the united states and around the world, i m christine romans. we begin with breaking news on what s now the second biggest bank failure in u.s. history. most of first republic bank is now being bought by jpmorgan chase in a deal arranged by the federal deposit insurance corporation. the fdic. cnn s clare sebastian live in london for us. clare, this deal announced just a short time ago. all weekend, we ve been waiting for word what would happen to first republic. we knew it couldn t continue as a concern here. fdic would have to step in. and you went to bed thinkiing first republic is your bank, it s now jpmorgan chase, right? yeah, christine, all 84 branches of first republic will reopen this morning as branches of jpmorgan. this is different than silicon valley bank which was taken by regulators and stayed there for more than two weeks. this happenmuch more quickly over the weekend with that auction held on sunday. several banks bid it. it seems they reached that deal with
also tonight: a promise to appoint 20,000 extra police in england and wales has been delivered, say ministers while labour says it s simply making up for the job cuts of the past. two former senior managers at the private health care firm the priory group, say they had concerns about the safety of patients and staff. and manchester city welcomed arsenal this evening for a top of the table clash in the premier league. and coming up on bbc news. luca brecel shocks ronnie o sullivan winning 7 frames in a row to reach the semi finals of the world snooker championships in sheffield. good evening. the rescue operation to bring british nationals out of sudan has made progress today. the latest official figure is that 536 people have been rescued so far. two flights landed at stansted airport in essex today. tens of thousands of sudanese and foreign nationals have left sudan in the past week, fleeing the violence that s erupted between two military factions. a ceasefire declared
don t just watch. participate. worship with us now. come on. his goal is to walk out of the dark. and to resurrect his heart. come on, rise up, take a breath here and rise up. can you hear up the voice of jesus calling us. the power that controls you, can t you hear the voice of jesus calling us. out from the grave of nazareth. that is a awesome. s that s cain performing rise up as our seven week faith and friends concert series wraps up this easter sunday. and a that s what we ve been celebrating all morning on this easter sunday. it s wonderful. cain s going to hang out with us, no relation, by the way. [laughter] we ve been making that joke off camera all morning long. they re from alabama, so roughly the same region, somewhat. they re going to hang out all morning long, performing later in the show. easy there, texas. those are my neighbors over there. it s closer than new jersey. are they making sure that people don t draw the correlation of rela
our window. welcome into fox & friends . wiwe had several bibles from the office out and handouted to us and it struck me, i love history. i love history. i know pete is a big student of western civilization and its foundational ties to christianity. one thing she highlighted in the piece visiting the museum of the bible is the way that christianity and the word of god in the form of the bible is inextricable from the history and culture. from the gutenburg press that s mass knead media to the united states of america and monuments and documents and founding fathers, it s all intricately intertwined and you can check it out by the way in american. go to that museum of the bible at museumofthebible.org/explore and see the literal stories come to life. rachel: we re in a battle to save the story and it was a privately funded museum that was never done on public money and there s a lot of wokeification of the smithsonian and retelling of the story and a battle right now for the
in england have started a four day strike that threatens to bring the worst disruption in the history of the health service. it runs all the way through to saturday morning, and could mean the cancellation of 350,000 appointments and operations. the doctors union is in a row with the government over pay forjunior doctors, with the british medical association sticking to its demand of a 35% pay rise and the government refusing to negotiate until what it sees as a more reasonable pay demand is met. catherine burns reports. what do we want? pay rise! how do we get it? strike! this winter, we ve got used to seeing nhs staff waving banners on picket lines. we re now into the fifth month of industrial action, but this walk out byjunior doctors in england is bigger in scale than anything that s come before. the bma is being accused of picking dates to maximise disruption. their view is industrial action is meant to cause some disturbance. we ve been open and honest and transparent