sean. high school police departmet is slamming a student and the video is shocking and the impact that ll have on elections. first, the white house is trying to back away from president biden s end of the world rhetoric as biden ran from reporter s questions about the comments on friday. he told democrat fundraiser think about it. we have not faced the prospect of armageddon since kennedy and the cuban missile crisis and said putin is not joking when talking about potential of tactical and nuclear weapons. those were a hot topic today on the sunday s shows from a former chairman of joint chiefs of staff to trump s former secretary of state. biden s rhetoric is being called wreck less. you re about at the top of the language scale if you will and we need to back off that a little bit. what he told putin by saying armageddon, you strengthened putin and gave him confidence to think that biden s scared. those comments were reckless and i think that even more importan
forward to make that closing pitch on the economy next hour. he s expected to sharpen attacks on republicans and their economic plans. the president is celebrating new economic numbers released earlier today. great economic report today. the gdp report, things are looking good. the key economic reports show the u.s. economy grew in the third quarter after two quarters of decline. he was excited about that report. he also acknowledged that more work needs to be done to address inflation. the federal reserve has raised interest rates five times so far this year in attempts to combat inflation. the gdp report tells us we re not in a recession right now, but what more did we learn? we learned that the u.s. economy grew at a rate of 2.6%. that was higher than most were expecting. the expectation was 2.3, 2.4%. some of the largest contributors were things like net exports. we americans just didn t buy as much things from overseas, from outside of the u.s. that helped on the
let s welcome tonight s guest. readers get so lost in his books , his publisher includes at map. writer in literary critic walte kerr. she is so bright that daylight savings times since he hate mail. here in paris need. he gets in bed while you re still at work and he s always gone before you get home. cohost of fox and friends. she keeps yourself so thin so she can slip through the bars over holding cell. a fox news contributor kat timpf . so exhausted. it has been another great weeks of shows thanks to new creams and ointments i ve been using that allow me to sit comfortably . thanks, larry, but it s been seven days since my favorite segment so let s go do it right now, shelley? greg s leftovers. it is time once again for leftovers were i read the jokes we didn t use this week in as always it s my first time reading them. if they suck, it s not my fault. but if they are great, it s all me because that s how it works great if you don t like it, get your own show. don t
decent jobs report but don t tell that to big tech companies planning lay offs. gallup says 98% of americans are concerned of the economy, so why are democratic denials still a thing? some blue states white house already vowed to put the fossil fuels industry out of business. the president may change his tune after the midterm. but, with the midterms now being counted down and we begin with team coverage. kekevin keke corke on how big companies are trying to avoid red inc. with pink script. jeff, good evening. trace, three days away, the president is spending the last weekend before midterms in illinois from one blue state to another. here is what president biden had to say while leaving california. we are going to win this time around. i feel good about our chances. i have not been in all the house s races. i think we ll keep a senate and pick up a seat. i think we ll have a chance to win in the house. i am optimistic. i really am. the president will deliver remarks
there s been turmoil in british markets since the government announced unfunded tax cuts three weeks. it s 4:30. good morning. now on bbc news, hardtalk. welcome to hardtalk. i m stephen sackur. last month, president biden told americans the covid pandemic was over. a striking statement, given that us covid deaths are still running at an average of close to 400 a day. the overall covid death toll in the states has topped 1 million. on many measures, america s pandemic performance has been relatively poor. my guest is the soon to retire chief medical adviser to president biden, dr anthony fauci, the scientist at the centre of america s covid storm. what lessons has he learned? dr anthony fauci in bethesda, maryland, welcome to hardtalk. thank you. it s good to be with you. it s great to have you on the show. now, let s start with that big statement by president biden. the pandemic is over, he declared. do you agree with that view? well, certainly, if you re talking about the