ping up goodbye to one area another one will ping up out of nowhere to move back across the uk. it is that repeating pattern we will see over the next few days and it s exactly why the weather is this damage was all so preventable. this programme continues on bbc one. for sexually explicit pictures. tonight, lawyers for the individual say the claims in the newspaper are rubbish . the bbc has been on the back foot for days, the sun is standing by its story, the high profile star remains unamed officially, and we don t know how the young person at the heart of this story is. where does all this leave the corporation and its bosses a question we have asked before in recent months and years, surely they have learned from previous scandals? tonight we ll talk to alison hastings, former chair of the bbc s editorial standards committee who s dealt with a number of bbc scandals, and top agentjonathan shallit. also tonight, as temperature records are broken around the world, we ll
three liberal judges argues it is unconscionable and unconstitutional to punish people for being homeless. homelessness and poverty is dangerous. it does not work and it will not stand in los angeles county. we cannot arrest our way out of homelessness and these kinds of actions actually exasperate homelessness. we know what the solutions are. people need affordable housing. the bottom line is some cities will ban outdoor camping. others will not. back to you, bret. bret: okay, william. thank you. dana: here we go. make or break time for former president donald trump at the supreme court. any moment now the justices are set to rule on presidential immunity. this is a blockbuster decision that could reshape the political landscape this year and beyond. welcome to a brand-new hour of america s newsroom, i m dana perino. good morning, bret. bret: i m bret baier in for bill hemmer. this case could have a major impact on special counsel jack smith east prosecution on
that could be letting light in and heating things up. then there s shipping. new fuel regulations have recently brought down emissions of sulphur dioxide by around 10%. but while that pollutant can impact people s health in the atmosphere it also reflects sunlight and helps form clouds. some researchers suggest the sudden drop could also be playing a role in these record temperatures. despite all these short term issues, scientists still think climate change is playing a significant role. fast analysis by the non profit climate central has found current heatwaves in the us and china were made at least five times more likely by our warming world. and that weather has consequences. a new paper out today found heat waves across europe caused more than 61,000 heat attributable deaths last summer. almost 3,500 were in the uk. these latest trends have scientists worried. we are very much out of the climate that we were used to and our