former director of intelligence says the only explanation for the pandemic is a leak from the chinese laboratory. the damage caused is very real. pizza delivery man was in the right place at the right time as a suspect happened to run right by him. police thanked the policeman for the assist and said if he is ever interested in a job, they are hiring. steve: live from the avenue of the americas as you look up that green stuff up there, that s central park. it is the 18th day of april. it is tax day. attention all people if you have not put your taxes in the mail, you have got until midnight tonight. it s going to be a beautiful day here in new york city. we have got 48 degrees. ainsley: taxes finished for you? steve: yes. a couple of weeks ago. pete: do people still put them in the mail. ainsley: my dad always did at midnight. pete s pete i know you can. ainsley: downtown main library midnight i always rode with him. pete: out of protest? ainsley: no, st
relations lawyer. also this afternoon. there were more excess deaths than usual in the uk last year. the highest number outside the covid pandemic in half a century. some shops open at midnight to meet demand for prince harry s heavily trailed autobiography, which is now on sale. and a setback, not a roadblock. the team behind a uk space mission which failed to launch say they will keep on trying. and this picture has been causing something of a stir on social media today, because someone or something is missing. we will be revealing all. good afternoon. in the last few minutes, the government has been introducing draft legislation to limit future industrial action in the public sector. the bill would cover health, fire and railway workers. ministers say it would introduce a minimum level of service. unions have reacted angrily to the proposals, which they say potentially are undemocratic and unworkable, and would limit the right to strike. the business secretary grant shapps
he bought twitter to defend free speech even though it s worth half as much. steve: i think he bought it because he wanted to be the chief twit. pete: at this point top of the pyramid thinking up schemes. can you set at your kitchen table ah ha you created a digital god no no because we can t. they are at the point they think they can. how beholden will would he be to their view of what s good especially in a godless world where computers are in control. i think that s scary. ainsley: he is so bright. we learned about singularity. that s the when the most intelligent, which would be a.i., is smarter than the smartest person in the world. we learned about speciousist. share some of that wealth of knowledge with us. steve: at least we can watch it. that was part of part 1. tonight at 8:00 eastern time, part 2 of tucker s sitdown with
ione wells reporting from westminster. i talked more about those proposed strike laws the government are introducing with lord hendy casey, a barrister specialising in trade union rights. he gave me his reaction to that proposed legislation. you are right to describe this is controversial. i mean, the first point to make about this is the cumulative effect of this legislation on top of what s already gone before. a former prime minister backin gone before. a former prime minister back in 1997 said that we already had the most restrictive laws and trade unions in the western world. since then, we had the trade union action 2016, regulations allowing agency workers to break strikes, quadrupling of the damages payable by trade unions. so this comes on top of that. i think another point top of that. i think another point to make is, it is said that we are