Into Tonights Debate, showing this race remains as close as can be. And what do voters want or need to hear from the stage . The effort to reach that slim group of undecided americans. Good morning. It is 10 00 eastern, 7 00 a. M. Pacific. Im Ana Cabrera joined by my Colleague And Friend chris jansing, reporting from philadelphia today, ahead of tonights pivotal debate between Kamala Harris and Donald Trump. It is so great to be sitting next to you on this enormously important day in politics. Can we take another look at The Room . Where were sitting has a couple of purposes. One, it is the file room, which is an old phrase they use where people used to file their stories. Those chairs will all be full tonight with members of the media, who will be watching the debate from here, because, remember, there is no audience. So there will not even be members of nbc team, other teams, other many Media Teams there. But in the middle, thats where the Spin Room is going to be and each side will
closer. russia wants a massive risks for the west after closer. russia wants a massive risks for the west after the closer. russia wants a massive risks for the west after the us closer. russia wants a massive risks for the west after the us agrees - closer. russia wants a massive risks for the west after the us agrees to l for the west after the us agrees to train ukrainian pilots on american f-16 train ukrainian pilots on american f 16 fighter train ukrainian pilots on american f 16fighterjets. and in northern ireland, sinn fein is on track to become the largest party in local government. now on bbc news, it is time for click. this week paul s in for a shock. 0h! the planes that are preparing for the unexpected. burlington airport. lima, foxtrot, bravo, oscar. the man who doesn t want any surprises. all right. normally, i have four smartwatches. a band broke on one, so i m down to three right now. it s a good job you ve got the other three, isn t it? it is. otherwis
licence, after she was caught speeding last summer. now on bbc news all the the latest tech innovation. it s click. this week paul s in for a shock. 0h! paul laughs. the planes that are preparing for the unexpected. burlington airport. lima, foxtrot, bravo, oscar. the man who doesn t want any surprises. all right. normally, i have four smartwatches. a band broke on one, so i m down to three right now. it s a good job you ve got the other three, isn t it? it is. otherwise, i d be losing data. and we re getting nostalgic, with a flashback to those coloured blocks. it s poetry, art and math, all- working in magical synchronicity. it s. it s the perfect game. spencer: air passenger volumes are set to grow from pre covid levels of 4 billion passengers a year to 8 billion a little more than the current world population in about 15 to 20 years. lara: this means there ll be more aircraft flying and more flights to manage. so, although a lot of the talk recently has been about
joe biden met with kevin mccarthy earlier today. both men said talks were productive and repeated the stance that the default is off the table. to avoid that, though, they will have to work out an agreement with the next ten days. negotiators have been trying to strike a deal to avail the default. sources say the white house is offering. both men said talks were reproductive and repeated their stance that a default is off the table. to avoid that, they will have to work out an agreement within the next ten days. even before president biden met with house speaker kevin mccarthy, negotiators were once again around the table, trying to strike a deal to avoid a default. sources say the white house is now offering to keep spending flat from this year to next, while republicans, they say they want to increase defence spending while cutting everything else by up to 22%. treasury secretary confirmed over the weekend that during the first is the hard deadline when the government can n
who just got fed upwith the world, got fedup with being told go to college,get a job, make a living. frankly,that s just not realistic for our generation. you know,it is really frustrating. the boomers,they think we re lazy. you know the whole term, pull up your bootstrapsand work hard and you get the same lifethat they had? no. the world is very,very different these days. hell, the next pandemicin 2025 might wipe us all out anyways. i ain t got timeto wait for retirement. you got to will itinto existence. life s just not fair.the world is a harsh place and the stock market was justthe purest form of yolo. [music playing] reporter: stocks up againthis morning, 12%. short sellerscontinue to get hurt by the thread wallstreetbets and other retail [interposing voices] reporter: all this whiningby wall street, it s making me sick. reporter: this is populismcoming for capitalism. gamestop. matt kelly: on surface,i can be pretty scattered. in the water, though,it s calming for me,