kamala harris, his current deputy, will be running for another term as vice president. it all comes four years to the day since he first announced he was running for the white house at the last election. personal freedom is fundamental to us as americans. there is nothing more important, nothing more sacred. that has been the work of my first term, to fight for our democracy. this should not be a red and blue issue. to protect our rights, to make sure everyone in this country is treated equally, and that everyone is given a fair shot. but around the country, maga extremists are lining up to take out our most bedrock freedoms. cutting social security that you have paid for, cutting taxes for the wealthy, dictating what health care decisions women can take, banning books, and telling people who they can love. all making it more difficult for you to be able to vote. live to new york with cbs correspondentjarred hill. so, correspondent jarred hill. the so, correspondentjarred hil
also in the programme. president zelensky addresses the european parliament saying ukraine is fighting to protect europe s way of life president zelensky pleas for. we start with the devastation following monday s earthquakes in turkey and syria, where mass graves are being dug, as the death toll climbs rapidly. nearly 20,000 are known to have lost their lives. rescuers are continuing desperate attempts to find and free survivors, four days after the quakes hit. the world health organization has warned there could be a secondary disaster with survivors living on the streets with very little food and water and in freezing temperatures. our middle east correspondent anna foster is in gaziantep the epicentre of the biggest earthquake to hit the region on monday. this heavy machinery is starting to arrive mainly in the big cities like this one, it has to be said, when you think about the rural villages, towns that are as badly affected, it is so much harder to get the equip
of the regulator, how the regulator shapes the future of the bbc directly impacts on everyone who consumes its content and also interacts with it as an institution. let s understand first of all more about what ofcom wants. let s hearfrom kevin backhurst, group director of content and media policy. and, kevin, reading your review today, you sound a little underwhelmed by how the bbc explains itself. tell us why. i think we feel that the bbc should absolutely strive all the time to explain itself to audiences and to viewers, and also to be transparent to the audiences who pay the licence fee, and also to the rest of the creative industries around the uk about what it is planning, how it is approaching programming, how it is delivering its mission, its public purposes. ofcom s role essentially is to make sure the bbc delivers what parliament has set out for the bbc, which is its public purposes, which are across things like delivering things like impartial news, learning conten
gay venue in the capital oslo and led to authorities cancelling the city s pride parade. now on bbc news the media show. hello and welcome to the media show. ., ., ., , ., , , show. how the regulator shapes the bbc impacts show. how the regulator shapes the bbc impacts everyone - show. how the regulator shapes the bbc impacts everyone who l the bbc impacts everyone who consumes its content and also interacts with it as an institution. let s understand first of all about what ofcom wants. let s hearfrom kevin backus, group director of content and media policy, and cabin, reading a review today, you sound a little underwhelmed by how the bbc explains itself. tell us why. i by how the bbc explains itself. tell us why- tell us why. i think we feel that the tell us why. i think we feel that the sac tell us why. i think we feel that the bbc should - tell us why. i think we feel- that the bbc should absolutely strive all the time to explain itself to audiences and to viewers
now, the uk s media regulator ofcom has published a major review of what the bbc does, particularly focussed on three areas how the bbc deals with complaints, how the bbc approaches impartiality and how the bbc defines the services that it offers people in the uk. needless to say, how the bbc takes the advice of the regulator, how the regulator shapes the future of the bbc directly impacts on everyone who consumes its content and also interacts with it as an institution. let s understand first of all more about what ofcom wants. let s hearfrom kevin backhurst, group director of content and media policy. and, kevin, reading your review today, you sound a little underwhelmed by how the bbc explains itself. tell us why. i think we feel that the bbc should absolutely strive all the time to explain itself to audiences and to viewers, and also to be transparent to the audiences who pay the licence fee, and also to the rest of the creative industries around the uk about what it is