to the drone strike that killed u.s. troops. so how long until the rest of the country and the world find out what it is. plus, republicans border strategy increasingly fixated on a man instead of a plan. hope surrounding a border deal fade as the house is stepping up efforts to impeach alejandro mayorkas. tempers flaring inside the committee room. we ll take you there in a minute. and a dream vacation turns tragic. at least four people are dead, including a young boy, after a boat carrying tourists sinks off the coast of mexico. so what went wrong? so much to get to. we start with president biden, telling reporters just a short time ago that after several days and multiple meetings with his national security team, he has settled on a plan to punish iran for the deadly drone attack that killed three u.s. service members. now, the details, the timing and matter of that response is still unknown. but here is the president on the south lawn of the white house earlier toda
it signals concern about the health of the sector, following the collapse of first republic and its acquisition byjp morgan chase. the wall street giant said it would pay $10.6 billion dollars to the federal insurance deposit corp, after officials shut down the smaller bank. first republic had been under pressure since last month, when the collapse of two other us lenders sparked fears about the state of the banking system. meanwhile, the managing director of the international monetary fund kristalina georgieva says she expects more weaknesses to be exposed in the banking sector. so just how vulnerable is it? let s ask the chief global investment officer of oreana financial, isaac poole. i think there is a real risk of that. this is probably not the end of bank failures. we are seeing these problems in the smaller, regional, medium sized banks, really exposed to higher interest rates. we are going to see another interest hike from the fed which might add extra pressure on dep
i m karishma vaswani. we begin with the banking turmoil in the us. shares of several regional banks have closed in the red on monday. it signals concern about the health of the sector, following the collapse of first republic and its acquisition byjp morgan chase. the wall street giant said it would pay $10.6 billion dollars to the federal insurance deposit corp, after officials shut down the smaller bank. first republic had been under pressure since last month, when the collapse of two other us lenders sparked fears about the state of the banking system. meanwhile, the managing director of the international monetary fund kristalina georgieva says she expects more weaknesses to be exposed in the banking sector. so just how vulnerable is it? let s ask the chief global investment officer of oreana financial, isaac poole. i think there is a real risk of that. this is probably not the end of bank failures. we are seeing these problems in the smaller, regional, medium sized banks,
president biden has awakened from his hellish fever dream of last night. his nightmarish speech which looked like he d either wandered onto the set of triumph of the will or into amsterdam s red light district, is all over now. today he has no memory of it. watching all of this recall that moment at the end of the musical 1776 when john adams prowls independence hall in frustration. is anybody there? does anybody care? does anybody see what i see? tammy: biden would probably call adams an extremist but is anybody there? does the president even know what he saying? you decide. i m not going to comment. you watch. there s no question that the republican party today is dominated, driven and intimidated by donald trump and the maga republicans. and that is a threat to this country. i don t consider any [indistinct] donald trump and the maga republicans were present and extremism that threatens the very foundation of our republic. maga republicans are destroying american
electricity. big companies are also looking at ways to become greener and use less power. innovation is a fundamental part of australia s efforts to tackle global warming. at this treatment facility near sydney algae is being used to reduce levels of pollution and waste water that comes from nearby towns. it is far less energy intensive than traditional methods. we have an aspiration to be carbonate zero by 2030 and across our entire supply chain by 2040. our customers are telling us they want us to be carbon neutral. it is fundamentally important for us that we make investments for an energy intensive organisation to lead the way in carbonate zero. australia has a target to reach net zero emissions by 2050 but coal and gas still generate much of its energy. the switch to renewables is unstoppable. nagging question remains, is the transition happening fast enough?