The week in parliament. Hello there, welcome to the week in parliament our look at the highlights from all four of the uks parliaments and assemblies. Coming up borisjohnson tells mps schools in england wont return before the 8th of march. And i know how frustrating that will be will be for pupils and teachers who want nothing more than to get back to the classroom. The Labour Leader Calls for teachers to be vaccinated in the next few weeks. He should bring forward the vaccination of key workers and use the window of the february half term to vaccinate all teachers and all school staff. Also on this Programme Leaders in wales and scotland face questions about the Coronavirus Vaccine roll out. The Home Secretary announces tougher border controls. And theres to be a new investigation into mother and baby homes in Northern Ireland which housed women pregnant outside marriage, including victims of rape and incest. Wasnt their fault that they were raped or the victims of incest. Yet they we
the ingraham angle. the upcoming trial has had people bracing for weeks of protests. have you seen that razor wire. tonight we get an update from business owners who had their dreams burned to the ground literally during the george floyd riots last summer. also, the unreported details of megan merkel and harry, cast you new light on that big interview. raymond arroyo has it all in seen and unseen. time to retire the control freaks. that s the focus of tonight s angle. it was just about this time last year when people began to lose their minds. remember? they were paying $50 for a $6 pack of anti-bacterial wipes on amazon and lining up at all the grocery stores to buy carts full of toilet paper, paper towels, diswashing detergents, bleach, and enough batteries to power a small city. dr. fauci, he was still only a fledgling star, but you could tell he was basking in the glow. what s the danger of minimizing the risk of an infectious disease outbreak? well, i mean, the
when there are a lot of dead ends around, the virus is not going to go anywhere. one of the things that ear that is clear from the data, even though the vaccines because of the high degree of transmissability of the virus don t protect overly well as it were against infection, they protect quite well against severe disease leading to hospitalization. sean: everything was an evolution. fox news contributor dr. nicole sapphire good to see you both. dr. nicole, let me start with you one mask doesn t work? then one mask, two masks, maybe masks forever. if you get the vaccine, joe biden said it, fauci said it, you re not going to get covid. are we on booster four or five. i don t know, i don t listen to these people, ever. i refuse to ever listen to them again. well, sean, you know, first of all, you cannot blame someone for changing science. but at the end of the day, the
okay. i ll tell you what s known and what s not known. it s called b.1 versus b.2. the b.2 is a newer 1 that s a sublineage of the original omicron, which is the b. 1a. so we know one thing, that it doesn t appear to be substantially different with regard to transmissability. likely a bit more of a transmission advantage. the reason you come to that conclusion, anderson, is when you look at denmark, denmark is being overtaken a bit by this new variant of sublineage of omicron in the sense that it was fundamentally all omicron, the b.1, but now it s seeing much more, about 40 to 50 or more percent is the b.2. so that s something that tells you that there s an advantage of
been talking about. they will go off the agenda later, but that is where the agenda later, but that is where the focus has been today. yes the agenda later, but that is where the focus has been today.- the focus has been today. yes and that is an important the focus has been today. yes and that is an important story, - the focus has been today. yes and that is an important story, the - that is an important story, the ministers considering whether to scrap the idea of making vaccines mandatory for front line nhs workers. it was controversial among some conservative mps. but some of the reasoning is omicron and the nature of omicron has changed the picture, mildersymptoms. the picture, milder symptoms. the government picture, mildersymptoms. the government still stressing for people to try and get vaccinations, but also concerns about staff shortages as well in the nhs. we have been hearing from the prime minister today on this issue. all health care professionals should get a vaccine.