removed 89 policies from two previous administrations. bill: congressional correspondent watching that starts us off and sets the table on capitol hill for this. good morning. good morning to you both. we won t actually see or hear from secretary alejandro mayorkas, we are expecting this hearing to be pretty fiery especially between democrats and republicans as pretty much every lawmaker knows where these hearings are going. we will hear and see from chad wolf, of course, the former acting d.h.s. secretary under former president trump. he s expected to compare and contrast president biden s border policies with that of former president trump saying that this is really just a crisis by design. now, there has been a lot of impeachment talk in these hallways as of late and last week, represent clay higgins actually became the latest republican to introduce articles of impeachment against mayorkas. but it s pretty unclear. you have some republicans out there who are not convi
of opposing demonstrators. mr trump is now on his way to newjersey to address his supporters. our reporter helena humphrey has more from outside the courthouse in miami. well, monica, if you take a look behind me outside the federal courthouse in miami, you ll see a quieter scene than those that you probably see all day where we had trump supporters outnumbering those who oppose him at times some kind of tense moments between them. but now a much quieter scene, just a few straggling protesters. one man who had a make america great again flag over his shoulder, shouting to tell me, and of course, this is florida. it s a red state. it s a state that has voted in favour of president trump on two occasions. but thankfully, no violent scenes, really some chaos, but no violent scenes that some people have been concerned about based on some rhetoric and corners of the internetm and nothing like the 50,000 people either that authorities had been bracing for. but despite that, still
days. we have new video to show you, bakhmut getting absolutely pummeled in shelling. this shows the devastating toll the war has taken on this city in particular the past year. this as ukraine prepares for the counteroffensive to try to reclaim occupied land. sam kiley joins us from eastern ukraine. sam, good morning. reporter: hey, poppy. what can you tell us? reporter: oh, sorry. there is a rather heavy wind condition here, so difficult to pick you up. but i think the main thaing to take away from this latest wave of attack by cruise missiles, surface-to-surface missiles, the full pan alpy of missile technology fired by the russians is once again they are trying to soak up the air defenses of the ukrainians and expose vulner blts such as they could find in ke kyiv. 30 miles an hour filed, 29 the ukrainians claim to have shot down 29 out of 30. either a missile or debris of a missile hit the southern port city of odessa killing one person. three people were killed the
switching from the kuna to the euro. nationalist parties wanted to keep the kuna, but were overruled by the constitutional court. now on bbc news it s click. this week, we are celebrating 100 years of the bbc in 23 minutes. we will look at the secrets behind the broadcasting technologies that changed the world. a radio legend talks about legendary radio. i used to set my watch by the pips. my favourite pip is always the last one. lara watches tv with friends. i guess the idea is we re not actually meant to be in the same place. and in the quest for greener energy, omar discovers a tasteless fluid called water. it goes in your mouth and then disappears? today we are literally stepping into history. we are at alexandra palace and this place has seen it all. that s the studio in there. 2022 marks 100 years of the bbc. goodness me. what began with a single radio transmission has transformed into a global broadcaster. in that time, it has covered the biggest events of successive