projects. it is an interesting one, because on one hand, donald trump says that day one, dictator for a day, i m going to drill drill drill. russia producing more fossil fuels than anybody in the world by a long shot, and then antibodies ever produced. let s get down to the skin of some climate activists who say that maybe that is not the goal that we should be having. and so this is that intersection between energy dependent and being a leader in the world and guaranteeing freedom for people who don t want to buy their gas from russia, and at the same time, being conscious of the climate. it is an interesting tightrope that we are going to talk about. have a great weekend, i will see you again tomorrow morning. all right, take care alley. all right. right i m ali velshi. we begin this morning with a blockbuster penalty that a jury has awarded the writer e. jean carroll in a defamation case against the twice impeached four times indicted ex president. yesterday, a
us, really. that rain is across many areas. quite heavy for scotland and northern ireland at the moment and it will spread across england and wales and willjust be sitting across the far south east and east anglia first thing tomorrow morning. by the post office to pay the stolen money back. they tell us they received little or zero support from the post office following the traumatic events and were told they were liable for the loss of money. i v e i ve worked for the post office, on behalf of the post office, for 43 years and i ve never had any sympathy for anything at all. and we ll talk to a subpostmaster who was the victim of an armed robbery twice. also tonight, the chairman of the conservative supporting spectator magazine, andrew neil, is here. in an exclusive interview he s going to urge the government to block a takeover bid of his title and of the daily telegraph by a uae us joint venture. he ll be explaining why. nick sits down with the shadow home secretary yvet
and the us is pausing the approval of exports from new liquefied natural gas projects. we find out why. hello, everybody, welcome to the road business report. give me about 30 minutes and i will try to give you a fascinating snapshot of the world of business and money. welcome to the world business report. the uk has suspended free trade talks with canada, after nearly two years of negotiations. the british government had been trying to extend temporary arrangements put in place after brexit, but disputes about agricultural exports couldn t be overcome. it marks the first time the uk has formally suspended talks with a trade partner since formally leaving the eu trading regime in 2021. lets get more on this with the directorate general of the international trade. just for those who haven t been keeping up with this, why has the uk walked away? 50 with this, why has the uk walked awa ? ., . ., away? so once the uk had left the eu, there away? so once the uk had left the eu.
laura: i like hanging out with old people and young people. all the people in the middle forget it. that s awesome. sean: laura is abandoning these handoffs. isn t that sad? laura: including right now. including right now, sadly. all right, hannity, great show. i m laura ingraham, this is the ingraham angle from washington tonight. my angle on the fraud that is bidenomics a little later in the show. but first has vladimir putin been weakened by recent events. hard to tell but he s clearly losing the war in iraq losing the war at home and become a bit around the world. i spoke to a white house official about that who really downplayed that who said look presidents spent a lot of times talking so there s moments they confuse words but there s no doubt those moments will be under heavy scrutiny. laura: but joe s addled mind isn t the only thing to heavy scrutiny the new york times among others extensive pieces on damning hunter biden whistleblower tomorrow morning.
flight delay and cancel llation stacking up meaning the domino affect is under way. ashley is live in new york, the country s biggiest air traffic hub. it s kind of a mess out there. reporter: it is. the severe weather and staffing shortages are contributing to scenes like this at airports across the nation. more than 28,000 flight s were delayed wednesday and 2,000 were cancelled. some travelers have been stuck at the airport for days. i am so mad but i m trying not to explode. they just told us it was delayed and they delayed it and they delayed it. at 4:00 a.m., they said it was cancelled. reporter: could you imagine. united had the most cancellations. the ceo putting the blame on the faa for staff and overall inexperience but the flight agency fired right back in a statement saying we will always collaborate with anyone seriously willing to join us to solve a problem. in denver, set up 3,000 cot and stranded passengers, it was all for them. cell phone video taken