Tech companies crack down on Trump and raise regulation questions
There are new accusations that Big Tech is censoring conservatives amid a crackdown on Parler, an app used by Trump supporters. Anna Werner has the latest.
There are new accusations that Big Tech is censoring conservatives amid a crackdown on Parler, an app used by Trump supporters. Anna Werner has the latest.
A security surge is underway in Washington and the city's mayor is urging residents to stay home after a pro-Trump mob stormed the Capitol. Nikole Killion reports.
Los Angeles is reporting a more than 1,000% increase of COVID-19 deaths in the last two months, officials said.
Southern California has been hammered with COVID cases while the death toll surges across the U.S. Jonathan Vigliotti reports.
California Governor Gavin Newsom said in a briefing Monday that the state will open three mass vaccination sites, including Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles and Petco Park in San Diego, to help combat a surge in coronavirus cases. The state saw a record 1,163 deaths in a two-day period over the weekend, and intensive care unit capacity in several regions in the state is severely limited. Watch his remarks.
Representative Bonnie Watson Coleman, 75, was sheltering in place with fellow lawmakers during the attack on the U.S. Capitol last week.
The PGA says it has canceled plans to hold its 2022 championships at the Trump National Golf Club in Bedminster, New Jersey, in the wake of the Capitol riot. CBSN "Red and Blue" anchor Elaine Quijano has details.
Treats are made from the same ingredients the Vermont ice cream company uses in its nondairy human desserts.
Monday marks the first day small businesses can apply for the lated round of help from the Paycheck Protection Program. Lawmakers authorized $284 billion in forgivable loans for struggling businesses as part of the coronavirus relief bill that recently passed. Joanne Canady-Brown, owner of the Gingered Peach Bakery in Lawrenceville, New Jersey, shares her story with CBSN.
Investors want to cash in on the footwear maker's rapid growth now that its chunky shoes are hip again.
More than 30,000 people in the U.S. have died of COVID-19 just since New Year's Day of 2021. Dr. Rashmi Jain joins CBSN to discuss what's happening with the pandemic and how vaccines could be administered more quickly.
Scenes of violence and chaos at the U.S. Capitol shocked America and the world on Wednesday, when a mob of pro-Trump protesters, some of them armed, forced their way into the building, ransacking the offices of lawmakers who fled for their lives. Larry Cosme, national president of the Federal Law Enforcement Officers Association, joins Anne-Marie Green on CBSN AM to discuss the failure of crowd control and law enforcement that disrupted American democracy.
South Africa now reports more than 1.1 million cases of COVID-19, making it the hardest-hit country on the continent. Scientists there discovered a new, potentially more contagious variant of the virus, similar to the one found in Britain, in December. Lesley Wroughton, a contributing writer to the Washington Post, joins CBSN AM from Cape Town, South Africa, with more.
Democratic leaders are putting pressure on the President's Cabinet to invoke the 25th Amendment and remove him from office. This comes as two of those Cabinet members have resigned in the wake of the Capitol siege. CBS News chief congressional correspondent Nancy Cordes joins CBSN AM with more.
After months of fighting the election results and misleading his supporters with baseless fraud claims, President Trump admitted publicly he will be leaving the White House. He made the remarks in a video posted online, in which he also condemned the deadly violence at the Capitol. CBS News White House correspondent Ben Tracy joins CBSN AM with the latest.
"Come armed at your personal discretion," one flyer that briefly circulated on social media read.
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un admitted during a rare meeting of his ruling party that his economic plan failed. Also, Japan declared a state of emergency in Tokyo and three nearby areas after days of record new coronavirus infections and a rising death toll, and Zimbabwe is in a new monthlong lockdown to slow the spread of COVID-19. CBS News foreign correspondent Roxana Saberi joins CBSN AM from London with those stories.
A Wisconsin district attorney has declined to press charges against Rusten Sheskey, the White police officer who shot Jacob Blake, an African American man who was left paralyzed from the waist down after the incident. Ben Crump, an attorney for the Blake family, joins CBSN AM's Anne-Marie Green to discuss the family's path forward.
The Pelicans, Mavericks, Celtics, and Bulls matchups have all been rescheduled.
Two Capitol police officers died as a result of the riots that forced the evacuation of Congress last week.