great show as always. awesome audience. i am laura ingraham and this is the ingraham angle from washington. thanks for joining us. biden surrenders. that is the focus of tonight s angle. this month americans cannot turn around without seeing a very colorful flag. it is everywhere. you see it in stores, at hotels, on clothing. of course it is being pushed by celebrities. it is even hanging prominently at the white house. but there is a flag that far better represents where we are heading as a country right now. although it s a lot less flashy. you see it there. given bidens groveling approach to china our single greatest adversary, the white house might as well raise it at this point. there are so many obvious reasons why america needs to begin decoupling from china. it is insane when you think about it that we ever allowed manufacturing and the production of things like prescription drugs, medical devices, critical electronics and other critical parts to be controlled by
flights have already been cancelled and schools closed, as heavy rain and strong winds begin battering the south of the country. hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are the journalist and broadcasterjenny kleeman, and natasha clark, chief political correspondent of the sun. tomorrow s front pages. there s no surprise about the story dominating the front pages. liz puts her foot on the gas is the headline in the sun, saying the new pm s first major move will be to freeze energy bills for homes and businesses. the mail goes with cometh the hour, cometh the woman with a reminder that liz truss is the third conservative female prime minister. the telegraph believes the freeze in energy bills could last for two years, and says the announcement could come as early as thursday. the ft says the total package to be announced on energy could end up costing £100 billion. the metro goes with liz: i will deliver , quoting
Chris Hayes discusses the days top news. Deliberating three days after this. I think its very sad what theyve done to paul manafort. Thank you very much. When all in starts right now. Good evening from new york, im chris hayes. The president appears to be terrified he has a quote rat in his midst. Inside the white house. That i should be clear, thats his word. Rat. Its not the kind of language we are used to hearing from the president of the United States who is, of course, entrusted by our constitution when suring the nations laws are faithfully executed and who is responsible for appointing our most senior Law Enforcement officers. Youd expect to hear that word in a very different context. Your uncle was a rat. Sit down, sit down. Your uncle was a rat and now hes in the witness protection program. Thats my fathers brother youre talking about. Now the president is assuring
the country not that he has obeyed and upheld the law but that he does not hire snitchs. Tweeting the naming Nort
Chris Hayes discusses the days top news. So im going to be a little contrary here, chris, say i see where the president is coming from when he says this is a bit old news, my colleague, bob costa and i wrote in november when don mcgahn went before bob muellers interview team, sat down with verdicts two days straight so people have known for a long time that don mcgahn was cooperating with the investigation, that everyone who was in the white house was encouraged to voluntarily be engaged in these interviews. Now what we do know now is that after the week stories, by the times don mcgahns attorney has alerted and assured trumps own legal team that don mcgahn provided no information that was incriminating to the president , did not incriminate him. In fact, don mcgahns lawyer was putting tear mind to ease, sent them information saying my guy does not incriminate your guy. Are you serving the office of the presidency and you are serving the american public. Youve got to balance those two
there comes another now overhead, pretty well on schedule. but of course, this is at a time when the it problem has only just occurred and many of these flights were already in uk airspace. they may have been circling overhead for the last 30 minutes or so in some cases, but it s the flights that are yet to depart from destinations abroad that are going to be most affected by the problems. i see. and what about the timing of all this for the the implications of the wider industry? well, of course, this comes about three months after the last major it error affecting uk airports, which involved border gates, the egate system that went down for several hours. and this is yet another sign of the rather creaking uk infrastructure that s in place around our aviation system, whether it s egates on the ground or whether it is these it systems affecting flights going in and out of the uk.