promise you, i haven t felt so good today, i m telling you, i feel like i have to toast you. i feel a little bit bad tonight because what is america going to do without the most scintillating 30 seconds of tv every single night with you and me? i don t know how they are going to sean: let me just say this. laura and i have a plan, we ve discussed, and you ll learn more about it in the weeks to come. we ve known each other for 30 years. and this will not be the last time we re on the air together. i ll put it that way. laura: you bet. i can t wait. sean: congrats on your new time slot and i look forward to seeing you soon. laura: all right, sean, take care. thank you, i m laura ingraham and this is the angle tonight with some breaking news. president biden has just order $3 reservists to be ready for european deployment 3,000 reserveists. this doesn t suggest our military s training mission in europe will change but along with the deployment of several brigades a
you. and to all of you at home, we have a great rowdy crowd. hannity, our live audience, the only normal people in new york city. tonight many on the left are lashing out at the biden administration. in fact, one host is outraged that white house staffers are not doing enough to make joe look younger and more competent, and prevent him from falling down so often. he just needs a little help getting on and off the stage and calling on reporters and remember talking points, and remembering actually where he is and who he s talking to and every other day-to-day activity and not fall down. by the way, we may be one fall away from the democratic party pushing him right the heck out of the way. anyway, we ve got that tape straight ahead. also, we have more from john kerry. he had a big temper tantrum. he s now very angry that his deeply hypocritical private jet use is now being called into question but first breaking tonight, after only 11 days, secret service has now officially en
also tonight, after the hottest days on record, has climate change already reached a tipping point? the meteorologist who left local news after his climate coverage led to a death threat joins me tonight. and america s economy is red hot. jobs and wages are growing. inflation is easing. so why isn t joe biden more popular? but we begin tonight with a crisis that is impossible to ignore. i often start this show with the most recent to solve on american democracy at the hands of the modern republican party or the supreme court, but tonight i want to talk to you about a different type of existential threat. y all know it s hot. some of you in arizona spent the day trying to avoid 115 degree heat. next week, it might hit 120. earlier this week, i shared some really terrifying news. some scientists believed that july 4th of this year may have been one of the hottest days on earth in 125,000 years. guess what. we keep breaking those records. new york s temperature set a record
advanced knowledge of yevgeny prigozhin s plans to revolt. he is suspected of helping plan the events of last weekend. officials say there are also signs of other russian generals may have supported the rebellion which raises questions about putin s support inside the top ranks. meanwhile vladimir putin is attempting to portray himself as retaining popular support. you can see him there greeting crowds in a rare public appearance wednesday. he flew to the majority muslim city to mark the holiday where he took a tour, kissed fans and posed for selfies. he is also expected to deliver remarks in about an hour. clare sebastian is live in london with more for us. reporter: this is sort of a pr tour. kremlin trying to reassert his authority. he made public remarks, he commemorated the air force pilots killed in prigozhin s armed rebellion. and today speaking at a tech digital conference. but the visit really unusual. this is un-putin-like behavior. having actual human contact, a
the england and wales cricket board has apologised and admits the sport needs a reset after a report found racism, sexism and elitism are widespread. the independent commission for equity in cricket has spent the last two years, getting evidence from more than 4,000 people. bosses from tesco, sainsbury s, asda and morrisons will be questioned by mps about high prices in supermarkets. the british retail consortium says food price rises eased slightly again this month.restrictions on price promotions for unhealthy foods are going to be introduced in wales. the laws which are expected to come into force in 2025 would also see rules on where high sugar, salt and fat foods are placed in shops. the aim is to tackle obesity and diabetes. a charity says the cost of school uniforms is still a big issue, despite rules aimed at keeping prices down. the children s society found parents spent on average £422 a year on secondary and £287 on primary uniforms. the government says it wa