Nice to see you. How are you doing . Hows the family . Im good. My pleasure. Hi sara. I like your tshirt. Excuse me. Hi. How are you . Its nice to see you. Thats how we knew you were here. Its so nice to see you. Wow. We want to shake your hand. Some old friends of mine up in sandwich. Center harborside. Old friends of mine in sandwich where i spent last night. Family ive been for 40 years. Familyhave an extended here. Youre welcome to stay at my house anytime. Hi, everybody. I am the Laconia Democratic Party chair and delicate delegate at large. My story began in 2007. I moved to the state of New Hampshire as a homeless youth. Life was tough at the time. I came here, graduated from night school. Ran for office at a really young age. I was told i was too young to candidate and a run by 46 votes in a city that was all republican. Only hispanic in the same kstate to be elected until two years ago, while we have a few representatives in our state house. I am going to quote the governor, h
On cspan. Former Massachusetts Governor Duval Patrick spoke at a town hall in laconia, New Hampshire. Topics included Economic Growth and combating the nations opioid epidemic. A pleasure. Nice to meet you. Nice to see you. How are you doing . Hows the family . Im good. Im good. My pleasure. John, nice to see you. I like your tshirt. Im so sorry. Excuse me. Hi. How are you . Its nice to see you. Thats how we knew you were here. Its so nice to see you. Wow. We want to shake your hand. Some old friends of mine up in sandwich. Center harborside. Old friends of mine in sandwich where i spent last night. Family ive been for 40 years. Familyhave an extended here. Youre welcome to stay at my house anytime. Hi, everybody. I am the Laconia Democratic Party chair and delicate delegate at large. My story began in 2007. I moved to the state of New Hampshire as a homeless youth. Life was tough at the time. I came here, graduated from night school. Ran for office at a really young age. I was told i
The house floor. Watch live coverage of house rules, tuesday at 11 00 a. M. Eastern on cspan3. Watch online or listen live with the free cspan radio app. Next, former chicago mayor rahm emanuel and amazon Senior Vice President talk about Workforce Development issues. From the annual wall street journal ceo council meeting, this is 30 minutes. Rahm emanuel was the mayor of chicago between 2011 and 2019, also former white house chief of staff. They will be interviewed by my colleague who see at her editor live journalism as the wall street journal. Please welcome them. [applause] to do a couple of case studies and we have a short amount of time. Quickly, lets bring everybody up to speed. First, most people here, the headlines about the 700 mu dollars amazon plans to spend in the next few years. Give us a quick overview on how that works. 700 million, 100 thousand workers over the next six years. Its an aggregation of different upscaling programs. Our frontline workers, we give them a pro
Carol and a different type of crisis that asks if homelessness is a crime. Jason all of that and more. But first, our top story this week. Natos 70th turned out to be less of a Birthday Party and more like a thanksgiving dinner for a big, dysfunctional family. Carol thats right. Not all of them got along. A few snide remarks were made, but in the end, everyone seemed to accept they were stuck with each other. Thats according to mark champion, who covered the summit outside london. Lets talk about nato and what a week it was. Mark it was. I mean, the buildup was pretty extraordinary. This was supposed to be a celebration. It wasnt a real summit. They do that every two to three years. This one, they felt they had to do because it was the 70th. They kept it really short because they specifically didnt want to create a big target for unscripted problems with president trump, which theyve had before. So, and then all of a sudden, in the weeks before, you had the french president macron comi
Im a long time resident of district 5, i to california in 1947, and i watched all the things that have happened over the years. Met anyone who cared so much to pick up the garbage, to pick up the people, try to find places for people to live, try to help all of us to develop new relationships and understanding here in our district. And i would like, again, to thank you so very much for what you have done. I want to say, im with you all on the city college. But i came here to talk about the Reparations Initiative. And i also came here to not necessarily talk about racism and those type of things, but to talk about acknowledgement and being overlooked. Most of the time when black people are hired, you know, except for franklin, most of the time when black people are its about us struggling against something and fighting some oppression, but you never acknowledge this, and i understand the city, you never acknowledge this for our contribution. We actually contributed to the fabric of this