claimed to have seen credible evidence that the virus originated in a Wuhan lab, but gave no further details. Ben Tracy reports on the White House's ongoing response to the pandemic.
He announced Thursday that the city's subways will shut down during overnight hours starting next Wednesday, in order to clean the public transit system on a daily basis.
With U.S. deaths over 63,000, questions mount over the president's focus on a Chinese lab as he pushes for a vaccine to be made available at "Warp Speed."
President Trump attacked China in a Thursday press conference, threatening the country with tariffs after accusing it of failing to stop the coronavirus outbreak. Also, U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who has been recovering from COVID-19, said his country was past its virus peak. All that and all that matters in today's Eye Opener. Your world in 90 seconds.
The shutdown of church services due to the pandemic on top of unresolved clergy-abuse lawsuits led to the archdiocese's financial woes.