about 1/10 of 1%, and anyway thank you. we begin with president biden brushing off august inflation report insisting the economy is still strong despite high prices hammering families nationwide. hello, happy wednesday. john roberts in washington. hi, sandra. sandra: sandra smith in new york. comments after the dow plunged 1200 points in yesterday s trading session following the higher than expected inflation number, and it does mark the worst day on wall street since covid shutdowns began june 2020. john: biden is back on the road in the motor city of detroit celebrating millions in spending on electric vehicles. sandra: not everyone is praising the move. ford confirms thousands of layoffs in its shift to go electric. john: we have team coverage, in new hampshire after a couple big primary races there, winner of one, and peter doocy is live on the north lawn to kick us off. peter. peter: and ahead of some remarks by president biden promoting electric vehicles,
h.w. bush and everybody gathers and has a moment. that s what we re watching here. the queen s coffin will lie in rest at st. giles. bill: the quoen s coffin will then be flown to london and she will lie in house of parliament. dana: president biden accepted an invitation to the funeral. the first lady will join him. they remember her more than a monarch. bill: king charles iii arriving in scotland after addressing parliament on sunday for the first time since his mother s passing. he pledged to follow her example of selfless duty as lawmakers offered up condolences. dana: this is the moment everyone is talking about. princes william and harry making a rare joint appearance. they and their wives greeted mourners outside windsor castle and harry made his first statement on his grandmother s death. jonathan hunt has more from buckingham palace. good morning to both of you. we are in the heart of another historic and hectic day here in the u.k. it began with king charl
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We asked the candidates in New Hampshire's 1st Congressional District, U.S. Rep. Chris Pappas and Republican challenger Karoline Leavitt, what can immediately b.
the president was took too long to really begin to tackle inflation. and i think we still have work to do on lowering energy costs. i think it is important in the inflation reduction act we stood up to big oil and giving tax cuts the families who invest in energy efficiency in their homes and pivoting away from our dependence on big and foreign oil to a green energy economy. bill: she is not the only one. democrats at new hampshire congressional district 1 are seeing a similar thing. it s a contradictory message. the first the president took too long to focus on inflation. the inflation reduction act, what is it? $307 billion to push american towards more expensive forms of energy. you will see as people start to see the price of this climate mania, it is not an inflation reducer. she mentioned the incentives.