three times the pre brexit average of 200 250,000 a year. let s speak to mikejones, who is executive director at migration watch, a british think tank which argues for lower immigration in the uk. the first thing we should say when we talk about those pre brexit figures, there s an awful lot of stuff that s happened since then. indeed. public opinion is strongly in favour of stricter immigration controls, and there is a widespread belief that this is the government s objective too. there is this sort of common belief that if there s a spike in immigration, it s to government lapses, possibly involving illegal entry or exploitation of the asylum system. but in reality, the spike in immigration results in deliberate policy, not its failure. so the figures have leapt from 606,000 to a staggering 745,000. and this reveals a betrayal of the government s policy to take back control, causing inflation numbers to go into the tens of thousands, and the numbers at 670,000 - tens of tho
tradition that i think it s become. it s the true right of passage. how will the voters feel about it? we ll have to wait and see. thanks. we ll see you back tomorrow. good night. a shakeup in the tech world that has implications for all of our futures. tonight on laura coates live. what happened over the last few days could change the shape of the future for you, for me, for everybody. you heard about this guy named sam altman, right? the leader of one of the most influential and artificial intelligence companies. and he was fired over the weekend. altman is the leader of open a.i., the company that created chatgpt. he was suddenly out of the company. it was mysterious. and he said he was fired over concerns that he was not always truthful with the board. we meant to what that means. but two days later, altman was hired by microsoft where he could be even more powerful to run a brand-new division with all of the many, many all the resources of one of the biggest
the west bank for talks with the president of the palestinian authority. we re live with the latest on the secretary s trip as he continues to push for a humanitarian pause in the israel-hamas war. ambassador cindy mccain, executive director of the world food programme, also joins us live with the latest and desperately needed relief efforts in gaza. abortion on the ballot. on tuesday, voters in kentucky, ohio, and virginia will decide the future of reproductive rights in the states. how the hot button issue is reshaping the landscape of 2024. and, constitutional showdown. colorado in minnesota takes center stage in an unprecedented legal battle to keep the twice impeached, four times indicted on 91 counts former president off the ballot in the 2024 race for the white house. we ll go in-depth with constitutional scholar and harvard law professor laurence tribe. i m jonathan capehart. this is an extended edition of the sunday show. we begin with the breaking news in an ongoi
did you start to think that there was a list? no, sure. i don t think there was any doubt in my mind this was a serial killer we were dealing with. someone had declared war on law enforcement and their families. i have kids. my husband, i can t keep putting them at risk. my wife had two guns out. i said unless you know it s me coming through the door, be ready to use them. is there some sort of antigovernment militia group? i had no idea what we were dealing with. before leading investigators back home. was he living a double life? i think he was. you re making him sound like hannibal lector. it s just wild. the courthouse. the moral center of every american city and town. the place we go to settle differences, resolve disputes, find justice. it is the place where the story usually ends, but not this time. not in rural kaufman, texas, where life is leisurely and no one is a stranger. oh my god, someone just shot someone. they are laying on the ground.
Forthe trump stump, today President Trump confirmed he was totally serious. The secretary of homeland security, working with myself and my staff, will begin immediate construction of a border wall. Applause the United States of america gets back control of its borders, gets back its borders. Can we go ahead . But, as previous president s have found, it is one thing to sign and seal and another to deliver. On his second full day in office, president obama ordered the closing of guantanamo bay. But it stubbornly outlasted even his second term in office. His plans were locked up by an uncooperative congress. So might Donald Trumps wall meet similar obstacles . Its obstacle is literary, build a wall. There are a lot of nuts and bolts in the process. First of all, the money has to be appropriated, it has to go to congress, and there is the question of what the physical wall looks like. If some of it fencing, and is some of it a virtual wall . Today was basically a message that they are seri