Happened on saturday. At least 32 children were among 125 people who died in a crush the police have been widely criticised for using tear gas on the fans. Now on bbc news hardtalk. Welcome to hardtalk. Im stephen sackur. Britain mourned the death of Queen Elizabeth in ways that combined the intimate and the personal with the grand and ceremonial. For most of us, of course, death and grief remain a very private affair. An irreversible, Life Altering shock when we lose someone close for which there is no guide or preparation. My guest today is the one time pop star Turned Church Of England vicar, the Reverend Richard coles, whose frank account of his own grief has struck a chord with many. Why did grief nearly break him . Richard coles, welcome to hardtalk. Britain has just lived through a rather extraordinary, momentous experience, the death of Queen Elizabeth, the mourning that came with it. And many people have said that the death of the queen revived very sharp memories for them of
at all. i want women, doctors, local political leaders tv doctor from jersey gets hammered from debate stage honesty. oz would let politicians like doug mastriano ban abortion without exceptions. tonight renewed outrage over the radical republican position on abortion they have been trying to hide. i wish as a man i didn t have to make this decision, i wish women could make this decision. the new evidence that our disgraced ex president will pull the strings if republicans pull takeover. and mister president how are you sir? the bad election answer. plus republicans campaigning on inflation do they have anything to do about it? and the effort to force the sky to spill the beans about the mar-a-lago documents. in december, january not the way of, i witnessed him declassify whole sets of documents. when all in starts right now. good evening from new york. i m chris hayes. pennsylvania republican senate candidate mehmet oz of new jersey, more honestly, ki
lawyer, it hence the same way. it really is wild to watch it happen over and over again. and so it goes, the will keeps turning, thank you chris as always. and thanks to you at home for joining us this hour. imagine somebody write you a check. you take did the bank, you cash, it deposit, whatever. and then the czech bounces. you didn t write this check, you had no idea that it was not good. up until today, banks across the country could charge you for that transaction. you would get charged a fee for being a victim of a fraud. that s just one of the laundry list of what president biden is calling junk fees, that he announced his administration is going to cut down on. have you ever shown up to the airport and had your flight canceled, and then the airline tries to charge you a fee to rebook you on a new flight? to our place the flight that they canceled? this thing happens. biden today is directing the department of transportation to make rules so that airlines can no lon
in its protests in the uk, because they say very little has changed . now on bbc news, it s hardtalk. welcome to hardtalk, i m stephen sackur. britain mourned the death of queen elizabeth in ways that combined the intimate and the personal with the grand and ceremonial. for most of us, of course, death and grief remain a very private affair. an irreversible, life altering shock when we lose someone close for which there is no guide or preparation. my guest today is the one time pop star turned church of england vicar, the reverend richard coles, whose frank account of his own grief has struck a chord with many. why did grief nearly break him? richard coles, welcome to hardtalk. britain has just lived through a rather extraordinary, momentous experience, the death of queen elizabeth, the mourning that came with it. and many people have said that the death of the queen revived very sharp memories for them of their own losses and how they felt during their own losses. you ve ju
to his predecessor. the former pontiff will be lying in state from today, until his funeral on thursday. now on bbc news, it s hardtalk with stephen sackur. welcome to hardtalk. i m stephen sackur. britain mourned the death of queen elizabeth in ways that combined the intimate and the personal with the grand and ceremonial. for most of us, of course, death and grief remain a very private affair. an irreversible, life altering shock when we lose someone close for which there is no guide or preparation. my guest today is the one time pop star turned church of england vicar, the reverend richard coles, whose frank account of his own grief has struck a chord with many. why did grief nearly break him? richard coles, welcome to hardtalk. britain has just lived through a rather extraordinary, momentous experience, the death of queen elizabeth, the mourning that came with it. and many people have said that the death of the queen revived very sharp memories for them of their own losse