Spells and showers, for scotland and Northern Ireland that is what you have, sunshine and showers. All of the details later in the programme. Its monday the 14th of august. Officials in hawaii say they expect the number of casualties to rise significantly as a result of the wildfires. 93 people are known to have died, with hundreds still missing in maui. Questions are now being asked about whether Early Warning systems were used or if they malfunctioned. The states Attorney General is conducting a comprehensive review. Our correspondent Sophie Long Reports from hawaii. The fire left more than a city devastated, and charred black buildings behind. Existential questions hover about the emptiness. How can you rebuild from this . What will exist here in the future . A congregation there without a church gathers in a coffee shop to share their pain. It used to be my house. I wept, but weeping is not. God gave us tears. There are so many questions that remain without answers. Why did one sur
Outfront. Next we are following several breaking stories this hour, the Supreme Court agrees to weigh in on whether trump is immune from criminal charges related to january 6, its the heart of trumps defense. Is the dojs case now in trouble, also breaking right now, trump on the hook for 454 million. The clock is ticking because a new york court has just ruled that he cannot get out of putting up the full amount trump is saying he does not have the money, will give all you the details. And inside putins decision to use Nuclear Weapons, the Financial Times tonight, obtaining secret russia intelligence documents showing putin could resort to using nukes just to stop quote aggression. It is a stunning report reporter who broke it will be outfront. So lets go so good evening. Im Erin Burnett Outfront tonight. The Breaking News, the Supreme Court takes up trumps case, the nations highest court tonight saying justices will hear trumps argument that he has absolute immunity for crimes he alle
they know they can t say, sometimes even their own name. i ve even had moments where i ve not caught myself peter. £28 billion of unfunded spending. maybe even more than 28 billion. 28 billion maybe even more than 28 billion. 23 billion different ways to raise people s taxes. £28 billion different ways to raise people s taxes. billion different ways to raise people s taxes. £28 billion of taxa er people s taxes. £28 billion of taxpayer money. people s taxes. £28 billion of taxpayer money. £28 - people s taxes. £28 billion of taxpayer money. £28 billionl people s taxes. £28 billion of. taxpayer money. £28 billion of people s taxes. £28 billion of- taxpayer money. £28 billion of tax rises. £28 billion taxpayer money. £28 billion of tax rises. £28 billion is taxpayer money. £28 billion of tax rises. £28 billion is about - taxpayer money. £28 billion of tax rises. £28 billion is about 4p - taxpayer money. £28 billion of tax rises. £28 billion is about
i mean by that is the perception of china from outside, even those who have businesses here and have teams here, for whom china is a very important market and then the writ lived reality on the ground. that is due anywhere in the world but i think one of the world but i think one of the confusions during the pandemic period particular contributed to the gap. what they will find is and they will visit their own teams and factory floors and get an idea on what the outlook is but the truth is zero covid and some of the other challenges have really stomped on consumer investor confidence and it has beenin investor confidence and it has been in unbalanced so far so it isjust not been in unbalanced so far so it is just not the recovery people were hoping for even if it is not as grim as the more sensational headlines suggest. we just want to ask you because regulations in china have tightened. this is not good for a business environment, for anyone. a business environment, fo
to boost foreign investments in the country as its own economic engine slows. for clues on what we can expect. mattie bekink of the economist intelligence unit spoke to us. i think one of the reasons that this meeting and the stream of executives and world leaders turning to china in the last few months since the very surprisingly exit from the zero covid and the reopening is because there has been a perception gap that has only widened in the three years that china was close. but i mean by thatis china was close. but i mean by that is the perception of china from outside even those who have businesses here and for whom china is a very important market and the lived reality on the ground. that is true anywhere in the world but i think some of the geopolitical tensions and confusion during the pandemic. particularly contributed to this perception 93p- contributed to this perception gap. so what they will find is, one, but they will discover is a chance to revisit their own tea