i m sandra smith in new york. we will get the latest in the twist of the classified document scandal, ongoing at this hour, quickly becoming president biden s biggest headache, i should say biggest headache yet, right? new at 2:00 with the fox news alert. john: still early. a question we are hearing more and more, and harder to answer, what in the world is happening in the nation s school. from critical race theory and rewriting history, redefining centuries of science, the push to go woke in the nation s classrooms is no longer causing controversy, but real world consequences parents say are hurting their kids. sandra: supporters say it s making sure every student is regarded equally. angry parents say the focuses on differences like gender and race only serves to further divide us. in fairfax county virginia, and the merit awards scandal has the governor taking action, a total of 17 high schools in three virginia counties admitting to withholding national merit awards f
few spots of rain left over here and towards the north west of the uk the weather is beginning to deteriorate. another band of rain starts to move its way and across scotland and you can see the rain working into western counties of northern ireland right now and that rain will continue to edge its way in over the next few hours but that still leaves large areas of wales, the north midlands, northern england, eastern scotland, with glorious weather and plenty of sunshine and for many of you it continues to be pretty mild. temperatures 14 17 for england and wales, about 12 13 for scotland and northern ireland, temperatures a bit closer to average for the time of year. overnight quite a bit of cloud, a few mist and fog patches, a few patches of light rain and drizzle here and there as well but not desperately cold, temperature is about 9 12. tomorrow, a changeable kind of weather day. this is a band of rain, cold front, that will be bringing wet weather across northern ireland,
first, donald trump speaking to you a sold out crowd at his big 78th birthday bash in west palm beach. i wanted to thank larry snowden. you same him is he great is he not a good singer but a good. is he not a great singer. do we agree? snowden and linda stock for their outstanding work. [cheers] incredible people. along with senator marco rubio thank you very much, mr. senator. thank you. cory mills. thank you, corey. these are great people. mike waltz. thank you, mike. dr. ronny jackson, he was my doctor in the white house. he said i was the most healthy person he has ever seen. thank you very much dr. ronny. he was a great doctor. and now a great congressman. nancy mace. nancy, thank you. she won a big race. she just won a big race by a lot. brian mast, a very good friend of mine. [applause] phenomenal guy, more courage than all of us. and, gus, bill araucous. gus, thank you very much. they have been so fantastic. that whole florida delegation. state representat
to be a little poorer, a little colder, a little more uncomfortable. they are not going to bring that in. and of course the rest of humanity is not going to do this either. we are not going to tell everyone you have to do with less. what we have to do, how we solved the problems in the world, through innovation. if you can come up with green energy that s cheaper than fossil fuels, everyone will buy it. that s how you fix problems and that s what we have forgotten and to a large extent because there is a lot of money involved, a lot of subsidies, and so yes, in some ways it s great we get the quotes out because people laugh, but we need to get back and actually be smart about it instead of wasting hundreds of billions of dollars, we should be spending smarter, more effectively and actually help fix this problem, but in a smart way. john: quick one-word answer if i could. whole idea that kerry talks about, al gore talks about, everybody talks about about purchasing carbon credits to o
we ve been talking lots about the increasing waiting times in the nhs and in lincolnshire it s no different. ambulances are wasting hundreds of hours, stuck outside hospitals there. bbc look north has found out more than 2000 eight hundred hours were lost in a month outside just two hospitals in the region because crews couldn t hand over patients to a and e. look north s health correspondent anne marie tasker has been speaking to the family of a 91 year old woman who was stuck in the back of an ambulance for hours. last month, richard travis experienced first hand the crippling pressures on nhs emergency care. his mum margaret, who s 91, was taken by ambulance to scunthorpe general hospital. when she arrived at 8.30 in the evening, the ambulance crew was told a&e couldn t admit any more patients.