Through the b. S. I dont know if theres been any. Wants to cut through the b. S. , get the answers to the questions about how long this is going to go on and this is what was most interesting to me. One of my sources says to me, hes going to find out if we have to fight and where this leads. They seem to think that Rudy Giuliani will be the one to be able to do that where nobody else was able to do that before. In some interviews today he talked about his prior relationship with Robert Mueller. Its not clear to me how a prior relationship with mueller would impact an on going investigation. And he told that in his interview that they do have a prior relationship. I think i should remind people that john dab the lawyer that quit also had a prior relationship with mueller. Giuliani did work with mueller after 9 11 of course. But i think that whole we have a relationship and we get along can be overdone because a lot of people worked with mueller over the years. He also said i think when
of these recruitment areas, that really, it s just notjustified to have the overseas recruitment, i think at the heart of this, there is a difference in approach. what the conservatives have done over the last five years is to have effectively a free market, unregulated approach to migration. we don t think that s right we think you need intervention, you need both controls, the system has to be controlled and managed. so that was the shadow home secretary yvette cooper talking about that immigration pledge from labour. the conservatives, though, mainly talking about health today, they have got a new policy saying that they would build 100 new gp clinics and that they would also free up more gp appointments by trying to divert some services to pharmacies, the conservative government already, for example, said that people can now get the contraceptive pill at pharmacies rather than having to see a gp, they said they would expend that existing than having to see a gp, they said they wo
what the conservatives have done over the last five years is to have effectively a free market, unregulated approach to migration. we don t think that s right we think you need intervention, you need both controls, the system has to be controlled and managed. so that was the shadow home secretary yvette cooper talking about that immigration pledge from labour. the conservatives, though, mainly talking about health today, they have got a new policy saying that they would build 100 new gp clinics and that they would also free up more gp appointments by trying to divert some services to pharmacies, the conservative government already, for example, said that people can now get the contraceptive pill at pharmacies rather than having to see a gp, they said they would expand that existing scheme to mean that people can get treatment for other conditions, acne or chest infections, at a pharmacy instead. but the health secretary victoria atkins was also pushed earlier on the bbc about two thi
on the cohen thing, what i don t understand, i m not a lawyer, is why would rosenstein volunteer that to the president. he was not asked? is it to save his job? that s a possibility? a requirement. or is it something that he would do because he knew that the president was concerned about it and he shouldn t be. i m not going to say he s a guy that s going to get rolled here. he s a person who is a great character, high integrity. so why would you do it? i don t know. i think politics seeps into every phase of our government now. the three separate branches are becoming, you know, the judiciary used to be kind of independent. we hope it remains that way but the executive branch and investigative functions now seem to be points higher lliticized. they said they re not going to follow along with the president s immigration pledge. that s number one but number two