Jay Sekulow, a member of President Trump's legal team, joins Face the Nation Moderator John Dickerson to discuss Trump's knowledge of his son's meeting with Russians in June 2016.
Guests included Mark Warner, Rand Paul, Jay Sekulow, Jeffrey Kluger, Susan Page, Jeffrey Goldberg, Ramesh Ponnuru, and Ed O'Keefe.
We leave you this Sunday Morning with a dive into the Indian Ocean at Kenya's Mombasa Marine National Park. Videographer: Ziggy Livnat.
Sen. Rand Paul, R-Kentucky, is pushing Senate Republican leaders for a fuller repeal of Obamacare
It's "Sundae Morning"! Lee Cowan takes a break from "Sunday Morning" hosting duties to celebrate National Ice Cream Day
"The longer the bill's out there, the more conservative Republicans are going to discover that it's not repeal."
Politics, the President said, is not the nicest business -- but there are also examples of the opposite: people behaving morally when it was easier not to
The top Democrat on the Senate Intelligence Committee Senator Mark Warner, D-Virginia, discusses how Donald Trump Jr.'s meeting with Russians will impact the investigation into Russian meddling.
According to the president, anyone in a campaign would have met with someone with dirt on a political opponent, but there are historical examples of the opposite: people behaving morally when it was easier not to.
Senator Rand Paul, R-Kentucky, shares why he opposes the new version of the Senate health care bill with Face the Nation Moderator John Dickerson.
This week on "Face the Nation," host John Dickerson interviews Senator Mark Warner, Senator Rand Paul, and Jay Sekulow to discuss the latest on the Russia investigations and the new version of the Senate health care bill.
From Comic-Con International in San Diego, to New York City's annual Bodypainting Day, "Sunday Morning" takes a look at some notable events of the week ahead. Lee Cowan reports.
Fifty years have passed since the summer of 1967, which saw urban riots in many of our largest cities, including New York, Newark, N.J., and Detroit. A new movie by Oscar-winning director Kathryn Bigelow, "Detroit," dramatizes one of the most notorious incidents of those terrible days. Michelle Miller takes us back. (Caution: There is language some may find offensive.)
Now 84, country singer-songwriter Willie Nelson is on the road again - performing, writing music, and releasing a new album, "God's Problem Child," which features songs like "Still Not Dead." He talks with CBS News' Bob Schieffer about songwriting, longevity, and how he will never quit. Originally broadcast on April 2, 2017.
As a prosecutor in Manhattan's District Attorney's Office, Linda Fairstein pioneered the use of DNA evidence in cases against sexual offenders. She was even the inspiration for some of the tough prosecutors you see on TV. But Fairstein has made a second career for herself as an award-winning writer of crime novels featuring prosecutor Alex Cooper, including her 19th, "Deadfall." Lesley Stahl talks with Fairstein about the truth behind her fiction.
It happened this past week: the 200th anniversary of the birth of the great naturalist and writer Henry David Thoreau, on July 12, 1817. Thoreau's account of his two-year stay in a small cabin beside Walden Pond, near Concord, Mass., taught many about both natural observation and inward reflection. Lee Cowan reports.
As American as apple pie, the annual National Pie Championships, in Orlando, Fla., pits professional and amateur bakers from across the U.S. in a showdown that is definitely not "easy as pie." Conor Knighton meets some of the competitors, and learns what goes into judging pie-making excellence.
"What we've seen is a constant effort to hide contacts with Russians. We've seen this pattern repeat itself," Sen. Mark Warner said on "Face the Nation"
The ghetto in Lodz, Poland, was one of hundreds created by the Nazis across Europe, used to temporarily separate Jews from the rest of the population. Most residents would be sent to killing centers, if disease or starvation did not kill them first. The Lodz Ghetto is now the subject of a photography exhibit at the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston. Called "Memory Unearthed," it features photos by Henryk Ross, a Polish Jew who lived inside the ghetto, and who buried his negatives in order to protect them from the Nazis. Читать дальше...
Lee Cowan interviews the former Vice President and Nobel Prize-winner Al Gore on his second career as an advocate against climate change - and against climate change deniers. Gore, who is featured in a new documentary, "An Inconvenient Sequel: Truth to Power," talks about his efforts to sway President Donald Trump to maintain America's participation in the landmark Paris Climate Agreement, and how advances in energy technology make him more optimistic about changing the course of the Earth's future.
On July 16, 1999, John F Kennedy Jr., the son of the former president, died in the crash of the small plane he was piloting toward Martha's Vineyard. Also killed were his wife, Carolyn Bessette-Kennedy, and sister-in-law, Lauren Bessette. Lee Cowan looks back.