Because the pensions act came in in 1995, and in theory it goes 15 years of notice before the State Pension age and started to rise for women in 2010, actually, as the report spells out, the communication was not clear enough, and i think, one of the issuesis enough, and i think, one of the issues is that because the State Pension age for women rose over a number of years, which is obviously fairer than number of years, which is obviously fairerthan an number of years, which is obviously fairer than an overnight rise, it meant that individual women, they might know somebody who is, say, six months older or six months younger, but they could have a very different State Pension age to them themselves, which is why i think it was very confusing for the individual women to actually work out how they were going to be affected, that is assuming that they knew in the first place that they would be. ~ knew in the first place that they would be. , ~ ,. , knew in the first place that they would
ethics scandals. is this politics? it s tuesday, i m bill hemmer. good morning. dana: it s tuesday and politics. any day is politics. i m dana perino and this is america s newsroom. what s going on? the supreme court is facing renewed criticism over reports of justices failing to disclose what democrats say are questionable financial transactions. that includes justice clarence thomas accepting vacations from a wealthy donor and justice neil gore the democrats see the court needs more oversight. but should not have to answer to congress. dana: chief justice roberts submitted a letter saying that the court has reaffirmed a voluntary commitment to keep things above board. bill: democrats say it s not enough. republicans maintain sit a power grab designed to rein in a conservative majority on the court today. dana: if you ve been following this. the organization the news organization that first put out these reports about clarence tomorrow as. if you want to get th
you the biggest news stories from here and around the world as ourjournalists witness some of the most historic moments. from richard dimbleby, the bbc s first war reporter, who broadcast from raf fighter planes during world war two. the bombers of the main force are now streaming in above and below us. as we drive steadily over cologne in a dead level straight line, the german flank is winking and flashing. ..to kate adie, on the scene as chinese troops fired on protesters in tiananmen square. after hours of shooting and facing a line of troops, the crowd is still here. they re shouting, stop the killing! and, down with the government! and who can forget michael buerk s reports from africa as he revealed the full scale of the famine in ethiopia. dawn, and as the sun breaks through the piercing chill of night on the plain outside korem, it lights up a biblicalfamine. his reports were a watershed moment that led to this. # feed the world. bob geldof s live aid concerts rai
towards the channel islands and hug the channel coast. it may linger for a time first thing in the morning across essex and kent, clearing by dawn and with a blanket of cloud around, temperatures will hold up, double figures first thing tomorrow, a milder start, further north, chilly and a touch of frost likely. early morning rain clears quite quickly, the cloud will break up and the sunshine come through and lovely autumn sunshine for many, even across eastern scotland. we have worked and 20 weather pushing into the far north west and temperatures more subdued we have wet and windy weather. temperatures likely to be in the mid to high teens. by friday low pressure dominates, brisk winds gust, they will drive plenty of showers into the far north and west. fewer showers across england and wales, not a bad day on the whole and temperatures quite widely peaking at around to 17. into the weekend, don t forget that low, it looks like sunny spells, plenty of frequent showers and
now on bbc news, unspun world withjohn simpson. hello and welcome to unspun world, here at the bbc london headquarters. after a brief pause, will the war in gaza enter a new and even more worrying stage? the vast majority of the gaza population are in the south, that will mean a lot of casualties if they continue the way they have, civilians dead. as cop28 rolls out in dubai, disturbing evidence about the health effects of oil and gas production on the people of the region. really high levels of respiratory disease, asthma, also high levels of heart disease and this is particularly bad in communities that live close to the gas flaring. and is europe as a continent lurching towards the far right? when it comes to concerns about the cost of living, i think when it comes to migration, you can say that europe is moving to the right. the pattern that has been followed in just about every war israel has fought since 1973 has been repeated now in gaza. israel is attacked, hits back