. we have that tape tonight james straight ahead. also, congressman james comeer r with an update on the latest on the biden syndicaten sy and family business dealings. this is getting very interesting. the wallgetting s are beginning. to close in on joe biden. bun. r xplai losifirst, is biden in danger of losing the firstt prim two primaries or the first caucus and the first primary in 2024? now, while he does holold a d ad over the rest of the democratic fiels, now,toughe survey despite a tougher than expected challenge from robert f kregula junior, herl is regularly now 2, polling at 20 21%. that s a real number and marianne williamson is at o 10%. that s a lot of democrats thatat don t like joe biden sident new axios report saying the president is in danger of losing both iowa and new hampshire. now, this is self-inflicte miw,d. after his team indicated he might not even appear on the ballot. be in biden wants the first primary to be in south carolina. obviously, to me, a
t state income taxes in the country. but the state, they are what they arey ae. are. i don t i believe everybeliev governor should enforce the lawse rnor sho of our land t be a sanctuary state or city. but he the left wing in this new era is hard core left. so is he. i agree with clay. he would win. i agree with clay entirely. lookayntirely., i don t like gad newsom. he s run a state to the ground. he only as the democrat wonderboy because cuomo was kicked out of the new york governorship because oe new yo. back when i was in the white house, everyone was talking about cuomo. now it s newsom. i agree with botw ith you an sd. he would beat joe biden todai y when you have rfk jr whose off views are really off skew s with the democraket party pullii in 20% in the south. interesting. but his positiond , covid was,oa you know, contrarian. yes. hi yes.s views on biological men d women s sports are no, thatas oh shouldn t happen. he s got other viewser that, you know, i find very inter
it is just one of those things i cannot put into words, you know? i believe this is the highlight of my career. and this new species is called victoria boliviana. named after bolivia, where it grows in the wild. standing here, you really get a sense ofjust how huge this is. this is one plant and it is still growing. not only is this the first discovery of a new giant water lily species in more than 100 years, it is also now the biggest water lily in the world, with leaves that grow to more than three metres. that is ten feet in size. astonishingly, the new species had been hiding in kew s archives for more than 150 years. a specimen was collected and dried and stored, but wrongly identified. you can read more about that story and plenty others on the website
tell me why you ve engaged with this. i think we ve engaged with it because it is. it is directly applicable to our public purpose, as set out, ultimately, in the heritage act that constitutes kew s governance. the reason is kew is a public body. we have to be here for everyone. we re part funded through the general taxpayer. we re a charity. everyone should feel welcome at kew. everyone should feel that kew is doing something that matters to them and their lives or telling stories that are relevant to their lives, so i think it is essential that we re examine our history, including our colonial imperial history. kew is absolutely a product of empire, without doubt. deeply rooted, to coin a phrase that s very relevant, deeply rooted in colonialism. i think that s true, yes. kew was set up in the mid 19th century, its formation in the mid 19th century, in a sense, as a vehicle of empire. economic botany, moving valuable plants around the empire, was absolutely central to kew s public
i think we ve engaged with it because it is. it is directly applicable to our public purpose, as set out, ultimately, in the heritage act that constitutes kew s governance. the reason is kew is a public body. we have to be here for everyone. we re part funded through the general taxpayer. we re a charity. everyone should feel welcome at kew. everyone should feel that kew is doing something that matters to them and their lives or telling stories that are relevant to their lives, so i think it is essential that we re examine our history, including our colonial imperial history. kew is absolutely a product of empire, without doubt. deeply rooted, to coin a phrase that s very relevant, deeply rooted in colonialism. i think that s true, yes. kew was set up in the mid 19th century, its formation in the mid 19th century, in a sense, as a vehicle of empire. economic botany, moving valuable plants around the empire, was absolutely central to kew s public purpose. yeah, so this wasn t. from th