cover for reckless spending. alexandria hoff live in washington with the very latest. alexandria, good morning. good morning, ashley, todd last week white house press secretary karine jean-pierre said it was not over. that was four months after the president said this. speak with the pandemic is over. we still have a problem with covid. we are still doing a lot of work on it, but the pandemic is over. eight months after the president made that statement more than three years after and acted, the white house will end two national emergencies stating this, at present the emergency declarations extended to may 11th and end both emergencies on that date. this would align with the administration s previous commitment to give 60 days notice prior to the termination of the phd. the republicans to manning for spending come with the declarations needs to end now. $817 billion in stimulus checks, $678 billion in employment, 39 million in housing programs. steve scalise sharing th
this is gps, the global public square. welcome to all of you in the united states and around the world. i m fareed zakaria coming to you live from new york. on today s program, amidst the utter political and economic chaos in the united kingdom, liz truss resigns, becoming the shortest tenured prime minister in that country s history. i m resigning as leader of the conservative party. what happens now? i ll ask the economist editor in chief. then, next week, benjamin netanyahu might get a third stint as israel s prime minister. today, you ll hear from him about iran s nuclear program, israel s relations with its neighbors, his own relations with vladamir putin. i wouldn t call it a love affair, but i would call it a question of interest. and more. also the protests in iran have now been going on for more than a month. and show no signs of slowing. i ll get the big picture from robin wright of the new yorker, who calls this the world s first women-led counterre
on today s program, amidst the utter political and economic chaos in the united kingdom, liz truss resigns, becoming the shortest tenured prime minister in that country s history. i m resigning as leader of the conservative party. what happens now? i ll ask the economist quest editor in chief. then, next week, benjamin netanyahu might get a third stint as israel s prime minister. today, you ll hear from him about iran s nuclear program, israel s relations with its neighbors, his own relations with vladamir putin. i wouldn t call it a love affair, but i would call it a question of interest. and more. also the protests in iran have now been going on for more than a month. and show no signs of slowing. i ll get the big picture from robin wright of the new yorker, who calls this the world s first women-led counterrevolution. but first, here s my take. in late 1992, i started my first full-time job as managing editor of foreign affairs. i remember sorting through
street s worse day in more than two years. it s wednesday, september 14th. it is 9 a.m. here in london where queen elizabeth s coffin now rests inside buckingham palace. behind me before the next leg of her final journey begins today. in the hours ahead a procession will take her coffin from the palace to westminster hall. members of the royal family, including king charles, prince william and prince harry, will be walking in that procession. the queen will lie in state at westminster hall starting later today until her funeral on monday at westminster abbey. ahead of that, mourners are camping out in london waiting for their chance to see the queen s coffin and pay their respects. [ applause ] an outburst of emotion outside buckingham palace late tuesday as queen elizabeth arrived home for the last time. the crowd, some who waited in hours in the rain clapped and cheered as they gathered to pay their respects to brittain s longest serving monarch. the queen s coffin had
still too cowardly to take a stand against insurrectionists ex president. the idea of political violence is being normalized. he held newspaper published a piece this weekend underlying its stark terms what this new post trump post january 6th world looks like. the number threat in vests launched by u.s. capitol police in 2021 was 100 and 50% higher than it was in 2017. trump s first year in office. lawmakers who are critical of trump remain among those most frequently targeted for violence. the long and diverse listening clues republicans who voted for an infrastructure bill he opposed. democrats who manage the former presidents impeachments. republicans who supported his ouster after the january 6th capitol attack. and most recently, the nine lawmakers on the select committee investigating the 2021 a riot. all of whom have around the clock security details. end quote. president biden addressed the normalization of violence this week in his soul of the nation s speech. y