from tony blair to rishi sunak, ifelt like humming the tune of ghostbusters! who are you going to call? louise casey! why you? how did this happen? i don t really know, actually. i don t know. i started offjust working in charities with homeless people and then all our dreams came true when somebody said, we want to reduce the number of people sleeping on the streets by two thirds, we will set a target, we are serious and i got thatjob. and i suppose i am pretty fearless. and pretty determined, if i believe in the cause. and i always say to people, success then breeds success. we are a nation that loves our failures, aren t we? god love henman, who never won wimbledon but we made the name of that hill after him. we celebrate the underdog which is one of our most endearing and wonderful qualities. drifting is a fearless, we talk to a few people you worked with and one former cabinet minister said louise is like, a live grenade thrown into the civil service. and added, in cas
champions league final in istanbul, leaving i o champions league final in istanbul, leaving 1 0 with 20 minutes left, rodri was the scorer. now on bbc news, political thinking with nick robinson. hello and welcome to political thinking. draw up a list of some of the toughest policy of nuts that any government needs to crack and you probably put pretty near the top rough sleeping. you might add anti social behaviour, troubled families, maybe child sexual exploitation. victims rights and last but certainly not least, the culture and standards of the police. that list is a short summary of the job is done by my guest this week on political thinking. job is done by my guest this week on politicalthinking. she job is done by my guest this week on political thinking. she has done those jobs political thinking. she has done thosejobs for political thinking. she has done those jobs for five different prime ministers, both main political parties over the last quarter of a century or
waters along with judge pirro. and greg gutfeld. this is the five. brand-new pro-palestinian protests happening right now in new york city as anti-semitic threats and attacks surge in america. jewish communities are on the edge, while the biden white house focuses on islamophobia, and push hamas pro talking points. a man getting arrested by the feds after threatening to scathe a rabbi and quote every other jew he could find. a woman arrested in indiana after plowing her car into what she thought was a jewish school but she wound up smashing into a building associated with an anti-israel israeli group and in california a man killed at a pro-palestinian protest. witnesses claim the victim was struck in the face with a megaphone before falling and hitting his head on the ground. the medical examiner ruling his death a homicide and the sheriff s office has not ruled out the possibility of this being a hate crime. a witness describing what happened. listen. you know, i hear th
reporter: dr. lauren handy says the number of tickbororne diseases nationwide is on the rise likely due to clilimate change. ticks can survive in difffferent areas because it is warmer and that can lead to more infections in humans. reporter: to prevent an infection, doctors recommend wearing long clothes and using g checkining your bodya fufull-length m mirror and throg your clothes in the dryer. turned it on high end any ticks remain on the clothes, they will just kill that after about 10 minutes. reporter: if you do find a tick, grasp it with tweezers close to the skin and steadily pull it out. the majority of tickborne infections are easily treatable with antibiotics. i really truly hope i can just help one other person, ten other people, this has really been quite an experience. reporter: meg oliver, cbs news. james: with the nation baking under a record heat, america s largest electrical
we have got to grasp it, you said. are we ever going to create a britain for and if not now then when? we haven t, have we? we haven t. and i m trying not to be naive. but i think in time my view is that we will realise that you can t have such a vast number of the squeezed middle, the theresa may expression, the sort of low income, you can t have such a vast number of people struggling and having to take more than one job and being really concerned. it is the pressure on that, it s too great. and i think we have not recovered the pandemic sufficiently, the economy, everything. and i think that my worry is that political parties, all of them, need to see that somehow, just taking some of the economic, social pressure out of these families is worth it.