
News Wrap: White House sending officials to inspect Gaza aid
Clip: 7/31/2025 | 4m 56sVideo has Closed Captions
News Wrap: White House sending 2 officials to inspect Gaza food distribution
In our news wrap Thursday, the White House says President Trump is sending two officials to inspect food distribution in Gaza after dozens of Palestinians have been killed while trying to get aid, Ukraine says Russian drone and missile attacks overnight killed at least 13 and Delta is investigating an incident of 'significant turbulence' that sent dozens of people to the hospital.
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News Wrap: White House sending officials to inspect Gaza aid
Clip: 7/31/2025 | 4m 56sVideo has Closed Captions
In our news wrap Thursday, the White House says President Trump is sending two officials to inspect food distribution in Gaza after dozens of Palestinians have been killed while trying to get aid, Ukraine says Russian drone and missile attacks overnight killed at least 13 and Delta is investigating an incident of 'significant turbulence' that sent dozens of people to the hospital.
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorshipGEOFF BENNETT: Today's other headlines start with U.S. efforts to address hunger in Gaza.
The White House announced that President Trump is sending two officials there tomorrow to inspect food distribution.
Special envoy Steve Witkoff is already in the region.
He met with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Israel today to discuss the humanitarian crisis.
White House officials say Witkoff will be joined by U.S.
Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee for tomorrow's visit.
KAROLINE LEAVITT, White House Press Secretary: Special envoy Witkoff and ambassador Huckabee will be traveling into Gaza to inspect the current distribution sites and secure a plan to deliver more food and meet with local Gazans to hear firsthand about this dire situation on the ground.
GEOFF BENNETT: Gaza health officials say that, in the past day, at least 91 people were killed and more than 600 others were wounded while trying to get aid.
That includes 54 people waiting for food in Northern Gaza.
Israel says it fired warning shots into a crowd that swarmed an aid truck, but is not aware of any injuries.
Officials in Ukraine say Russian drone and missile attacks overnight killed at least 13 people and wounded more than 130 others in Kyiv.
The air assault hit dozens of locations across the capital, damaging more than 100 buildings.
More casualties are expected as rescue teams search the rubble for survivors.
Also, in Kyiv today, Ukrainians celebrated after Parliament approved a bill to restore the independence of two main anti-corruption agencies.
President Volodymyr Zelenskyy tried to bring the watchdogs under his government's oversight, but the move led to rare and widespread protests.
Zelenskyy quickly reversed course and today signed the new bill into law.
VOLODYMYR ZELENSKYY, Ukrainian President (through translator): It is very important that the state listens to public opinion, it hears its citizens.
Ukraine is a democracy, absolutely, no doubt.
GEOFF BENNETT: Meantime, U.S. diplomat John Kelley told the U.N. Security Council today that President Trump wants a deal to end the war by August 8.
Earlier this week, Mr. Trump said he was moving up his timeline to reach a cease-fire and has threatened to impose tariffs and other measures on Russia if a deal is not reached.
Delta Air Lines says it's working with federal safety officials on investigating an incident of significant turbulence that sent dozens of people to the hospital.
The flight from Salt Lake City to Amsterdam last night hit rough air some 40 minutes after departure, then diverted to Minneapolis.
Flight data shows the plane descended more than 1,000 feet in just 30 seconds.
First responders took 25 people to the hospital, though most have since been released.
Serious injuries from turbulence are rare, but scientists say they could happen more often as climate change alters the jet stream.
Thousands of mourners honored police officer Didarul Islam today, one of four New Yorkers killed in a mass shooting earlier this week inside a Manhattan office building.
Islam's fellow officers lined up in rows as his coffin was carried through the Bronx, the borough where he lived and worked.
A funeral service was held inside a local mosque.
Islam had picked up an off-duty security shift when he was fatally shot.
Another victim, Julia Hyman, was buried following an emotional service yesterday at a Manhattan synagogue.
Funeral arrangements for the other two victims have not been made public.
An investigation into the shooting is ongoing.
President Trump announced this afternoon that he's reviving the Presidential Fitness test at U.S. public schools.
(APPLAUSE) GEOFF BENNETT: Prominent athletes and officials joined the president as he signed an executive order to restore the President's Council on Sports, Fitness and Nutrition and the test itself.
The program was created in 1966 and it required schoolkids to run certain distances, do push-ups and pull-ups and other physical challenges.
It was a rite of passage for more than four decades until President Obama replaced it back in 2012 with a program that focused more on overall health.
On Wall Street today, stocks gave up early gains amid worries over President Trump's tariff deadline.
The Dow Jones industrial average ended more than 300 points lower.
The Nasdaq slipped just seven points, so nearly flat.
The S&P 500 also ended in negative territory.
Still to come on the "News Hour": the chair of the FCC discusses the Trump administration's approach to regulating the media; an author of the intelligence community's report on Russian election interference pushes back against Trump administration accusations it was a politically motivated lie; and Texas Republicans seek to redraw congressional districts and expand their electoral advantage.
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Clip: 7/31/2025 | 11m 45s | Ex-CIA analyst challenges Trump's attempt to discredit Russian election interference probe (11m 45s)
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Clip: 7/31/2025 | 9m 40s | FCC chairman says network oversight offers a needed ‘course correction’ (9m 40s)
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Clip: 7/31/2025 | 6m 26s | How Trump's answers about his fallout with Epstein have evolved (6m 26s)
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Clip: 7/31/2025 | 6m 35s | Sen. Shaheen on why more Dems voted to block weapons to Israel: 'Things need to change' (6m 35s)
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Major corporate funding for the PBS News Hour is provided by BDO, BNSF, Consumer Cellular, American Cruise Lines, and Raymond James. Funding for the PBS NewsHour Weekend is provided by...