and on that note, i wish you all a very good night. from all of our colleagues across the networks of nbc news, thanks for staying up late with us, see you at the end of tomorrow. o tomorrow after more than a year investigating, 1000 witnesses, nine televised blockbuster hearings, the january 6th investigation sums up its case, and finishes with one last surprise. resolution one resolves. chairman be, is hereby directed to subpoena donald j trump. tonight, the unexpected, historic decision, to try to compel testimony from a former president. i don t want people to know, this is embarrassing, figure it out, we need to figure out, i don t want people to know we lost. new information about the advanced planning of the violence that day. in fact, that the white house knew it. a source went on to say, their plan is to literally kill people. please, please, take this tip seriously, and investigate further. we re coming in if you don t bring her out! thus, never before
and finishes with one last surprise. resolution one resolves. chairman be, is hereby directed to subpoena donald j trump. tonight, the unexpected, historic decision, to try to compel testimony from a former president. i don t want people to know, this is embarrassing, figure it out, we need to figure out, i don t want people to know we lost. new information about the advanced planning of the violence that day. in fact, that the white house knew it. a source went on to say, their plan is to literally kill people. please, please, take this tip seriously, and investigate further. we re coming in if you don t bring her out! plus, never before seen footage as congressional leaders fought to regain control. this is just horrendous, and all at the word of the president of the united states. what may be the final hearing of the january 6th investigation, it is time for final answers. our duty, today, is to our country, our children, and our constitution. we are ob
to have died and it s feared that number will rise. divers are continuing to search for survivors in the machchhu river. now on bbc news, ros atkins on the week. on a thursday night in may 2015, the returning officer in richmond, north yorkshire, announced the result. rishi sunak had become an mp. and part of a conservative election victory. the choice is in your hands. early the next year, prime minister david cameron called a referendum on brexit. my recommendation is clear. he wanted to stay in the eu. but rishi sunak didn t. he wanted out. the uk wanted out, too. david cameron would resign. six years later, rishi sunak was chancellor. he d been loyal to boris johnson, until the scandals became too much. he resigned saying he didn t agree with mrjohnson s approach. a summer leadership contest followed. time and again, he contrasted his message with his opponent s. i ve said the things that i believe our country needs to hear. he lost. but liz truss would come and go. and n
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
the man who was bin laden s number two in al-qaeda, the man who took over as al-qaeda s leader after bin laden was killed by u.s. navy s.e.a.l.s. the string of attacks and murders attributed to ayman al-zawahiri is stomach turning. he was the ideological mastermind behind the term of al-qaeda and groups like that towards indiscriminate mass murder of civilians anywhere including muslims all in the name of islamic piety. and how he got there now looking back at it seemed like a straight shot, but if you sort of dropped in on him at any time in his biography you wouldn t have known he was going there. by the time he was 15 years old he was a committed radical who wanted to try to impose islamic theocracy by force. he formed his first terrorist cell when he was all of 15 years old. when islamic militants did assassinate egypt s president at a military parade in 1991 ayman al-zawahiri was one of hundreds islamic radicals tried and imprisoned for that crime. he was tortured for ye