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How to watch the VP debate between Tim Walz and JD Vance

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Washington — Vice presidential candidates Gov. Tim Walz and Sen. JD Vance are poised to go head-to-head at their first and only debate in New York on Tuesday, as ballots are already being mailed to voters weeks before Election Day.

Hosted by CBS News, the VP debate between Walz, the Democratic nominee, and Vance, the GOP nominee, will be moderated by “CBS Evening News” anchor and managing editor Norah O’Donnell and “Face the Nation” moderator and chief foreign affairs correspondent Margaret Brennan.

The 90-minute event is taking place just over a month before Election Day, and several weeks after Walz and Vance’s running mates, Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump, respectively, faced off in their first debate.

While Walz and Vance are scheduled to meet only once on the debate stage, it’s unclear whether Harris and Trump will go head-to-head again before the election. The vice president and Democratic presidential nominee accepted an invitation from CNN for a second debate on Oct. 23, but Trump, the GOP presidential nominee, has said it’s too late for another to happen.

Walz and Vance have spent the weeks after they were announced as the vice presidential picks for their respective parties on the campaign trail, introducing themselves to voters. Walz is the governor of Minnesota who served more than a decade in the U.S. House. Vance represents Ohio in the U.S. Senate, a post he won in the 2022 midterm elections after rocketing to fame with his 2016 memoir “Hillbilly Elegy.”

The debate will take place at the CBS Broadcast Center in New York, and, like with the presidential debate between Trump and Harris, there will be no live audience. While there will be no opening statements from the two vice presidential candidates, each will be allotted two minutes for closing remarks, according to debate rules from CBS News.

How to watch the VP debate on cable

The vice presidential debate will be broadcast on the CBS television network. It will begin at 9 p.m. ET. Coverage of the match-up will start at 8 p.m. ET on CBS — find your local CBS station here.

Where to stream the VP debate

The debate can be streamed on the free CBS News app on your connected TV or smartphone, on Paramount+, and all platforms where CBS News 24/7 is available, including CBSNews.com and YouTube. Coverage of the event will begin on CBS 24/7 at 4 p.m. ET.

Where to watch a replay of the VP debate

The full debate will be available to watch on CBS News’ YouTube page and on CBSNews.com.

CBS News will host the only planned vice presidential debate between Vance and Walz on Tuesday, Oct. 1, at 9 p.m. ET on CBS and CBS News 24/7. Download the free CBS News app for live coverage, post-debate analysis, comprehensive fact checks and more.



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Here’s how Hurricane Helene brought “biblical devastation” to western North Carolina in a near “worst-case scenario”

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Hurricane Helene has proved to be disastrous for Appalachia, as massive amounts of precipitation from the storm caused rampant flooding that has devastated several towns and killed dozens of people. On Monday, the North Carolina State Climate Office provided a picture of how the “monster storm” was nearly a “worst-case scenario for western North Carolina.” 

“Torrential rainfall from the remnants of Hurricane Helene capped off three days of extreme, unrelenting precipitation, which left catastrophic flooding and unimaginable damage in our Mountains and southern Foothills,” a post from the office says. “… the full extent of this event will take years to document – not to mention, to recover from.” 

Here’s how the climatologists said it happened. 

North Carolina was saturated with rain before Helene hit

helene-precip.png
Total precipitation from the precursor frontal event and Hurricane Helene from September 25 to 27, 2024.

North Carolina State Climate Office


As Helene became a Category 1 hurricane in the Gulf of Mexico — more than 500 miles and 30 hours away from where it would eventually make landfall in Florida — western North Carolina was already seeing rain. The climate office says that Helene’s outskirts were feeding tropical moisture to slow-moving storms that had formed along a stalled cold front. 

By midnight on Thursday — roughly an hour after Helene’s landfall 10 miles north of Steinhatchee, Florida — Asheville Airport in North Carolina had already seen more than 4 inches of rain. That downpour continued before Helene’s outerbands even moved in. By Thursday night, Yancey County, which sits just south of Erwin, Tennessee, where floodwaters became so bad that people were trapped on the roof of a hospital, had seen more than 9 inches of rain. 

Storm Helene Causes Massive Flooding Across Swath Of Western North Carolina
A helicopter takes off from a front yard in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene on September 30, 2024 near Black Mountain, North Carolina. 

/ Getty Images


Water was already beginning to inundate cities, “all while the heaviest rain from Helene was just beginning to fall,” the climate office said. The more than 300 miles of tropical storm-force winds Helene produced only amplified the situation, pushing more moisture up mountains. 

“The storm’s impacts were especially long-lasting because of its massive size. It developed in a high-humidity environment over the warm Gulf of Mexico, which let it grow and strengthen unimpeded,” the office said. “…From the start of the precursor frontal showers on Wednesday evening to the heart of Helene moving through on Friday morning, it was one of the most incredible and impactful weather events our state has ever seen.” 

Record rain brings reports of “biblical devastation” 

From Wednesday to Friday, the office said that there were more than 8 inches of rain across the western North Carolina mountains, with some areas seeing a foot or more. The highest rainfall total was in Busick, with a three-day total of 31.33 inches — more than 2.5 feet. 

At least a dozen weather stations recorded their wettest three-day periods on record, the office said. Asheville Regional Airport lost communications on Friday morning after Helene’s landfall, but had already reported just under 14 inches of rain. That amount, the office said, was “nearly three months’ worth of precipitation … in less than three days.” 

screenshot-2024-10-01-at-7-25-48-am.png
Notable rainfall totals from September 25 to 27. Bolded text denotes local single-day or three-day records. An asterisk denotes that totals were submitted the following morning.

North Carolina State Climate Office


All of that rain caused rivers to flood, landslides and mudslides, leading to rescues across several counties. 

In Buncombe County, home to Asheville, Emergency Services Assistant Director Ryan Cole told the Citizen-Times that “catastrophic devastation” didn’t accurately describe the impact the deluge had. 

“It would go a little bit further and say we have biblical devastation through the county,” Cole said. “We’ve had biblical flooding here and it has been extremely significant.” 

The newspaper quoted county manager Avril Pinder as saying, “this is looking to be Buncombe County’s own Hurricane Katrina.” 

Rare mountain tornado as Helene’s winds move in

helene-gusts-tornadoes.png
Notable wind gusts and confirmed tornadoes from the precursor frontal event and Hurricane Helene from September 25 to 27, 2024.

North Carolina State Climate Office


“Helene brought the full suite of hurricane impacts to North Carolina,” the climate office said, “and in full force just hours after its landfall at Category-4 strength.” 

The winds from Helene were felt across western North Carolina, with the Charlotte Airport recording the strongest wind gusts it’s seen since a thunderstorm microburst in August 2019. The winds, which surpassed hurricane speeds in some places, contributed to widespread power outages. Millions were left without power across several states because of Helene, and as of Tuesday morning, hundreds of thousands remain without electricity in North Carolina alone. 

Storm Helene Causes Massive Flooding Across Swath Of Western North Carolina
A destroyed home in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene on September 30, 2024 near Black Mountain, North Carolina. 

/ Getty Images


On Wednesday evening, as the state battled existing storms ahead of Helene, a rare mountain tornado formed in Watauga County, the first it had seen since 1998. The day after Helene made landfall, at least six tornadoes were confirmed, including an EF3 in Rocky Mount that destroyed several buildings. 

A historic and deadly storm

CBS News has confirmed that at least 131 people across several states were killed by Helene. Buncombe County alone has reported at least 40 deaths, including a 7-year-old who was swept away by floodwaters with his grandparents. 

While hundreds of people were able to be rescued, there have been even more requests for welfare checks. And given the severity of the damage, the climate office said that suggests “the death toll is likely to climb as hard-hit areas are finally accessed in the coming days.” 

“Sadly, our state’s long-running benchmark for deaths during a tropical event – approximately 80 during the mountain region’s July 1916 flood – could be in jeopardy from this storm that has already broken plenty of other records,” the climate office said, adding that the 1916 event was the area’s flood of record for more than a century — a title that “now belongs to Helene instead.” 

Several rivers surpassed their highest-ever crests by several feet, including the Swannanoa River, which saw “the worst flood along the river since North Carolina became a state,” the office said. 

Aftermath of Hurricane Helene in Asheville
A view of the damaged area at Asheville along with the western part of North-Carolina is devastated by the heavy rains and flooding after Hurricane Helene in Asheville on September 30, 2024

Peter Zay/Anadolu via Getty Images


As unprecedented as Helene’s impact on the region was, there is a chance it won’t be the last. 

“The rapid intensification of Helene over the Gulf, the amount of moisture available in its surrounding environment, and its manifestation as locally heavy – and in some cases, historically unheard of – rainfall amounts are all known side effects of a warmer atmosphere,” the office said. 

Last year was already the warmest humans had ever recorded and 2024 has seen countless heat records. The continued use of fossil fuels releases greenhouse gases that are trapping heat within the atmosphere, increasing average temperatures that fuel extreme weather events like Helene. 

It’s unclear when an event like Helene would downpour on Appalachia again, but the climate office is near-certain about one thing: “We won’t see another Helene in the Atlantic.” 

Officials often retire hurricane names when they are particularly devastating, and while such action has yet to be announced, the climatologists suggest it may only be a matter of time.



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Thousands of port workers go on strike, shutting down East and Gulf Coast ports

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Thousands of port workers go on strike, shutting down East and Gulf Coast ports – CBS News


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At least 25,000 union dockworkers are on strike in the Eastern and Southern U.S. after talks between the International Longshoremen’s Association and shipping companies failed to reach a new contract. The union representing the dockworkers is seeking higher pay and protections against automation replacing workers.

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GOP Rep. Elise Stefanik on VP debate

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GOP Rep. Elise Stefanik on VP debate – CBS News


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New York Rep. Elise Stefanik, a top Republican in the House and supporter of former President Donald Trump, speaks with “CBS Mornings” about the only vice presidential debate between Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz and Sen. JD Vance.

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