Record Q1 2023 Total Gross Fundings of $476.2 Million
Record Q1 2023 Total Investment Income of $105.1 Million, an Increase of 61.3% Year-over-Year
Record Q1 2023 Net Investment Income. | May 4, 2023
comprehensive censorship effort and we are learning about these other grants and fundings. that has to be investigated but the democrats are resisting every effort to disclose the censorship programs. christina: free speech and first amendment, this shouldn t be a partisan issue, hopefully everybody can understand and appreciate the importance of journalists allowed to investigate and report on important information, that should not be a partisan issue. thank you so much, we really appreciate having you on. also, a new article published in the hill post decency politics, house democrats use a hearing to attack free speech and a free press. jonathan turley, thank you. coming up, more catastrophic flooding here in california. a report from one of the hardest hit parts of the state over really for months of bad weather when we return.
of over last year, 300 more border agents, but that certainly not enough. we need to build on what the trump administration did in terms of shining a light on the border and build on some of the successes we saw during that time. i am a democrat on this panel saying some of the things that the administration, previous to administration did that you were a part of were critically important. we need to build on that and hope that republicans need us at that border with president biden and pushing for increasing fundings to dhs and border patrol. kayleigh: s, michelle, what do you think the administration should do this? if somebody was vacationing abroad and say middle eastern country i assume we would take some level of action. i m not suggesting militarily, but michael wall saying i m not saying u.s. military, i m saying drones for instance, there is other technology we could use if we use the military to assist. michelle: there is so much more that can be done, i appreciate that e
and a lot of the criticism is, look, these people are doing what is a very difficult and at times demanding job could just as easily go into retail, could go work for amazon, jobs like that. if we paid people more in those jobs, would that solve the problem? it certainly would help with the problem. the social care workforce reduced for the first time last year. 50,000 people left the sector, so it is 50,000 people smaller than last year, despite an ageing population and more people needing social care. so there is a huge workforce crisis in the social care sector. and pay has to be part of it. it won t be everything about recruitment retention, but if people can leave the social care sector to go work in pretty much any other sector and get paid more, particular with the cost of living crisis, it is understandable that people want to do that. so, sally, is some of this historical? because we ve had the nhs and social care as two very different systems in the uk, from the creation of t