the labour party? i was raised in manchester when sir graham stringer was leader of the council. my dad is a labour man. my grandad was a co op milkman. when i sat down ten years ago and read all the manifestos, and felt the conservative party was my natural home. it is a mixture of responsibility with your money. the values on the type of society you want to be in. we are a broad church coalitions in the conservative and labour movement. but ultimately you cannot overturn a democratic vote and say that you want to rejoin the eu. d0 and say that you want to re oin the eu. y ., ~ and say that you want to re oin the eu. , ~ ., and say that you want to re oin the eu. do you like what you have heard from katherine? eu. do you like what you have heard from katherine? no! eu. do you like what you have heard from katherine? no! i eu. do you like what you have heard from katherine? no! i am eu. do you like what you have heard from katherine? no! i am never- eu. do you like what you hav
banking sector? the regulators are trying to calm nerves and they are saying it isn t a systemwide problem. i would saying it isn t a systemwide problem. iwould point saying it isn t a systemwide problem. i would point out that the common thread in all of these bank failures we have seen so far, including credit suisse, is the rising interest rate we have seen globally. this causes a repricing of risk. banks are in the business of taking on longer term risks and balancing with funding from short term deposits. when the interest rate environment goes up, when interest rates go up, that balancing act become significantly more difficult and banks which have a handle on those risks, which have handled those risks badly, which had poor risk management are unable to negotiate that high wire balancing act. that is why we are seeing some failures at the moment. act. that is why we are seeing some failures at the moment. good to have our failures at the moment. good to have your thoughts- fa
another republic, pulled him from the car. , , . , another republic, pulled him from thecar. ,, . , the car. emergency services took over and delivered the car. emergency services took over and delivered shocks - the car. emergency services took over and delivered shocks to - the car. emergency services took. over and delivered shocks to restart his heart. pepper, her dad and fiance headed home, fearing the worst before receiving the best possible social media message. a possible social media message. . paramedic so my tweet and message to say he was alive, and i cried. she save my life. say he was alive, and i cried. she save my life, simple say he was alive, and i cried. she save my life, simple as that. the best save my life, simple as that. the best friend save my life, simple as that. the best friend i ve got. you can t get a better best friend i ve got. you can t get a better friend. best friend i ve got. you can t get a betterfriend. i best friend i ve got. you can t
diffuse russia s sense of concern. how united are the european allies and the us in their approach to ukraine are they? and the us in their approach to ukraine are they? over the past coule of ukraine are they? over the past copple of years ukraine are they? over the past couple of years there ukraine are they? over the past couple of years there have - ukraine are they? over the past couple of years there have beenj ukraine are they? over the past - couple of years there have been some significant differences. i would say, i would significant differences. i would say, iwould point significant differences. i would say, i would point to, the chancellor angela merkel, her more reserved views, meaning that her rather sober understanding of the degree of their corruption and the degree of their corruption and the degree to which there rhetoric of reform contrasted with reality on the ground but the americans tend to take a more distant idealistic view of the ukraine. but these differe
telegraph. tougher to be. sienna, let s look at the telegraph. tougher powers - to be. sienna, let s look at the telegraph. tougher powers for magistrates to clear the backlogs in the court, so that magistrate would be given powers to jail criminals for up to a year and this is the old, according to the telegraph, as the biggest change in the justice system in 140 years. i wonder if that would classify as part of operation to make red meat or not. it seems like there has been a policy frenzy, every day, we are getting something new. dominic raab has been quite busy. he is reviewing the human rights act, that is a little project he has got going, but he is also announcing the jail terms magistrates proposes going to double, from the current maximum six months to a year, and that means they can try more serious offences like assault and burglary and theft and fraud, so it will increase the number of cases they can handle and obviously that could help with the backlog. again, iwould poi