british prime minister s during which she became the symbol of national unity and stability in the face of profound political, social and cultural change. here at the look at the life and legacy of the queen s historian at dominic green. as a fellow of the royal historical society and a wall street journal contributor. so welcome, great to have you with us. so tell us. the particular reason that the british people have held this a queen in so much esteem? is it about her in particular or is it the monarchy in general? oh well, thank you it is both in a sense. or her sheer longevity and commitment and skill she handled the job in a very hard for people in britain, as elsewhere, to imagine a monarchy without her. she was an absolute professional throughout the period 1952 for the 70 years after words. the result was we never saw behind the curtain. we never really understood the magic. but it always worked. this is a textbook example of how a monarchy make up ancient and po
congress. in her concession speech tuesday night though, it cheney said her work is just beginning. cuts harriet hagman has received the most votes in this primary. she won, i called her to concede the race. this primary election is over. but now, the real work begins. offspring at walter journal columnist and fox news contributor karl rove is a senior advisor to president george w. bush. welcome kroger to see you again. so, just to start out why do you think liz cheney lost by such a larger margin i think sheila got 29% of the boat. a full discloser whizzes been a friend of mine for decades. i contributed to her primary campaign, served as a member of host committee for fundraiser taxes for her. with little expectation she would be able to win but this is one of the more trump reinstates in the country they get donald trump the highest percentage of any state. the republican party in the state perfectly attuned to him. she was going to be defeated and was defeated by a w
there is a lot going on right now. but the idea we are going to be able to flip a switch to bring down the cost of gasoline is not likely in the near term nor is regard with food. paul: joined the palace week also journal columnist dan henninger and kim strassel. at editorial page writer monet. before we get to inflation just want to take a quick word about the jobs report on friday at 390,000 new jobs, higher than many expected. the job market is pretty good, very solid. but there is still this unhappiness people have with the economy right now. how do you explain the disconnect? personally jobs numbers i think we can say guess they re a little stronger than a lot of people anticipated. but still this number represents a drop off at the pace of hardwood seen over the course of the past year or so. that is would been the biden administration only bragging point about the economy because inflation has run so high which means that wages actually down in real terms. that is