united states and all around the world. i m max foster in london. just ahead on cnn newsroom donald trump and john eastman together were part of a likely criminal conspiracy. emails show that president trump knew that the specific numbers of voter fraud were wrong. this is the closest thing to a smoking gun and deliberate wrongdoing in this meeting. we re going to continue to stabilize markets and decrease the prices. i agree with anything that will make gas prices cheaper because right now they are astronomically high. i put liz truss in number 10. i hope it was worth it. i am a fighter. announcer: live from london, this is cnn newsroom with max foster. it s thursday, october 20th. 9 a.m. in london, 4 a.m. on the u.s. east coast. we begin with exclusive reporting. sources tell cnn former donald trump and his team are allowing federal agents to conduct a new supervised search of trump s mar-a-lago estate still part of an effort to save trump from poten
qatari world cup in paris world cup and ballast ambassador who is cold homosexuality and damage in the mind. the petrol actor leslie phillips, star of the carry on films, has died at the age of 98. good afternoon and welcome to bbc news. many headteachers in england say they may have to cut the number of teaching staff because of pressure on their budgets. a survey by the headteachers union found two thirds of its members said they ll have to make teaching assistants redundant or cut their hours. the government says it is giving schools an extra four billion pounds in funding this year. here s our education editor, branwen jeffreys. it s all go for these four and five year olds, learning through new experiences. but making the sums add up is getting harder. some teaching assistants have left and not been replaced. that s because the bills are going up. we are tightening our belts and it gets to a point where, how much more can you tighten? we are shopping around as mu
the long-term issues we have on energy swam- the long-term issues we have on energy supply. the long-term issues we have on ener: su l. , ., energy supply. few bells continue to no energy supply. few bells continue to .o u . energy supply. few bells continue to no u- and energy supply. few bells continue to 90 up and the energy supply. few bells continue to go up and the labour energy supply. few bells continue to go up and the labour party - energy supply. few bells continue to go up and the labour party says - energy supply. few bells continue to go up and the labour party says the | go up and the labour party says the conservatives are out of ideas about what to do about it, regardless of who is prime minister. fitter what to do about it, regardless of who is prime minister. who is prime minister. after 12 ears of who is prime minister. after 12 years of tory who is prime minister. after 12 years of tory government, - who is prime minister. after 12| years of tory
of potential security risks from classified materials recovered from donald trump s home in florida earlier this month. a spokesman for mr trump accused the democrats of weaponising the intelligence community. now on bbc news, dateline london with shaun ley. hello and welcome to the programme which brings together some of the best known british commentators and correspondents who write, blog, podcast and broadcast to audiences back home from the dateline london. this week, britain s elusive prime minister turns up in ukraine, as the country marks six months since the war began. we now know in the uk how much energy bills will rise from october, but not what the new prime minister will do when they take over. where has power gone in the uk? where s it going in the united states? and in australia, how come much of it ended up in the hands ofjust one man? and even his his friends aren t happy about it. to discuss all of that, in the studio, we have latika bourke, a corresponde
where s it going in the united states? and in australia, how come much of it ended up in the hands ofjust one man? and even his his friends aren t happy about it. to discuss all of that, in the studio, we have latika bourke, a correspondent for the australian newspapers the age and the sydney morning herald, a writer who has been writing a weekly column for the guardian since 1987, polly toynbee, and michael goldfarb, who was a foreign correspondent for national public radio in the united states, his podcast is called the first rough draft of history. lovely to have you all back in the dateline studio. this is ourfinal month on air, so we ll make it a good one. polly, let me start with you, with a week left of voting, how confident are liz truss s supporters that she will be in downing street at the beginning of september? absolutely. every poll puts her further and further ahead. it is a funny little electorate just 160,000 people choosing a prime minister for all of the r