and h totally get that. but in another blow to the prime minister, the conservative party chairman resigned straight after the by election results saying someone must take responsibilty. the labour leader sir keir starmer says the tories are imploding . with the prime minister out of the country in rwanda, we ll be asking if this is a moment of political peril for borisjohnson. also this lunchtime: ukrainain troops ordered to retreat from the key eastern city of severodonetsk. figures just out show another big rise in the number of covid infections in the uk 1.7 million people had the virus last week. and welcome back to worthy farm after three years, it s the long awaited return of glastonbury. coming up on the bbc news channel can emma raducanu repeat her us open championship exploits at wimbledon? she ll face belgian alison van uytvanck in the first round. hello, good afternoon. borisjohnson says he will keep going as prime minister, despite the double blow of l
with this decision, the conservative majority of the supreme court shows how extreme it is, how far removed they are from the majority of this country. they made the united states an outlier among developed nations in the world. but this decision must not be the final word. my administration will use all of its appropriate lawful powers, but congress must act. if you vote, you can act. you can have the final word. this is not over. thank you very much. i ve more to say on this in weeks to come. thank you. reporters: mr president. president biden there speaking to the american people. hello and welcome to sportsday. hello there. this is your update from the bbc sport centre. england have made hard work for themselves in their response to new zealand s first innings total, after an early batting collapse, with all top four out in single figures. joe wilson reports. these are the crazy test match times when the state of play seems to change by the second. a landmark day forjack
affronts to everything we stand for is russia s invasion of ukraine and hughton s blockade of the ports that would otherwise be shipping food to the world s paris people. vladimir putin. at this moment, nearly 25 million tonnes of corn and wheat is piled up in silos across ukraine, held hostage by russia. britain supports the united nations plan to get that food out and we will invest over £370 million in global food security this year including £130 million for the world food programme. we want to work alongside our commonwealth friends to understand your needs, your priorities, and to deliverjoint solutions to a crisis that president putin has deliberately engineered. for now, it only remains for me to thank every commonwealth member for having given the united kingdom the chance to serve as during office and as i pass on this responsibility to the president, a close friend and partner, i know that he shares my boundless optimism about the future of the commonwealth at
form it wilt way, and it s unclear exactly what form it will take, but the concern that s form it will take, but the concern that s presented in this report is that s presented in this report is that this will simply water and is essentially a move backwards. what is essentially a move backwards. what do is essentially a move backwards. what do you make of it, and? natasha. what do you make of it, and? natasha. , ., ., ., natasha. it s worth noting how we ve not to this natasha. it s worth noting how we ve got to this point- natasha. it s worth noting how we ve got to this point. let s natasha. it s worth noting how we ve got to this point. let s think - natasha. it s worth noting how we ve got to this point. let s think back- got to this point. let s think back to rwanda decision we had about a week ago. british courts essentially decided that the plan, as far as they could see, should go ahead and was effectively legal in their eyes, and they didn t see t
a classroom door at the uvalde school was not locked while police waited for a key, as a gunman shot children dead inside the room. images have emerged showing armed police inside the school much hello and a warm welcome to our look ahead to what the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are natasha clark, who s a political and environment correspondent at the sun, and joe twyman, director of the polling organisation deltapoll. just to remind you of the front pages. the rail strikes dominate tomorrow s front pages for the second day running. the financial times says the dispute now boils down to an offer of a 3% pay rise in exchange for 2000 job cuts. the i questions government plans to break the rail strikes, claiming ideas like allowing agency workers to fill in for striking staff won t work. the times reports that borisjohnson is preparing to dig in for a strike that could last months. the sun says teachers may be next to strike, calling it a class war . the daily