in their dispute over pay. the cost of some sandwiches rockets by almost 40% in the past year, as the cost of living crisis continues to bite. and could spain see its hottest april day on record? scientists predict it may hit a0 degrees celsius. and coming up on bbc news, chelsea, a goal down, but emma hayes wants her team to stay calm in the second leg of their champions league semifinal in barcelona. good afternoon and welcome to the bbc news at one. ministers have announced the biggest changes to laws on gambling in nearly two decades, aiming to update and toughen regulations for the smartphone era, which has completely changed how people place bets. the proposals, which cover england, scotland and wales, include checks on gamblers who lose £1000 in 2a hours, and a consultation on new limits to stakes for the digital version of slot machines. there will also be a statutory levy on companies to pay for research and treatment of gambling addiction, but there ll be no restri
daylight. it started from myrtle beach, north carolina. the two killed are on the screen. the ones who survived are on the other side. dana: authorities found them in this wooden shack on the outskirts of town. they were tortured for days. bill: the man arrested was guarding that being sha. ambulances rushing the survivors back across the border into brownsville, texas. according to lawmakers back in d.c., it is time for the american military to take charge. dana: peter doocy asked karine jean-pierre about that yesterday. cartels kill americans on this side of the border with drugs and now killing americans on the other side of the border with guns, why is president biden so comfortable with cartels operating so close to the u.s.? because of the work this president has done, because of what we ve done on fentanyl. it is at historic lows. would president biden consider using u.s. military, taking the same approach if it was al qaeda or isis? the president takes
what those folks do. so, bless them for all their efforts and i m really glad you put that story on your show. so, we will see you next sunday, my friend. see you next time. meantime, a very good day to all of you from msnbc headquarters here in new york. welcome, everyone, to alex reports. we are tracking hurricane ian at this hour. it is now a post-tropical cyclone. it s making its way north along the east coast and leaving a trail of devastation in several cities and states. in fact, right now, at least 34 people are confirmed dead. and rescue efforts are ongoing, with crews searching for survivors inside flooded and destroyed homes across that state. the coast guard is out today, assessing damage in several areas. survivors say, it has been a terrifying experience. it was terrifying. i ve never experienced winds, the howling, ears popping. i will never forget it. it was scary, it s the worst thing in the world. today, you know, we need basics and they
if you, don t, you lose. now that may sound unfair, but we did not make the rules nature did. ignore t we can choose to ignore them,he but those rules will never change. sorry wil. thankfully for americans, we live in a country that is remarkably abundant in all three of those things. the u.s. has the most fertile farmland in the world. we ve got more potable freshwater than virtually any other place and critically, first of all, america has the largest recoverable oil reserves on the planet. we are no one in that category and that matters maybe more than anything. now, let me be telling you on cnn that so-called renewable energy windmills and solar panels are about to power the world s. but that s absurd and no one corrects them and somebody should because a lot is at stake.e.at if your nine year old sta startt telling you i m like superman, you have to correct him before he jumps off the garage.ect the the stakesbe are high. so it is incumbent on the rest of us to point out
i don t think sunday will be the end of it, from what i can see. if we can negotiate a deal this week, it can be, but otherwise we ll have to look at what campaigns we are going to put on going forward, and we think that other unions are going tojoin us in this dispute on the railway, and more broadly in society. it wasn t the employers that called the strike action. we wanted rmt. .. we wanted to do reform earlier. they have been discussing it with us, but they have not came forward with meaningful reform. in other news, ukraine is on the verge of losing control of the key city of severodonetsk. its troops have been pushed back to just one factory there. allegations of corruption and sexual abuse at the united nations whistle blowers call for an independent panel to investigate. an inquiry finds that the belfast health trust failed to intervene quickly enough on misdiagnoses by a consultant neurologist, resulting in northern ireland s largest ever patient recall. and princ