Autumn statement in november, and he is of course hoping to rally the conservative Party Faithful as much as of course win over the public vote. We are hoping to cross live an hour to our correspondent In Manchester who has been covering the conference throughout the day and throughout the few days. We have heard a couple of speeches so far today. Any standout moment so far . Not in terms of policy. I think there have been rhetoricalflashes. The key think the conservatives are trying to do here is draw a distinction with the labour party and come up with some big points on which they disagree going into a general election. But i think speech we are about to hear in the next few minutes from the chancellor will be a really big moments, actually. Because what the conservatives are trying to argue and persuade us all as they have stabilised the economy from the days of liz truss and they can now move on with bringing inflation down. But what is really interesting is the buzz around here t
is going to come together in cornwall a plan notjust to make sure that we can vaccinate the world but we can build strong resilient health systems to ensure that we are ready for the next pandemic. we heard earlierfrom the american national security adviser. he told the bbc that america would be at the forefront of vaccine diplomacy. so let s have a look at who has shared the most vaccines. well the us has pledged 80 million vaccines around the world. and the eu has promised over 1.5 billion doses to be made available by the vaccine producers. but there has been criticism of both of vaccine hoarding and vaccinating their own populations first. here s the director general of the world health organization. at the assembly, i called for a massive global effort to vaccinate at least 10% of the population of all countries by september and that leaves 70 persons by the end of the year. to reach this target, we need