he was rediscovered, wasn t he, in a car park? under the r. yeah! crazy! amazing, innit? amazing. and, of course, there are fans of richard iii who s a bit furious with shakespeare because how we imagine richard iii existed and the way he lived his life is entirely defined by shakespeare s version of it, which was entirely theatrical, and which shakespeare used for his own purposes, so yes, he is part of the weft of our cultural life. whatever the historical truth may be, shakespeare has made of richard an unscrupulous murderer, twisted in mind and body, relentless in his ambition to gain the crown of england, destroying all who stand in his way. darest thou resolve to kill.? there s so many words that he coined for the first time and, you know, things that we say every day which that. like what? neither a borrower nor a lender be, you know?
refineryjust in the russian side. this is what happens, this war has been going on for 15 months. although we focus on specific things like an attack in moscow or maybe the battle in bakhmut, there is a calamity plus front line wet night after night there is shelling on either side. this is the what and weft of normal warfare, but as you say, for once we had a relatively quiet night. say, for once we had a relatively quiet night- say, for once we had a relatively quiet night. james, good to hear, thank ou quiet night. james, good to hear, thank you very quiet night. james, good to hear, thank you very much quiet night. james, good to hear, thank you very much indeed. - parents on universal credit will be able to claim hundreds of pounds more, to cover childcare costs from the end ofjune. the government says anyone receiving the benefit will be able to claim back £951 for one child and £1,630 for two or more children that s a 47% increase. the scheme applies across england, sco
so often done. it looked to house democrats to govern and to lead, and under the leadership of weft greatest speaker in the country s history, nancy del asand rho pelosi, and that s what we did. if we want to talk about history, let s talk about recent history. two years ago tomorrow i stood here with so many of you in this chamber, as our democracy was attacked. as you re colleagues on the other side of the aisle tried to overturn an election. the country yet again did what it has done before. it looked to house democrats to lead and to govern. that is exactly what we did when
witnesses, that would mean we have to stop what we re doing to then work with the department of justice. we will eventually cooperate with them. we have five more hearings to work through. weft a lot of other things to do. we have excellent staff, but we can t stop our work because someone writes us a letter. i want to bring in nbc s ken dylanian, and garrett haake on the ill, and kevin kirshner. grads to see all of you have, look, glenn, let s talk about this letter. the doj is pretty adamant it needs the committee s cooperation. in fact, they called it critical. what is your take on this? why did they write the letter? chris, they re presenting the case to a grand jury. they even say in there there s undoubtedly lots of overlap between the witnesses being presented to the grand jury and
panic. very notably he did not necessarily say he agrees from president biden s assessment yesterday that president putin has decided to go in. he also seemed to question the american intelligence about putin s intent. he s saying if the u.s. and others are so certain that putin is going to invade ukraine, why not impose these sanctions today? so, boris and amara, i don t necessarily want to there is certainly a level of concern here. there s a real level of worry, especially in a town liar mariupol, so closed to the fighting that s been going on for years. so that sense of calm that clearly president zelensky prioritizes, that is what weft for now. clearly the fact that he is presenting that calm confidently, as you re saying, is working, and it s important, as you heard him say, this is