hello this is bbc news. the headlines: novak djokovic wins the wimbledon men s final, beating nick kyrgios in four sets his 20 first grand slam victory and his seventh wimbledon title. every single time, it gets more and more meaningful and special, so i am very blessed and very thankful to be standing here with the trophy. trade minister penny mordaunt becomes the ninth candidate to join the conservative leadership race with former health secretaries, sajid javid and jeremy hunt, also declaring in the last 2a hours. in eastern ukraine 15 people died when an apartment block was shelled in the donestk region. sri lanka s deepening economic crisis: the president says he ll step down after huge demonstrations, the us appeals to politicians to act swiftly. and, temperatures rise around the uk, with scotland recording its warmest day of the year so far. now on bbc news it s time for sportsday. hello and welcome to sportsday. in wimbledon the jabbing tips have come to an end wi
withdraws as a goodwill gesture. expected of involvement in one of the most deadliest incidents in the english channel in recent years. and life in wimbledon on day four of the tennis tournament producing the biggest win of her career. another day, another controversial ruling by the supreme court. it s decided to limit the federal government s ability to regulate emissions from power plants. government s ability to regulate the case was brought on behalf of nineteen mostly republican led states. it s a major blow to president biden and his policy on climate change. here s our north america editor, sarah smith not only says that the biden administration was enacting these proposals that are come up with under barack obama but never implement of us a sub and narrows the clean air act and future administrations from sighting it to enact greenhouse gas regulations on a broad scale. the court said that if the administration or any administration must regulate greenhouse gases in
by rmt union. it has meant trains going out of service and millions of passengers going nowhere. my daughter s doing her gcses. i ve got to get her to and from school, so it s a right pain in the neck. i understand they want a pay rise and things change, i get that, but it s not fair for all the commuters. we are going to primarily focus on the two stories this hour, the rail strike in the uk and the hearing in washington, which is where we are going to begin. we start in washington, where the committee investigating the storming of the capitol onjanuary 6 is holding another public hearing. today s focus is on pressure by former president donald trump and his team for individual us states to overturn the election results. central to this are two battleground states arizona and georgia. joe biden won both by a razor thin margin and president trump has kept pushing false claims of electoral fraud. in opening statements, we heard from the republican vice chair liz cheney.
very upfront in their manifesto commitments that a second referendum would come a long should they be elected, and that s what s happened. also the absolutely were, but they were considerably less radical nicola were considerably less radical nicola sturgeon repeatedly resisted attempts by alex salmon to block her into that attempts by alex salmon to block her into that position and what the terms into that position and what the terms of into that position and what the terms of it were. into that position and what the terms of it were. stay with us, we can continue terms of it were. stay with us, we can continue this terms of it were. stay with us, we can continue this discussion - terms of it were. stay with us, we can continue this discussion and i terms of it were. stay with us, we can continue this discussion and a| can continue this discussion and a second, i want to bring viewers up to date. a statement from the home secretary priti patel over what s hap