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This is primary election night in Wyoming and Alaska and a top Republican
critic of former President Trump has her job on the line. Wyoming
representative Liz Cheney is vice chair of the congressional January
6th. Committee. Polls have shown her trailing a trump backed challenger
in Alaska. Another trump critic, US Senator Lisa Murkowski, is hoping
to hold on.
And former governor Sarah Palin is running for Alaska's lone U. S.
House seat. With Mr Trump's backing. We'll get a closer look at all
this after the news summary.
President Biden signed landmark legislation today. The bill dubbed
the Inflation Reduction Act. It includes record spending on climate
change provisions to cap Medicare, drug costs and new taxes on corporations.
The president celebrated the legislation as a victory delivered by
Democrats over solid Republican opposition.
We have not wavered.
We have not flinched and we have not given in. Instead we're deliveries.
Sulzberger, the American people, we didn't tear down, we build up.
We didn't look back. We look forward.
Well look at the state of the Biden agenda later in the program,
First Lady Jill Biden has tested positive for Covid 19. Days after
the president recovered from his case the White House had. Mrs Biden
began having mild symptoms on Monday while vacationing in South Carolina.
She remained there today when the president returned to Washington.
Former president Trump called today for the release of an affidavit
supporting the search of his estate in Florida. FBI agents recovered
classified material in the search, but the U. S. Justice Department
says that releasing the affidavit would impair the investigation.
A federal judge has scheduled a hearing on the issue for Thursday.
In the Ukraine war explosions and fire tore through another military
site in Russian annexed Crimea today. Moscow charged that saboteurs
blew up an ammunition depot week after an attack on an air base in
Crimea. Meanwhile, Ukraine's president Zelensky called again for
new sanctions on Russia over shelling near a nuclear plant will return
to that story later in the program.
Kanye could face weeks of uncertainty after the opposition presidential
candidate rejected election results. The elections commission chairman
has declared Deputy President William Ruto the winner by a narrow
margin, but losing candidate Raila Odinga vowed today to go to court.
What we saw yesterday.
Was a travesty and the blunt and disregard of the constitution.
And the laws of Kenya.
Our budding democracy suffered a major setback.
Result.
Kenya faces a grave legal and political crisis. Bingo also urged
his supporters to remain calm. Back in this country. Federal officials
announced that Arizona and Nevada will face new cuts and how much
Colorado River water they receive. It's due to another year of extreme
drought. The Colorado River provides water to 40 million people across
the West and in Mexico. We'll explore this in detail later in the
program.
The U. S. Food and Drug Administration finalized a rule today to
let millions of Americans buy hearing AIDS without a prescription
online and over the counter retailers will be allowed to sell a new
class of devices for adults with mild to moderate hearing loss. The
rule takes effect in October and on Wall Street stocks ended mostly
higher. After an up and down day. The Dow Jones industrial Average
gain 239 points.
To close at
1 34,052. The NASDAQ fell 25 points. The S and P 500 added eight
still to come on the news hour how Congress has managed to pass major
legislation despite deep differences.
Federal water cuts to Western states underscore the severity of the
climate crisis.
Journalist David Bornstein gives his brief but spectacular take on
countering the bad news bias plus much more.
This is the PBS news hour from W. E to studios in Washington and
in the West from the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism at Arizona