the science, we can drop that inquiry. fantastic on that, we were all watching, fantastic interview pick up where you left off, thanks so much. this is the in the graham angle from washington, a lot to get to so we will dive right in. president biden s distraction tour, that is the focus of tonight s angle. fresh off embarrassing himself and the entire nation at the g7 and nato meeting biden returned more bad news for his entire agenda at home. it is neither working nor popular. first his approval numbers are upside down. the latest monmouth paul has met 48% approval down 6 points from 54 in april. he dropped 9 points among democrats and 11 points among the all-important independents. monmouth polling explains it this way, right now biden is not meeting the public s expectations for helping the middle class which is calculation may be the country s willing to accept some price increases in return for a more robust economy and wider array of support programs. biden s calculati
fox nation host. looking forward to all of that, president biden forced to address the issue, these democratic led cities, the president said to devote time, we can discuss how his administration plans to tackle this crisis, which has turned deadly for many police. hello and welcome, i m sandra smith in new york and this is america reports. i m trace gallagher, according to the officer down memorial page, 45 officers have been killed in the line of duty this year with a number of police officers shot or stabbed to death increasing more than 40% compared to this time last year. sandra: some brutal statistics, new yorkers tomorrow and the city s primary election for mayor, crime is becoming a hot-button issue for voters. aisha hockney is standing by in the streets of new york city. she has more. hello! i talked to a man who was this weekend and he told me he s been attacked on the subway three times in just one year. this isn t just a new story, this is deeply persona
because of course none of the press were allowed in the room. so how easy is it forjournalists who specialise in diplomacy to sort fact from spin? in fact, do the politicians even want them there? unless of course it s to snap them posing grandly on the beach in those ubiquitous family photos. let me introduce you to my wonderful panel of guests. patrick wintour is diplomatic editor at the guardian. naomi o leary is europe correspondent for the irish times. rym momtaz is senior france correspondent at politico and steven erlanger is the pulitzer prize winning journalist and currently chief diplomatic correspondent at the new york times. steven, you ve been covering this week s international diplomacy from your base in brussels. tell us, are you the only journalist left in the city? naomi is here too. part of the problem is that covid has made it very hard to travel. so if you want to go bouncing around, you need to have a whole separate nose for all of the tests. and you have
brian o connell was london editor for ireland s public service broadcaster rte and here with me in the studio is celia hatton, the bbc s pacific asia editor. a warm welcome to all of you, thanks for being with us and thank you as well for being with us at home. now, 80 years ago in what is now canada s atlantic coast, in the midst of war, winston churchill and franklin roosevelt signed the atlantic charter. tack due east and fast forward eight decades and on england s atlantic coast, their modern day successors, borisjohnson and joe biden, have signed anew. what the g7 leaders who convened on friday may not know is that cornwall in england s far south west is a county of changeable weather. atlantic scores can go up without warning and through the surf is slight, the water may be turning underneath. henry, in terms of the relationship between the uk and the united states, first of all, since they were the signatories of the original atlantic charter, borisjohnson described it
hot or cold at the moment between london and washington? well, i think this reminds me a little bit of when obama became president and all of europe gave a sigh of relief, basically because he was not george w bush. the same dynamic is happening here, where leaders are smiling and feeling there is a spring in their step because it is no longer donald trump. so i think already that has created for some better atmospherics across the atlantic. it does always amuse or bemuse me a little bit whenever these summits come around and this taking of the temperature of the anglo american relationship is really a preoccupation here in london and in the uk, but i am sorry to say it is not really of much significance in the larger sense in the us. there is not the same kind of anxiety or a constant taking of this temperature and that is of course because britain is thejunior partner in this relationship, but that said, i would like to point out that the broad contours of the anglo america