paul: welcome to the journal editorial report, i m paul gigot. the senate going into joe biden is his son hunter made a draconian gnat ick appearance on capitol hill and flouted a subpoena before the before a closed door deposition and defiant republican lawmakers and rizz father. in the depths of my addiction, i was extremely irresponsible with my finances, but to suggest that is grounds for an impeachment inquiry is beyond the absurd. it s shameless. there s no evidence to support the allegations that my father was financially involved in my business because it did not happen. paul: joining the panel this week, wall street columnist pam and senior fellow jason riley. kim, now that hunter has flouted that subpoena, what s next? well, it s pretty clear, paul, that the house, it might give him one more chance to see if he ll come in. they obviously later that same day voted to open a formal impeachment inquiry into the president. you can argue that hunter s defiance of tha
that. in terms of where it was flying, it was well-clear of any territory in ukraine. it was international airspace over international water. thank you. nancy? thank you. during secretary austin s visit to egypt he held meetings with officials even though all press were banned from covering it. past defense chiefs when they ve been in similar situation have refused to proceed. given the biden administration has said one of its key pillars in terms of foreign policy is when presented between a choice of autocrats and democracies that it stands with democracies. can you help us understand why the secretary proceeded with those trips given the ban. our relationship with egypt is obviously an important strategic partnership. the secretary did appreciate the opportunity to meet with his counter parts and talk about that. i will tell you when it came to the press coverage of that portion having looked further into it, the egyptians lived up to what they had agreed upon. some of
institutionally racist, misogynist and homophobic in a scathing year that says it needs a complete overhaul to restore public faith. the culture, sadly, in the met is all pervasive and the institutional racism and homophobia, misogyny, largely led by what their officers have said and what our own research has shown. ., , have said and what our own research has shown. ., . , have said and what our own research has shown- has shown. today is one of the darkest days. has shown. today is one of the darkest days, without - has shown. today is one of the darkest days, without a - has shown. today is one of the darkest days, without a doubt, j has shown. today is one of the - darkest days, without a doubt, and history darkest days, without a doubt, and history of darkest days, without a doubt, and history of almost 200 year old met police history of almost 200 year old met police service. history of almost 200-year-old met police service- police service. european stock mark
alexjones to pay $965 million to the families of the victims of the sandy hook massacre. and in china, where the country s ruling communist party gathers for its annual congress, we ll look at whose likely to become xijinping s second in command. live from our studio in singapore. this is bbc news. it s newsday. it s six in the morning in singapore and 11 in the evening in london, where the government is battling new economic uncertainty. prime minister liz truss has told mps her strategy of cutting tax will not change. but she s also said she won t cut spending either, suggesting the government will have to borrow more. that s raised concern even among her own mps. some want her to rethink tax cuts to reassure the markets. our political editor, chris mason, reports. reporter: have you wrecked the economy, prime minister? - there are plenty of questions for liz truss at the moment, but that one gets to the crux of things. spiralling prices, interest rates climbing, the market
working with fbi officials since mid-may, combing through classified documents taken from mar-a-lago back in january. that s, remember, when trump s team turned those over, as they work to determine potential risk to high level sources and methods. there s been a significant departure from secret service. onato is out, he left the secret service to become deputy chief of staff to president trump. let s let s talk about the latest filing, doj expected to file a lengthy response to trump s request. what more do we know about it and what do we expect to be in it? reporter: today is the deadline for the department of justice to file their brief in response to trump s request for special master, a third party person who would review the material seized from mar-a-lago. doj says they want to be able to take 40 pages to response bec respond because they say they need more room to respond to trump s factual and legal issues. this is all teeing up for the hearing on thursday in we