you have a recipe for disaster for disaster. mike: the delays and cancellations are already piling up. all signs pointing to a rough weekend. for travelers the frustration is palpable. senior correspondent casey stegall is following all of those from dallas-fort worth international airport. good morning, casey. good morning mike and dana. the folks at aaa tell us this fourth of july holiday us expected to be the second busiest since the year 2000. 20 plus years with over 48 million americans total traveling over the next couple of days where the majority by car, by air is about three and half million which is higher versus last year. only time will tell whether those holidays passengers will further bog down the airports and airlines already this morning i can tell you that more than 700 delays in more than 230 cancellations are being reported by flight aware within the united states. so cute with those long lines, weights, and frustrations. dana: like to get stressed s
one leaves you alone. what s wrong for christ s sake look at him, money. ferris? he doesn t have a fever but he says his stomach hurts and he is seeing spots. jesse: if anybody knows what it s like to not be left alone while they are sick it s joe biden. since the president was diagnosed with covid on thursday, the left sensed an owning. the washington post ran an op-ed this weekend telling biden to quit, joe, quit. and the squad want nothing to do with him. do you want to see joe biden run for a second term. he has got to go. that s an easy question it s not going to take long. i don t want to answer that question because we have not that s not, yeah, i don t want to answer that question. okay. i mean, he is the president. he has the right to run for a second term, absolutely. but i don t want to i don t want i would rather you not do that we got to go. jesse: so that s a no from cory bush. take a look at the polls. democratic primary voter
like because it, in effect, puts a border down the irish sea. now on bbc news, it s time for dateline london. shaun chuckles. hello, and welcome to the programme which brings together leading uk commentators with the foreign correspondents who write, blog and broadcast from the dateline london. this week political apologies and their consequences. 40% of borisjohnson s mps say it isn t enough to say sorry he should quit. we ll be discussing why history may be on the british prime minister s side. and in africa, the king of belgium voices his deepest regret over the abuse and humiliation caused in what is now the drc by his family and other belgians. why do those who colonised find it so hard to say sorry? in the studio are stefanie bolzen, uk and ireland correspondent for the german media group die welt, marc roche, who writes for the french news magazine le point, and adam raphael, who began reporting on uk politics in 1976 the last year to date in which a british
in britain have insisted that prince charles remains politically neutral , following a report that he has strongly criticised government plans to send some asylum seekers to rwanda in central africa. an unnamed source told the times newspaper that prince charles has described the policy as appalling . now on bbc news, unspun world withjohn simpson. hello, and thanks forjoining me here at the bbc s central london headquarters for unspun world, the programme which provides straight answers from the bbc s array of experts worldwide to the important questions of the moment. is the west supplying enough weapons to ukraine to help it win the war? or can russia hang on and declare victory? russia has huge resources, and in a war of attrition, russia can sustain that for probably longer than ukraine can. things seem to have gone terribly wrong with the rainbow nation of south africa. why is that? corruption levels in this country have been so rampant, it has actually reached propor