from everything they know. we can t go back to hong kong right now, but i think ten years or 20 years we can. if she is still in hong kong, then i think she sjust going to be brainwashed. i think they deep down know that | i won t come back to hong kong. many are cash rich and are buying homes outright in towns across britain. they re bringing over on average, six, 700, maybe 800,000 into the uk economy. but are the tensions they were hoping to escape now in the uk? this is my bloody face after being attacked by those chinese people. i m elaine chong. over the past few months, i ve been following hong kongers who ve moved to the uk and i ve been finding out if their new life here is what they were hoping for. in 2019, violent clashes spread through hong kong. millions of hong kongers took to the streets to protest against china s growing control in the region. they felt their freedom of speech was being threatened with new risks of deportation to china and possible torture. t
stepped in it again. and how they can blow their case against trump. the dems told us walls wouldn t solve the border crisis. biden makes plans to built a wall of his own. it s not at our border and you are paying for it. it s serious time now. things are bad right now. i know that, you know that, the republicans know it, biden knows it, the dems know it. democrat voters know it too. so why do some voters still support this administration. when i was in the secret service we stayed in hot zones. that was me with obama. i got sick there, that was trinidad. i think i had like 101 fever. there was no place on earth i would rather not be than there. here is me, too, tooking miserable in indonesia. i got that eating grit. but i was embracing the sock. that s accepting the circumstances around you sometimes operating within them with no expectations things will get better until it s over. does that feel like the american economy? i think some non-conservative voters are starting
at 10pm, clive myrie will be here with a full round up of the day s news. first, a look back at boris johnson s time in downing street in a special programme presented by michael cockerell. six weeks ago, a typhoon fighterjet took off from an raf base in lincolnshire. its co pilot just announced he was about to become britain s ex prime minister. after three happy years in the cockpit, and after performing some pretty difficult if not astonishing feats, i am now going to hand over the controls, seamlessly, to someone else. i don t know who. boris johnson believes in the great man theory of history, and he thinks he is that great man, like his hero, winston churchill. churchill, the guy made the most incredible series of mistakes, his early career was studded with disasters of one kind or another, but he always came back from them, and he always stuck by what he believed. applause whenjohnson became prime minister three years ago, churchill s grandson, sir nicholas soames,
new research suggests the arctic is warming significantly more quickly than previously thought at on average four times the rate of the rest of the world. hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are rosa prince, who s the editor of the house magazine, which covers the workings of parliament, and the broadcaster, david davies. tomorrow s front pages, starting with. pm turns up for meeting is the headline in the metro an ironic dig at borisjohnson, as they report his talks with bosses of energy firms: the daily star is unimpressed with the result of that meeting saying it produced no plan to solve the energy bills crisis: the mirror is equally scathing branding the ministers and energy bosses clueless : the i says drought is expected to be declared in several regions of the uk tomorrow and that restrictions on water use are likely to last months: it s the same lead in the guardian which says there are also likely
hello, this is bbc news. i m kasia madera. the headlines: donald trump s former strategist steve bannon has been found guilty of contempt of congress. he was charged after refusing to testify to the inquiry into the january 6 riots at the us capitol and could face two years in prison. ukraine and russia have signed a deal which will allow the resumption of ukrainian grain exports from ports on the black sea. they had been blocked by russia, following the military invasion. russian exports will also be guaranteed safe passage. the european commission has launched fresh legal action against the uk. it says there is a failure to comply with the post brexit trading arrangements for northern ireland. there are warnings that the the gridlock around the english channel port of dover could get worse over the weekend. officials declared a critical incidents today. i ll be back later with a full round up of the day s news. but first, with all the week s political news, here s newscast.