life and legacy of the home run king. terrance moore, thank you very much for being on today. that wraps us up for this hour. jose diaz balart picks up msnbc s live coverage right now. and good morning. 10:00 a.m. eastern, 7:00 a.m. pacific. i m jose diaz balart. we have breaking news. we got word president biden will be delivering a speech tonight in washington d.c. nbc news chief white house correspondent kristen welker joins me with that. what do we know about this? jose, according to sources familiar with the president s plans tonight, he is going to deliver those remarks at 7:00 p.m. eastern at union station here in the nation s capitol and the focus is going to be democracy. we have heard him say this. he was at a campaign event in florida yesterday where he said democracy is on the ballot. now, in a release from the dnc, they previewed this by saying the president will address the threat of election deniers and those who seek to undermine faith in voting and democ
canadian calls for a safety zone. police urged people in indigenous canadian police urged people in indigenous communities to stay indoors as the man hunt continues for one of two suspects following a mass stabbing. no more pcr tests for international visitors to japan from today. but is it enough to encourage overseas tourists back? we ll talk to a tour operator. live from our studio in singapore. this is live from our studio in singapore. this is bbc live from our studio in singapore. this is bbc news. live from our studio in singapore. this is bbc news. it s live from our studio in singapore. this is bbc news. it s newsday. l welcome to bbc news broadcasting to viewers in the uk and around the world. it s six in the morning here in singapore, and ”pm in london where the new british prime minister liz truss has moved into downing street, having accepted the queen s invitation to form a government. and she s already made some key cabinet appointments. in her first sp
for a surviving suspect following a mass stabbing, which claimed 11 lives. hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are sam lister, political editor of the daily express, and rachel shabi, journalist and author. the appointment of the prime minister dominates the front pages. the metro quotes liz truss, saying britain can ride out the storm. the ft focus is on her plan to guide britain out of what it calls the energy storm. the express says that plan is likely to involve freezing bills at two and a half thousand pounds. the i warns the plan will have to be paid for by the energy consumers or by pack tears taxpayers. the garden uses the image of a storm and says the reshuffle has been brutal the guardian. in the telegraph says the new cabinet, including therese coffey as deputy pm, as most diverse in history. and the sun pictures the meeting between liz truss and the queen, with both saying, hello, liz. and hello to y
powell tries to force down inflation. let s get right to it. joining me now is full disclosure host, robin, have we gotten the number yet? lass it come out? or are we still waiting? still waiting for it to come out. we re waiting, all right. another 75. 75 basis points. what is that going to mean? i got it tell you, i got a song in my heart, special thanks to the bee gees. because we re dealing with the cpi that s still high and the fed will have to hike which we just won t like la la, la, la. and did i just destroy my career? i loved every moment of it. oh, the title is called how deep is this inflation? i really want to know. and that s the question on everybody s mind. are we going to go to 5%? 6, 7%? how deep is the buying power and consumer demand in this economy that we have to snuff out and i don t think mr. powell knows. we have it official. three quarters of a point. 75 basis points. i was talking to steve retner today about when the bottom is and whe
in the next hour, before conservative mps go into that committee room, and place their votes in a secret ballot we will be talking to some of them in the run up. good afternoon. the prime minister borisjohnson has addressed conservative mps to try and convince them to back him in a vote of confidence this evening. in an hours time, tory mps will start voting on whether they want mrjohnson to be replaced. he s been under increasing pressure following the publication of a report which looked into parties at downing street which broke covid rules. a vote of confidence was triggered after some conservative mps handed in letters calling on the pm to resign to sir graham brady, the chairman of an influential group of backbench mps, called the 1922 committee. for a vote to be held, at least 15% of conservative mps need to write a letter that works out at 5a. let s cross straight to college green in westminster now and my colleague victoria derbyshire: it s been a dramatic day and it