surprise in this. most definitely and specifically on surprise in this. most definitely and specifically on the - surprise in this. most definitely and specifically on the front - surprise in this. most definitely and specifically on the front of| surprise in this. most definitely i and specifically on the front of the ft. and specifically on the front of the ft lots and specifically on the front of the ft lots of and specifically on the front of the ft. lots of shocking figures being forecasted. the iff says public borrowing would talk £190 billion this yeah borrowing would talk £190 billion this year. the third highest peak since this year. the third highest peak since the this year. the third highest peak since the second world war, which is quite since the second world war, which is quite staggering. there has been a lot of quite staggering. there has been a lot of backlash from this today and a lot of lot of backlash from this today and a lot of surprise from lot
tone, warning markets were spooked by government borrowing to pay for the biggest as cut in half a century. the market reaction is on the front page of the financial times as well. the pound has slumped to its longest level since 1985. borrowing is forecast to hit £190 billion. the times describes the chancellor s plans as a great tax gamble, with the prime minister seeking economic growth at all costs. and the telegraph shows us the first official photograph of king charles attending to his red box papers in his new office at buckingham palace. and in the guardian, hilary mantel celebrated author of the will fall trilogy, her picture there. she died at the age of 70. wolf hall. no prizes for guessing where we re
but the independent calls the plans robin hood in reverse , as the highest earners are expected to see the biggest tax cut benefits. the i says that markets were spooked by a surge in government borrowing to pay for the biggest tax cuts since 1972. the market s reaction is on the front of the financial times, too. the pound slumped to its lowest level against the dollar since 1985, as borrowing is forecast to hit £190 billion. the times describes the chancellor s plans as a great tax gamble with the prime minister seeking economic growth at all costs . the telegraph shows us the first official photograph of king charles attending to his red box papers, in his new office at buckingham palace. and on the guardian, hilary mantel, the celebrated author of the wolf hall trilogy and double booker prize winner, who died today aged 70.
course, sandra, this is leading to an even bigger repeat offender problem. it s not working. who thinks that this system of giving people second, third, fourth chances is working? it s our city is not safe. overall crime up 26%, the committee investigating krasner plans to hold hearings later this month. to impeach him, a simple majority in the house and two-thirds majority in the senate. if the republicans stay together would require five democrats to vote with them. sandra: important story, thank you for telling it. john. john: and election issue of education, new numbers show student enrollment fell more in districts that kept their kids online longer than those that went back to the classroom sooner. state and city officials are pushing the feds for more money for the schools, on top of the $190 billion allocated and not much spent.
unions are great for workers. unions raise the level of the standard of living. but remember what it is. randi weingarten is not come of mrs. floor floras that brings you the cookies. she s a labor boss. greg: he s got a point, judge, that the teachers union it s called the teachers union for a union pit is about the teachers, it s not about the kids. jeanine: it s never been about the kids. the sad part is now the wall street journal says that i think for the longest time without that 87% of the money was not spent of the hundred and $90 billion we gave the schools. the wall street journal now says that 93% of the money has not been spent. so the question is for me if covid is over, we should be able to crawl back that $190 billion. i want that money back. claw it back. the whole idea was to make schools safer the kids on the teachers. will it save right now. if you can t figure out air conditioning vents so that all