full sized sd scan that s been created. welcome to bbc news broadcasting to viewers in the uk and around the world. there ve been dramatic scenes in northern italy after 1a rivers burst their banks, flooding 23 towns. at least eight people died, after parts of the emilia romagna region saw half a metre of rain injust 36 hours. the extreme weather comes as scientists warned that the world will almost certainly experience its hottest year on record within the next five years. and a key temperature threshold is likely to be breached for the first time which is a rise in global temperature by 1.5 degrees celsius, above pre industrial levels. here s our climate editor, justin rowlatt. remember last summer? temperatures in england breached a0 degrees celsius for the first time, driving wildfires and helping make 2022 the hottest year ever recorded in the uk. and we can expect even hotter weather worldwide in the coming years, according to the world meteorological organisatio
going through a difficult period in 2018, i started to review journals, i realized i was doing two things. i was simultaneously trying to out-run something, and i was brief, and then looking for something. that was trying to find my identity. that s what the books about. that happens over six continents, deeply internal journey, in many external visible physical places. i hope you check it out. we will, this is my coffee, everybody, enabling anybody wants to to come in my office and borough it. they can t keep it, bring it back. by more. that s exactly they should. luke russert, it s a pleasure to see you, thank you so much. best of luck with the book, that s gonna do it for me, everyone, on this edition of alex witt reports, my father s my dear friends she continues our coverage right now. ues ou and good afternoon, i m lindsey reiser in for yasmin vossoughian, new numbers just in from the border on this crucial first weekend since title 42 ended. amid fears of an
share 4,000 generations what america has done for me, she can do for you. this can t be another presidential campaign. we don t have time for that. we need a president who persuades not just our friends and our base, we need a president the persuades. we have to do that with common sense. and conservative principles, but we have to have a compassion for people. we have to have a compassion for people who don t agree with us. we have to believe that our ideas are so strong and so powerful and so persuasive that we can actually take it to the highest points in the world and to be successful. but we also have to be able to take it all the way down to places that today are hopeless. and prove that who we are works for all americans. i am living proof that god and a good family in the united states of america can do all things if we believe. will you believe it with me? [cheers and applause] will you join the team of the greatest nation on god s green earth? [cheers and applause]
now congress failure to reel in post-pandemic spending is forcing the central bank to tighten credit, choke spending and heighten risk of recession. in reality, this is not debate about spending, but who is going to do the spe spending. todd: alexandria hoff has more. alexandria: june 1 is the day the treasury secretary janet yellen has given for when it is debt limit must be resolved, if not, world implications would follow. today president biden and kevin mccarthy will meet after what was called a productive phone call last night. i just finished a phone call with the president, he s flying back on air force one. we re talking about his trip there and positive things that took place and spent time talking about the debt ceiling and where we are and i believe it was a productive phone call. we can solve some problems if he understands what we re looking at. we have to spend less money. alexandria: the president arrived back from washington. in japan, president biden
at the white house for the third time to discuss the debt ceiling. this comes a little more than a week away from the treasury secretary s so-called hard deadline for default. white house correspondent jacqui heinrich starts us off live tonight from the north lawn. good evening, jacqui. good evening, bret. we are expected to hear something each side following this meeting which has happened after every other meeting. it is speaker mccarthy s first solo meeting with the president, after talks fell apart last week and both sides exchanged barbed over the weekend. treasury secretary janet yellen setting the stable for the president s meeting with house speaker kevin mccarthy saying again it is highly likely the treasury will no longer be able to satisfy all of the government s obligations if congress has not acted to raise or suspend the debt limit by early june and potentially as early as june 1st. there will be hard choices if that doesn t occur. after exchanging barbs