the archbishop of canterbury. god to the living grace, to the departed rest, to the church, the king, the commonwealth and all people peace and comfort and to us and to all his servants life everlasting and the blessing of god almighty, the father, the son and the holy spirit be amongst you and remain with you always. amen. god save the king heard in this cathedral by many. what you heard for the first time in 70 years was god save the king. joining me is correspondent keir simmons. what we heard from the bishop of london there is that she was a remarkable constant, talking about the queen, a remarkable constant. and now similar from what we heard from king charles iii saying our values have remained and must remain constant. absolutely. and just a remark, hearing god save the king, just another moment where things are remaining constant but changing so much. i was just thinking before talking to you, katy, just think about t
no, no, that s not too sombre. but hello and welcome to the programme, which for the last 25 years has been the place where the uk s leading political commentators debate the big themes of the week. ,broadcast and yes, even today still write for audiences back home from dateline london. it may be our final edition, but we re still looking forward, not back. leaders and their future. after liz truss told her finance minister, the chancellor kwasi kwarteng to go, how long before british conservatives force her to do the same? biden or trump, who will win a second term in the white house? or might someone else get the chance of a first? and can china survive a third term for president xi? in the studio, jeff mcallister, time magazine s white house correspondent during the clinton years and then chief of the magazine s london bureau. he and his wife now run their own international law firm. eunice gersh is a portuguese writer and academic, lectures on comparative government, whic
morning. i m jonathan kaye part, this is the sunday show. and now, the unprecedented weaponization of the justice department and the fbi to break into a home of a former president of the united states. for six straight years, i ve been harassed, investigated, defame, slandered, and persecuted like no other president. and like no other president, he could be indicted soon. that may be why donald trump would on a 90 minute rant at a rally in ohio last night. he comes on the heels of the justice department officially appealing the decision by trump appointed judge alien cannon. the block the doj from using the classified documents seized in mar-a-lago and it s criminal mastication. the matter now heads to the 11th circuit quarter of appeals where trump appointees makes six of 11 active judges on the circuit. meanwhile, the special master appointed to sift through 11,000 documents to see if any should be shielded from investigators, has made his first official move. judge
who will win a second term in the white house, or might someone else get the chance of a first? and can china survive a third term for president xi? in the studio are: jeff mcallister, time magazine s white house correspondent during the clinton years, and then chief of the magazine s london bureau. he and his wife now run their own international law firm. eunice goes, a portuguese writer and academic, lectures on comparative government which, i guess, is how countries learn from each other s mistakes; and steve richards, who arrived at westminster just as the conservative party was evicting margaret thatcher from downing street. the latest episode of rock and roll politics, his podcast, is entitled the next labour government and the power of markets. have events of the last few hours, perhaps certainly the last few weeks, steve, provided you with an insight into those two thoughts, the power of the market and the prospects for a change of government? prospects for a change
understand there is been social disruption and trauma and it s time to together get a handle on. it keith alison. thank you very much for your time. that s all on this tuesday night. alex wagner tonight start tonight. this tuesday night. good evening, chris. thank you as always. thank you for joining us this hour. 13 years ago this week, a right wing, anti abortion group called operation rescue emailed its members encouraging them to participate in the special hollowing contest. it was known as the nancy pelosi and harry reid burn in hell competition. yes, really. operation rescue included a video showing step-by-step how you could make your very own nancy pelosi and harry reid effigy. they even showed you how to bring the effigy once you made it. the whole thing was supposedly a protest about abortion related aspects of the affordable care act. the winner of the contest would receive an all expense paid trip to d.c., to earn that effigy. i m not showing you this becaus