tv CBS Evening News CBS March 3, 2025 4:00pm-4:30pm PST
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in of the wes anderson movies. so bill's been in a ton of them. ok. yes, i will talk about how he's been in all of them, and never missed a beat. but we love you-- oh, there he goes. --and we love our tradition of stalking you when we're together, and vicey versa. we did it. we finally made this happen. drew made this happen. yeah. thank you so much, everybody. we make this show for you, so take it with you! [music playing] [cheers] [applause] [audio logo] [audio logo] ♪ ♪ >> announcer: from cbs news headquarters in new york, this is the "cbs evening news."
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>> john: here come the tariffs. good evening. i'm john dickerson. >> maurice: i'm maurice dubois. president trump is making it more expensive for mexico and canada to get their products through america's front door, and that could increase the cost of the packages left on your front porch. >> john: at a time when 3 out of 4 americans are telling cbs news their incomes are not keeping up with inflation. at a minute past midnight, a 25% tax takes effect on imports from america's closest and biggest trading partners. >> maurice: the announcement had investors running for the exits. nvidia, gm, and amazon led a sell-off that saw the dow plunge nearly 1.5%, nasdaq more than 2.5%, and the s&p 1.75%. >> john: weijia jiang is at the white house. weijia? >> reporter: president trump says canada and mexico must face those tariffs because they have failed to stop the flow of fentanyl into the u.s. and for this same reason, he is bumping up the fee on chinese imports.
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tonight, economists warned this could spark a trade war that would cost consumers. after following through on his threat... >> the tariffs, they're all set. they go into effect tomorrow.% >> reporter: president trump says there's a simple solution for countries that want to avoid tariffs. >> what they have to do is build their car plants, frankly, and other things in the united states, in which case they have no tariffs. >> reporter: to make his point today, trump hosted the ceo of a taiwanese semiconductor chip manufacturing company who pledged to invest $100 billion in new manufacturing plants in the u.s. and the president said japanese automaker honda has ditched its plan to open a new plant in mexico, opting instead for indiana to avoid tariffs. but auto prices are still likely to increase. one study found a large suv with parts from mexico could jump $9,000. >> trade wars are costly and nobody wins. >> reporter: josh lipsky is a former state department
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official. trump argues that we're going to slap all these extra fees on imports so then everyone's going to buy american and that will be great for american manufacturing, american companies. but doesn't that take time? >> that doesn't happen overnight. that could take years. and in the meantime, there's hue cost of transition. >> reporter: another recent study estimates the new tariffs could cost the average u.s. family more than $1200 a year. i think people at home really just want to know, what does this mean for me? do companies absorb the cost? or am i going to have to pay more? >> you're going to have to pay more. it doesn't mean you're going to have to pay exactly what the tariff is, because they're all kinds of ways some of this gets absorbed by companies. but you as a consumer will very likely pay more for the products that are tariffed. it could get worse if the trade war erupts. >> maurice: weijia, we remember
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candidate trump promising to lower prices on day one. what is he saying about the overall economy? >> reporter: he hasn't been talking much about prices and hasn't talked much about the overall economy in terms of specific action he's taking to immediately lower the prices. his economic team says it's only been six weeks since he took office, you have to give some time for the policy to take effect. the white house says he'll talk about all of this when he addresses a joint session of congress tomorrow night. >> john: weijia, there are more tariffs coming, yes? >> reporter: yeah, the president announced next month the u.s. will impose reciprocal tariffs on any country that has a fee on amercan exports. a new study from the university of michigan shows that all these tariffs are already having an impact. it showed that consumer confidence decreased by 10% since january, and it will likely impact consumer spending. >> john: and weijia, has that consumer spending received any kind of pushback from the white house? what's their explanation for that?
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>> reporter: well, they say that they are doing everything that they can. for example, when it comes to the price of eggs, they say the department of agriculture has a plan to deal with the bird flu and then deal with the costs. so far, they claim that the economy is doing great and because of all these bigger actions that trump is taking whether it's with d.o.g.e. or whether it's with tariffs, they say it will have an impact and boost that confidence overall. >> john: just got to wait. weijia jiang at the white house. thank you. >> maurice: china has already found a way around u.s. tariffs on imports. >> john: anna coren reports china is exporting its factories. >> reporter: a two hour drive outside the cambodian capital, phnom penh, a convoy of semitrailers passed by. moments later, an enormous arch greeted us with signage in two languages, the local language khmer, and beneath, chinese. but it's very clear who's in
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charge of the special economic zone rising from the dirt. hello, sir. the manager of this furniture factory invited us in. okay, thank you. they moved here from china a month ago to produce ottomans to export to the united states. most of the companies coming here are chinese. their driving incentive? to avoid u.s. tariffs. the trade war is the main reason for this chinese investment in cambodia. in 2016, before president trump took office, cambodian exports to the u.s. were roughly $3 billion. last year, they topped 12 billion, representing nearly 30% of the country's gdp. the cambodian government says for than half of the factories in cambodia are chinese-owned. to america? while chinese companies are skirting u.s. tariffs, economists we spoke to say they are playing by the
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rules, that there fears cambodis economy could be collateral damage. are you concerned president trump might put tariffs on cambodia considering the chinese investments? >> yes. >> reporter: chinese garment factory owner mr. huang moved to cambodia 20 years ago, capitalizing on tax breaks and lower wages while still running factories in china. when the trade war began in 2018, he moved all operations to cambodia and now exports 60% of his garments to the u.s. and who are your customers? >> walmart, costco. >> reporter: and he says those orders have only multiplied since president trump announced new tariffs. >> john: anna coren joins us now from beijing. anna, as you mentioned, they're already tariffs on china. president trump says he's going to add more tariffs. what's that going to do to chin? >> reporter: well, john chinese manufacturers certainly are going to feel some pain. we spoke to one who said she will try to absorb the tariffs. others won't be in a position to
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do so. that's when you'll see the higher costs passed on to american customers. the retaliatory tariffs that we saw from china were mainly symbolic last month. now they're going to target u.s. agriculture and that's u.s. farmers. >> maurice: china's national people's congress starts on wednesday, that is their big government meeting. their economy is not exactly in great shape, so what are they expected to do now? >> reporter: that's right, maurice. it's been hurting from the property crisis, high youth unemployment. the national people's congress is about laying out the road map to strengthen the economy. i spoke to an advisor to the chinese government last night, and he said that despite all the noise about a trade war, he still is confident a deal will be done and that president trump will visit china later this year. >> john: anna coren reporting from beijing. thank you, anna. >> maurice: we expect the president have much more to say about tariffs and other issues when he addresses a joint session of house and senate and the american people tomorrow evening. >> john: maurice and i will bring you live coverage beginning at 9:00 eastern time. now more top stories from around
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the world in tonight's "evening news" roundup. beginning with a new setback for pope francis. as he battles double pneumonia in a rome hospital. he had more breathing problems today. doctors twice had to clear his lungs. francis is 88. his prognosis remains guarded. >> maurice: in mannheim, germany, a man drove a car into a crowd, killing two people injuring at least ten. the police say the man who was 40 shot himself after being arrested and is listed in stable condition tonight. they say the motive was not political and he may have mental health issues. >> john: cbs news has learned a number of passenger planes on final approach to reagan national airport this weekend received apparent false alarms from their collision avoidance systems. senior transportation correspondent kris van cleave joins us. kris, we have had enough with regular alarms. now these are false alarms? >> reporter: yeah, john, we pored through hours of air
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traffic control audio from saturday at washington reagan airport and identified at least 12 flights that received these false alarms from their onboard collision avoidance systems. six of them in fact encouraged the plane to take evasive maneuvers, at least three did go arounds before safely landing. this is the same airport where that deadly midair collision occurred in january. flyers are already on edge. now the faa is investigating and looking into the possibility that some kind of external interference may have triggered these alarms. we do know that all 12 of these planes we identified were regional jets. two different makes of regional jets. other airplanes did not receive these alerts. so it is a mystery at this point. no evidence of nefarious activity but this many false alarms is highly unusual. >> maurice: and raises a lot of questions. kris van cleave tonight in phoenix. thank you. >> john: still ahead on the "cbs evening news," lonnie quinn on wildfires in the carolinas and a winter storm that could produce a blizzard.
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>> maurice: and we'll have these stories. >> thousands of usaid employees fired by the trump administration this week were given just 15 minutes to clear out their desks. i am caitlin huey-burns outside of the agency's headquarters with one federal aid worker's emotional goodbye. >> i'm imtiaz tyab in kyiv. we'll take you inside a military hospital where injured soldiers told us they had no choice but to keep fighting against russia, as u.s.-ukrainian ties unravel. that's next on the "cbs evening news." ♪ ♪ the "he is evening news." albuterol only treats your symptoms, not inflammation— a cause of asthma attacks. treating symptoms and inflammation with rescue is supported by asthma experts. finally, there's a modern way to treat symptoms and asthma attacks. airsupra is the first and only dual-action asthma rescue inhaler fda-approved to treat symptoms and help prevent asthma attacks.
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so for faster pain relief, advil the pain away. ♪ ♪ >> john: it did not end friday. president trump attacked ukrainian president zelenskyy again today, this time for saying an end to the war with russia is still "very far away." >> maurice: mr. trump in a post on social media called it the worst statement zelenskyy could have made and said the u.s. will not put up with it for much longer. >> john: the war, now more than 3 years old, has left three quarters of a million people dead or wounded. >> maurice: that includes civilians and military. imtiaz tyab is in kyiv tonight. >> reporter: at just 26 years
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old, dr. igor pryntsypal is one of ukraine's youngest orthopedic trauma specialists. he took us to an operating room where a ukrainian soldier was having reconstructive surgery. this group of surgeons meticulously removed skin and other tissue from the soldier's back to rebuild part of his arm that was nearly seered while he fought against russian forces on the battlefield. this is the highest level of reconstruction. >> yes. this is the best soldier in ukraine. >> reporter: we are seeing one of the most complex reconstructive surgeries that surgeons here perform and it really is a race against time to help soldiers like us who've suffered life-changing injuries. are you afraid ukraine may lose america's support? >> if we have it, we will be more strong. buttoday's soldiers,
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said we know we must save us. >> reporter: dr. pryntsypal is also closely involved in the physical rehabilitation of wounded soldiers, many of them told us they felt a deep sense of uncertainty as u.s.-ukrainian ties continued to unravel. including oleksiy, a grandfather and vounteer soldier in his 50s. he was being treated for shrapnel wounds to his legs and hips. oleksiy also suffered a battlefield injury to his arm a year ago and still went back to fight. so you're going to keep fighting no matter what. >> [speaking in a global language] >> reporter: "of course. for the sake of my granddaughter," he said, "we must protect ourselves to prove ukraine exists." a fight for ukraine everyone here believes in. what keeps you hopeful? >> we understand if we are together, we can fight with everything. and when our friends help us,
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we are better. >> maurice: and imtiaz tyab joins us now from kyiv. you have really extraordinary access there. what is the mood of the people there in ukraine? who are they counting as their friends nowadays? >> reporter: well, the many ukrainians we've been speaking to, from injured soldiers to politicians, they tell us they believe the u.s. and ukraine are still friends and that the connection between these two nations runs far deeper than any disagreement between two presidents. and of course following president zelenskyy's visit to london this weekend, the quite literal warm embrace he received from european leaders as well as promises of aid and security guarantees, well, that had many here feeling that ukraine is not alone. >> maurice: okay, thanks so much. imtiaz tyab in kyiv. >> john: hundreds of wild fires are burning in north and south carolina but firefighters battling them got a break from the weather. >> maurice: the wind that was helping spread the flames has
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died down. lonnie quinn has the latest on that. lonnie. >> gentlemen, you're right. the winds in the carolinas have sort of relaxed but not the case to the west. every color depicted here show some kind of wind warning, pay close attention to the bright red. red flag warnings in effect until tomorrow. we could use some rain. there is some rain on the way. the problem is it could possibly come in the form of severe weather. overnight tonight at 4:00 a.m. for dallas until 7:00 a.m., the threat is therefore severe thunder storms, possibly tornadoes. moves into shreveport louisiana. jackson, mississippi, mobile, by the time you get to wednesday the line makes its way to the east coast. when you look at the radar signature, it will tell you a lot. when you watch a line formed that's vertically stacked straight line straight up and down, see what's developing here, it's a strong line of storms. as it makes its trek through the midsection of the country, it's going to finish and exit the east coast on wednesday and wednesday we watch anywhere from washington, d.c., all the way to savannah, georgia. as for the carolinas, which is what we started talking about,
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the winds come back to play on wednesday but it comes also with a lot of rain, which is a good thing. gentlemen? >> maurice: all right, lonnie quinn, thank you. >> john: federal workers targeted in the mass firings are losing more than a job. >> maurice: "eye on america" is next. >> maurice: "eye on america" is next. brushed away. feeling can't be even a little blurry vision can distort things. and something serious may be behind those itchy eyes. up to 50% of people with graves' could develop a different condition called thyroid eye disease, which should be treated by a different doctor. see an expert. find a t-e-d eye specialist at isitted.com ok guys, instead of getting weathertech, i saved a few bucks and got some cheap, foreign made floor mats. but they really stink, so put these on. ♪♪ really, gary? mom, i'm thirsty. don't settle for cheap, stinky floor mats.
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>> maurice: president trump is giving the heads of federal agencies until next week to submit plans for eliminating more government jobs. the thousands being cut in the mass firings are much more than numbers on a payroll list and every one of them has a story. caitlin huey-burns has tonight's "eye on america." >> what do you want for lunch today? >> reporter: we joined kate scaife friday morning as she made her kids' lunch, dropped them off at the bus stop, and headed to her office at usaid where she was a program analyst.
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scaife was one of thousands of federal employees who received an email saying they are being affected by a reduction in force, government speak for "you're fired." >> it has been one of the hardest months of my life. to feel that i did something wrong when all we were ever trying to do was the right thing. >> they are increasingly viewed as the villains. >> reporter: that's top trump official russell vought talking to his right wing think tank in 2023. vought has helped billionaire elon musk carry out the mass firings across the federal government. last week vought sent this memo directing agencies to plan for a significant reduction in the number of full-time workers, an effort to shrink the government that could ultimately leave 700,000 federal employees across the country out of a job. >> we want to put them in trauma. >> reporter: that trauma was
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on display friday as usaid workers left the building for the last time. >> usaid saves lives. >> reporter: that's how you would have described your work? >> that's right. we make america safer. >> reporter: for the last two years, kate scaife's job was to make thousands of humanitarian programs around the world run efficiently, a role she optimistically believed would match the priorities of the new administration. >> one of our senior leaders came up to me at one point passed me in the hall and said be prepared to be the most popular girl in the room in a couple weeks. >> reporter: her illusions faded last month when musk tweeted about feeding usaid into the wood chipper. the next day, scaife couldn't log on to her work devices. >> i felt disappeared, right? all of our work was made invisible. >> reporter: we rode with scaife as she drove to the office. >> i've got my kids' pictures. >> i've got my kids'e thinking >> that it will be there on monday. >> reporter: she was allowed 15 minutes to clean out her
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desk. >> it just felt really demeaning to be treated like that. >> reporter: scaife had been the breadwinner in her family. how do you talk to your kids about this? >> it was so hard to tell them things like, you know, we've made summer plans for these camps. and you know, i can't afford that. >> reporter: it feels like work was a big part of your identity. >> i feel like i am my best mom when i have this other part of me that helps me to feel engaged with the world. i don't know how i'll find something new that gives me that same joy. >> reporter: a feeling now looming for hundreds of thousands of federal workers. for "eye on america," i'm caitlin huey-burns in silver spring, maryland. >> maurice: in tomorrow's "eye on america," the impact of the southern california wildfires goes beyond the land. we'll take a look at the
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long-term effects of the toxic ash on the ocean. john and i will be right back. john and i will be right back. '♪ ♪ go re-charge your batteries, ♪ ♪ come back to me and make your mama proud ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ i need your arms around me, ♪ ♪ i need to feel your touch ♪ ♪ and i really want to talk! ♪ ♪ rinse it out ♪ ♪ every now and then ♪ ♪ i get a little bit tired of the stinks ♪ ♪ that just will never come out ♪ ♪ pour downy in the rinse, jade ♪ ♪ every now and then i rinse it out! ♪ fights odor in just one wash. (woman) what if all i do for my type 2 diabetes isn't enough? or what if... (vo) ...once-weekly mounjaro could help?
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by a truck driving terrorist in new orleans this past new year's day. before he was shot dead by the police. among the victims, tiger bech, a 27-year-old former football star at princeton. >> maurice: this is his little brother jack, a tcu wide receiver showing the nfl what he's got. jack wore princeton shoes in honor of the brother he looked up to and who he believes now watches over him. >> john: said jack bech, "i know his wings are going to be on me from now until the end of time." >> maurice: that is the "cbs evening news." i am maurice dubois. >> john: i'm john dickerson. see you on "cbs evening news plus." >> maurice: have a good night. see you tomorrow.
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