a position which appears to have been agreed suggest this was not an open ended debate which led to a consistent decision. there was the ability to be able to unwind or unpick a position which had already been reached. do you agree with both those propositions or neither? obviously i didn t write the e mail, and i don t know precisely what it refers to. is it possible that i might have had a chat with the prime minister once a meeting wound up on my way back somewhere, of course that s possible. he might have said to me, that was interesting, i m thinking x, as a result of it, i don t think anything is wrong with that. i don t recall, huddle or not, it might havejust that. i don t recall, huddle or not, it might have just been that. i don t recall, huddle or not, it might havejust been him giving me a sense of where his head was at that particular moment in time. and i don t think there is anything particularly untoward about that, to be honest. as i have talked previously ab
consequence of that would be a firmer, more economically damaging lockdown in the future and as a trained economist, the second round impact of a decision is what economics is all about and i can get them to see, it was deeply frustrating, it was against the economic interest and as well as against the health interest to avoid the action that was necessary. the prime minister saw it as both, and he felt very keenly, the instincts on both sides. in he felt very keenly, the instincts on both sides. he felt very keenly, the instincts on both sides. , ., ., on both sides. in your book, for the 20 26th of on both sides. in your book, for the 20 26th of august, on both sides. in your book, for the 20 26th of august, it on both sides. in your book, for the 20 26th of august, it reports - on both sides. in your book, for the 20 26th of august, it reports to - on both sides. in your book, for the 20 26th of august, it reports to be | 20 26th of august, it reports to be a diary
overall this year, the economy still forecast to grow by 4.2%. gdp then falls in 2023 by 1.4%, before rising by 1.3%, 2.6% and 2.7% in the following three years. well, many are calling the chancellor s package a return to austerity. but is that the case? austerity is adopted by governments to try to balance the books if it s been running a budget deficit, or overdraft, where it s having to borrow money to fund public spending. it was pursued back in 2010 in the aftermath of the financial crisis. david cameron was prime minister at the time. austerity then meant deep spending cuts and tax hikes. the man in charge of that was the then finance minister george osborne. people know that there are no quick fixes to these problems, but they want to know that we are making progress, and the message from today s autumn statement is that we are making progress.
the black lab named zero caught on camera chasing a thief after they stole a package in front of a home in utah. the crook so scared he actually throws the package back. zero s owners are shocked since they say he is usually a scaredy cat. need the package a $4 dimmer switch. what were the thieves going to do with a $4 dimmer switch? pete: i think they were hoping for more. steve: what did we ever do before the ring doorbell? pete: a lot less of those headlines. steve: thank you very much. now let s go outside janice dean the weather machine. janice, great job this weekend in punxsutawney, pennsylvania. general january it s beginning to feel a lot like springtime. 54 degrees later on here in new york city, yes! take a look at those maps and i will show you. still cold in canada.