just to be clear, rhun ap iorwerth has no prior knowledge of the questions tonight. let s turn to the first question. abigail ensor. faith in politics is at an all time low, what are you going to do . to restore our trust in politicians? ifi if i can come a bit closer to you, thank you for the question. to me, it cuts to the heart of why we are here. we are asking you to consider voting for us and i think it is a basic premise that you should be able to trust what we are saying. we can look at it in terms of policy. you might have seen reports today, the institute for fiscal studies raising questions about how honest the labour party and the conservatives are being whether tax and spending plans, that they are not really telling you how they are going to go about saving these £18 billion that both parties say, implicitly, they have to make. we want honesty, and hopefully this evening we will get to talk about some of plaid cymru and my views on that. also, it is in behaviour
those are some of the world s largest economies. deutsche bank research crunch to the data. nvidia has enjoyed a meteoric rise, adding a full $1 trillion in market cap injust about a month this spring. the firm has been capitalising on the fever around artificial intelligence. the chips made by the company are used to power the company are used to power the ai applications that are in use and in development now and companies are betting they ll be instrumental in the future. shares of nvidia are up around 170% this year. over 70 million people in the us are under heat alerts this week, with extreme temperatures as high as 41 celsius forecast in some areas. scientists say many extreme weather events are becoming more frequent and intense as a result of climate change and it s coming at a cost not just to human lives, but also to businesses. i have been speaking with professor illan noy, who suggests that climate change could be costing the world around $16 million per hour
netanyahu that fighting against hamas in rafah will not stop, but mr netanyahu reportedly called the move unacceptable . he is under strong pressure from far right members of his coalition government to reject any pauses in the conflict until hamas is totally defeated. in a sign of further tension between the israeli army and those far right parties, the army s chief of staff said sunday there is a clear need to conscript ultra orthodox jewish israelis, who are currently exempt from military service. that s a change mr netanyahu s coalition partners firmly oppose. sunday marks the festival of eid al adha, one of islam s holiest days. there was a notable lull in fighting, with gaza s hamas run civil defence agency telling the afp news agency that, quote, calm has prevailed across all of gaza . lucy williamson reports from jerusalem. allahu akbar. in gaza, they stood to pray in places with little else left standing. the festival after eid al adha, marking another milestone