which this case and this argument was built. first, let me just get your reaction to this historic win. i know you ve been working on this case for years, it actually dates back to 2011 when your law firm petitioned i believe the montana supreme court to rule that the state has a duty to address climate change. what does it feel like to have seen a victory that set a precedent for such an urgent cause? thanks for having me on, ayman, it s been an amazing week. we ve been working for 13 years to secure a ruling like this. we have brought about 20 plus cases, and this is the first one to actually go to trial, to be able to present expert testimony to have the youth plane to take the stand, and ultimately to get a really incredible ruling from judge seely in montana. are you at all worried about the state s promise to appeal this case? i mean, this would then ultimately send it to the state supreme court, and what confidence do you have that legislators in a deep red
fossil fuel pollution. and so, we re really optimistic, going up to the montana supreme court, that when they apply the constitution in this case, and look at the facts that were found in the lower court, this these youth will prevail. you brought up a very important point about the judge s ruling and how it declared that montana had violated several of its constituents constitutional rights, including equal protection, dignity, i believe liberty, health, and safety. talk to me a little bit about how all of this could be used as a blueprint for other states. how do you see this case reverberating across the country, based on the legal arguments that you successfully made? i think judge seely s opinion, and ultimately hopefully an opinion by the montana supreme court, will be very persuasive to judges in other jurisdictions. we have active cases pending in
ongoing his honorary doctorate and say his ongoing charity work and high profile campaigns have helped millions high profile campaigns have helped millions of people up and down the country. millions of people up and down the country, and they congratulate him on that country, and they congratulate him on that. but when it comes to this issue on that. but when it comes to this issue of on that. but when it comes to this issue of keeping that a £20 uplift universal issue of keeping that a £20 uplift universal credit, they say the same things universal credit, they say the same things they universal credit, they say the same things they have been saying to labour things they have been saying to labour and some of their own mps who have wanted labour and some of their own mps who have wanted to keep it. that is that it was have wanted to keep it. that is that it was always a temporary measure designed it was always a temporary measure designed to help claimants throug
who s even partial birth aborti abortion, before the baby s born, okay to abort them. if i understand he s clarified his position, he told me he supporting supports the law on the books. late-term abortion. abet he clarified it. you got it. very clear, until a baby s born he can be aborted. he can come back and try to pull politics with you but that s what he believes, and our country s in trouble and we ve got to get back to the constitution, and godly principles that made this nation great. how does he affectively serve in the united states senate when his fellow republican senators, if he gets elected, richard shelby, didn t won t to vote for him and wrote somebody in. mcconnell doesn t want him him. i d say at least half of the senate they want to seely expel senate. how can he represent alabama
not that american influence in syria ever was very big, but now we have a new, permanent russian air base in syria that wasn t there two years ago. they ve upgraded their navy base in syria, and so the russians are much stronger in this area. kind of peculiar. same time, the u.s. military is conducting military operations in eastern syria against the islamic state, but that counts for little. it gives little leverage in the broader conflict between syrian president assad and the syrian opposition. you ve been critical, ex-. seely critical of the obama administration handling of this and left your post saying you could no longer defend america s policy. we re here, 21 days away from the end of the obama administration, how much of a black mark on his foreign policy legacy is the syria war?