Jeff Sessions pressured
Leading Democrats are calling on Attorney General Jeff Sessions to step down after a report that he misled senators about contacts with Russia during the Trump campaign. CBS News' Jeff Pegues joins CBSN with the latest.
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Leading Democrats are calling on Attorney General Jeff Sessions to step down after a report that he misled senators about contacts with Russia during the Trump campaign. CBS News' Jeff Pegues joins CBSN with the latest.
In a CBS News poll, 82 percent of the viewers of President Trump's speech on Tuesday said he was presidential. But as Major Garrett reports, the address left plenty of unanswered questions over the policies Mr. Trump will support.
Highlights from a panel discussion moderated by pollster Frank Luntz, focusing on President Donald Trump's immigration agenda.
The White House signaled that President Trump's primetime address to Congress will emphasize unity. Ahead of the speech, Scott Pelley spoke with Sen. Bernie Sanders on if there are places to work with Mr. Trump.
There is a growing crisis in the Department of Homeland Security over whether the Trump administration is exaggerating the threat posed by Muslim countries. As Jeff Pegues reports, some analysts feel they are being pressured to report what the White House wants to hear.
Senator Chris Murphy (D-CT) joins CBS News' Alex Wagner to discuss what Democrats want to hear from President Donald Trump during his first address to Congress tonight. Senator Murphy notes that Trump hasn't submitted any legislation as president.
Face the Nation moderator John Dickerson spoke with a group of people in Richmond, Virginia to get their take on President Trump's first month and more
President Joe Biden is approaching the 100-day mark in his term. CBS News political contributor and Democratic strategist Joel Payne and Briahna Joy Gray, the former national press secretary for Bernie Sanders' 2020 presidential campaign, join CBSN's Tanya Rivero with how progressives are reacting to Biden's first 100 days.
President Biden discussed on Tuesday new guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which says that fully vaccinated people do not need to wear a mask for most outdoor activities. CBS News senior White House and political correspondent Ed O'Keefe joins CBSN's Elaine Quijano to discuss.
Robert Draper, a writer for The New York Times magazine, joined CBSN to discuss his cover story, "Will Obamacare really go under the knife?" Draper discusses how Obamacare went from being a lightening-rod issue for Democrats to a rallying cry for Republicans.
California, Illinois, Michigan, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania and West Virginia will each lose congressional seats.
Democrats and some Republicans on Capitol Hill are calling for a probe into the conduct of former National Security Adviser Michael Flynn and his contacts with Russia. CBS News congressional correspondent Nancy Cordes has the latest.
The Senate stayed up all night debating the nomination of Betsy DeVos to be education secretary. Republican leaders plan to vote on the nomination Tuesday. DeVos has become so contentious that teachers in some school districts have taken to wearing all black or all red to show their opposition. Nancy Cordes reports.
Democrats will keep the Senate in session overnight in opposition to the nomination of Betsy DeVos for education secretary. CBS News Congressional correspondent Nancy Cordes joins CBSN with the latest.
The new administration is making political moves on healthcare, foreign policy and Cabinet confirmations. Ed O'Keefe, political correspondent for The Washington Post, joins CBSN to discuss the latest.
President Trump is telling his party to "go nuclear" if Senate Democrats continue to try to block confirmation of the rest of his Cabinet. CBS Radio News executive editor and correspondent Steve Dorsey joins CBSN to discuss.
President Trump wants Senate Republicans to change the rules if needed to confirm his Supreme Court nominee, Judge Neil Gorsuch. Some Senate Democrats already oppose him, but for others, the vote will be a tough call. Jan Crawford reports.
Republican strategist and CBS News contributor Frank Luntz joins "CBS This Morning" from Washington to discuss why the Republican-Democratic rift over President Trump's Cabinet nominations are concerning, and the one silver lining he sees of Mr. Trump's presidency.
Secretary of State Rex Tillerson was confirmed by the Senate Wednesday, 56 to 43, with only three Democrats voting for him. Republicans sent two other nominations to the Senate floor after Democrats boycotted a committee vote for the second straight day. Nancy Cordes reports.
Judge Neil Gorsuch received a friendly reception from Republicans after President Trump's announcement. But Gorsuch faces a battle from some Democrats aiming to block his nomination. CBS News congressional correspondent Nancy Cordes joins CBSN with the latest from Capitol Hill.
President Donald Trump hopes that Neil Gorsuch is quickly approved to join the Supreme Court, even if it requires the Senate to implement a "nuclear-option". The option allows the Senate to approve nominees with only 51 votes, but does not typically apply to Supreme Court nominees. Former Clinton White House Deputy Staff Secretary David Goodfriend discusses the Democratic plans to potentially block Supreme Court nominee Neil Gorsuch.
After Senate Republicans blocked former President Obama's Supreme Court nominee for 10 months, Democrats are pushing back against President Trump's nominee. CBS News congressional correspondent Nancy Cordes explains the challenges Neil Gorsuch is likely to face.
Democrats are pushing their Senators to oppose the Neil Gorsuch Supreme Court appointment, saying the seat was stolen from Merrick Garland. How hard will his confirmation fight be and what perspectives does Gorsuch bring to the high court? The Cato Institute's Ilya Shapiro joined Josh Elliott to discuss all that and the future of Roe v. Wade.
Judge Neil Gorsuch will be on Capitol Hill Wednesday, meeting senators who will decide his nomination. Gorsuch will need to get past Senate Democrats who are still furious that Republicans blocked Judge Merrick Garland's Supreme Court nomination for 293 days. Nancy Cordes reports.
Federal Judge Neil Gorsuch is President Trump's pick to fill the vacant seat on the Supreme Court. Gorsuch has served on the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver for more than 10 years. His outlook as a judge is similar to the late Justice Antonin Scalia. Jan Crawford reports on the confirmation fight ahead.
Explosions boomed across Kyiv for hours as ballistic missiles and drones hit the city in an attack that began early in the morning.
Millions of Americans live in areas under winter storm alerts stretching from northern Minnesota to the Eastern Seaboard.
President Trump said he won't quickly follow Mideast ally Israel in recognizing Somaliland, saying he needed to "study" it.
Thailand and Cambodia signed a ceasefire agreement on Saturday after weeks of deadly fighting along their border.
After a teen didn't return from walking her dog, her dad used cell phone data to find her in a secluded area two miles away.
The Telluride Ski Resort in Mountain Village, Colorado, was shuttered Saturday, with no date set for reopening, due to a labor dispute with the ski patrol union over wages.
Several lanes of the 5 Freeway were closed and a shelter-in-place order was issued to residents in Castaic, California, after a gas line ruptured on Saturday.
The university fired ex-coach Sherrone Moore on Dec. 10 for having an "inappropriate relationship" with a female staffer.
The Spanish soccer club Valencia said that a coach for its women's reserve team, Fernando Martín, and three of his children were among the victims.
The victim was sitting with her family under a covered porch several blocks away when she was hit by a bullet, according to a probable cause affidavit.
Jeffrey R. Holland was next in line to lead the Mormon church under a long-established succession plan.
The boy, identified by police as Coco, was found in chest-deep waters but was not injured.
After a teen didn't return from walking her dog, her dad used cell phone data to find her in a secluded area two miles away.
The suspected gunman was shot and killed by law enforcement, authorities said.
Several major retailers are now charging customers to return items even if they are unopened and in perfect condition.
Stocks are mostly flat in quiet morning trading on Friday as investors return from the Christmas holiday.
With President Trump declaring Dec. 26 a federal holiday, here's what's open and closed on Dec. 26.
As many Americans head into 2026 with mounting money worries, reviewing your finances now could help put you on firmer footing next year.
Most major retail stores and grocery chains are closed on Christmas Day, with some exceptions.
As prosecutors contend with a massive trove of Epstein files, President Trump suggested Friday the Justice Department is spending too much time on the issue — but said Democrats should be named.
Karoline Leavitt and her husband, Nicholas Riccio, welcomed their first child, also named Nicholas, in July 2024.
The Veterans Affairs Department is reimposing a near total ban on abortions for veterans and their families that was modified in 2022.
Strikes against ISIS targets in Nigeria come after President Trump spent weeks accusing the West African country's government of failing to rein in the persecution of Christians.
The message, aired on Channel 4 on Christmas Day, reflected on the impact of President Trump's second term in office thus far.
Nearly five million flu cases have been reported nationwide, the CDC estimates, and at least 1,900 people have died from the virus. "CBS Saturday Morning" has more on why this year's strain is breaking records.
Suze Lopez, a 41-year-old nurse who lives in Bakersfield, California, didn't know she was pregnant with her second child until days before giving birth.
The Food and Drug Administration has approved a pill version of the weight-loss drug Wegovy.
A federal judge has approved a preliminary agreement for a class action lawsuit requiring Aetna to cover fertility treatments for same-sex couples as they do with heterosexual couples.
Doctors and scientists say this year's influenza season could be tougher than usual, with a new version of the flu virus, called H3N2, spreading quickly.
The Spanish soccer club Valencia said that a coach for its women's reserve team, Fernando Martín, and three of his children were among the victims.
President Trump said he won't quickly follow Mideast ally Israel in recognizing Somaliland, saying he needed to "study" it.
Explosions boomed across Kyiv for hours as ballistic missiles and drones hit the city in an attack that began early in the morning.
Thailand and Cambodia signed a ceasefire agreement on Saturday after weeks of deadly fighting along their border.
The attack began Friday afternoon in the northern city of Beit Shean, where the Palestinian man crashed his vehicle into people, killing one man and injuring a teenage boy.
Peter Turnley, an American and French photographer known for documenting the human condition, finds comfort in Paris. His new book "PARIS Je t'aime" showcases 50 years of photographs from his favorite city.
Samara Joy burst onto the jazz scene in 2021, earning major praise as a "classic jazz singer from a new generation," and gaining popularity on TikTok. The young artist has already won five Grammy Awards, and her album "Portrait" is now up for Best Jazz Vocal Album of the Year. Here's Samara Joy performing "Now And Then (In Remembrance Of...)."
Samara Joy burst onto the jazz scene in 2021, earning major praise as a "classic jazz singer from a new generation," and gaining popularity on TikTok. The young artist has already won five Grammy Awards, and her album "Portrait" is now up for Best Jazz Vocal Album of the Year. Here's Samara Joy performing "Three Little Words."
It marks the second lawsuit in recent months accusing the filmmaker and studio mogul of leveraging his power in Hollywood to make sexual advances.
The band announced Perry Bamonte's death on their official website on Friday.
Instacart says its ending its controversial system of using AI price tests for retailers. Earlier this month, an investigation by Consumer Reports and progressive think tank Groundwork Collaborative found that Instacart's algorithmic pricing charged various prices for the same item from the same store. Jo Ling Kent reports.
Massive tech companies wanting to build more data centers in the U.S. are lobbying for support among Americans, according to a recent report by POLITICO. Gabby Miller joins CBS News with more on her reporting.
From labor shortages to environmental impacts, farmers are looking to AI to help revolutionize the agriculture industry. One California startup, Farm-ng, is tapping into the power of AI and robotics to perform a wide range of tasks, including seeding, weeding and harvesting.
Timothy Werth, a tech editor at Mashable, joins "CBS News 24/7" to discuss the best gadgets of 2025.
Instacart had drawn criticism for testing an AI-based system that enabled retailers to charge different prices for the same grocery items.
The Trump administration intends to dismantle one of the world's leading climate research institutions, in Boulder, Colorado, over what it said were concerns about "climate alarmism."
The footage of a bear caring for an adopted cub was captured during the annual polar bear migration along the Western Hudson Bay in Churchill, Manitoba.
Most of the footprints are elongated and made by bipeds. The best-preserved ones bear traces of at least four toes.
NASA continues to aim its space telescopes at the visiting ice ball, estimated to be up to 3.5 miles in size.
Paleontologists have discovered and documented 16,600 footprints left by theropods, the dinosaur group that includes the Tyrannosaurus rex.
The victim was sitting with her family under a covered porch several blocks away when she was hit by a bullet, according to a probable cause affidavit.
After a teen didn't return from walking her dog, her dad used cell phone data to find her in a secluded area two miles away.
Lawmakers may take action against the Department of Justice for the delayed release of the Jeffrey Epstein files. CBS News legal contributor Jessica Levinson weighs in.
Police were called to a shopping center late Friday morning. Two officers were shot and are in critical condition.
Smith previously played young Nala in "The Lion King" on Broadway.
NASA astronauts took their first drive on the moon 54 years ago. Now, three companies are competing for a NASA contract to build a new lunar rover for use starting with the Artemis 5 mission in 2030. Kris Van Cleave reports.
NASA is gearing up to send four Artemis astronauts on looping test flight around the moon in 2026.
A German aerospace engineer made history Saturday, becoming the first wheelchair user to go into space when she took a 10-minute trip aboard a Blue Origin rocket.
German engineer Michaela Benthaus is the first person with a significant physical handicap to reach space.
President Trump withdrew Isaacman's nomination for NASA administrator in April, before nominating him again in November.
A look back at the esteemed personalities who've left us this year, who'd touched us with their innovation, creativity and humanity.
Does the evidence show a cover-up, or was Todd Kendhammer wrongfully convicted for the murder of his wife?
Christy Salters-Martin dominated in the boxing ring but faced her toughest challenger at home.
Family seeks answers in death of newlywed who disappeared in 2005 while on Mediterranean honeymoon cruise.
Meet the tattooed beauty charged in the death of Google executive Forrest Hayes.
Perry Bamonte, a guitarist and keyboardist for the alternative rock band The Cure, died at his home in England following a "short illness," the band announced Friday. He was 65.
Nestled deep in the mountains of South Korea, in a remote part of the country's east, is one of the world's largest deposits of tungsten, a critical mineral the U.S. desperately needs for its defense. As Anna Coren shows, a newly reopened mine in South Korea could soon fill that need.
During his first year back in power, President Trump has used American military might to send messages to adversaries abroad. On Christmas Day, Mr. Trump ordered a strike on ISIS militants in Nigeria, which came about one week after the U.S. also struck ISIS targets in Syria. Willie James Inman reports from Mar-a-Lago.
The National Retail Federation estimates that 17% of holiday purchases will be sent back. Andres Gutierrez reports on what happens to unwanted gifts after they're returned to retailers.
Here's a look at the top stories making headlines on the "CBS Weekend News" with Jericka Duncan.