that s what the market responded to. finishing up 260 points or may be right around that area. you know, but the federal reserve peels back the onions on this. and a look at core inflation, that s without food and energy prices and what we are seeing is that it s basically moving sideways on this. you can see for the past two months core inflation at 4.7% and this month at 4.6% year-over-year shows experts as sticking inflation more sticky than first thought by the federal reserve. and this is what people feel every day at the store, the latest fox news polling shows 70% of people rate the economy as poor and only fair. only 21% see it as excellent and good. abysmal numbers. paul, christopher from wells fargo says we are looking at in economic rocky road ahead. you have inflation still sticky that is going to keep cost of production higher, we just hire and at the same time spending last. this is going to hit revenue squeezing profits from both sides in the market is not ex
from washington. really good news for the british diplomats an their families. reporter: absolutely. what we ve been hearing is this was a very complex situation with not a whole lot of time to plan but that planning was very intensive, pentagon officials say. they describe the operation as fast and clean. say it was conducted in one movement with service members spending less than an hour on the ground. so under 100 u.s. government personnel were removed from sudan s capital city by way of three helicopters. again, officials say that this was about a week of planning as they saw chaos erupting in sudan. president biden thanked the unmatched skill of service members of getting the this this completed. they confirmed the operations at the u.s. embassy have been temporarily suspended. the president added that this has cost the lives of hundreds of civilians and it must stop. sudan entered the second week of violence as the army and paramilitary group battle for control of the
down. it is now falling from the sky. bill: that was an incredible moment only seen live on this channel from over the weekend. american f22 shooting down the chinese spy craft off the carolina coast. the air ship dead in the water. political fallout has just begun. hope you had a great weekend. monday, bill hemmer. nice to see you. dana: a good catch-up already. we ll fill you in as we go along. i m dana perino and america s newsroom. remarkable over the weekend. president biden s decision to shoot down the spy flight drawing a heated response from china. beijing saying it is an overreaction and threatening to retaliation. they insist it was a machine used to track the wets. the pentagon says that s not true. the unmanned aircraft came from mainland china. first defected january 28th over alaska. made its way through canada crossing into northern idaho on the 31st when the white house says the president was first briefed on it and gave the order to shoot it down when
continuing concerns over inflation. how do those two square? we ll have much more on that in just a moment. plus happening right now, an investigation underway in arizona after the democratic candidate for governor katie hobbs said someone broke into her campaign headquarters. kyung lah is following this for us in phoenix. and more on the break-in. and police say there were some items taken. what more are we learning about this break-in and also what was taken from the office? reporter: well the campaign is still trying to sort exactly what was taken. they have to inventory everything and figure out what sensitive material was or was not taken in this break-in. there has been a police report filed and they are looking for someone. the campaign did manage to capt a capture someone who they think did this on their security cameras. we were able to obtain the still images from the security footage which has been handed over to police. as police try to figure out exactly who di
we want to get to the september jobs report. the unemployment rate dropped to 3.5%. what does this mean for future interest rate hikes? meanwhile, the markets are reacting, the dow down around 400 points and it comes as americans face a convergence of economic pressures from rising prices at the gas pump, rent and mortgage rates up, and inflation burning a hole in our wallets. we could hear from president biden as he heads to maryland. we ll watch to see if he stops to comment on this report. with me now brian cheung, josh letterman, also joins us, host of public radio s full disclosure and politico chief chief correspondent. the biggest jobs gains were in leisure, hospitality, health care. i think the big takeway is that the labor market still appears to be chugging along. americans have options out there. with the unemployment rate a 3.5%, by the way, multidecade lows on that front, you re not seeing the traditional recessionary dynamics in this labor market where you