Kim Vennell
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Russian President Vladimir Putin is set to discuss a possible peace plan for Ukraine with US envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner in Moscow today.
President Trump has said a deal to end the war is reasonably close.
In Ukraine itself, residents are doing everything they can to survive the coldest, darkest winter of the war.
Intensifying Russian strikes and years of cumulative damage are taking their toll.
Kiev resident Yulia Chumak is eight months pregnant.
She already has a three-year-old and is living without electricity or heating.
But in spite of the gruelling winter and war, she's determined to stay and raise her family in the capital.
Our reporter Max Honda is in Kiev, where even those with power only have it for a few hours a day.
And not everyone is managing to stay as strong as Yulia.
Max says some people in Kyiv are relying on heated tents for a moment of warmth and access to electricity.
Now to what's being framed as the fight for independence of the U.S.
Federal Reserve.
The Supreme Court, which is weighing whether Trump should have been able to fire Fed Governor Lisa Cook, appears skeptical that the move was legal.
Our Fed reporter David Lauder was in the courtroom.
David says the arguments reveal a lot about which way justices are leaning.
A Republican-led House panel has voted to hold Bill and Hillary Clinton in contempt of Congress for refusing to testify about their ties to Jeffrey Epstein.
The vote now goes to the full House, which will decide whether to send the case to the Justice Department for possible prosecution.
That could lead to criminal charges and up to a year in jail and $100,000 in fines.
Both Clintons have offered to cooperate with the House Oversight Committee but have refused to appear in person.
They say the investigation is a partisan effort to shield President Donald Trump.