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Prince Harry recreates his mother's historic landmine walk

Prince Harry recreates his mother's historic landmine walk

CNN3 days ago
Prince Harry recreates his mother's historic landmine walk
Following in his mother's footsteps, Prince Harry visited Angola's minefields just as Princess Diana did 28 years ago. The Duke of Sussex was in Angola with The Halo Trust as part of the group's efforts to clear landmines.
00:39 - Source: CNN
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Prince Harry recreates his mother's historic landmine walk
Following in his mother's footsteps, Prince Harry visited Angola's minefields just as Princess Diana did 28 years ago. The Duke of Sussex was in Angola with The Halo Trust as part of the group's efforts to clear landmines.
00:39 - Source: CNN
Medics perform surgery during earthquake
Video shows medics in Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky, Russia continuing a surgery on a patient despite a powerful magnitude 8.8 earthquake that struck off Russia's far eastern coast on July 30.
00:47 - Source: CNN
Therapist treating Epstein victims says Trump's language 'dehumanizes'
CNN's John Berman speaks with Randee Kogan, a therapist for victims of Jeffrey Epstein, about President Donald Trump saying Epstein "stole people that worked for me" and possibly pardoning Epstein accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell.
01:12 - Source: CNN
Tsunami warnings triggered after major earthquake
The strongest earthquake on the planet since 2011 has triggered tsunami warnings for parts of Russia, Japan, and Alaska, as well as all of Hawaii. CNN's Will Ripley reports on the 8.8-magnitude quake.
00:41 - Source: CNN
Delta announces generative AI ticketing
CNN Business editor-at-large Richard Quest breaks down Delta's announcement that the airline will deploy large-scale, advanced artificial intelligence towards ticket pricing — and what that means for the price of your next flight.
01:31 - Source: CNN
Democratic senators' heated debate on law enforcement benefits legislation
Democratic Senators Cory Booker, Catherine Cortez Masto, and Amy Klobuchar got into a heated debate on the Senate floor over law enforcement benefits legislation, as Booker alleged that jurisdictions in blue states will have trouble accessing the benefits due to their resistance to the Trump administration's immigration agenda, and railed on Democrats for folding rather than fighting back against the president.
02:01 - Source: CNN
Cuomo on Mamdani: 'You don't play politics with public safety'
After the recent mass shooting in New York City, Former Governor Andrew Cuomo reveals why he doesn't think his mayoral opponent, Zohran Mamdani, has what it takes to keep New Yorkers safe.
02:05 - Source: CNN
Israeli settler kills activist who worked on Oscar-winning film
Odeh Hathalin, a prominent Palestinian activist who had worked on an Oscar-winning documentary, was killed on Monday during an attack by Israeli settlers in the occupied West Bank, according to local journalists and officials. CNN's Jeremy Diamond explains video circulated on social media that shows the gunman firing a hand gun in the vicinity of where Hathalin was said to be killed.
01:36 - Source: CNN
What you need to know about CTE
CTE, or chronic traumatic encephalopathy, is in the news after sources say the Midtown Manhattan gunman cited the brain disease in a suicide note. CNN's Dr. Sanjay Gupta addresses some of the questions you may have.
01:34 - Source: CNN
Remembering the 4 NYC shooting victims
A New York police officer, a 'beloved' security guard, a Rudin Management employee and a senior executive with investment firm Blackstone were among four people killed when a lone gunman stormed a sprawling office tower in Midtown Manhattan and opened fire. CNN's Brynn Gingras remembers the victims of the shooting.
01:15 - Source: CNN
Trump and Netanyahu spar over starvation claims
President Trump told reporters that the imagery out of Gaza was 'real starvation' and that 'you can't fake that' in a rare rebuke of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu who claimed over the weekend that there is 'no starvation in Gaza.' A recent UN-backed agency alert, meanwhile, warned that the 'worst-case scenario of famine' is unfolding in Gaza.
01:12 - Source: CNN
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CNN Data Chief Names The 1 Way Dems Look Like A 'Complete And Utter Mess' Ahead Of 2028
CNN Data Chief Names The 1 Way Dems Look Like A 'Complete And Utter Mess' Ahead Of 2028

Yahoo

time12 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

CNN Data Chief Names The 1 Way Dems Look Like A 'Complete And Utter Mess' Ahead Of 2028

CNN's chief data analyst Harry Enten on Friday broke down how the Democratic Party is 'historically divided' ahead of the 2028 presidential election. 'It is a complete and utter mess,' said Enten, in a segment with CNN's Kate Bolduan. Enten noted that no possible Democratic presidential candidates are polling at 25% or higher in early national polling on the 2028 election. It's the first time such a scenario has occurred since the 1992 presidential election. Since then, Al Gore (2000/2004), Hillary Clinton (2008/2016) and Joe Biden (2020) all led by 25% or higher in early polling ahead of presidential elections where an incumbent Democrat didn't run. 'The water is quite warm. If you're a Democrat potentially thinking about running in 2028, jump right in because at this point there is no frontrunner,' Enten said. Although more American adults on average identified with Democrats in the second quarter of this year, the party's favorability has been historically abysmal. 'One of the reasons why there is no frontrunner — nobody wants to put anybody up at the top of their ballot list — is because at this particular point, the Democratic brand is in the basement,' he said. 'It is total and complete garbage in the mind of the American public.' In July, the party's net favorable rating (percent in favor minus percent not in favor) was -26 in both Gallup and CNN polling, while the figure dropped to -30 in The Wall Street Journal's polling. All three of those figures are record lows and, Enten argued, the numbers are mainly being driven by 'discontent within the Democratic base.' 'The Democratic base wants something different. We'll ultimately end up seeing who they choose. It will be quite the thing, who ultimately gets the rose,' he said. The segment arrives after former Vice President Kamala Harris, in an interview on 'The Late Show with Stephen Colbert' on Thursday, explained her decision not to run for governor of California while also leaving open the possibility of a 2028 presidential bid. Enten noted that Harris had just a 6% chance of being the 2028 Democratic presidential nominee on Thursday, per the Kalshi prediction market. California Gov. Gavin Newsom has the highest chance on the platform at 20% while Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) and former Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg have a 15% and 9% chance, respectively. H/T: Mediaite Related... Trump Gets Mocked Online For Self-Own After Leveling This 'Appalling' Jab At Kamala Harris Kamala Harris Stuns Colbert With Candid Admission: 'To Hear You Say That… Is Harrowing' Trump's MAGA Influencer Ally Launches 'Tip Line' To Purge 'Disloyal' Government Workers

Senate Passes Its First Spending Bills, but Battles Lie Ahead
Senate Passes Its First Spending Bills, but Battles Lie Ahead

New York Times

time14 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Senate Passes Its First Spending Bills, but Battles Lie Ahead

The Senate on Friday overwhelmingly passed the first of its spending bills for the coming year, with bipartisan approval of measures to fund military construction projects, veterans and agriculture programs and legislative branch agencies. But the broad agreement over the $506 billion package of bills, typically the least controversial of the annual federal spending measures, masked a bitter fight in Congress over how to fund the government past a Sept. 30 shutdown deadline. Senators pushed through the legislation after several intense days of haggling as part of an agreement to allow the chamber to make progress on funding the government before senators leave Washington for a monthlong summer recess. 'We are on the verge of an accomplishment that we have not done since 2018 — and that is pass appropriation bills across the Senate floor prior to the August recess,' Senator Susan Collins, Republican of Maine and the chairwoman of the Appropriations Committee, said on the floor. Still, debate over the package hinted at the bigger spending challenges that lie ahead. Democrats, furious about the White House's efforts to subvert Congress's power in the purse, are wary of striking spending deals with Republicans when President Trump and his team have signaled they intend to continue ignoring or defying lawmakers' spending dictates, even those enacted into law. And Republicans are fighting among themselves over how closely to hew to the Trump administration's spending targets. The package approved on Friday night would provide $452 billion for veterans programs, $300 billion of it mandatory spending to fund veterans benefits; $19.8 billion for military construction and family housing projects; $27.1 billion for agricultural programs; and $7.1 billion for the operations of Congress and legislative agencies. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

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