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tonight with the context, former conservative cabinet secretaryjustine greening and republican lanhee chen, who was policy director for mitt romney s presidential campaign and is now running to be california s state controller. welcome to the programme. the next british prime minister will be either rishi sunak, the former chancellor, or liz truss, the foreign secretary. mps voted for a final time this afternoon, eliminating former defence secretary penny mordaunt. and it sets up a bruising battle, through the summer, as the two remaining candidates pitch a very different version of conservatism to the tory members. the decision will rest with 160,000 party members who will each have a vote. many of them will be attending hustings around the country to hear from the candidates directly and this is the sort of thing they are going to hear. well, i m incredibly humbled to have made it to the next stage in the process and i m grateful to all my colleagues for their support. th ....
tonight on the reidout we have tens of thousands of pages of documents where we need to sit down and ask specific questions without filibustering, without interruption, without going five minutes back and forth with jamie raskins and dan goldman and little moscow wits jumping up and down. hunter biden agrees to testify before the house oversight committee on the utter lack of evidence that his father did anything wrong. but chairman james comer refuses to take yes for an answer. also tonight, more hostages are freed by hamas, including an american. as negotiators work to extend the pause in fighting. with just hours to go before the extended cease fire is set to end. plus, rejecting the binary us versus them narrative in the israel-hamas war, i ll speak to a prominent rabbi and a labor leader who happened to be married about the importance of a peaceful shared future for israelis and palestinians. but we begin tonight with two very stark warnings about th ....
Members are little bit like those mps on the benches, they are somewhat as calga, i would think, for borisjohnson. some of them did not want him to go at all. maybe theresa may represents the approval rating in the rest of the country, which were very low for mrjohnson, but ijust wonder how which were very low for mrjohnson, but i just wonder how those approval ratings among members, whether that helps liz truss, who did not resign from cabinet? i helps liz truss, who did not resign from cabinet? from cabinet? i think there is an arc ument from cabinet? i think there is an argument to from cabinet? i think there is an argument to say from cabinet? i think there is an argument to say that from cabinet? i think there is an argument to say that her - from cabinet? i think there is an argument to say that her loyaltyj from cabinet? i think there is an - argument to say that her loyalty may stand argument to say that her loyalty may stand her argument to say that her loyalty may s ....
To the broader european economy, particularly germany, which has been a key user of russian gap for some time, and also italy, and we see the literal instability in italy today, with draghi s 0verman looking like it when i make it through the next few days the political instability. so these are very challenging times and i think it is important for the eu and also britain to have a consistent approach on this, to fanatically, military, but also economically. so vitally important to keep this story in the top of the headlines, because there is more fatigue, but do you get a sense in the american public that they are sticking with it? there is a remarkable amount of fatigue there is a remarkable amount of fatigue here in the united states. i do not fatigue here in the united states. i do not think you are seeing nearly as much coverage in us media about what is as much coverage in us media about what is happening in ukraine, you re hearing what is happening in ukraine, you re ....
That is a lot. does that suggest that states could go further and faster and is that maybe the quickest way to reach the targets? i think it is up to states, california has been out to do it because there has been a lack of federal action. because there has been a lack of federalaction. if because there has been a lack of federal action. if you have different states taking dramatically different states taking dramatically different approach it doesn t really get to the broader issue of how you address the climate challenge in the united states more broadly. i think this is probably president biden s biggest challenge in the sense that the progressive wing of his party wants him to go harder and faster and spend more. the $2 billion the president committed today. the $2 billion the president committed to is nearly at a fraction of what progressive want him to spend to save the climate. so i think it s a political challenge in a policy challenge. so yes the states can go but at some poin ....