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you are done with this? yeah, maybe, or maybe need some plastic surgery, who knows? you never know. it s usually settled by an arm wrestle. we should mention special guest on the tour is john wait is on first and then foreigner or stix depending on the night and who wins the coin toss. it is lot of hits on stage. i think there are four or five number ones and just a lot of great songs that you certainly will know. four hours of classic rock which is amazing to unfold over the course of 7:00 to 11:00 p.m. steve: we love both of you. the renegades and juke box hero tour kicks off tomorrow in grand rapids. kelly and lawrence, thank you very much and good luck to you. want to make sure everyone goes to live nation or ticketmaster. dana: and breaking news on the hunter biden gun trial. we re waiting to find out if the first son will take the stand. good morning. i m dana perino. bill is off today. good morning to you, john. john: good morning. i was surprised to see foreigner and stix. i will see them in hershey, pennsylvania in july. stix are good friends of ours. america s newsroom a live look at the delaware courthouse. this as the president s son tries to avoid conviction for allegedly lying on a gun application. dana: also in delaware president biden and first lady jill biden. they returned there after their visit to france for d-day and the first lady this morning is back in court to support her son. john: team fox coverage today. andy mccarthy is on deck but let s go to rich edson in wilmington, delaware with news out of the courtroom. we just got an update from the courtroom. what s going on now, the jury is not seated yet but there are some preliminary discussions underway right now. in it there has been an indication from the defense that hunter biden will not testify. that is not fully confirmed yet. we re still waiting to here if he will or will not testify. he arrived for his second week in court with his wife, melissa. jill biden is here and his aunt and uncle. james a business partner of hunter s. if hunter declines to testify it would have closing statements as early as this afternoon. if hunter biden testifies it will go deeper into the october. prosecutor allege in october of 2018 hunter was a drug user but he produced witnesses and passages from hunter s own audio book to try to prove their case. called hunter s ex-wife and ex-girlfriend and sister-in-law hallie who hunter had a relationship with after beau died in 2015. the defense has drawn testimony that none of the witnesses actually saw hunter use crack the week and a half he possessed the gun. if convicted the charges carry a maximum of prison and fine. hunter would be a first time non-violent offender. once this trial wraps it s september in los angeles. his court date on federal tax charges. we re waiting to see if he takes the stand here today. john, back to you. john: rich edson with the latest. the very latest coming out of the courtroom in delaware. thank you. dana: thank you, john. let s bring in andy mccarthy. you know if it s a monday we have more trials to talk about. today is hunter biden. with this decision it indicates that hunter biden will not take the stand. i don t think that would be a surprise to you. but his lawyers had really presented quite a bravado going into this case but it is unlikely he will testify. do you think that s a good decision? it is a good decision, dana. i think looking at his potential sentencing guidelines it looks to me like even if he gets convicted he has a good chance of avoiding a prison sentence. that calculation can change if a defendant takes the stand, gives a version of events that the jury obviously rejects, especially what we just heard is true, the government would come back with rebuttal witnesses. the consequences of that under the sentencing guidelines would be to add additional points to computing his offense level as it is called in the guidelines, which would lean closer toward a prison sentence. i think it is a smart move. john: they took the weekend to decide what to do. the way i looked at this on friday and turley and others have talked about jury nullification. members of the jury who know someone addicted to drugs or alcohol at one point. if hunter biden were to testify he could potentially present a very sympathetic character that the jury might look at and have sympathy for and say you know what? let s not convict him on this. what do you think the decision tree was over the weekend as to whether or not to have him testify? i don t disagree with that analysis, john. i think they may feel like they accomplished that with calling his daughter last week. i think factually in terms of the evidence in the case, that was not a great strategic decision but if what you are trying to do is gin up sympathy for hunter, i think his daughter s testimony may have done just that. my own view of it is, of course they are trying for a nullification decision from the jury but also tee up their appeal. the second amendment is a very live issue in the appellate courts on the federal level. and i think what they are trying to show is that his kind of cocaine use was more like alcohol abuse than mental illness because in this country, there is not much history for regulating drug use in terms of gun possession but there is a lot of history of taking rights away, including gun rights away, from people who are adjudicated to be incompetent. they are trying to set this up and why the stress on the fact that no one can say he was using crack with certainty in the days around the time that he purchased the gun. that s where they are going, i think. dana: listen to president biden last week. he did an interview with david of abc news and asked if he would pardon his son. as we sit here in normandy, your son, hunter, is on trial and i know that you cannot speak about an ongoing federal prosecution. but let me ask you will you accept the jury s outcome, their verdict no matter what it is? yes. have you ruled out a pardon for your son? yes. dana: all right, give you a final word on that revelation. he says he is not going to pardon him. and i believe he won t right up until election day. there is nothing enforceable what he just said. that s about as enforceable as saying i can t do anything about the border because congress won t pass the legislation and then they don t pass the legislation and he issues this cockamamie order he did a week ago. it s the position he has to take in the run-up to the election. john: he also didn t say he would commute his sentence. dana: that s true. john: anti-israel agitators haar hasing police officers and defacing statues at president biden s front door calling on his administration to pull support from the top ally in the middle east. but one republican lawmaker is now pushing for an investigation into alleged crimes committed on lafayette square. they didn t get inside the fence to spray graffiti but did a lot of damage across the street. that s right. beyond yelling about a cease-fire in gaza there was also vandalism beyond the white house gates. statues outside the white house including one of andrew jackson were vandalized on saturday, desecrated by protestors, red paint hand prints and spray paint graffiti. national park service officials are assessing the extent and cost of the damage. arkansas republican senator tom cotton had photos of statues. free gaza sprayed on a number of the statute. it is a blatant violation of federal law and calling on the justice department to investigate. if not d.o.j. will next year. you have anti-american pro-hamas loon particulars desecrating the statues of our great veterans, which is a plain violation of federal law. but joe biden s government allowed it to happen and i bet we re not going to see any arrests or prosecutions for violating that law. saturday s protest was a combination of pro-palestinian and anti-war groups. protestors wearing red were forming a human red line around the white house with some saying they stand with hamas. white house spokesman andrew baits responded to that. president biden has been clear that every american has the right to peacefully express their views but he is also always been clear that anti-semitism, violent rhetoric and endorsing murderous terrorists organizations like hamas is repugnant, dangerous, and against everything we stand for as a country. his statement does not condemn the vandalism of those statues, john. john: all right, thanks very much, we ll see what happens across the street and whether or not the investigation results in any charges. a lot of people might think that s a foregone conclusion. thank you, now this. we re going to make our country great again and greater than ever before. it is going to be special. and the world is going to look up to us with respect. they aren t going to be laughing at us. they right now are laughing at us. dana: donald trump goes west on a campaign swing. it was hot out there. he made a major promise and hauls in a boatload of cash. we have that next. idf going deep behind enemy lines rescuing four hostages from the hands of hamas in gaza. retired four star general jack keane on how it all went down. and critics accusing usa basketball of shooting an air ball for leaving caitlin clark off the olympic team. i ll root them top win gold. hopefully in four years i can be there. and see why pods has been trusted with over 6 million moves. don t wait, use promo code 25now to save. book at pods.com today. from pep in their step to shine in their coats, when people switch their dog s food to the farmer s dog, the effects can seem like magic. but there s no magic involved. 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[shouting] dana: a buck wild scene at an oklahoma rodeo when a bull leaps over the arena fence and into a group of spectators. you can see it right there. they immediately descended on the action and eventually able to restrain the bull and put it back in its pen. four people suffered just minor injuries in the process, which is amazing. thank god. they are expected to make a full recovery. john: that s something. former president donald trump wraps up a four-day campaign swing out west including fundraisers in donor-rich california where the cash tap was on full blast. trump also made a no tax pitch to millions of people who work off of tips. senior correspondent alicia acuna live in vegas with more. that had to go over well in sin city, alicia. the crowd really loved it, john. he had a big weekend here in las vegas. former president trump also made a much-anticipated endorsement ahead of the gop senate primary race in nevada. after he left las vegas he endorsed leading candidate retired army captain sam brown who was injured in an explosion while serving in afghanistan. trump writing on truth social i have gotten to know sam and his beautiful wife, amy, first lieutenant and i know in the next chapter of their life of service together they ll continue to make us all proud. sam has already proven his love for our country being horrifically wounded and making a comeback of a lifetime. tuesday s primary winner takes on democratic senator rosen in november. rosen said donald trump endorsed my extreme maga opponent sam brown. banning abortion, gutting healthcare and slashing social security is wrong for nevada. we ll defeat maga extremism in november. on sunday trump also made that campaign promise. for those hotel workers and people who get tips you ll be very happy. when i get to office we re going to not charge taxes on tips. people making tips. the culinary union that represents 60,000 hospitality workers responded, relief is needed for tip earners. nevada workers are smart enough to know the difference between real solutions and wild campaign promises from a convicted felon. congress has the power to change the tax law. a trump spokesperson later told fox president trump will ask congress to eliminate taxes on tips. biden has stepped up the i.r.s. going after tip workers. we ll see where this goes, john. john: i wonder who the culinary workers union is backing in this election? alicia, thank you. dana: want to bring in kevin o leary, chairman of owe leery ventures joining us on the five once in a while. it would be popular for people who make tips but economically i love lower taxes, so what do you think? it is a very interesting proposal. congress has to approve it. tips have been controversial at the taxation level for decades because some of the tips they still are coming in cash are never put onto your form. a tremendous amount of leakage in terms of what s really due to the i.r.s. why not abandon these small amounts? tips are ten to 20% of a bill, maybe 150 or less for a meal in las vegas and so instead of going after these small amounts which for a i.r.s. are really $20, give it up, put some relief on these people squeezed by inflation both in their costs and labor costs for restaurants causing a lot of them to shut down in states like california. politically i see the point. it works. obviously if you are helping them out. a lot of these jobs are transient. you don t want to be a waitress in a fast food location for the rest of your life or waiter. and it s kind of helping young generation move forward. i like it. dana: let me ask you this. you are right on the politics. president trump at 50%, biden at 45%. i have a friend in democratic politics tell me they re writing off nevada at this point and thinking that trump will win it. i also wanted to ask you this looking forward the way the economy is going, there are many more people putting together their income based on the gig economy. a lot of that is based on tips. you re right, that s true. uber drivers, etc. that is a big boost. a tax gift, a giveaway. it may be political. in terms of changing the outcome of the election, i don t think anybody can call this election now. i ve never seen it tighter. dana: no, i just meant for nevada itself because it s looking really good for trump. i don t write off any state for any candidate. the polling has been so volatile over the last two election cycles i don t believe any of it. you have to show me the actual data the night of the election and then i ll believe anything. i would say the biggest issue for both candidates one way or the other is inflation and definitely playing up nevada on home and protein on energy. it s than issue. calling a state now impossible. that s certainly as an investor i m not doing that. dana: it was just a chat with my friend about politics. okay. let me ask you about home and auto insurance. this is the wall street journal earlier today in its editorial saying a politically-made insurance panic. auto and home rates are soaring and the causes are inflation and lawsuit abuse. look at the rates of insurance. it increases in homeowner s insurance. arizona a battleground state. a lot of this has to do with outside influences. listen to senator elizabeth warren and why she is blaming the insurance company. the insurance companies have kind of been playing every part of this game and now when climate risks are rising, they are trying to hang american families out to dry here and demanding either higher premiums or get out of the market all together. so there is a lot going on that poses risk to our economy. dana: i wanted to ask you about that. i ve been watching the costs of car insurance and home insurance really hurting people. while they re dealing with inflation they see at the grocery store. 100% right. 100% right. let me say out of the gate my family grew up in massachusetts. we don t live there anymore. a lot of it is because of elizabeth warren. a great politician, very successful. i don t like her management style and policies. she is wrong on this. the actual facts why inflation has hit insurance so hard is not just weather. there is a tremendous amount of contingency litigation going on here where a lawyer can take down capital from a hedge fund and litigate until the cows come home and get winnings. that policy should be changed. if you lose you pay the legal costs. weather is a factor as well. one sector in our economy that benefits from a.i. this is one of the biggest. so much investment going on trying to write policies from data to a micro level of your street address that it could bring some relief to people in the next 24 months. i m in the insurance industry and consumer goods industry. we look at this like a hawk. i have to buy insurance for my restaurants. are costs are up higher than our food and labor. we want relief there. elizabeth warren is not being helpful bashing the insurance companies. that s never useful. you have to look at why the rates have gone up. there are multiple causes. dana: i feel vindicated. i am obsessed with this issue and wanting to talk more about it and glad we did. kevin o leary, thank you, have a great monday. this whole thing, this whole tragedy could be over. all the hostages could be home. there could be a cease-fire if hamas would step up and say yes to the deal. john: a celebration of freedom after israel rescues four hostages from the clutches of hamas. new details on the daring raid and why the anti-israel mob just won t give up coming up next. plus potential crunch time in hunter biden s federal gun trial. will the president s son take the stand? we re watching. customize and save hundreds with liberty mutual! 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(laughing) call 1-800-977-3322 to schedule a free hearing evaluation and unlock our best deal of the year! dana: we re learning new details about israel s dramatic rescue of four hostages in gaza over the weekend. the raid in gaza bringing home one woman and three men. the largest hostage rescue operation since the war began last october. trey yengst live in tel aviv with the latest. this morning i listened to a podcast where they had wonderful detail about how all this happened. tell us more. good morning. it was certainly the happiest weekend in israel since the war began, four hostages were rescued from hamas captivity. tears erupted across the country from the streets to the beaches of tel aviv. at a hospital here the israeli civilians were reunited with loved wonder. embraced, laughed and cried. part of what the daring operation to save them looked like. israeli special forces engaged in intense gun battles with militants as they stormed two apartment buildings. they later took the hostages to safety. one mother describes what her reunion was like. very happy to see he is healthy. he looks himonty and happy. he is infinitely happy he is back home and very happy to see him. for israelis it was a day of hope, for palestinians a day of death and destruction. hamas-run palestinians health ministry stays nearly 300 people, mostly civilians, were killed during the operation. videos showed a hospital overflowing with injured and dead patients, as we gather new information about the raid over the weekend there is some political instability in israel. two members of the israeli war cabinet resigned from their positions in the emergency government. dana: also secretary blinken is heading to tel aviv this morning expected to meet with president netanyahu? absolutely. he just made some new remarks on the tarmac in cairo before heading to israel. there is a deal on the table and israelis have accepted the cease-fire deal and now up to hamas to sign on. dana. dana: trey yengst, thank you. john: let s bring in marc thiessen. former speech writer for president bush and fox news contributor. here is what the national security advisor jake sullivan said over the weekend to free the hostages. we should point out that they released the woman seen being taken away in the back of the motorcycle. literally without incident. the idf tried to free the other three hostages a gun fight ensued and all hell broke loose. here is what jake sullivan said about that. civilians were killed and it is tragic. the whole tragedy could be over. all the hostages could be home. there could be a cease-fire if hamas would step up and say yes to the deal that the israelis have accepted and that president biden elaborated a week ago. john: could be over if hamas would surrender and give up all the hostages. we don t hear the administration calling for that. i ve been stunned by the response to this hostage raid in the media and other places. if your response to heroic rescue of israeli hostages and the scenes of these hostages being reunited with their families after 245 days is to blame israel and be outraged an israel you may be an anti-semite. the reason why were civilians killed? because they were holding hostages in civilian areas. that s why civilians were killed. when you hear the news that israel carried out a raid to rescue hostages in a palestinian refugee camp the first question should be why were hostages being held in a refugee camp? that should be the outrage. one other thing. one of these this young lady was being held by a wealthy palestinian family who used her as a housekeeper. they would call her out of her room after family dinner and make her wash the dishes. i m sorry, in the 21st century the days of used being used as slave labor is over. israelis were right to rescue the hostage. wall street editorial said. haters of israel will blame and excuse hamas every time. media are manipulated to playing along. has the west loss lot the moral instinct for self-preservation to defend itself in a world of killers? hamas could not survive if not for its enablers around the world. experts say hamas will not unconditionally surrender or agree to any cease-fire where it would lose power is because it is holding out long enough for the outrage to grow against israel and the pressure from this administration on israel to accept the cease-fire is great and finally everybody caves and hamas stays in power. as a p.r. strategy it s working. keep in mind these civilian casualties here were intentional on the part of hamas. they are responsible for every one of them through their decision. it was hamas who made the decision to start this war and massacre and rape israeli civilians. it was their decision to take israeli civilians hostage and bring them into refugee camps and hide them among the civilian population using palestinian civilians at human shields. hamas s decision not to agree to a cease-fire and release the hostages and hamas s decision to take weapons into the palestinian refugee camp and when the israeli rescuers come, to open fire forcing the israelis to respond. people blame israel for the civilian what hamas understands is that there are millions of anti-semites out there who will give them a pass and blame israel for every action it takes to defend itself. unfortunately this administration cowering and the israelis aren t listening doing what they need to do to protect their country and not allow another holocaust to happen and their people to be massacreed. john: the video of the woman being kidnapped and taken away on the motorcycle and the look of terror on her face. for her to be back home is a miracle. dana reads sports. dana: two heroic plays in men s college baseball yesterday as the florida gators stun the clemson tigers 11-ten ending their season. clemson center fielder making an unreal over the head catch at the bottom of the 10th. the catch saved the game with a 9-nine. it was michael robertson who played hero for the gators punching a ball for the win at the top at the bottom of the 13th inning. and sending his team to the college world series that takes place in omaha. i felt i was on a high wire without a net with that read. john: the top is the first part of the inning the bottom the last part of the inning. the catch was amazing. dana: you don t see that every day. john: we ll talk next hour about my favorite topic, caitlin clark being snubbed from the u.s. owe ole owe limb particular team. patrol agents are being told something far different. what do you think of president biden? biden? i love biden. why do you love him? biden helped us. ild diagno sed with cancer because the research is being shared all over the world. it s awesome. [music playing] it s time to feed the dogs real food in the right amount. a healthy weight can help dogs live a longer and happier life. the farmer s dog makes weight management easy with fresh food pre-portioned for your dog s needs. it s an idea whose time has come. our biggest challenge? uncertainty. hidden fees, surcharges. who knows what to expect! turn shipping to your advantage. keep it simple.with clear, upfront pricing. with usps ground advantage®. with absorbine pro, pain won t hold you back from your passions. it s the only solution with two max-strength anesthetics to deliver the strongest numbing pain relief available. so, do your thing like a pro, pain-free. absorbine pro. dana: a landslide causing part of a major highway at teton pass in wyoming to collapse. it forced the closure of a key transit route between idaho and the beautiful town of jackson, wyoming. state officials describe it as a catastrophic failure and it is not clear how long it will take to reopen the road. that s a tough one as we go into the summer. john: that s a big one. maybe the landslide will bring you down. not even a week into president biden s border action we capture migrants illegally pouring across the san diego border sector. border patrol agents getting word to let those people into the country. matt finn is live along the california border with the latest for us. matt. all weekend long we saw migrants illegally cross right here coming from places like china, india, egypt, africa and beyond and just last week president biden promised that his new executive order would suspend illegal migrants from being released into the united states. but now a new border patrol memo obtained by fox news seems to contradict what the president promised. that memo reads in part that agents here in the san diego sector should continue mass releasing single adult migrants into the united states from all but six countries in the eastern hemisphere including russia, moldova and bill: others are being released on the honor system. it reads border patrol agents are ordered to refer to ice single adults from hard or very hard to remove countries. all other migrants are processed and released with a notice to appear on their on recognizance. here in san diego we are talking to migrants coming from all over the world. many tell us they fly into mexico and are smuggled into the united states. did you pay anyone to help you get here? no, i just searched the internet and then follow those guy. can come here. what do you think of president biden? biden? i love biden. why do you love biden? because biden, we love. why do you love him? biden helped us. many of these migrants tell us that they pay $10,000 and beyond to find these cartel coyotes or human smugglers to help them get into the united states, john. john: wow, anybody who thought this executive order was going to change things is sadly mistaken. matt finn for us in california. thank you. dana: want to bring in retired border patrol chief chris clem. curious let s put up the memo again about releasing not releasing from those countries in the eastern hemisphere. why would they do that, chris? this is first of all it s a great topic, very telling about the administration. since day one they have been about catch and release. hard to remove or hard countries, those are mandatory referrals to ice. it doesn t mean it s a mandatory detention. border patrol is not going to release those themselves. it is ice that is supposed to put them in longer, sometimes indefinitely. but as we know and what we ve seen most likely they will be released if nothing has come up. i want to say it s very interesting that we are a week into this executive order, nothing has changed. the numbers continue to rise in san diego. it s another pull factor. if you are a single adult and not listed in those countries you ll be released. so guess what? they ll keep coming. dana: here is what mayorkas thinks about the timing of it all. what has the impact been? how many migrants have been turned away between those ports of entry? we re at a very early stage. implementation as you noted has just begun. our intent is to really change the risk calculus of individuals before they leave their countries of origin and incentivize them to use the lawful pathways that we have made available to them and keep them out of the hands of ex employ station smugglers. it s early. dana: he says it s early. the new york post says it s already failed. the headline, the border crack down has failed as illegals flood across. how do you see it and where do you fall? it s early and already failed. he uses fancy words that don t make sense. reality is this. they ve known since day one this has been a problem. they ve been working on catch and release and doing this the whole time. now they say it will take time. what have they been doing the last six months when mayorkas and blinken went to mexico and the foreign policy expert that sits in the white house who hasn t made arrangements. one last thing i ll say specific to the memo, it is not uncommon to have some specific efficiency directives in those correspondence going to the field. ice is not going to take certain people. let s not waste the time and process them. one particular pathway if it is not going to result in a detention. so there is some efficiency rules in that memo but at the end of the day what should be alarming to everybody is that single adults are being released if knee aren t from those six countries. who has been committing the crimes around the country have been single adults released out of border patrol and ice custody. we need to detain these folks. they have had years to plan for this. to sit there and say it will take time. how many more lives and migrants have to be exploited because this administration will not secure the border and hold people accountable? dana: chris clem, thank you for joining us today. we ll continue to watch it because the migrants continue to come. thank you. as i was turning, a shark grabbed ahold of my hand i looked down and there was a shark attached to my hand. i started punching it. john: a streak of shark attacks putting the florida panhandle on high alert. what authorities are telling swimmers. usa basketball under fire for leaving caitlin clark off the olympic team and how the superstar is responding. no disappointment something to work for. it s a dream. hopefully one day i can be there. they get it. they know how it works. more importantly, it works for them. i don t have any anxiety about money anymore. i don t have to worry about a mortgage payment every month. it allowed me to live in my home and not have to make payments. linda, dinah, joanne, very different people. but they do have a couple things in common. they love their home, and they know their stuff. they all talked about the counseling they got, so they knew how a reverse mortgage worked. and how it could be a real financial solution for their retirement. if you re 62 or older and own your home, find out how you could access your home s equity to give you cash now, and when you need it in the future. a reverse mortgage could put more money in your pocket by eliminating your monthly mortgage payments, paying off higher-interest credit cards and covering medical costs. a person like me needed to get a reverse mortgage it changed my life, it was the best thing i ve ever done. really? yes, without a doubt just like these folks, aag can show you how a reverse mortgage loan uses your built-up home equity to give you tax-free cash. they also know they can pay it back whenever it works for them. it s a good thing! call right now to receive your free, no-obligation info kit. the kit will show you how you could get the cash you need using your home s equity as a reverse mortgage from aag. i ve been with aag for quite a while now, i think they re the real deal. so look, why don t you get the facts like these folks did and see if a reverse mortgage could work for you. call aag, the country s number one reverse mortgage lender. call this number. so tell me about your heart attack. our heart attack was. scary! never want to go through that again. but we could. with heart disease, you never know. so we made changes. green juice. yeah, not a fan. diet, exercise. statins helped. but our ldl-c (bad cholesterol)-it was stuck! stuck! just couldn t lower it enough. and high ldl-c meant a real risk of another attack. so i said, let s ask our doctor about repatha. what can i say? listen to your heart. repatha plus a statin dramatically lowers ldl-c by 63%, and significantly drops the risk of having a heart attack. do not take repatha if you are allergic to it. repatha can cause serious allergic reactions. signs include trouble breathing or swallowing or swelling of the face. most common side effects include runny nose, sore throat, common cold symptoms, flu or flu-like symptoms, back pain, high blood sugar, and redness, pain, or bruising at the injection site. we won t let another heart attack set us back. and neither should you. listen to your heart. lower your ldl-c and your risk with repatha. talk to your doctor. john: fox news alert. firefighters in miami working to extinguish a three alarm fire at a multi-story apartment building after a person was found shot inside that building. police also investigating. more details as we get them. dana. dummies, for the first time in the history of basketball you have arguably a player the most popular player in the world. and you leave her off the olympics team? dana: basketball fans are slamming a decision by usa basketball to leave caitlin clark off the team for the paris olympics that takes place in eight weeks. mike tobin has more from chicago. what happened? the biggest name in women s basketball won t be on the u.s. team this olympics and indications that the decision to not include her on the roster didn t really have to do with who would play the best in the olympics. moment i million dollar sensation and name drawing eyes to the wnba caitlin clark is left off the olympic roster. she was excluded from team usa because there was concerns she would not play as much in the olympics as she does in the pros and concern her fans would have a negative reaction. they wrote it s an admission of tension that the old guard in women s basketball harbors for the rookie who has drawn worldwide attention to women s basketball. clark took the high road and took the disappointment in stride and says the snub from team usa gave her something to work for. the most competitive team in the world and it could have gone either way. i m excited for them. going to be rooting them on to win gold. i was a kid that grew up watching the olympics so yeah, it will be fun watching. the coach of the indiana fever for which clark plays says behind the scenes clark s reaction was more competitive. they just woke a monster. women have been dominant in basketball. they have won every gold in the olympics since 1996. dana: thanks. lots a chitchat on that today. appreciate it. john: weird changes coming up in europe. the european parliament swinging to the right as conservatives win elections in france, italy and germany. alex hogan in london has more on the shift. what s going on? we re starting to see these results roll in from the european unions parliamentary elections and results showing this right-leaning shift especially in countries that hold a large number of seats. let s look at france, for example. the right-leaning party is projected to get more than double the share of french president macron s pro-centrist europeans. m he called for a new election. they will take place at the end of this month set to take place before the country hosts the olympics. looking at germany, chancellor schultz social democrats saw their worst-ever result of 14% losing to the conservative opposition. and in austria, the right-leaning freedom party out performed the conservative party as well as the social democrats. meanwhile looking at italy, italian prime minister conservative brothers of italy s group doubled their seats in the e.u. assembly. why it all matters is the 720 seats will really determine the state of affairs of what takes place within the e.u. over the next five years and new data from today from the e.u. suggests those voters who made their way out voiced concerns, three main concerns at this point in time immigration, international conflicts and economy. definitely making those voices heard this weekend.

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the country s president, emmanuel macron, called a snap parliamentary vote sunday night after his centrist alliance was trounced by the far right in european parliament elections. ina in a speech after exit polls are released, he said he could not ignore the results and the dissolving parliament is an act of trust in the french people. translation: the rise - of nationalists and demagogues is a danger for our nation but also for europe, for france s position in europe and in the world. and i say this even though we have just celebrated with the whole world the normandy landing, and as in a few weeks we will welcome the world for the olympic and paralympic games. yes, the far right is both the result of the impoverishment of the french and the downgrading of our country, so at the end of this day, i cannot act as if nothing had happened. the far national party was the winner of the election is predicted to win about 30% of the vote, and historic high. he called for elections after the victory became clear, arguing the legitimacy needs to be put to the test. the leader in the national assembly welcomed emmanuel macron at s decision to call a snap vote. trees legally these lectures confirm our movement is the major force confirm our movement is the majorforce for change in major force for change in france majorforce for change in france and we are ready to exercise power over the french people tracing their trust in us that his vision elections. we are ready to turn the country around, ready to defend the interest of the french, ready to put an end to mass immigration and ready to make the purchasing power of the french a priority. we are ready to southerly industrialisation of the country, in short, ready to turn the country around, ready to revive france. the overall winner ready to revive france. the overall winner of ready to revive france. the overall winner of the - ready to revive france. the overall winner of the elections was the president of the european commission. and her people s party grouping. they picked up a dozen seats taking them once again the largest group and this is her celebrating their win with supporters in brussels but at a press conference in the evening she acknowledged the success of the populist party. the extremes the populist party. the extremes on the populist party. the extremes on the - the populist party. the extremes on the left . the populist party. the l extremes on the left and the populist party. tie: extremes on the left and the right have gained support, and this is why the results comes with great responsibility for the parties in the centre. i have been working hard to build a broad and effective majority of pro european forces. my aim is to continue on this path with those who are pro european, pre ukraine, pro rule of law. as of tomorrow, this works out again. the results and this works out again. the results and ups this works out again. the results and ups and - this works out again. the results and ups and downs for every political block with results vary widely, country to country, despite wins in germany and france, results through the far right only picked up an additional three seats in the european parliament. the greens had a bad night, using 19 says, i spoke to a collie earlier by what this could mean. good to have you with us this evening. from the results we see at the moment, we see that right swing. what stands out for you from tonight so far? the x-rays here brussels from tonight so far? the x-rays here brussels will from tonight so far? the x-rays here brussels will tell - from tonight so far? the x-rays here brussels will tell you - from tonight so far? the x-rays here brussels will tell you the l here brussels will tell you the centre and a centre right has held, but there is definitely a determined definitive shift to the right. the freedom party, the right. the freedom party, the hard right, is on top in austria, in the netherlands they have picked up seven seats, marine le pen transiting emmanuel macron in france, the md emmanuel macron in france, the afd in germany finishing second and in italy they are on the hard right. top of the pile as well. of huge concern to the commission but no question what the big story is here tonight, faced with that election results in a france, emmanuel macron has denied is called a snap election, dissolving parliament, it will go to the polls the last week injune anniversary canjuly and that is an enormous gamble. the national rally party finishing with 32% of the vote in france, over twice the size of the renaissance party vote. here is hoping he can turn it around in the next few weeks for the french voters on the spot. it is a real risk given what has unfolded tonight in france. b, unfolded tonight in france. a gamble there. emmanuel macron calling it an act of trust and, of course, we will have to see what comes to pass there. from people you have spoken to there, are they getting an understanding over why some people, apparently voted the way they did, the issue that clearly they are concerned about? ., ., ., ., . about? for our world audience, ou about? for our world audience, you need about? for our world audience, you need to about? for our world audience, you need to understand - about? for our world audience, you need to understand for- about? for our world audience, i you need to understand for many people across europe, a big electorate, around 370 million which was the american electorate which is around 244 million in america, brussels feels a long way away. it is a domestic politics, their everyday lives that matter to them but there are some issues which cross waters which people will have voted on here, particularly migration and borders and there is a green lash under way here in europe,. i have spoken to the european parliamentary president who said perhaps there was an invisible line we crossed and maybe we wish to hard on the transition and maybe we do not explain properly to people who had been processing. that is one issue but also a referendum one issue but also a referendum on national governments and you see that in a france and also in germany, the coalition parties in germany fed badly tonight. running in third behind the hard right afd. it is partly a decision on domestic politics but also a feeling within europe that the people in this parliament are not yet understanding the cost of living crisis, not doing enough in their minds to turn around the economy posed pandemic and they want more from their parliamentarians and they turned their back in some countries on the mainstream. talking about the feeling there, when it comes to france, for example, a bad night for the party of immanuel mike rann, also when it comes to germany as well. the german chancellor. so often we have spoken about europe, you look at that nexus of power between at that nexus of power between a france and germany. what does that mean for the balance there in the eu and where the power is held? ., , , ., in the eu and where the power is held? .,, , ., ,., is held? there has been a power shift in europe, is held? there has been a power shift in europe, france is held? there has been a power shift in europe, france and - shift in europe, france and germany still the engine of europe, the biggest parties in this parliament. people will look towards emmanuel macron and the german chancellor within the european council of leaders but you look to poland and the security brief pushed there, a key figure within the main grouping hearing the european people s people s party, the centre rise. i think there is a broad issue that is affecting these countries, and thatis affecting these countries, and that is they are being pulled to the right by these populist parties, whether that will happen here any is another question because the centre has held actually on the right they are fairly disparate groupings. taking jordan maloney, the conservatives and reformists, she is pro ukraine and marine le pen in another group, identity and democracy, she has had a softer approach to russia. they may be able to find some agreement on migration but also many issues these groups have different priorities and so the centre will hope they can pick it that division. they have the numbers from the centre left all the way to the centre right of the mainstream has held this only there will be more influence on there will be more influence on the writer when it comes to migration, climate, the european budget, which still has to be negotiated here, the question is how much influence the hard right, the populist will have here and that remains to be seen. a key member of israel s war cabinet which was set up after the hamas attack last october resigned from the emergency government on sunday. benny gantz had set a deadline of 8june for israel s prime minister benjamin netanyahu to outline the country s long term strategy in gaza once the war is over. he told reporters that he wasn t satisfied. he is now calling on mr netanyahu to hold elections. this is the moment he confirmed his resignation. translation: unfortunately, netanyahu is preventing us i from approaching true victory, which is the justification for the painful, ongoing crisis. and this is why we quit the national unity government today with a heavy heart. yet we feel that it is the right decision. we are now in the midst of a campaign that will impact the fate of israel generations ahead. in order to guarantee true victory, this coming fall, when it will be the one year anniversary of this disaster, we should go for elections and reach a new government. i call on netanyahu to set a date for elections. it is important to note that mr gantz was not part of prime minister benjamin netanyahu s government before the war in gaza. mr gantz had set out 6 strategic goals for israel, including the return of all foreign and israeli hostages still held by hamas in gaza and the return of displaced palestinian civilians to northern gaza byi september. he said he has not been reassured on any of those counts. mr netanyahu appealed to mr gantz to remain in the war cabinet. after mr gantz made his announcement, mr netanyahu posted this message on the social media platform x. 0ur international editor jeremy bowen has been following the developments. this is the quote that in his press conference he was going to settle yesterday but he put it off for 24 hours after the hostage rescue. he said faithful strategic decisions are stark due to hesitation and procrastination out of political considerations, talking about benjamin netanyahu, by political neta nyahu, by political considerations netanyahu, by political considerations he means the desire to stay in power and perhaps prolong the war when he could be doing a deal. and to avoid the reckoning with the israeli people about the mistakes that led up to the security failures of 7 october was a lot of israelis blame netanyahu for. benny gantz is hoping this move will start the destruction of the netanyahu government and there will be elections in the polls see if there were elections he would become the prime minister. it might backfire because netanyahu is reliant on the votes to keep his coalition are going of ultranationalist far right elements who won the war to continue into gaza, put settlers into gaza, they will now perhaps have more influence. that was jeremy bowen there. officials from the hamas run health ministry in gaza say that the israeli raid on a refugee camp on saturday in which four hostages were rescued killed 274 palestinians. several hundred palestinians were also wounded in the raid. hamas accused the israelis of carrying out a massacre. that phrase was echoed by the european union s top diplomat, josep borrell, who described the raid as another massacre of civilians. more footage has emerged of the rescue israel used helicopters to evacuate the hostages from an area around the nuseirat refugee camp, in central gaza. the head of the hospital where they are being treated said none of them require emergency care or procedures, but that they will need long term evaluations. around the world and across the uk, this is bbc news. let s look at another story making the headlines. the wife of the bbc presenter michael mosley, whose death was announced on sunday, has described him as wonderful, funny, kind and brilliant . he went missing after going for a walk on the greek island of symi on wednesday. joe inwood has more. on a barren hillside, just metres away from the safety of the beach he d been heading for, the search for michael mosley finally came to an end. it was on that beach, of agia marina, that the body which has now been identified as michael mosley was found. he was found lying just at the right side of that fence you can see over there, so really close to where people would have been relaxing and playing on this popular and busy beach. we spoke to a police source, who said the body of michael mosley had been there for a number of days. it emerged a greek tv crew discovered the body when they were filming, only noticing his body in their shot when they are editing their pictures. michael mosley was 67 years old. you re live with bbc news. thousands of people gathered at the presidential palace in delhi to watch as narendra modi was sworn in for a third term as india s prime minster. high profile guests attended the grand ceremony on sunday, including several asian pacific leaders. mr modi is only the second indian prime minister to serve a third straight term. but this time he will have to lead a coalition government after his bjp party fell short of winnng a parliamentary majority in the general election. 0ur south asia correspondent yogita limaye reports from delhi. i, narendra modi. an oath that narendra modi is more than familiar with. but what follows is uncharted territory. a weakened prime minister, dependent on a coalition for the first time. there are hundreds of pictures of mr modi all over delhi today, and it s something we ve gotten used to here in india over these past ten years. his picture s been on welfare schemes, on vaccine certificates, so that doesn t seem to have changed. but what has is that while this is a win, it s a victory that feels like a defeat for brand modi. the aura of invincibility that has come to surround him has been damaged. and clues to why some voters turned away can be found here in the politically crucial state of uttar pradesh. it was considered to be a stronghold of mr modi s bjp, but it delivered the biggest shock. in a predominantly hindu village in muzaffarnagar, we met men who ve traditionally supported the bjp. but not this time, says shyam singh, who has four post graduate sons who are unemployed. translation: since four years, they have been searching - forjobs, but there are no vacancies. the government talks about development, but we can t see it happen on the ground. price rise has gone beyond limits, it s tough to put food on the table. translation: people had blind faith in modi, - but now they ve opened their eyes to the reality around them. a hindu temple opened by the prime minister ahead of the election, was expected to galvanize votes like these for the ruling party. translation: temples are a matter of faith, i but to feed ourselves, we need work. just opening temples doesn t help us. in another part of the constituency we met people from india s muslim minority who had found themselves to be the target of an overtly divisive campaign by the bjp. translation: when the results came in, we were happy - because we were worried that if they came to power with a full majority, they would make laws that would discriminate against minorities. bell ringing. a leader who s achieved an almost godlike status for his followers has been brought down to earth by the will of india s voters. for mr modi, keeping his allies together will be the test of a new skill. yogita limaye, bbc news, delhi. suspected islamist gunmen have killed at least 38 people in an overnight attack on villages in eastern democratic republic of congo. local officials and a civil society leader blamed the killings in north kivu province on the allied democratic forces, a militia group with ugandan origins and ties to the islamic state. the adf is also acccused of a village attack that killed 13 people on thursday, as well as one on wednesday that killed at least 16. thousands of people are fleeing to the city of beni in the wake of the assaults. congolese government forces assisted by the ugandan army, have battled the adf in north kivu and neighbouring ituri province since 2021. the adf is just one of several militia groups vying for control of eastern dr congo. for more i spoke to kambale musavuli, analyst at the center for research on the congo kinshasa. whenever they operate there, they are creating violence. you can assume for two reasons possibly. the first one is recruitment of civilians in the area to come and destroy or unlisted children into the groups but secondly for the population. we notice the adf attacks are taking place around areas that is rich in oil, particularly the bene area. we see a max exodus of the population in those areas because they know if they stay, after a few days or weeks or a month, they will also be attacked. these are the only two reasons. let s not forget beyond the adf and the militia groups, it shows the inadequacy of this government and military to address the issue.- government and military to address the issue. less so to some important address the issue. less so to some important news - address the issue. less so to some important news around address the issue. less so to - some important news around the world. north korea has threatened to blow up loudspeakers installed by south korea to broadcast propaganda over their border, responding to the campaign of sending balloons carrying rubbish across the border and releases are at their lowest point in years and in recent weeks they have engaged in a campaign with analysts warning he could escalate to military skirmishes. donald trump told a rally in las vegas on a sunday he would seek to end the taxation of income from attempts, a direct appeal to service workers in nevada. polls suggest it is leaning his way ahead of the election in november and at least three supporters were taken away on a stretcher is as average hits 99 fahrenheit or 37 celsius. the us national transportation safety board this week said that a mistake by an air traffic controller led to a near collision between two jets on a foggy runway last year in austin, texas. it is just one of several investigations into close calls on us airport runways. according to the us department of transportation, in 2023 there were 23 incidents where collisions were only narrowly avoided. in the near miss at austin, a fedex cargo plane was given permission to land as a southwest airlines jet carrying 128 passengers and crew was cleared for take off. investigators say the fedex plane aborted its landing when its first officer spotted the southwest plane on the runway. the fedex aircraft then pulled back into the air, as the southwest jet continued its run for take off. investigators at the ntsb said inadequate training and a lack of a lack of safety technology were factors in the incident. in may, the us federal aviation administration said they would install the surface detection systems at austin and other airports by the end of 2025. joining me live is oriana pawlyk, an aviation reporter with politico. always good to have you with us. taking a look at the numbers, we have federal regulators are grappling with this increasing number of close calls on runways across the united states. do we know why that is? {iii united states. do we know why that is? .., , united states. do we know why that is? , , ., ~ that is? of course it will take some time that is? of course it will take some time for that is? of course it will take some time for investigators l that is? of course it will take l some time for investigators to get down to some of these causes but it is neverjust one thing, always a cascading series of elements they had to deal with, as in the austin incident we knew it is an air traffic controller that was not properly trained and it was also foggy that day and we also learned that he was listening for the sound ofjet noise to know whether or not a plane was taking off. last year, as you pointed out, there are 23 incidents and ii of those were involving at least one passenger airliner. involving at least one passengerairliner. but involving at least one passenger airliner. but is not a great track record and again investigators are boiling down to some of these root causes with the faa looking at one element in the ntsb to try to piece together some of the information that might be missing and to give them more data on what is going on here. the investigations are continuing and in the meantime, we had a safety inspectors taking calls for more technology on the ground to prevent these close calls. how would that work, could have prevented more of these incidents? prevented more of these incidents? ~ , ., incidents? absolutely, you have heard this incidents? absolutely, you have heard this for incidents? absolutely, you have heard this for something - incidents? absolutely, you have heard this for something the - heard this for something the ntsb chair said last week that she has been calling for some of these the organisation has been calling for these technologies where air traffic controllers can see some of these grant equipment via a video screen right there in the tower instead of listening for jet noise instead. that organisation has called for more of these technologies for more of these technologies for more than 30 years. only 40 or so airports across the us has some of the most advanced equipment to see some of the ground movement and it is not always exist either in the cockpit over aircraft, even though some newer aircraft are starting to install them, that way you have both elements in the airport and the controllers as well as those new planes getting some of that from the pilots to hear the alarm bells go off when they go the wrong direction in the airport or as they land. direction in the airport or as they tend direction in the airport or as the land. , , they land. some people might be uuite they land. some people might be quite surprised they land. some people might be quite surprised to they land. some people might be quite surprised to hear they land. some people might be quite surprised to hear that - quite surprised to hear that does not exist more extensively already across the us, and nobody wants to see something trending in the wrong direction. you mentioned some of these incidents, these close calls are also with passenger planes. the question here is how concerned should people be about this? about this? when it boils down to the root about this? when it boils down to the root cause, about this? when it boils down to the root cause, everyone . to the root cause, everyone will try to piece together what some of these elements that led to them and as soon as they get some of that data to uncover it they will they know how to proceed forward. the faa has talked about exploring more technologies and installing more technologies at airports nationwide but, of course, i would not necessarily happen quickly. what it will take is a vigilance on air traffic control side training and vigilance from the pilots as well. , ., ,., vigilance from the pilots as well. , ., ., well. in terms of some of those safety technologies well. in terms of some of those safety technologies being - safety technologies being rolled out, there has been some questions raised about whether thatis questions raised about whether that is happening fast enough. what do you hear? what do you hear? some of it has to do what do you hear? some of it has to do with what do you hear? some of it has to do with the what do you hear? some of it has to do with the recently i has to do with the recently passed faa bill and it gives airports five years with all that, so i think they will every already airports evocative technologies they will need. evocative technologies they will need- evocative technologies they will need. ., will need. always good to get our will need. always good to get your take- will need. always good to get your take. thank will need. always good to get your take. thank you - will need. always good to get your take. thank you for - will need. always good to get your take. thank you for your| your take. thank you for your reporting. you are watching bbc news. thank you for your company, more at the top of the hour. you can get the latest on our website. see you soon. hello there. weather for the week ahead is perhaps not the story you want. no significant summer sunshine or warmth, i m afraid. in fact, the story in armagh on sunday really sets the scene just a high of ten degrees. we had cloudy skies with light rain or drizzle with a cool northerly wind as well. now, that rain is sinking its way steadily southwards and it will clear away from eastern england and south east england during monday morning. behind it, this northerly wind and this cooler air source starts to kick in across the country. so a rash of showers, a cold, brisk wind driving those showers in off exposed coasts and drifting their way steadily south across scotland and northern ireland as we go through the morning. here s our cloud and rain still lingering across east yorkshire, lincolnshire first thing in the morning, some heavier bursts that will ease away. best of any brighter skies, perhaps across southern england down to the south west. here, showers should be few and further between. but nevertheless, that wind direction still really digging in right across the country. so sunny spells, scattered showers, a brisk northwesterly wind for many, so temperatures just below par really for this time of year, a maximum of 10 15 degrees for most. we might see highs of 17 or 18 if we get some sunshine across south west england and wales. now, as we move out of monday into tuesday, the low pressure drifts off to scandinavia, high pressure builds. it should start to kill off some of the showers out to the west. but with those clearing skies, well, those temperatures will be below path through the night as well, low single figures for some, quite a chilly start to our tuesday morning. hopefully some sunshine around on tuesday. there will continue to be some showers, most frequent ones running down through central and eastern scotland and england. further west, some brighter skies and once again, highs of 17 degrees, but for many, just a maximum of 10 15 once again. moving out of tuesday into wednesday, winds will fall lighter still for a time, but there s another low pushing in and that will bring some wetter weather to close out the end of the working week. it will gradually start to change the wind direction. so, after a drier day on wednesday, it will turn that little bit milder, but also wetter as we head into the weekend. india s prime minister begins a third term. we ll look at the challenges he could face when pushing through economic reforms. plus how the death of an actor in the nigerian film industry comparable to hollywood is raising safety concerns. hello and welcome to business today. i m arunoday mukharji. narendra modi has been been sworn in as india s prime minister for a third consecutive term. however, it marks the first time his bharatiya janata party has needed allies to form a government. so will that impact mr modi s ability to push through economic reforms? priyanka kishore, the director and principal economist at research company, asia decoded, gave us her take. modi is actually working with an alliance which has a lot of experience of pushing through reforms in the government. of course, i think that there will be a slowdown in the decision making in certain areas and the big bang reforms that people are expecting that won t come through. but will not completely see a stalling. labour reforms, i think, will be prioritised. be prioritised. and we can debate the be prioritised. and we can debate the outcomes, - be prioritised. and we can debate the outcomes, but be prioritised. and we can - debate the outcomes, but the reality that many people talk about is that in the last ten years, india has been bold economic decisions as well made by the bjp government, and many feel that that has worked, in a way, for international investors. are you likely to see that continue?- investors. are you likely to see that continue? the decision makin: see that continue? the decision making means see that continue? the decision making means that

France , World , Europe , Nation , Danger , Position , Normandy-landing , Transiting-emmanuel-macron , Country , Grand-ceremony-on-sunday , European-parliament-elections , Centrist-alliance

Transcripts For BBCNEWS BBC News 20240610



parliamentary vote sunday night after his centrist alliance was trounced by the far right in european parliament elections. in a speech after exit polls were released, he said he could not ignore the results and he said he could not ignore the results and the dissolving parliament is an act of trust in the french people. translation: the rise - of nationalists and demagogues is a danger for our nation but also for europe, for france s position in europe and in the world. and i say this even though we have just celebrated with the whole world the normandy landing, and as in a few weeks we will welcome the world for the olympic and paralympic games. yes, the far right is both the result of the impoverishment of the french and the downgrading of our country, so at the end of this day, i cannot act as if nothing had happened. the far right party was the winner of the eu elections and is predicted to win 30% of the vote, and a sorry high. a call for elections once the victory became clear, arguing the legitimacy is reported to the test. the leader in the assembly welcome was the eventual decision to call a snap vote. translation: they confirm our movement is the major force - for change in france and we are ready to exercise power over the french people placing their trust in us. we are ready to turn the country around, ready to defend the interest of the french, ready to put an end to mass immigration and ready to make the purchasing power of the french a priority. we are ready to start industrialisation of the country, in short, ready to turn the country around, ready to revive france. the overall winner of the elections was the president of the european commission. and her people s party grouping. they picked up a dozen seats taking them once again as the largest group and this is her celebrating their win with supporters in brussels but at a press conference in the evening she acknowledged the success of the populist party. the extremes on the left and the right have gained support, and this is why the results comes with great responsibility for the parties in the centre. i have been working hard to build a broad and effective majority of pro european forces. my aim is to continue on this path with those who are pro european, pro ukraine, pro rule of law. as of tomorrow, this works out again. the results and ups and downs for every political block with results vary widely, country to country, despite wins in germany and france, results show the far right only picked up an additional three seats in the european parliament. the greens had a bad night, losing 19. from the results we see at the moment, we see that right swing. what stands out for you from tonight so far? the experts here in brussels will tell you the centre and centre right has held, but there is definitely a determined definitive shift to the right. the freedom party, the hard right, is on top in austria, in the netherlands they have picked up seven seats, marine le pen trouncing emmanuel macron in france, the afd in germany finishing second and in italy they are on the hard right. top of the pile as well. of huge concern to the commission but no question what the big story is here tonight, faced with that election results in france, emmanuel macron has tonight called a snap election, dissolving parliament, it will go to the polls the last week injune and first week injuly and that is an enormous gamble. the national rally party finishing with 32% of the vote in france, over twice the size of the renaissance party vote. he is hoping he can turn it around in the next few weeks for the french voters on the spot. it is a real risk given what has unfolded tonight in france. a gamble there. emmanuel macron calling it an act of trust and, of course, we will have to see what comes to pass there. from people you have spoken to there, are they getting an understanding of why some people apparently voted the way they did, the issue that clearly they are concerned about? for our world audience, you need to understand for many people across europe, a big electorate, around 370 million which dwarfs the american electorate which is around 244 million in america, brussels feels a long way away. it is domestic politics, their everyday lives that matter to them but there are some issues which cross which people will have voted on here, particularly migration and borders and there is a green lash under way here in europe. i have spoken to the european parliamentary president who said perhaps there was an invisible line we crossed and maybe we pushed too hard on the transition and maybe we do not explain properly to people who had been processing. that is one issue but also a referendum on national governments and you see that in france and also in germany, the coalition parties in germany faired badly tonight. running in third behind the hard right afd. it is partly a decision on domestic politics but also a feeling within europe that the people in this parliament are not yet understanding the cost of living crisis, not doing enough in their minds to turn around the economy post pandemic and they want more from their parliamentarians and they turned their back in some countries on the mainstream. talking about the feeling there, when it comes to france, for example, a bad night for the party of macron, also when it comes to germany as well, the german chancellor. so often we have spoken about europe, you look at that nexus of power between france and germany. what does that mean for the balance there in the eu and where the power is held? there has been a power shift in europe. france and germany still the engine of europe, the biggest parties in this parliament. people will look towards emmanuel macron and the german chancellor within the european council of leaders, but you look to poland and the security brief pushed there, a key figure within the main grouping hearing the european people s people s party, the centre right. i think there is a broad issue that is affecting these countries, and that is they are being pulled to the right by these populist parties, whether that will happen here is another question because the centre has held actually on the right they are fairly disparate groupings. taking georgia maloney, the conservatives and reformists, she is pro ukraine and marine le pen in another group, identity and democracy, she has had a softer approach to russia. they may be able to find some agreement on migration but also so many issues these groups have different priorities and so the centre will hope they can pick at that division. they have the numbers from the centre left all the way to the centre right, the mainstream has held this only there will be more influence on the right when it comes to migration, climate, the european budget, which still has to be negotiated here, the question is how much influence the hard right, the populist will have here and that remains to be seen. a key member of israel s war cabinet which was set up after the hamas attack last october resigned from the emergency government on sunday. benny gantz had set a deadline of 8june for israel s prime minister benjamin netanyahu to outline the country s long term strategy in gaza once the war is over. he told reporters that he wasn t satisfied. he is now calling on mr netanyahu to hold elections. important to note that mr ganz was part of the netanyahu government before the war in gaza and he has at our six strategic goals for israel including the return of all foreign israeli hostages still held by hamas in gaza and the return of displaced palestinian civilians to northern gaza byi september. he said he has not been reassured on any of those accounts. netanyahu appealed to benny gantz to remain in the war cabinet after benny gantz made the announcement, benjamin netanyahu posted this message on a social media. our international editor jeremy bowen has been following the developments. this is the quote that in his press conference he was going to say it yesterday but he put it off for 2h hours after the hostage rescue. he said faithful strategic decisions are stuck due to hesitation and procrastination out of political considerations, talking about benjamin netanyahu, by political considerations he means the desire to stay in power and perhaps prolong the war when he could be doing a deal. and to avoid the reckoning with the israeli people about the mistakes that led up to the security failures of 7 october, which a lot of israelis blame netanyahu for. benny gantz is hoping this move will start the destruction of the netanyahu government and there will be elections and the polls say if there were elections he would become the prime minister. it might backfire because netanyahu is reliant on the votes to keep his coalition going of ultranationalist far right elements who want the war to continue into gaza, put settlers into gaza, they will now perhaps have more influence. officials from the hamas run health ministry in gaza say that the israeli raid on a refugee camp on saturday in which four hostages were rescued killed 274 palestinians. several hundred palestinians were also wounded in the raid. hamas accused the israelis of carrying out a massacre. that phrase was echoed by the european union s top diplomat, josep borrell, who described the raid as another massacre of civilians. more footage has emerged of the rescue israel used helicopters to evacuate the hostages from an area around the nuseirat refugee camp, in central gaza. the head of the hospital where they are being treated said none of them require emergency care or procedures, but that they will need long term evaluations. joining me now to discuss these developments is david mccoskey, a director on arab israel relations. welcome, thank you for being with us. what do you think the resignation of a benny gantz will mean for benjamin netanyahu for his cabinet and for this war? it is a key moment cabinet and for this war? it is a key moment in cabinet and for this war? it is a key moment in time, - cabinet and for this war? it 3 a key moment in time, no question. basically foryour viewers, you need 61 of 121 to govern and without this party, he is down to 64. that means the balance of power is held by the balance of power is held by the ultranationalist, the the ultra nationalist, the police the ultranationalist, the police minister, the finance minister, and so it is possible that netanyahu will be more concerned about the hard right pushing him and believing without them he doesn t have a cabinets, he does not have 61. benny gantz provided notjust the question of an extra vote but with two former chief of staff of the israeli military, a lot of experience and they are trusted by washington. this could be a perilous moment where netanyahu is under the influence of these two heart rate members, it is a moment of uncertainty. rate members, it is a moment of uncertainty- uncertainty. whether to be the case, uncertainty. whether to be the case. walk uncertainty. whether to be the case, walk with uncertainty. whether to be the case, walk with a uncertainty. whether to be the case, walk with a potentially . case, walk with a potentially look like in how netanyahu continues this war? it might mean that continues this war? it might mean that those continues this war? it might mean that those two - continues this war? it might mean that those two clearly| continues this war? it might i mean that those two clearly do not want the joe biden mean that those two clearly do not want thejoe biden plan which, it is our 21, no small measure, and they have not given the answer yet for the release of hostages, the ending of the war. they are clearly on a record against this, calling it the surrender plan, releasing hostages, the prisoners, the exchange in return for a gradual and to the war. that is one part of other parties will try to expand the war to lebanon, something the defence establishment is very much against and will they be more reticent to try what antony blinken and the administration wants which is a grander deal with the saudis that the strategic community, they want the very badly. it will come down to this one essential question, is the strength of the defence establishment and the defence minister himself, to what extent can they hold the line against the enhanced influence of bendigo via? where is the prime minister and the delicate balance? will the side with the defence establishment that i think he knows will give him more strategic will he go with two people with no military experience? and will he leave israel to a much more perilous course? israelto a much more perilous course? ., , ., ., course? that is one potential we could course? that is one potential we could see course? that is one potential we could see unfold. - course? that is one potential we could see unfold. we - course? that is one potentiall we could see unfold. we know when his departure that benny gantz called for elections. do you think there is any potential for that? you think there is any potentialfor that? it you think there is any potential for that? it could be to the extent potential for that? it could be to the extent that potential for that? it could be to the extent that the - potential for that? it could be to the extent that the hard i to the extent that the hard right over reaches which i think is a real possibility and the government and the polling data becomes much more unpopular, is netanyahu saying these guys will lead him to a ruin? he still wants to maintain popularity, yes, he could in theory remain a minister even if he is unpopular but in reality when you are unpopular with the public it is harder to get things through. it is a question of does this overreach create a backlash in the public s nobody thinks right now that benny gantz can bring about what he wants because 64 seems ironclad for the moment. i do think they could overplay their hands, the harder rights, and that is something that netanyahu certainly knows. that could lead over time to elections. will it be in the fall or several months later we do not know for sure. there is a real risk here, a risk i feel could be dangerous for israel militarily and politically for netanyahu is equally risky that the right leads into a course that is unpopular. leads into a course that is unp°pular- leads into a course that is un oular. ., . ~ unpopular. good to talk you, thank yon unpopular. good to talk you, thank you. always unpopular. good to talk you, thank you. always good - unpopular. good to talk you, thank you. always good to i unpopular. good to talk you, | thank you. always good to be with yon around the world and across the uk, this is bbc news. let s look at another story making the headlines. the wife of the bbc presenter michael mosley, whose death was announced on sunday, has described him as wonderful, funny, kind and brilliant . he went missing after going for a walk on the greek island of symi on wednesday. joe inwood has more. on a barren hillside, just metres away from the safety of the beach he d been heading for, the search for michael mosley finally came to an end. it was on that beach, of agia marina, that the body which has now been identified as michael mosley was found. he was found lying just at the right side of that fence you can see over there, so really close to where people would have been relaxing and playing on this popular and busy beach. we spoke to a police source, who said the body of michael mosley had been there for a number of days. it emerged a greek tv crew discovered the body when they were filming, only noticing his body in their shot when they were editing their pictures. michael mosley was 67 years old. you re live with bbc news. to the uk general election and when this week, the main parties will launch their manifestoes and they will be quizzed on how they would fund their cliff ledges. conservatives say they could save billions of the benefits bill while labour was to provide more prison places without having to raise household taxes. our political correspondent reports. cheering. the main parties are preparing to launch their manifestos this week. the whole country has been longing for and waiting for this election to come. labour s promising to provide more childcare places. now the big parties know you can t pay for policies from small change, but the labour leader wasn t keen to identify spending cuts or tax rises. instead, he insisted it was all about the economy. all of our plans are fully funded and fully costed and none of them require tax rises over and above the ones that we ve already announced. what we do need to do, just to take up the challenge that s being put to us, is we do need to grow the economy. cheering. the prime minister s keen to move on from his d day misstep. today his party wasn t talking about warfare, but welfare. they ve been looking for cash for tax cuts and claim they could save £12 billion from the benefits budget by the end of the next parliament. in my area of welfare, we ve saved £7.7 billion over measures that we ve brought in over this parliament. we cut fraud and error within the welfare system, within benefits by about 10% last year and we can go still further. the lib dems have been banging the drum for investment in the nhs to the tune of billions of pounds. they say they won t raise income tax to pay for this, but other taxes are available. we said we d increase the digital services taxes on the social media giants, the likes of amazon and google as well. so i think unlike the other parties, we ve actually already begun to show very clearly where the money for our health and care policies would come from. the snp accuse the main westminster parties of being deliberately in denial about the public finances. it s important at this election that people focus on the conspiracy of silence that is going on between the labour party and the conservative party. the tories have signed up to £18 billion worth of spending cuts, according to the institute for fiscal studies. and labour, according again to the institute of fiscal studies have not demurred from those figures. the parties manifestos will provide a political sense of direction, but they may be less clear aboutjust how rocky a road lies ahead. iain watson, bbc news. suspected government have killed 38 people in the democratic republic of congo. officials blamed the killings on the allied democratic forces, a militia group with ugandan origins and ties to the islamic state. the adf is also accused of a village attack that killed 13 people on thursday as well as on a wednesday killing 16. thousands of people have fled between nearby city in the wake of the recent assaults. government forces have battled the adf and neighbouring provinces since 2021. the adf is just one of several militia groups vying for control of eastern drc. for more i spoke to kambale musavuli, analyst at the center for research on the congo kinshasa. thank you for being with us. what we know about this spate of attacks? it what we know about this spate of attacks? of attacks? it is not the first time we have of attacks? it is not the first time we have launched - of attacks? it is not the first. time we have launched attacks. this is an issue we have had for almost two decades, if i may say, where a ugandan rebel group has operated in a drc and the people have face the brunt of the group. there have been military operations against them for the past two decades, even some involving logistical and military support for this stage. yet up until today, the adf has not been able to be stopped. adf has not been able to be sto ed. ~ ., adf has not been able to be sto ed, . ., , adf has not been able to be stoned. ~ . , ., ., stopped. what is the aim for those who stopped. what is the aim for those who are stopped. what is the aim for those who are carrying - stopped. what is the aim for those who are carrying out i those who are carrying out these kinds of attacks? what are they looking to achieve? when it comes to the adf, they have a connection with uganda, political problems there. they claim their aim is to remove the regime of the officials in power since 1986 but their claim inaudible. whenever they operate there, why are they creating a violence? you can assume for two reasons possibly. the first one is recruitment of civilians in the area to come and destroy or enlisted children into the groups but secondly for the population. we notice the adf attacks are taking place around areas that is rich in oil, particularly the beni area. we see a max exodus of the population in those areas because they know if they stay, after a few days or weeks or a month, they will also be attacked. these are the only two reasons. we can clearly see that as a reason why the communities bear the brunt. let s not forget beyond the adf and the militia groups, it shows the inadequacy of this government and military to address the issue. we do not believe that military pressure, military action to the adf will resolve it. to resolve this issue we have to go all the way back to uganda and allow the ugandans to have all of the assistance, not small groups who can move, not just uganda but also drc. we have some just uganda but also drc. we have some developing unused to bring you. the us and our thing on sunday it has requested a un security council vote on the draft resolution backing a plan for an immediate ceasefire with the release of hostages between israel and hamas, according to nate evans, this paperfor the us delegation, no vote date specified but that is the call from the us for a security council vote there. you are watching bbc news. we will bring you more on that as we get it, what is at the top of the hour. join me then. hello there. weather for the week ahead is perhaps not the story you want. no significant summer sunshine or warmth, i m afraid. in fact, the story in armagh on sunday really sets the scene just a high of ten degrees. we had cloudy skies with light rain or drizzle with a cool northerly wind as well. now, that rain is sinking its way steadily southwards and it will clear away from eastern england and south east england during monday morning. behind it, this northerly wind and this cooler air source starts to kick in across the country. so a rash of showers, a cold, brisk wind driving those showers in off exposed coasts and drifting their way steadily south across scotland and northern ireland as we go through the morning. here s our cloud and rain still lingering across east yorkshire, lincolnshire first thing in the morning, some heavier bursts that will ease away. best of any brighter skies, perhaps across southern england down to the south west. here, showers should be few and further between. but nevertheless, that wind direction still really digging in right across the country. so sunny spells, scattered showers, a brisk northwesterly wind for many, so temperatures just below par really for this time of year, a maximum of 10 15 degrees for most. we might see highs of 17 or 18 if we get some sunshine across south west england and wales. now, as we move out of monday into tuesday, the low pressure drifts off to scandinavia, high pressure builds. it should start to kill off some of the showers out to the west. but with those clearing skies, well, those temperatures will be below path through the night as well, low single figures for some, quite a chilly start to our tuesday morning. hopefully some sunshine around on tuesday. there will continue to be some showers, most frequent ones running down through central and eastern scotland and england. further west, some brighter skies and once again, highs of 17 degrees, but for many, just a maximum of 10 15 once again. moving out of tuesday into wednesday, winds will fall lighter still for a time, but there s another low pushing in and that will bring some wetter weather to close out the end of the working week. it will gradually start to change the wind direction. so, after a drier day on wednesday, it will turn that little bit milder, but also wetter as we head into the weekend. voice-over: this is bbc news. we will have the headlines for you at the top of the hour, which is straight after this programme. hello and welcome to unspun world here at the bbc s headquarters in london. we live in turbulent, changing times. after 80 years of peace, more or less, between the superpowers, where are we heading now? scratch away at the surface of european sentiment, european sensibility, what you find is anxiety about peace and security. south africa has punished its ruling party for 30 years of failing government. but how does the chastened anc now select partners for the way forward? it is highly expected that the african national congress will come up with a coalition, even though it will be uneasy, but one that will be manageable. and immigration the great issue in so many of the 60 plus elections which are taking place around the world this year how does it affect us? we live in a much more globalised world. it s easier to travel. that has, you know, created movements of people around the planet which are presenting real challenges for governments.

Renaissance-party-vote , European-parliament-elections , Armagh-on-sunday , Exit-polls , Centrist-alliance , Speech , Person , News , Spokesperson , Public-speaking , Product , Event

Transcripts For CNN CNN News Central 20240610



single voter, all latino voters, understand what s at stake and what president biden has delivered for them? adrian elrod, appreciate you being with us morning. thank you okay. more than 20 million people from california to arizona could be seeing triple digit or near triple-digit heat. let s get over to cnn s derek van dam tracking this one for us. derek, what are you looking at? yeah. kate, 30 is coming out of phoenix arizona warning that the high risk of heat stress or heat-related illness is present here in the city today, if you don t have access to adequate cooling or adequate hydration as well, they ve had 14 consecutive days where the mercury in the thermometer has climbed above one in hundred degrees and we have no relief really insight, especially this week, 20 million americans under some sort of heat alert, including heat warnings for vegas, sin city. it is sisley and their 11 consecutive days with temperatures above 100 degrees. this is the warmest start in the month of june for the sin city and we continue to see the above-average temperatures well into triple to territory. all thanks to this heat dome that is suppressing cloud, allowing for maximum sunshine overhead and that means we bake underneath that heat dome triple-digit heat for palm springs, phoenix sacramento, and to las vegas. and guess what? it doesn t stop here no break, not even summer yet. i think i can ever remember when summer starts, but i m just going to say not yet. here are already there. it s great to do, derrick. thank you so much. a, new are xena new central stress now what will donald trump tell his probation officer? they meet today, talk about are to store first for a former president, hunter biden s federal gun trial could go to the jury today. hey, and we could learn any minute while they re hunter biden will choose to testify and brand new trial data on a combination covid and flu vaccine. a first of its kind when might it be available? sara is out, i m john berman with kate bolduan. this is cnn new sec the president s son hunter biden just arrived or federal court courthouse once again in delaware and the first-order of business and really the most anticipated order of business today is to find out if he will take the stand in his own defense. chord is not just minutes away from resuming hunter biden is facing charges related to a 2018 gun charge. he s pleaded not guilty. sorry, 2018 gun purchase. and he has pleaded not guilty. if he does not take the stand, then closing arguments may soon begin. cnn s evan perez is live outside the courthouse for us, evidence seems pretty stark either or today, either his legal team says it s going to get ready to take the stand or things really start wrapping up yeah absolutely cate we just saw a hunter biden arrived a short minute or a couple of minutes ago. he had a lot of family members around him, including the president s sister and brother. there s this is going to have obviously a full courtroom right now with family members offering his support offering their support rather, the defense has raised the prospect that 100 for biden could testify on his own defense, but this is a risky proposition for this defense the prosecution has already warned essentially that if he takes the stand, they re going to bring up a number of things, including his navy discharge allegedly for testing positive for drugs about a decade ago as well as his tax charges and the fact that he had admitted guilt as part of a plea agreement that fell apart spectacularly last summer. here in this very courtroom fence wants to argue, in part that he has been sober since 2019 and so that s part of what they would like to to bring to the jury. now, again, it s very at this point unlikely that this will happen. the risks are very high for hunter biden if he takes the stand but he has been very, very forceful in trying to do a very public defense of himself over the last few months against republicans and there is some feeling around him that he believes he is his best advocate. we ll see in the next few minutes whether the defendant takes it s a stamp. remind people of how things also ended on friday. it was even more, it was more emotional and personal testimony, even coming from biden s daughter right? namely, naomi biden testified on friday and really it was tearful. it was very powerful, emotional testimony and part of what she was brought here to do was to blunt some of the impact of the testimony of hallie biden, who is a hunters brothers beau biden widow, who he was also in a relationship with after the death of his brother and one of the things she told prosecutors, the most important thing she she brought to the until the trial was the allegation that she believed he was doing drugs, that he was addicted to drugs, and struggling with his addiction in october of 2018. now that s when he bought the gun. he bought this garden. and had it for about 11 days according to this case, according to prosecutors and that s what this case is about. prosecutors say that because hunter biden was addicted to drugs, that he lied on the government form that he used for this to fill out to buy that firearm. and they also say that by possessing it while he was an addict, he also broke the law. he is facing these three charges. again this hour. we re going to find out whether he actually takes the stand evan. thank you so much. it s great to have you there, john. all right. with me now cnn legal analysts, criminal defense attorney joey jackson. joey evan says extremely unlikely. hunter biden will take the stand. we could learn any minute if he doesn t, why not? because it is just the risk is too great, john, good morning to you. now, here s the way it goes. what you always want to do as defense attorney is prepare your client for that eventuality. how asking them questions, furthering your narrative, and then you mute that, mute them by cross-examining them giving them the pressure of what it would be like in the courtroom. but here s the problem number one, when you look to doing your cases of the defense, the first thing you look for is raising the spectre of reasonable doubt. the case becomes without your client testifying, have you raised that spectrum? you have to examine here. have they done that defense has shed a lot of light on at the time of this it s purchase. was he addicted then was evidenced presented to the court and to that jury with respect to what he was doing at that time? yes. prosecutors have shown that he was addicted in general. have they shown he was addicted them? the other issue is you re then attacked and cross-examination with collateral issues. what am i speaking up? it s not so so much that he cannot that is hunter biden get on the stand and advances narrative with respect to addiction, advances narrative with respect to the dark moments. but then you re cross-examined not only factually with respect to what the case is about, what you were doing, who you were doing it with the drugs you were having, you were ruining people s lives, but other issues you heard evan whereas speak to the issue of when he was in the military discharge, what does that have to do with it goes to your credibility. it s just not an advisable thing it changes the equation, puts too much focus on him and then final point, john, it then opens up this other pandora s box. what pandora s box, after you testify, guess what? prosecutors say, judge. i d like to rebut that testimony. we re going to bring more witnesses. and it just gets too messy. leave it where it is. i think the defense has done a lot with respect to reasonable doubt, make your arguments to the jury, but then again, john, expect the unexpected that reasonable doubt seems to be over the issue of whether hunter biden was literally on drugs the moment that he signed that form, saying that he was not on or addicted to drugs, correct. so yes. now, what will happen is just to be clear, it s not even that the forum says that right at this moment, are you addicted? the defense is trying to really narrow the timeframe, saying prosecutors, you ve shown our client was drug addicted for sure i think the fence will also say you re shaming him as a result of that. why we shaming an addict should we be up lifting, getting people? how are we really dragging people into katia milli eight them based upon this the defense is saying in the 11 days that he owned that weapon, have you demonstrated then that he s been on drugs, don t tell me about text messages about him sleeping on cars a day after another text that he sent with respect to him using show me someone who saw him using drug. can you do that? prosecutors? and if you don t, the defense will say it s not enough. the other issue jhanas you know, trust me because i don t know what i was doing at the time. he was in a deceptive state of mine. and as a result of that, you can t 20 seconds left, assuming that we re going to closing arguments shortly. the prosecution, though, knows that the defense will do that. so what are the defense prosecution said? i think what they do is they continue to lock him in. i think we re going to see in closing arguments the pictures of him. and really humiliating pictures and what he had in what those pictures in terms of paraphernalia, i think they ll 0.2 witnesses that talked about his addiction and et cetera. i think they ll say prosecutors that he knowingly knew what he was doing. he did it anyway, and that we re not here to shame anyone what we re here to do is to hold a person accountable who lives on the form. defense s narrative, john, far different than that, of course, what will ultimately the jury decide? i think will know soon and they could get the case by the end of the day. joe jackson great to see you this morning. thank you also this morning, donald trump has a meeting, a meeting with his probation officer ahead of his sentencing. that s coming next month. so this is standard procedure for anyone convicted of a crime, but it s absolutely anything but standard obviously, when it comes to the historic conviction of a former president, the meaning will help decide trump s punishment after he was found guilty of all 34 charges in his new york trial seen as john miller has new reporting on all this. john, we also know that trump s attorney, todd blanche is going to be present for this meeting. it s kinda leading me to wonder what s normal about this and what s definitely not normal. about all of this so it is not unusual for an attorney to ask to be present and when they ask, it s generally granted. but just about everything else is unusual. i mean, the probation department is going to want to go through what they call an intake process. now, the other day spoke to new york city s commissioner of probation, juanita holmes, who said she could not discuss the trump case or any specific case, but walk me through the process and what commissioner home set is the interview is family history, education, criminal background, donald trump will have to tell the probation department what they already know, which is he has three other open felony cases that are that are pretrial right now. employment history, he s worked for himself his whole life substance abuse, not an issue. they re medical condition financial status, living conditions. i have a triplex triplex spent out in a building with my name on it he may have questions for them. can i vote? yes. while on probation what are the conditions be when do i have to report? how often it ll be? a routine experience for the probation department on one hand and very strange on another it also we re talking about someone who is convicted, who has secret service protection as well. i mean, you done a lot of reporting on kind of the coordination that s necessary between secret service and all other forms of law enforcement around just the trial, around the trial. what does that how do you throw the secret service protection into all of this? what does that do well, for today, not much because it s going to be a virtual meeting via zoom or something like that. but the conditions of his probation the secret service, will be with him all the time the probation department could call them in as witnesses. if there s an alleged violation and i think one of the first things that s going to come up are a travel. if you re going to travel and by the way, if you re a presidential candidate, you re going to travel. you need the permission your probation officer. and number two, i don t live in new york. i mean, i have a building here in an apartment, but i m a florida resident. can i get my case transferred to florida? i think that s going to be likely request and the answer is it can happen. one probation, one states probation can transfer to another state for supervision. if that s where the person lives, and then there ll be some administrative stuff such as a convicted felon in new york state they re going to ask him for his dna and he s going to have to give that they can do other things like unannounced home visits to check on his living conditions that probably would be unlikely in this case, but, you the rules will be the same for him as anyone else. john. thank you so much. always getting your insight on this all of these things is always so interesting and important. thank you. something so normal and also so completely abnormal about this whole thing. ever you just we ve seen all along, but such stark the secret service could be called as witnesses to find out if he s violated his probation. just as the founders intended, you d like to very like that. let s say the least this morning, secretary of state antony blinken traveling in the middle east as the political turmoil there reaches a peak a major us city partially shut down after it got him file large scale cyber attack overnight and it is like a battlefield, new details on a fire that was jumping from 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follow the facts follow. cnn any moment now we re expected to hear from secretary of state antony blinken, and he s just as he s just arrived back in the middle east to try and push forward the hostage and ceasefire negotiations between israel and hamas blinken s ben in cairo, egypt. they ll soon head to israel to meet with israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu and also expected to be meeting with benny gantz, who just resigned from israel s war cabinet and protests of how netanyahu was handling the war now this happened after the dramatic rescue operations saturday that brought home four israeli hostages after eight months in captivity in gaza cnn political and global affairs analyst barak ravid joins us now he also is, of course, a political and foreign policy reporter with axios rockets great to see you very long weekend for so many especially you reporting on all of this. what are you hearing now about about the operation saturday and also what, if anything, is being learned from the four hostages who were rescued? hi gate, i think what we learned by by what the hostages have been saying during that weekend since they were rescued, is that once again, there s a very different mo, that hamas has in different cases of different hostages, some of them are in the tunnels, some of them are in houses of families who are affiliated with hamas, with hamas guards and according to the place that those hostages are being held they get different treatment and for example, no alga money was held hostage and rescued, said that she was held with the family. that was that had quite a lot of money. so the conditions were better than other hostages. and this family i used her as a cleaning lady and told her told her to clean the house, to clean dishes, to make food, which is something that we haven t heard from other hostages and i want to ask you about tony blinken and what his mission now is as he s gonna be landing because this is where kind of all of the focus will be quickly shifting. but also even before that jake sullivan, biden s national security adviser has been on since the operation and asked what the impact of the rescue operation would have on the hostage and ceasefire negotiations he basically said it s hard to say. they haven t heard yet from hamas and he doesn t know what are you hearing about this so i think it s interesting because in previous cases for example, when israel started its operation in rafah or in cases that are even before every time that there was some sort of a big blow hamas immediately said that it s freezing the negotiations. there s nothing to talk about and that s it. it did not say this in this case. so i think this is one interesting point. another interesting point is that three of the hostages were rescued, were men who are supposed to be released in a second phase of that deal in return for a big number of palestinian prisoners who are serving life sentences the fact that there, they were rescued took a lot of leverage from hamas and was a big loss for each sinwar because a lot of those prisoners that he wanted to release are people that he worked with together in prison so i think the message that hamas get out of this operation also is that every day that passes it could lose even more leverage. and therefore, maybe now could be a good time to cut a deal and what then do you think is a conversation between tony blinken and benjamin netanyahu? tony blinken and benny gantz especially after gantz just leaves the war cabinet. i mean, it is really new kind of reality that they re facing right now yeah. so blinken, obviously it s going to push again for the hostage deal. and this is mainly also in his visit to cairo that he just finished and another visit to qatar that is going to have later this week but i think that there are also so many other issues on the table, mainly how does the biden administration is going to deal with the current israeli government without this bullet, bulletproof vest called benny gantz fur, eight months since the war started, he was there and he was seen by the biden administration is a more moderate person that can sort of like, you know, tame the push from the radical right members of the coalition without him, those people in tomorrow, bank view, but saw smartwatch are going to have much more influence from decision-making. and it will also influence how the biden administration, since this government that s really a great point. you also saying if new reporting on the united states circulating a new draft among the un security council calling on hamas to accept the hostage and ceasefire deal. what are you learning about this one this time? i think there s a good chance to vote will be today and it seems that at least for now, according to what i hear, the there a good chance to russia and china will not veto this resolution which means that it could most likely pass. and if it passes, i think it s interesting because it s sort of, i think will be the first time that the international community will speak in one voice about something that has to do with gaza, which is something we haven t had in eight months. and this is, again, if it passes, it means that hamas can look all over the world. let s see that basically everyone i m telling him take the deal. even russia and china, but again, let s see first how this vote develops. absolutely great to see you brock, as always, thank you for your reporting thank you. knew this morning it political shakeup across europe that could become an earthquake far-right parties projected to win a record number of seats in the european parliament and back-to-back shark attacks are now sparking new warnings along the florida panther if you re 50 or over, you can get vantage of everything. aarp has to offer right now, join aarp for $12 for one year and your second membership is free. get instant access it says to discounts on everyday purchases. i care in prescriptions and tools and tips 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the president and they ll former president s one stage moderated by jake tapper and dana bash, the cnn presidential debate thursday, june 20, nine live on cnn. and streaming unmet next this morning political tremors in europe, far parties are predicted to win a record number of seats in the european parliament. this is having an immediate impact. protesters took to the streets in paris, outrage at gains for the far-right parties there. and french president emmanuel macron dissolve parliament and called snap collections after his party underperformed cnn s frederik pleitgen is with us now and in fred, i think this was expected still major major tremors i think it was expected to a certain extent, but certainly not as powerful as then it actually happened, especially if you look at france, john, i mean, just a couple of days ago, we of course had a manuel my from the president of france standing together with us president joe so biden at the d-day commemorations talking about transatlantic relations and european unity. and now you have eaten friends, the far-right party, the awesomely not soon winning 30% of the vote and model in my post, party one 15%. so they got twice as much the far-right, then the president s party and of as you mentioned, he came out and he immediately called for snap parliamentary elections. so he s not putting himself up for election there, but is the parliament that s going to be up for election, and that s really sue and that s on june 30th. we re biden is hoping that if there s a national election not as many people will vote far-right, but of course, it is a huge gamble and certainly also a big issue for europe and here in germany, it s exactly the same thing you have the right-wing afd that got about 16, almost 16% of the vote, also more than the par hardy of german chancellor olaf scholtz. there s a couple of trends that i think are really fascinating about all this. first of all, in the former communist east of germany, the far-right party called the afd, is by far the strongest political force, but also a lot of young people voted for the far-right parties. and that s certainly something that is of grave concern. crn here in europe, of course, as far as a lot of foreign policy issues and relations with the us are concerned as well, john. yeah, i was just going to ask, what does that mean for the united states, fred as the biden administration looks to europe, for partners particularly in dealing with ukraine dealing with ukraine, dealing with russia, dealing towards russia, of course, dealing with the middle east as well, right now, of course, you do have your very much in the us, his corner on all of these issues. and the other big one of course, is china as well. and what could happen in that regard? will that be the same in the future? i think that s something that is very much up for grabs. one of the things that we do have to mention though, john, is that the european parliament, the election that took place here doesn t have that much power here on the continent. nevertheless, of course it is something that needs to be taken into account if you have these far-right parties there now, we know the far-right party of frehse and it s led by marine le pen that that, that she s very close to vladimir putin, very close to russia. also the far-right party here in germany the afd as well, probably won t have tectonic shifts in the immediate future, but certainly very, very concerning for relations with the us as well. john yeah, it s certainly worth watching and it is something of an indicator of which way the political winds are blowing. frederik pleitgen great to see you this morning. thanks so much, fred breakthrough results. that s how we re durde is describing the trial of its new combined covid, flu vaccine then i worship a convicted felon, you and somewhat bizarre statements from trump loyalists comparing him to jesus the simons are going off and playing the tornado here. i m 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from medium rare two. well done so many ways to save life. ruddy wallet, happy, but 365 by whole foods market priceline helps families. they 60% on family-friendly hotels. so many great trips we might just leave here with another vacation baby take it easy, paris and u2 for motor to help. lisa wasn t alito gardi are happy priceline june 19th cnn celebrated juneteenth which special performances by john legend, hadi lewbel, smokey robinson. we still have a lot of work to do. juneteenth celebrating eid amend legacy. wednesday, june 19, on cnn the national park service is looking into a fire that jumped from boat to vote to vote to vote from adam marina at lake mead, the flames, just 15 votes at the las vegas boat harbor marina and took hours for agencies to contain it. all witnesses said that they had to get out so quickly, they did not even have time to grab any of their things and the marina released a statement on facebook, sandi that we re thankful there were no known fatalities. there were only two minor injuries. they say an investigation into the cause of all this is still ongoing tensions, escalated once again, on the grand peninsula, south korea says that it is detected signs north korea is preparing its loudspeakers on the border in response to these speakers at the sun that south korea has been using to broadcast anti-north three and propaganda. remember, this is just the latest, this comes after the back-and-forth, the wild back-and-forth over the trash and propaganda balloons that we re going back and forth over the border and reach a real fever pitch last week this morning and investigation is underway into a fiber incident as it s being described in cleveland, ohio fire police and other emergency services are running, but city hall is close today. some systems are offline. the city says the nature for in scope of this remains unclear. scottie scheffler has won his first tournament since his arrest. last month. he won the memorial tournament and ohio, his fifth pga tour win of the season. his wife and newborn son, were on hand to celebrate sunday s victory the world number one golfer was arrested. you remember, last month in louisville, kentucky. and what he calls a big misunderstanding . the charges were later dropped. john duda s fit a lot it to assure like, oh my gosh, that was the span of time. this is all happened. that s a lot of pga victories. a child and an arrest and a dismissal. he s busier than we are. all right. back-to-back shark attacks in florida, the victims of 45-year-old woman in two teenage girls, a woman had to have part of her arm amputated than just 90 minutes later on a beach about four miles away, a shark attack, the teenagers and they were left with significant injuries with us. now, wildlife biologists and shark week expert for us kollontai. thanks so much for being with us. multiple injuries from two attacks, not that far apart in one day, how unusual is this? well, to be honest, john, it s very unusual. it s a complete anomaly that there happened to be two separate attacks in the same area on one day. i mean, that s not how sharpe s work. it s not coordinated efforts taking place. it is just really, really unfortunate with the timing so unfortunate with the timing, it s not how sharks work. does that mean there s no explanation for why you might be seeing this happen? no that s a good question. it s summertime. the waters are warming. there are more people entering into the ocean than usual especially at this time of year, people are playing a lot. there s splashing around, they re having fun. so these are the things that can lead to a negative shark encounter. in addition to that, this time of year is when sharks will move in shallower to feed, they re looking for fray along the beaches. and as you can see by the pictures of these beaches, there are a lot of people there. so these sharks are not trying to attack people. they are out swimming, looking for food in the same habitat that human beings happened to be entering in. and of course that s why you have these negative interactions. i grew up in massachusetts and obviously on cape cod, it s a whole different situation now than it was when i was growing up. the sharks are much more present, much closer to shore. is there an explanation for why in some cases, or sharks in florida and other places spending more time closer to shore well, it s a good question and that s the thing about conservation john is you never know what s happening where in every case is independent. so when it comes to the northeast, there are higher sharpe densities and populations than there used to be. and as sea surface temperatures continue to increase globally, sharps or moved moving into new areas and distribution is changing now as sharks warm up and the sea warms up, their metabolism actually speeds up. so they have to eat more and have to travel more to look for prey than their historical ranges. at the same time, a lot of their prey may have been removed du two overfishing or habitat change. so it s sort of this perfect storm of such tuitions for sharks globally, not just in florida, in the northeast where they re going to be moving into new areas looking for prey sources. and if people happen to be there, they may end up having an incident like we ve just seen here so officials tell beachgoers to be situationally aware in the water so what does that mean? i mean, what are the signs if you re swimming that a shark could or might be nearby great question. i mean, the best the best thing you can do at the beach is be cautious and be preventative. so don t go in the water with jewelry, don t go into water with plastic water bottles because that crunching sound sounds like fish bones stay away from river mouths are murky areas anywhere where people are fishing or discarding bycatch, things like that are where sharks are likely to congregate because sharks are an ambush predator, they like to hide and murky water and eat things that smell good to them. so if you re aware of your area where of the situations staying clear water dealt with? the water at dusk or dawn because sharks are corpuscular hunters. and just swim on a normal beach in a normal day, the likelihood of a negative shark encounter is very, very slim, even though it may have happened here also, lakes and ponds turn out to be great. and just as wet for us, golani great to see you this morning. i appreciate your time. thank you. okay. you do have some breaking news just in hunter biden s defense attorney saying and court indicating in court that hunter biden will not testify in this case according to his attorney, he s agreed to allow the allow the judge to give an instruction to the jury that they should not hold it against him, that he did not testify in this case over this is not the same as announcing definitively that hunter biden is not testifying. that would be announced officially when the defense rests its case in the presence of the jury. but indications pointing to hunter biden not taking the stand in his own defense. we re going to have much more on this at the top of the hour, we re also tracking this right? now, researchers say there are no closer to unveiling they are now closer to unveiling a two-in-one vaccine to combat covid and the flu moderna saying it s scientists are seeing positive results in a late stage trials seen as meg tirrell joining us now, now closer to not no closer to what are you hearing about them? yeah. again, this is the same mrna technology behind moderna has a covid vaccine. they have an mrna flu vaccine, and now they re putting the flu and covid shots into one shot together. they ve tested this now in a phase three trial of about 8,000 adults age 50 and older, and they say the immune response generated by this combination jot was stronger than currently licensed or approved flu and covid vaccines they tested against three strains of flu and the source cov-2 virus. they also say that the safety and tolerability profile was acceptable and similar to what you see with currently available vaccines from a public health standpoint, folks are hoping perhaps a common venetian shot could bring covid, vaccination rates up to closer where they are for adults, for flu more than or about half of adults in the united states every season get vaccinated against flu. and that is about 25% for adults against covid right now. so perhaps putting those together in one shot, it s more convenient. you can take care of both at the same time. now in terms of timing, this is not going to be available, this coming flu season at the end of the year, but moderna is ceo telling me this morning, they do have to engage with regulators, with the fda and other regulators, but they are hoping perhaps for the 2025 flu season. this could be available. and pfizer also has a combination shot in late-stage trials, two so the situation is evolving, guys. sure is great to see you, meg, thank you so much for bringing us that jump and for those dealing with covid right now, like my mother, keep getting better. no. vice president kamala harris reportedly sizing up for competition this morning new comments on donald trump s potential vp picks. and then we ll siri get a boost of artificial intelligence, a preview of apple s plans for a aldrich james is cold calculating, cynical, and needs the money not only was the cia compromise, he also was compromised secrets and spies. a nuclear game sunday at ten on cnn they say we should stop eating so much meat so we made meet out of plants because we aren t quitters impossible. we re solving the meat prone with more meat. chances for plane crash on an 11 million, you re not considered so salts and that s right but never waking up from anesthesia one and 185,000 valley, your parking or see how it goes. why stress about the unlikely does a killer clown worry about being struck by lightning while winning the lottery, cured out. but your 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chain moving some more pet parents can get everything they need, right when they need it keeping more pets and families happy for the love of moving our clients forward, for the lack of progress not flossing well then add the wo of listerine to your routine new science shows. listerine is five times more effective than floss ev, reducing plaque above the gum line for a cleaner, healthier mouth this three feel the world jesse loves playing detective, but the real mystery was her irritated skin. so we switched to tied free and gentle. it cleans better and doesn t leave behind irritating resume and it s gentle on her skin type free and gentle liquid is epa safer choice certified? it s got to be dyed. can the riva support your brain health? mary janet, hey, eddie, know fraser, franck. franck, bread. how are you? a pro pain-free absorb been pro. the most anticipated moment of this election and the stakes couldn t be higher. the president and the former president s one stage moderated by jake tapper and dana bash, the cnn presidential debate thursday, june 27th, nine live on cnn and streaming on max this is cnn. the world s news network. and the furniture business, things move fast. ziprecruiter helps us hire qualified candidates who keep up. we needed a project manager yesterday, we posted a job and ziprecruiter and had our guy on-site and five days he was qualified and everyone zip recruiter finds the best candidates for all our jobs. they helped us build our dream team and he did it fast. does that too fast for you 44 out of five employers who post on ziprecruiter get a quality candidate within the first day, try for free at ziprecruiter.com slash higher america s choice 20 24. he s brought to you by ziprecruiter. those smartest way to hire all right. both presidential campaigns with big outreach to hispanic voters over the weekend, cnn senior data reporter, harriet and is with me now, it takes someone with your vast expertise since you already i think to explain the situation now, why are we seeing this from both canvas? yeah. i mean, look at this change in the vote. all right. this is the polls at this point among hispanic voters nationally, at this point in 2020, joe biden had a very clear advantage, right? 59%, 32%. that s a 20 he seven point lead. look at this tremendous shift. oh, my goodness, gracious. nauta, 2024 biden s dropped by eight points, 51%. trump is up 12 points, 240, 4%, and you have what was a 27 point margin has been shrunk to seven that margin has been shrunk by 20 points now versus this 0.4 years ago. so it s no wonder that donald trump thinks he can play for the spanish, and it s no wonder that joe biden thinks he has to defend against trump s advantage. so how is this manifesting itself in the battleground states? yeah, so let s take a look here. hispanics share of likely voters. where are these campaign s going to be focusing if they re focusing on hispanic voters, while it s pretty clear from this screen, john that they re going to be focusing on the southwest, right. nevada 19%. that s percentage of hispanics makeup of likely voters. how about arizona? they make up 17%. the rest of these battleground states, these key battleground states though six battleground states, we keep focusing on spanish voters don t make up that larger share. they make up the largest share in georgia, 5%. but those great lake battleground states, four three, 2%, wisconsin, michigan, pennsylvania, the focus here, john is going to be in nevada and arizona in the southwest if they re interested in breaking through with hispanic voters, say, okay, as you re looking at this right now, how are things going in the battleground states in general? yes. so you see this 19%, you see that 17% you saw that first slide where biden struggling with hispanic voters all right, how about what s going on here? one the great lakes, pennsylvania, michigan, wisconsin, where spanish make up a very small portion, electric joe biden is actually doing. okay, right? the smallest lead trump has its two points actually the only bleed trump has is two point in michigan and pennsylvania or wisconsin, excuse me. we have a tie. we have a tight look at these sunbelt battleground states, right where hispanics are much more likely to make up a significant portion. the electric in nevada where they make up the largest share. look at that donald trump ahead by seven points arizona donald trump ahead by five points, and georgia were african americans make up a substantial portion electric and where joe biden struggling as well we see her again, trump up by seven, but the bottom line, jaume, to take away from this is where hispanic voters make up a significant share of the electorate. that is where joe biden is struggling the most relative to four years ago, which might help explain the focus that we are seeing right now exactly right. nice to see you, nice to see you. my friend kate, he has right now, cnn political commentator karen any she s also a former senior adviser, hillary clinton s presidential campaign, former deputy communications director for donald trump s 2016 campaign, bryan lanza is also here. this brian, let s start with basically with the conversation that was just left off when it comes to nevada, how big of an impact do you think immigration is going to have? on the eventual outcome first of all, good morning. thank you for having me listen. i think it s going to be immigration and the economy with nevada. nevada was hit very difficult during covid. there economy was very dependent on tourism, which took a huge hit. and that s sort of sorted the shift. and i think if you look at immigration, i think president trump has done a good job of sort of highlighting the fact that when you have illegal immigration which newly aliens coming into our marriage, into the workforce. they tend to target the working class. the working class worker more, and they re the ones that suffering so president trump, for the first time is delivered that message. the community is starting to understand it, and you couple that with a tough economy that s taking place with inflation, sort of wiping out the middle-class that hurts latinos, that hurts working class latinos and they re suffering a lot in arizona and nevada of the best examples of that. one poll number of karen since we love whole number so much, we re going to continue with this from cbs news shows that 62% of registered voters say they re in favor of a new national program to deport all undocumented immigrants. still you have cnn s new reporting that biden s on the verge of following up his executive action from last name that was tightening up the border with another move, possibly focused on providing legal status for undocumented spouses married to american citizens. how does this win over the 62% well, when i d want to know and that 62% is what percentage of that were actually latinos who they asked that question because oftentimes in these national polls, they end up being a very small share because here s what we re seeing. particularly where you have mixed status families. when we taught, when you hear trump talk about mass deportations, that actually brings people a lot of anxiety because you re looking at families where you have people who have come through the process who don t want to see their family members deported, but they also want to see like daca kids, for example be safe and be able to be in this country. so that s kinda the way i would kind of wrestling with those numbers. and again, i think what we continue to see is the way in which you do it matters, right? i mean, the fact that president biden is talking about we re not going to talk about separating families were not demonizing people as you hurt my my distinguished colleague bryan called people aliens, human beings are not aliens. we can talk about people very civilly and human humanely. and how we do these processes actually matters deeply to people and how we talk about lavandera guys give me my transitions and how we talk about people, but does matter. john highlighted this earlier in the show and i wanted to get your guys to take as well, some of what was said from the stage in nevada before donald trump took the stage and how people are talking about donald trump oh, president trump is a convicted felon. what you want to know, something the man that i worship is also a convicted felon and he was murdered on a roman cross park to worship and bring back the greatest president we ve ever known in our generation. brian, does this work with maga republicans? absolutely. does this help attract independent voters or as it has been deemed, this election, the double-haters mean, does this bother you at all? yeah, listen i think the only term i like president trump to be called, it s going to be a two two-term president. write i think volunteers get carried away with their language. they re entitled to their volunteers to private citizens. they are enthusiastic about through her supporting. does it matter ultimately to an independent voter with somebody in nevada said, no. what matters to an independent voters there? pocketbook. what matters is that milk is almost 40% more expensive than it was during president trump. those are going to be the things that matter. it s not going to matter what somebody says on the stage and arizona, it s going to be pocketbook issues and it actually might be another war that takes place under the biden watch, which will bring us to three wars under his term. those are the issues that are going to have the biggest impact with latino voters. because at the end of the de is latino voters that are serving this military with huge distinctions and they re the ones that are suffered. there are going to be paying the burden of joe biden s bad decisions. so we ve gone from words, do matter, two words do not matter. and now karen biden campaign spokes of it and advisor adrian lr is just on last hour with john her reaction when john played that for her was i don t even know what to think about that kind of reverence, that people are paying. did donald trump, what do you you think about that well, remember one of those individuals was a member of congress, not just a volunteer laura republican party chair in nevada? yeah. yes right but here s why the words matter elections are about contrast and they re about the future. and so when you have president biden laying out his vision for the future, when you have president biden, who is out there talking about the ways in which he s actually trying to lower costs and address inflation and continue to create jobs that meant that those are pocketbook issues. but what also matters to people is, hey, brian, i didn t interrupt you but what also matters to voters is this contrast basically, who d you trust? who are you going to trust your future two. and we are starting to see certainly in some of the internal data that i m looking from the outside groups. and i think you saw a little bit of this in the cbs poll. i m going to come back to it is because we do like both that pete, the likability and that s been something that s been a consistent factor for trump, which is particularly when you re trying to consolidate suburban women with they liked him or they think they feel concerned about well, i can have the tv on with when he s on when my kids are in the room. so again, trump s going to keep trying to muddy the waters whereas biden is going to keep trying to drive the contrast and it is a fact that donald trump is a convicted felon, 34 times over. and joe biden is it s a good decent guy who is trying to work hard for your family and not focused on the past and the grievances. it s good. see you guys. let s see where this next chapter in our wilds, rio, texas new roc, the new central starts now all right. the breaking news, we are hearing that hunter biden will not testify in his own defense. we are now poised for the beginning of closing arguments. there the former president and the probation officer donald trump about to have really a historic meeting in a major announcement expected from apple, the company looking to make a big plunge into artificial intelligence. sarah is out. i m john berman with hey, baldwin. this is cnn news central and the. breaking news is word from hunter biden s attorney that a hunter biden will not testify in the federal gun case against him. this means that we could sue hear closing arguments and the jury could soon get the case. let s go right to cnn as evan perez live outside the core, bring us up speed on what has happened ever will john the jury, is still not in the room at this moment. and the prosecution and the defense could could get to their closing arguments as soon as that happened. and as soon as the jury is in the room but as you pointed out, abbe lowell, a hunter biden s attorney? no surprise here. let s be honest indicated did in the pretrial in the pretrial hearing just now that he doesn t believe 100 biden will with testified the formal word will come when the jury is present and part of what they re arguing right now behind the scenes. is what jury instructions, what the jury will be told about all of this. one of the things that abbe lowell got agreed to was that the jury ll

Hunter-biden , First , Jury , Kind , Mrna , Trial-data , Brand-new , Hunter-biden-s-federal-gun-trial , Combination-covid , People , Voters , Us

Transcripts For FOXNEWS Life Liberty Levin 20240610



check out this footage mountain pass outside of teton pass outside of jackson, wyoming. the road has completely collapsed what is interesting about this is this is the road that connects jackson hole, the playground of billionaires with eastern idaho the only place you can afford to live out there. looks like this summer bunch of them billionaires are going to have to learn how to do their own yardwork. will this survive? hard to say it. [laughter] tough work. before we go do not forget to follow the big weekend show on x, on facebook, on instagram at the big weekend show but that doesn t for us but thank you for joining us we see it next weekend. life, liberty & levin starts right now. . mark: hello america i am mark levin and this is life, liberty & levin sunday. powerful gas for your we have america s governor, florida governor desantis. of america s a wiseman victor davis hanson will be joining us shortly. i ve always said you re the smartest of all audiences, why? we get into things others are not going to get into and other networks and self. i do not do the fan dancing and everything else to grab your attention. substance, intelligence, that is what i do here. we are going to need that today, right now. going to explain something to you. not enough attention is given to what happened manhattan case. the options for donald trump and the american people s in that case s decision i m very frustrated with lawyers who come on tv will heard or read articles that basically says donald trump is stuck in that new york judicial gulags. he is not paid in very troubled by it lawyers who do not do their research. who do not look at the precedent that is in front of us. for the opportunities for president trump and his lawyers to try to get out of what is the new york judicial gulags. there are certain rents we ve talked about before the supreme court can issue but it has to be asked. if it is not asked us not going to do a thing. it does not have original jurisdiction we do not have a court system like they have in israel and other places that can see something in separate going get involved in that, that s not the way it works and we do not want it to work that way we do not want a super legislature for the court system in this country is bad enough quite frankly. so what do we do? what to walk through this slowly so even the lawyers on msnbc and cnn can understand although i don t think they care but we do. the american people. you have in this case, apart from all the local issues and all of the rest issues involving federal election law. issues involving presidential election the highest of federal official in the nation being chosen. you have federal constitutional issues, first amendment, free speech the gag order yes but even more than that the idea a nondisclosure agreement violates campaign laws is not only falls on the law but that would violate the first amendment. the fifth amendment, due process and equal protection rights also conveyed on the states by the 14th amendment as they were ratified that amendment after the civil war the sixth amendment you have a right to counsel the canc cancel cannot e competent when they re endlessly being interrupted, sabotage cannot call proper witnesses, do not have notice of what laws are involved and so forth and so on. then you have facts. facts that suggest the timing of the case after the federal authorities rejected it, and local authorities rejected at this case was brought for the purpose of interfering in eight federitfederal election. a federal campaign. in usurping federal authority. it was timed in order to create a very convoluted, slow appellate process within the state. so major issues could not be resolved because the proper length of the appellate court before the election. so this is an ongoing violation. now the question is whether donald trump will have to wear an ankle brace for that they ll have to get permission from a probation officer every time he travels to a state. whether his sentencings will be stayed in on and on and on. we are all waiting around for politically democrat judges to make decisions that belong in the federal government. this is fundamental. it is not just one instance these are multiple federal constitution and legal issues. they cannot be resolved by the state of new york. must be resolved at the federal level. must be resolved at the federal level the issues are compelling, they are overwhelming for this election in future elections for this republic how we elect presidents and for our electoral system. there has ever been a case that the supreme court should take up and argue would take up it is this case. it checks off all of the unconstitutional and unlawful activities that would trigger supreme court intervention. now i cannot predict that in advance the basic pushback i get from some of the lawyers who do not understand what they are saying is the court is not going to take it up. how do they know? the court took up bush versus gore. bush and cheney campaign or not waiting around for a final decision by the florida supreme court. said while i supreme court will not take up the case, they took that case to the supreme court but they were not even sure how to characterize their case as an emergency appeal the court accepted as written it does not matter. on december 84 3 decision florida supreme court ordered immediate manual recounts up over votes for the office of president and all county were such recounts had not already taken place they were changing state election law. there were chair picking counties out help gore and the bush campaign petition the u.s. supreme court for first day ofe recount order which was granted on december 9 treating the petition as it former request for review. the court agreed to take up the case bush versus gore. the florida supreme court was out of control for their interfering with the eventual electoral count in florida brother trying to deliver the race to gore. the justices, among other things, their flesh and blood. they are human beings for the shower like we did with the eat like we did they do other things like we do and they see what is taking place they saw this court was out of control changing election loss to advantage outdoor the supreme court knew it. oral argument december 11 bush s legal team asserted the florida supreme court exceeded its authority by ordering the manual recount under votes on gore s team contend the case having already been decided at the state level was not a matter for consideration at the federal level. in a ruling issued the following day the court found seven two due to inconsistencies and minute recounting methods the status of jim florida counting florida court order of a mental recount a mandatory violation of equal protection clause in the 14th amendment. by a smaller majority five for the court also ruled note new recount could take place because none can be finished by the safe harbor deadline the date set by federal law by which states were required to resolve any disputes regarding the selection of presidential electors in order to guarantee their final determination quote shall be conclusive and shall govern in the counting of electoral votes is provided in the constitution unquote the extent to which the court went. the stop the florida court was doing to stop that recount in the middle of the recount. to say that is unknown if your deadline has been met that is the end of it. in florida. it is far more extraordinary, far more extraordinary than anything donald trump and his lawyers to be asking the supreme court to do, why? these are federal law, federal constitutional violations. federal jurisdictional violations. by an acting state judge and a prosecutor, by two people. and it is ongoing. sentencing and other issues have to be decided by the local judge. and then the appellate level on the level after that but this is an ongoing violation. it does not matter wit what the final court has to say. again if i m donald trump s lawyers i go through that process. but you go to the supreme court of the united states now how do we get to the supreme court of the united states? this is where people get bogged down. the art rithe art writs and com. and it really does not matter which you follow here is a piece by former attorney general griffin bell would later become attorney general under jimmy carter. the southern methodist university la law school law rew the fellow appellate courts and it discusses what common law are a discusses it in the context of a specific statute that was passed as part of the original judiciary act in 1789. about to get in the weeds, we are smart and can follow this. the preemptory common law writs are among the most potent weapons and the judicial arsenal. common law writs are used, they are rare use more and more than the federal chain of courts. so, what does he say here? the basis for general judicial supervision over inferior courts if you are a federal court your extraordinary preemptory writs can be found and early, and allow the alt writs act as a direct descendent of the judiciary act of 1789. other than the supreme court which is created by the constitution everything else is created by congress but all of the other courts, the number of courts, how many justices are on the supreme court granted federal courts the power to issue extraordinary writs in aid of their respective jurisdictions for it while it is clear the all writs act authorizes the issuance of traditional, not writs of prohibitions the phrase all writs encompasses common law injunction subpoenas. do not worry about all of that. what that really means is there are many ways of characterizing this direct appeal to the supreme court and relaying the facts and what is taking place under the law to the court. in fact you can use multiple requests it says choosing the correct to obtain the desired relief is no longer necessary in the federal courts, different may be sought alternatively or cumulatively. the choice is not unimportant these subtle distinctions among the various have no effect on the relatively usefulness as vehicles for review. we are not seeking until lockard tory review at the federal level but in effect we are of the state courts activities. hello count before you finish on the estate side we have big questions at the supreme court needs to answer. the jurisdictional pre-requisite for application of the art writs act is simply it beat necessarily appropriate in aid to the jurisdiction of the issuing court the supreme court the company explain the power of the courts of appeals under the act quote the question of negative powers long been settled by this court presents a courts of appeals could at some stage of the proceedings entertain these cases the power and proper circumstance to reaching them. this is an expression of prospective or concurrent appellate jurisdiction, the power of the courts of appeals is not limited to cases where an appeal has already been filed. rather this power of review extends to all proceedings for the actions of the trial judge at some future stage of that litigation may be reviewable parade that applies to the federal chain but as i explained here, we have violations of federal law, federal constitutional provisions by a state court. now the supreme court, the federal government ever get involved in state court decisions? or state law decisions or state regulatory decisions? you better believe it. they are things called express federal which is what we have here federal constitution, federal due process rights. equal protection rights under the constitution applies to the state. federal jurisdiction under the federal election law under a presidential election and i can go on and on and on you have implied federal preemption. you have the states that are obstructing federal preemption of this litigation of presidential activities taken place before it gives the supreme court jurisdiction a states cannot regulate congress which is what it is doing and that court when it takes over authority for determining what a federal election violation is. that is important. the equal protection clause or the due process clause or the first amendment free speech clause about a nondisclosure agreement. federal court started with the supreme court of intervene in state actions before the civil rights issue, death penalty issues, bush versus gore a presidential election issue. you have federal jurisdiction issues and how are they used? the supremacy clause tha of uc commerce clause that necessary because when it comes to regulating federal elections, especially presidential election congress has exclusive plenary power the supreme court has overall authority. you have an extraordinary radical extreme multitudinous case of a violation of federal law. whether it is substantive. whether it is processed. whether it is jurisdiction, this is the case. mia s is at first out of the gate i would file comment lot writs for a writs of prohibition that extremes a body exercising public power from exceeding its powers. it does not have it seems like this. you can file a writ of mandamus ordering a lower court to state their action while the court considers it. it might go if they writ a us or see your itchy argo and there s a statutory basis it does not matter. you have got to take it to the door of the supreme court they will decide whether to take it or not and if they don t, shame on them. because if there is ever a basis for what we call a common law writ, it is this. they do not take it in the trump case they will have to take it in the future because these dark blue states are not going to stop unless they are stopped. when i com -electric for short trips. -hmmm? .gas for long. hmmm? quite the paradox. -it really is both. -hmmm. the lexus rx plug-in hybrid. here s to getting better with age. here s to beating these two every thursday. help fuel today with boost high protein, complete nutrition you need. .without the stuff you don t. so, here s to now. boost. a year after a heart attack, mike s feeling like himself again. but even though time has passed, his risk of a second attack hasn t. mike is still living in the red. with a very high risk of another heart attack or stroke. he doesn t know with his risk factors his ldl-c (bad cholesterol) is still too high - the recommended level is below 55. are you living in the red? get in the know. learn how to get a free ldl-c test at attackheartdisease.com. it may not sound like it, but this. is actually progress at 225 miles per hour. shell renewable race fuel. reducing emissions by 60% in all ntt indycar® series races. we re moving forward with indycar. because we re moving forward with everybody. shell. powering progress. mark: welcome back america. america s governor, governor ron desantis. welcome. governor, if member of the house he been a governor for a while now you are considered a very, very successful governor. you look at joe biden. he has executive order he puts out he says i m going to fix the border. he destroyed the border. he signed over 90 executive orders and now he signed another executive order. we hear nothing is changing on the border. he not only violates the take care because of the constitution were it not only violates multiple parts of federal immigration law he lies, and lies and lies to the american people more that michael cohen. what do you make of this? ask mark when you re in the position of executive responsibility sometimes bad things may happen that are not your fault for their sometimes bad things are happening if you would have had some foresight you could have headed it off and then there are things that are the sins of omission. the border is a sin of commission by joe biden. he overturned the trump policies that is what has caused the crisis this did not just happen out of thin air it was manufactured and engineered by joe biden. the policy consequences have been disastrous you have highlighted people, i have highlighted people who have lost loved ones for criminal aliens coming in we know what s happening with human trafficking we do with the cartels are doing. then of course that just the sheer number of people you have a liberal jurisdictions but in the interest of illegal aliens over their own people which is outrageous. then you have the constitutional question that you cite. when you put your left hand on the bible and raise your right hand to take the presidential oath you are taking an oath to take care of the laws be faithfully executed. joe biden has systematically violated that oath. he has not lived up to the office of president duty to make sure our laws are enforced and even doubly so as commander-in-chief he has a responsibility to ensure and enforce the sovereignty of our country and he has not done that. and they have lied and 10, 20, how many millions of people it is had negative consequences on american society and in our country and in our sovereignty. then they re going to want to try to pull over the wolves over people eyes sink he is the one doing something for the border. he s going to blame the republicans and congress but the republicans in congress have made mistakes. i think they should have attached the border to all of these appropriations they refuse to do it. but the bottom line is this executive order is windowdressing it is a farce. you and i both know the corporate media s going to run interference for him on this for the rest of the election are going to try to act like the border is taken care of they re going to try to act like he solved the problem. first of all that is not true. second of all whatever happens between now and the election the day after the election he s going to open it back up again. we know that is going to happen it s really up to the american people at this point to put a stop to it. mark: you know joe biden likes accusing president trump of being a dictator, when to put people in prison. that sounds like projection, doesn t it? and on top of that he lies about so much. for instance he supreme court of the united states twice ruled against him. he has defied the courts, the fight a supreme court to supreme court rulings was talk about democracy and the constitution and the rule of law. then he lies and says effectively trump is going to do what he does. what do you say to this a president who is defying the supreme court who defies immigration laws? in fact defies a lot of laws when it comes to this country. what do you say to him? once you have two things one is, you are right this guy is a serial liar. on all host of issues on the border, on the student loans, even minor things he is constantly doing it. the difference is when donald trump was a president he would ve said something with her, out of place you d have 10 quote unquote fact checker from corporate media organizations trying to say that s not true they would do all this and spin this all up there with biden these guys have gone on three anand a half year vacation they basically let him do all of this stuff very rarely is he held accountable. often times an indirect await with just friendly fire. from the whole corporate press you have a president who lies constantly have a president who is not up to the job that is not something they don t want to talk about but on the constitutional question ease in violating the constitution with the student loan gambit. they had the statute on the books for 20 years and all of the sudden that can be used to have taxpayers bail o of bail ot people with student loans? if eight truck driver is taxed to be able to pick up the student loan of somebody who got a degree in gender studies, that is wrong but it s also not legal. he has not gotten congress to enact that policy do you know why? if congress voted to enact that policy a lot of them will get voted out of office is not with the american people want. he s a flouting the law in a number of different ways. one of the things that is frustrating is there s a lot of people who are apathetic out there about all of this and i do not think there is sufficient outrage and ho at how he has cod himself in ( ) your pain shouldn t be minimized or forgotten. ( ) when medicine gets better, all of us can get better. introducing new advil targeted relief. the only topical pain reliever with 4 powerful pain-fighting ingredients that start working on contact to target tough pain at the source. for up to 8 hours of powerful relief. new advil targeted relief. guys, are you tired of frequent nighttime bathroom trips? well, force factor prostate helps reduce urges to urinate, plus fully empty your bladder, and promote a normal prostate size. don t settle. rush to walmart for force factor prostate, from the #1 fastest-growing men s health brand in america. life, liberty & levin. . mark: welcome back america with america s governor, governor desantis. is joe biden at war with working-class americans, with the middle class in this country? one 100%. think about when he came into office, what did he do? an unprecedented spending spree that is spark the worst inflation we have seen in the last 40 years. he pulls at grocery bills have gone up 50, 60, 70, one 100% since he has been president. their wages have not gone up that much. he also came in and tried to force covid vacs and mandates on people threatening truck drivers with losing their job and other blue-collar people he has allowed the open border and people working some of these states illegally that is depressing wages from working people. then of course if you look at his overall approach to energy policy, he is putting climate ideology over bread and butter economics for the american people. he wants you to pay more for gas pretty want you to pay more for electricity and he wants you to pay more for automobiles. mark, most people do not want an electric vehicle but most people cannot afford an electric vehicle and yet he wants to plunge us in that area. it has been a frontal assault on the middle class, on working people all in service of this bankrupt ideology and by the way, a lot of the big city mayors and prosecutors deserve a lot of the blame for the crime. but biden is right in there with them on wanting to put people back on the streets he supports eliminating cash bail he supports the soros funded prosecutors acoffendedprosecutoy and incidentally, in florida we had two of them here one in tampa, one in orlando i removed both of them from their post. they are gone because they put their ideology and their political agenda over their duty to enforce the law. tampa people in their jurisdictions at risk. we are not standing for that in the state of florida. biden was to facilitate that all across this country. in fact you were sued when you fired that prosecutor and you won in court the other day. this is what i mean conservatives need to take risks i do not mean or reckless risks they need to follow their principles and take them through action. this is the one of the things you ve been doing as governor over, and over, and over again it s not enough to whine and complain and wring their hands sand we are in positions of powr we have to do things people look at your experience in your success as governor, this is what it is about i promise this, these are my principles i am implementing it we will duke it out if we are sued. let me ask you this, why does joe biden hate the state of israel? that is my view and hate the prime minister of israel he never talks down the fascist fundamentalists that run ironic. never talks about president xi and a negative way i don t think he needs knows how to spell kim jon owens name in north korea so it s a relentless war against the israeli, the idf against trent one. what is his problem? what sees a puppet to the far left in this country. he does not want to offend the far left tease virt he s virtueg to them. those of pro- hamas people at columbia and harvard aren t taking over the campus for their taking over offices. that is joe biden s base. he s got to cater to them by attacking israel the pro- hamas people, their anti- semitic, anti- israel and that is what joe biden has reduced himself to comment to virtue signal being anti- israel all in the service of trying to scrape up votes among the far left fringes in this country. but what he is doing is not serving america s interest. israel is the only ally in the middle east that we can depend on through thick and thin. they re the only country in the middle east that reflects western values and american values. and benjamin netanyahu has been a tremendous friend to the united states. this is rooted in the biden s ideology and in his weakness as a leader he is sick cow child to some of the craziest moms this country has seen in quite some time. mark: governor, one last question. even that you and in europe has condemned iran for pushing out inspectors because iran is on the precipice of having a nuclear weapon. the biden administration was lobbing france, britain and germany not to rebuke them. they finally voted for it was prolonged of those countries wanted to do it in september. i run as going to get a nuke on his watch because he s not doing the thing to stop them. this is so bizarre obama was the same way and the obama nuclear deal was a total disaster donald trump came in and turn the screws on the iranian regime and that worked the room she on its heels they did not have cash coming in. they could not do a weapon they did not have the wherewithal to do it. biden comes out, floods them with cash their funding terrorism all across the middle east october 7 would not have happened had we had a strong iran policy. he is paving the way for iran to get a nuclear weapon and it is delusional policy but it s a double lead so given his democratic predecessor when vice president tried the same policy and that policy totally flopped. mark: it governor desantis home to think of her think of that in the state. i think you ve done in the country my best to you and your family. god bless you my friend. (vo) dan made progress with his mental health. .but his medication caused unintentional movements in his face, hands, and feet called tardive dyskinesia, or td. so his doctor prescribed austedo xr a once-daily td treatment for adults. as you go with austedo austedo xr significantly reduced dan s td movements. some people saw a response as early as 2 weeks. with austedo xr, dan can stay on his mental health meds- (dan) cool hair! (vo) austedo xr can cause depression, suicidal thoughts, or actions in patients with huntington s disease. pay close attention to and call your doctor if you become depressed, have sudden changes in mood, or have suicidal thoughts. don t take if you have liver problems, are taking reserpine, tetrabenazine, or valbenazine. austedo xr may cause irregular or fast heartbeat, or abnormal movements. seek help for fever, stiff muscles, problems thinking, or sweating. common side effects include inflammation of the nose and throat, insomnia and sleepiness. as you go with austedo ask your doctor for austedo xr. austedo xr mark: welcome back america. i always love having victor davis hanson on the program s got this book out how you get it at amazon.com at any major bookstore and i strongly recommend it. victor davis hanson are the great historian i watched joe biden give the speech at d-day. went back and listen to reagan, his was nothing like there is despite the propaganda in that media i saw the cheap shots. i saw him talk about crane which is good in my view. even though we re spending a lot of money in ukraine he s holding back. hholding the leash back for the seam to determining military pulse in the oval office with a bunch of eggheads. world war ii and part two and the holocaust. many left and went to israel. even more than that give speeches like a black universities and elsewhere trashing the united states. think people in the audience do not have a chance but they have to work extra hard. i am watching him at d-day with great heroes behind him. who fought their lives on the line and someone died to defend an america joe biden does not believe in. emmett wrong about that? so you re absolutely right. as they are leading a group and just exudes how much we owe that generation. reagan was coming off a disastrous and was there in the lecture like biden he talked very softly. it was with a big stick. he had to increase the defense budget he restored deterrence. biden is coming off a successful administration an and the sendig oand talks loud of her he screas but does not have any sustenance to back it up he talks loud and carries a twig. he kind of yells or emphasis does not fit the somber occasion. reagan is as close to d-day as it reagan is to biden. this generation, the baby boomers he has a baby boomer as am i. you look at perspective we did not carry the burden. i am being candid in comparison to the people at omaha beach. look was sent to the military. recruitment is a weight down because people do not want to be treated this way in the united states military. what he did with the troops on the vaccine for a look at what he does on the budget for china is on the rise. the access is on the rise. russia, ironic, north korea, he does not act like it pretty screams about democracy and a russia and a war coming. is he preparing the american people psychologically? is he preparing the defense department? eight national security and so forth what s with this guy? works i do not know he speaks more negatively of donald trump in cap the country that voted for him they does the existenial enemies abroad for the only thing that excites him a is when he says semi- fascist or hyper magna or super maga. he s done a lot of damage and people do not realize the we are borrowing $10 billion a day at a trillion every three months. we alienated you mentioned 45000 recruits and that is the demographic the white mail demographic accounts for that shortfall. the died twice of numbers in iraq and afghanistan and overtly or almost every in the country. that doesn t work. that is on top of the 8500 he drove out who most of them have natural covid immunity they did known to be vaccinated. this is a terrible record i think everyone is worried why that this is recoverable and what year or two or three. if he has another term i am pessimistic for the first time in my life. if we can recover from it. twenty-six oh we come back victor davis hanson how do you come back with all of those crosses behind him on d-day. all of those men the vast majority of whom are white and christian. and then the next day you re more than happy to give a political speech attacking the nation s founding. attacking the nations history. attacking racialized and everything trying to turn america against america. you stood there in front of these men 95, 98 over 100 years old to put their lives on the line. so many died that day and so many battles. not just of the civil war, world war i, world war ii and we go on and on and on. and yet lower yourself to the lowest most grotesque part of the gander and trying to get elected president of the united states for remember space? and legroom? 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[sfx] ambient / laughing. we can secure our world. don t just use a password alone. mfa sends a call, a text or a code to your phone. learn more at cisa.gov/secureourworld that s how we can secure our world! . mark: welcome back america. victor davis hanson he throws in with tout the races in the segregationist, not just as a junior partner but as a leader to oppose school integration. he gives these horrendous racial speeches, divides the country. what do you make of this? works i get very upset. that generation is buried beneath the white crosses. they were eight wonderful a wonn if it was not for them they ve not had discussions on a race and the eia. they were a chain make a leak in this great chain of america. i m named after victor hansen who died on okinawa 1945 on may 19 and my father flew 40 missions on a b-29 over japan. they were wonderful people. they were not racist of the type of people who built this country the people coming across the border from all over the country for there not from europe they re coming to a country that was established by so-called toxic white mail founders but why is that? these white mail founders were ecumenical. that it wrote in the declaration all men are created equal the logic extension is that multiracial democracy they created it yet all we do is smear and label them. it is one of the worst things for a leader to speak ill of the dead and they cannot respond. they use modern ideas of morality to go back centuries and condemn them. demagogues especially when he does to the people in the military. you are the only commentary, mark, i ve ever been asked that. that is very sad. most people are afraid to even mention it. mark: it is very frustrating to me. i am jewish. this nation was founded on judeo-christian beliefs. if it was not for the christian majority in this country, i don t think the jewish people would have had a place to go where they could feel safe. and now you see fusion of the marxist islam a and the colleges and universities in the democrat party. which is threatening the whole foundation of this country. this demand, and joe biden just not speak against it pretty gives a speech or to his government does not act against it. and in fact he lobbies it in dearborn, michigan and other places of the country because he wants to get elected. he really is as donald trump says the worst president in american history certainly modern history. lexi is. all you have to say if you are guest from the middle east and you are on a student visa and you break the laws of your host, that is us. you re not going to be here any longer. you ll get your wish to go back to where you re came from since you want to go there anyway pretty always told us is a much superior place to live than where you are now. at thif the college of presidens would say it we have rules, you broke then you are suspended for you are expelled. but they don t at stanford university they say if you break our rules and something might happen or could happen or would happen the logical result is a storm the president s office like they did this week and burglarized it. they do not understand deterrence simple deterrence it. if you say something follow it through and treat them if they should beach treat it as a break the laws of the country. mark: the brief moment we have can you think of a single speech in the united states that joe biden has given that is patriotic, that is inspiring, that is uniting to the american people? it because i cannot. because i don t think he can because he has a base of support and this new democratic party. it s not even a democratic party it s up radical neo- socialist party. their world view white males are toxic. anything he says about the past might be acquainted with the majority of white males. he can t say it and he won t say it. it s very ironic talks about privilege but no family has used his for greater privilege from themselves. yet he attacks the white middle class at they have privilege he enjoys. i really do not like what he does at all. think that is one of the reasons he is so unpopular now, so hypocritical. mark: he goes a place like the holocaust museum talks about anti-semitism. he has his foot on israel s throat cutting off armaments to mcgough s independent told this to me is the holiest site our government has. he viciously attacks half of the american people. i think this guy is an arsonist. a political economic societal arsonist. this election is our ability to put the fire out. victor davis hanson thank you for everything you do. it s always an honor to have you. god bless you my friend for shingles. the rash can feel like an intense burning sensation, and last for weeks. shingles could make it hard to be there for your loved ones. over 50? the virus that causes shingles is likely already inside you. don t wait. ask your doctor about shingles. limu emu. and doug. (bell ringing) limu, someone needs to customize and save hundreds on car insurance with liberty mutual. let s fly! (inaudible sounds) chief! doug. (inaudible sounds) ooooo ah. (elevator doors opening) (inaudible sounds) i thought you were right behind me. only pay for what you need. liberty, liberty, liberty, liberty. you know, i spend a lot of time thinking about dirt. at three in the morning. any time of the day. what people don t know is that not all dirt is the same. you need dirt with the right kind of nutrients. look at this new organic soil from miracle-gro. everybody should have it. it worked great for us. this is as good as gold in any garden. if people only knew that it really is about the dirt. you re a dirt nerd. huge dirt nerd. i m proud of it! [ryan laughs] do you want your kids to eat healthier? but they just want sweets. force factor kids super chews can help. created by the number one superfoods brand in america. force factor kids super chews are packed with healthy vitamins and are absolutely delicious. find force factor kids at the walmart vitamin aisle today. welcome back america, when i think about joe biden i asked myself many questions but this one in particular, what exactly has he done for america. he and his family have gotten rich, they ve gotten powerful, he has the highest office in the land. what has he done to deserve to be president? is he inspiring, does he give great statesmanlike speeches, is he securing our country from enemies without and within. izzy building up her institutions, is he encouraging young people to embrace our country and learn our history and our principles? is he bringing peace and prosperity to the country? is he doing things about crime in the inner city that are effective, what the hell has this guy done throughout 50 years that has been positive for this country, nothing. nothing. i will see you next time on life liberty and levin .

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Transcripts For BBCNEWS BBC News 20240610



the country s president, emmanuel macron, called a snap parliamentary vote sunday night after his centrist alliance was trounced by the far right in european parliament elections. in a speech after exit polls were released, he said he could not ignore the results and the dissolving parliament is an act of trust in the french people. translation: the rise - of nationalists and demagogues is a danger for our nation but also for europe, is a danger for our nation but also for our europe, for france s position in europe and in the world. and i say this even though we have just celebrated with the whole world the normandy landing, and as in a few weeks we will welcome the world for the olympic and paralympic games. yes, the far right is both the result of the impoverishment of the french and the downgrading of our country, so at the end of this day, i cannot act as if nothing has happened. the far right national party was the winner of eu election and predicted to win about 30% of the vote, an historic high. he called for elections after the victory became clear, arguing mr macron s legitimacy needs to be put to the test. the leader in the national assembly welcomed emmanuel macron s decision to call a snap vote. translation: these european| elections confirm our movement is the major force for change in france and we are ready to exercise power over the french people placing their trust in us. that his vision elections. we are ready to turn the country around, ready to defend the interest of the french, ready to put an end to mass immigration and ready to make the purchasing power of the french a priority. we are ready to start the re industrialisation of the country, in short, ready to turn the country around, ready to revive france. the overall winner of the elections was the president of the european commission, ursula von der leyen, and her people s party grouping. they picked up a dozen seats, taking them once again as the largest group and this is her celebrating their win with supporters in brussels, but at a press conference in the evening she acknowledged the success of the populist party. the extremes on the left and the right have gained support, and this is why the results support, and this is why the result comes with great responsibility for the parties in the centre. i have been working hard to build a broad and effective majority of pro european forces. my aim is to continue on this path with those who are pro european, pro ukraine, pro rule of law. as of tomorrow, this works out again. , as of tomorrow, this work starts again. the results are ups and downs for every political block with results vary widely, country to country. from the results we are seeing at the moment, we are seeing that right wing swing. what stands out for you tonight? the exerts stands out for you tonight? the exnerts in stands out for you tonight? tie: experts in brussels stands out for you tonight? tte: experts in brussels will stands out for you tonight? tte: experts in brussels will tell you at the centre centre right has held but there is definitely a determined, definitive shift to the right so the freedom party, the hard right is on top in austria, in the netherlands, they picked up 7 cents, marine le pen transiting emmanuel macron in france, the hard right in italy top of the pile and in germany. a huge consent to the commission but no question but the big story tonight, faced with that election result, in france, iman omicron has denied cold snap election. he is dissolving parliament. emmanuel macron. first week in july and that is an enormous gamble. the national rally finishing with 32% of the vote in france, over twice the size of the relicense party vote. that at renaissance. it is a real risk given what has unfolded tonight in france. fix, unfolded tonight in france. a gamble and a risk. france president emmanuel macron calling it an act of trust and we will have to see what comes to pass. from people we have been speaking to, are they getting an understanding of why some people apparently voted the way they did, the issues that clearly they are concerned about? for many people across europe, it is a very big electorate and 244 million in america, brussels feels an awful long way away. it is a domestic politics, everyday life which mattered to them but there are some issues which cross borders, which i think people would have voted on here, particularly migration and borders. , ., .., borders. there is what we call a ureen borders. there is what we call a green lash borders. there is what we call a green lash under borders. there is what we call a green lash under way - borders. there is what we call a green lash under way here l borders. there is what we call| a green lash under way here in europe. i havejust spoken a green lash under way here in europe. i have just spoken to that european parliamentary president who said there was an invisible line and maybe we pushed too hard on the transition and maybe we did not explain it properly to people out there, to the farmers who have been protesting so that is certainly one issue but it is also a referendum on national governance and you see that in france and in germany. the coalition party in germany fed pretty badly tonight, running third behind the hard right far right afd. it is part domestic politics but also feeling within europe that the people in this parliament are not yet understanding the cost of living crisis, they are not doing enough in their mind to turn around the economy post pandemic and they want more from their parliamentarians and they have turned their back in some countries on the mainstream.- some countries on the mainstream. ., ~ ., mainstream. talking about the feelinu mainstream. talking about the feeling when mainstream. talking about the feeling when it mainstream. talking about the feeling when it comes - mainstream. talking about the feeling when it comes to - feeling when it comes to france, for example, as you said, a bad night forthe france, for example, as you said, a bad night for the party of french president emmanuel macron and also in germany as well, the german chancellor, olaf scholz a bad night for him. you look at that kind of nexus of power between france and germany, what does that mean for that balance in the eu and where the power is held? i think there has been a power shift in europe. france and germany still very much the engine of your because they are the biggest parties in this parliament and, of course, they will look towards emmanuel macron and chancellor shawls without the european council, the council of leaders. olaf scholz. but you look to the security brief pushed in europe, a key figure within the main grouping in the european people s party, the centre right. there is another broad issue is so that is infecting these countries and thatis infecting these countries and that is they are being pulled to the right by the populous parties. whether that will happen here in the parliament is another question because, as i said at the outset, the centre has held and actually on the right, they are very disparate grippers. giorgia meloni, one group, she is project ran a get marina pain in another group has had a softer approach to russia. marine le pen. on so many issues they have different priorities. the centre will hope to pick on that division. they have the numbers from the centre left all the way to the centre right. the mainstream has held but certainly there would be more influence on the right and when it comes to migration and climate and when it comes to the european budget, which still has to be negotiated here, the question is, how much influence the hard right, the populace will have you remains to be seen. a key member of israel s war cabinet which was set up after the hamas attack last october resigned from the emergency government on sunday. benny gantz had set a deadline of 8june for israel s prime minister benjamin netanyahu to outline the country s long term strategy in gaza once the war is over. he told reporters that he wasn t satisfied. he is now calling on mr netanyahu to hold elections. important to note that mr ganz was part of the netanyahu important to note that mr ganz was not part of the meta nyahu government before the war in gaza and he has at our six strategic goals for israel including the return of all foreign israeli hostages still held by hamas in gaza and the return of displaced palestinian civilians to northern gaza byi september. he said he has not been reassured on any of those accounts. counts. netanyahu appealed to benny gantz to remain in the war cabinet after benny gantz made the announcement, benjamin netanyahu posted this message on a social media. this is the quote that in his press conference he was going to say it yesterday but he put it off for 24 hours, after the hostage rescue. he said faithful strategic decisions are stuck due to hesitation and procrastination out of political considerations, talking about benjamin netanyahu, by political considerations he means netanyahu s desire to stay in power and perhaps prolong the war when he could be doing a deal. and to avoid the reckoning with the israeli people about the mistakes that led up to the security failures of 7 october, which a lot of israelis blame netanyahu for. benny gantz is hoping this move will start the destruction of the netanyahu government and there will be elections and the polls say if there were elections he would become the prime minister. it might backfire because netanyahu is reliant on the votes to keep his coalition going of ultranationalist far right elements who want the war to continue into gaza, put settlers into gaza, they will now perhaps have more influence. the us announced it once un security vote backing a plan for an immediate ceasefire with the hostages. however the spokesperson did not specify a date. it comes as officials from the officials from the hamas run health ministry in gaza say that the israeli raid on a refugee camp on saturday in which four hostages were rescued killed 274 palestinians. several hundred palestinians were also wounded in the raid. hamas accused the israelis of carrying out a massacre. more footage has emerged of the rescue israel used helicopters to evacuate the hostages from an area around the nuseirat refugee camp, in central gaza. david mccoskey, a director on arab israel relations. what do you think the resignation of benny gantz will mean for benjamin netanyahu for his cabinet and for this war? it is a key moment in time, no question. basically for your viewers, you need 61 of 121 to govern and without this party, he is down to 64. that means the balance of power is held by the ultranationalists, the police minister, the finance minister, and so it is possible that netanyahu will be more concerned about the hard right pushing him and believing without them he doesn t have a cabinets, he does not have 61. benny gantz provided notjust the question of an extra vote but with two former chief of staff of the israeli military, a lot of experience and they are trusted by washington. this could be a perilous moment where netanyahu is under the influence of these two hard right members, it is a moment of uncertainty. were that to be the case, walk with a potentially look like in how netanyahu continues this war? it might mean that those two clearly do not want thejoe biden plan which, it is up to hamas, no small measure, and they have not given the answer yet for the release of hostages, phased ending of the war. they are clearly on a record against this, calling it the surrender plan, releasing hostages, the prisoners, the exchange in return for a gradual end to the war. that is one part and another parties will try to expand the war to lebanon, something the defence establishment is very much against and will they be more reticent to try what antony blinken and the administration wants which is a grand deal with the saudis that the strategic community, they want that very badly. it will come down to this one central question, is the strength of the defence establishment and the defence minister himself, mr gallant, to what extent can they hold the line against the enhanced influence where is the prime minister and the delicate balance? will the side with the defence establishment that i think he knows will give him more strategic will he go with two people with no military experience? and will he leave israel to a much more perilous course? that is one potential we could see unfold. we know when his departure that benny gantz called for elections. do you think there is any potential for that? it could be to the extent that the hard right over reaches which i think is a real possibility and the government and the polling data becomes much more unpopular, does netanyahu saying these guys will lead him to a ruin? he still wants to maintain popularity, yes, he could in theory remain prime minister even if he is unpopular but in reality when you are unpopular with the public it is harder to get things through. it is a question of does this overreach create a backlash in the public and while nobody thinks right now that benny gantz can bring about what he wants because 64 seems ironclad for the moment. i do think they could overplay their hands, the hard right, and that is something that neta nyahu certainly knows. that could lead over time to elections. will it be in the fall or several months later? we do not know for sure. there is a real risk here, a risk i feel that could be dangerous for israel militarily and politically for netanyahu is equally risky that the right leads into a course that is unpopular. around the world and across the uk, this is bbc news. let s look at another story making the headlines. the wife of the bbc presenter michael mosley, whose death was announced on sunday, has described him as wonderful, funny, kind and brilliant . he went missing after going for a walk on the greek island of symi on wednesday. joe inwood has more. on a barren hillside, just metres away from the safety of the beach he d been heading for, the search for michael mosley finally came to an end. it was on that beach, of agia marina, that the body which has now been identified as michael mosley was found. he was found lying just at the right side of that fence you can see over there, so really close to where people would have been relaxing and playing on this popular and busy beach. we spoke to a police source, who said the body of michael mosley had been there for a number of days. it emerged a greek tv crew discovered the body when they were filming, only noticing his body in their shot when they were editing their pictures. michael mosley was 67 years old. you re live with bbc news. at least 38 people have been killed in the eastern democratic republic of congo. local officials and a civil society leader blamed the killings in north kivu province on the allied democratic forces, a militia group with ugandan origins and ties to the islamic state. the adf is also acccused of a village attack that killed 13 people on thursday, as well as one on wednesday that killed at least 16. congolese government forces assisted by the ugandan army, have battled the adf in north kivu and neighbouring ituri province since 2021. for more i spoke to kambale musavuli, analyst at the center for research on the congo kinshasa. whenever they operate there, why are they creating a violence? you can assume for two reasons possibly. the first one is recruitment of civilians in the area where thye come and destroy and they enlisted children into the groups but secondly for the population. we notice the adf attacks are taking place around areas that is rich in oil, particularly the beni area. we see a mass exodus of the population in those areas because they know if they stay, after a few days or weeks or a month, they will also be attacked. these are the only two reasons we can clearly see that as a reason why the communities bear the brunt. let s not forget beyond the adf are the militia groups, it shows the inadequacy of this government and military to address the issue. a mistake by an air traffic controller led to a new collision on a foggy railway by two jets in austin, collision on a foggy railway by twojets in austin, texas. it is one of several investigations into close calls of us runways. in 2023, there were 23 incidents when collisions were only narrowly avoided. investigators say the fedex plane aborted its landing when its first officer spotted the southwest plane on the runway. the fedex aircraft then pulled back into the air, as the southwest jet continued its run for take off. investigators at the ntsb said inadequate training and a lack of a lack of safety technology were factors in the incident. in may, the us federal aviation administration said they would install the surface detection systems at austin and other airports by the end of 2025. taking a look at the numbers, we have federal regulators are grappling with this increasing number of close calls on runways across the united states. do we know why that is? of course it will take some time for investigators to get down to some of these root causes but it is neverjust one thing, it s always a cascading series of elements they had to deal with, as in the austin incident we knew it is an air traffic controller that was not properly trained and it was also foggy that day and we also learned that he was listening for the sound ofjet noise to know whether or not a plane was taking off. last year, as you pointed out, there are 23 incidents and ii of those were involving at least one passenger airliner. that is not a great track record and again investigators are boiling down to some of these root causes with the faa looking at one element in the ntsb to try to piece together some of the information that might be missing and to give them more data on what is going on here. the investigations are continuing and in the meantime, we had a safety inspectors making calls for more technology on the ground to prevent these close calls. how would that work, could it prevent more of these incidents? absolutely, you have heard this for something the ntsb chair said last week that she has been calling for some of these the organisation has been calling for these technologies where air traffic controllers can see some of these grant equipment via a video screen right there in the tower instead of listening forjet noise instead. that organisation has called for more of these technologies for more than 30 years. only 40 or so airports across the us have some of the most advanced equipment to see some of the ground movement and it is not always exist either in the cockpit of aircraft, even though some newer aircraft are starting to install them, that way you have both elements in the airport for the controllers as well as those new planes getting some of that from the pilots to hear the alarm bells go off when they go the wrong direction in the airport or as they land. some people might be quite surprised to hear that does not exist more extensively already across the us, and nobody wants to see something trending in the wrong direction. you mentioned some of these incidents, these close calls are also with passenger planes. the question here is how concerned should people be about this? when it boils down to the root cause, everyone will try to piece together what some of these elements that led to them and as soon as they get some of that data to uncover it they will they know how to proceed forward. the faa has talked about exploring more technologies and installing more technologies at airports nationwide but, of course, i would not necessarily happen quickly. what it will take is a vigilance on air traffic control side training and vigilance from the pilots as well. in terms of some of those safety technologies being rolled out, there has been some questions raised about whether that is happening fast enough. what do you hear? some of it has to do with the recently passed faa bill and it gives airports five years with all that, so i think they will every already airports evocative technologies they will need. donald trump has sat at a rally he would seek taxation in the state of nevada. at least three people were taken away on stretchers as temperatures hit 99 fahrenheit or 37 celsius. prisoners across venezuela have staged a hunger strike to protest alleged human rights breaches. the present observatory say prisoners are angry about conditions inside crowded gels. stay with us. bye for now. hello there. weather for the week ahead is perhaps not the story you want. no significant summer sunshine or warmth, i m afraid. in fact, the story in armagh on sunday really sets the scene just a high of ten degrees. we had cloudy skies with light rain or drizzle with a cool northerly wind as well. now, that rain is sinking its way steadily southwards and it will clear away from eastern england and south east england during monday morning. behind it, this northerly wind and this cooler air source starts to kick in across the country. so a rash of showers, a cold, brisk wind driving those showers in off exposed coasts and drifting their way steadily south across scotland and northern ireland as we go through the morning. here s our cloud and rain still lingering across east yorkshire, lincolnshire first thing in the morning, some heavier bursts that will ease away. best of any brighter skies, perhaps across southern england down to the south west. here, showers should be few and further between. but nevertheless, that wind direction still really digging in right across the country. so sunny spells, scattered showers, a brisk northwesterly wind for many, so temperatures just below par really for this time of year, a maximum of 10 15 degrees for most. we might see highs of 17 or 18 if we get some sunshine across south west england and wales. now, as we move out of monday into tuesday, the low pressure drifts off to scandinavia, high pressure builds. it should start to kill off some of the showers out to the west. but with those clearing skies, well, those temperatures will be below path through the night as well, low single figures for some, quite a chilly start to our tuesday morning. hopefully some sunshine around on tuesday. there will continue to be some showers, most frequent ones running down through central and eastern scotland and england. further west, some brighter skies and once again, highs of 17 degrees, but for many, just a maximum of 10 15 once again. moving out of tuesday into wednesday, winds will fall lighter still for a time, but there s another low pushing in and that will bring some wetter weather to close out the end of the working week. it will gradually start to change the wind direction. so, after a drier day on wednesday, it will turn that little bit milder, but also wetter as we head into the weekend. voice-over: this is bbc news. we will have the headlines for you at the top of the hour, which is straight after this programme. welcome to hardtalk. i m stephen sackur. forfive decades, colombia was ravaged by political violence, cocaine, cartels and corruption. then came a peace deal with the main rebel group, the fa rc. and two years ago, the election victory of a former guerrilla turned democratic politician, gustavo petro a story of national recovery and redemption. well, not necessarily. my guest is the renowned colombian novelist juan gabriel vasquez, who weaves powerful stories out of fact and fiction. is there anything magical about colombia s current reality? juan gabriel vasquez, welcome to hardtalk. thank you for having me. it s a pleasure to have you. now you inhabit two different intellectual worlds. you are a political commentator. it is yourjob to have instant, strong opinions for newspapers.

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Transcripts For MSNBC Way Too Early With Jonathan Lemire 20240610



that does it for me today, but we ve got a big show planned for tomorrow night. my guests will include pennsylvania governor josh shapiro and new york congressman dan goldman. i m very excited to talk to both of them. in the meantime be sure to follow the show on twitter, tick tock, and instagram, and a reminder you can listen to every episode of the podcast for free. we ll see you back here tomorrow night at 8:00 p.m. eastern, but stay right where you are because there s much more news coming up on msnbc. . jill > . jill jill and i wanted to pay our respects. it means a hot. everybody was worried about you and they nerve mentioned me. i m up here sweating like a dog. there s no quit in america. none. there s no quit in america. secret service says we have to keep everyone safe. i said what about me. they said we never thought about that. the best way is to stay strong with our allies. to not break, do not break. do you feel the breeze because i don t want anybody going on me. we need every voter. i don t care about you. i just want your vote. president biden wraps up a visit to france honoring both world war i and world war ii veterans while donald trump campaigned in las vegas post-criminal conviction. we ll have more on the split screen from over the weekend. plus, israeli forces rescue four israeli hostages kept in captivity. what we learned about that operation and the emotional reunion that took place. plus, will hunter biden take the stand today in his federal gun trial? we ll go over what to expect when court proceedings resume later this morning. good morning and welcome to way too early on this monday, june 10th. monday again, folks. i m jonathan lemire. thanks for starting your day and week with us. president joe biden is back in the united states after a very busy week in france that focused on reaffirming america s commitment to its allies and commemorating 80 years since d-day. yesterday the president and first lady capped their trip with a visit to the american cemetery, the resting place of more than 2,300 war-dead with over a thousand names missing inskrieshed on the interior wall of its chapel. the low caution saw heavy fighting nearby during world war ii while the chapel still bears a hole caused by an artillery shell which is left as a reminder of what took place there. the president finished his trip by paying his respects to the fallen. afterward he spoke to reporters about the sacrifice those troops made and the importance of standing by our allies. we stopped the germans. we stopped the germans. and the idea we were able to avoid being engaged in major battles in europe is not realistic. that s why it s so important to continue the alliances we have, continue to keep nato strong, continue to do what we ve been able to do for the last since the end of world war ii. so i just wanted jill and i wanted to come and pay our respect. more marines were lost than any battle in the middle of world war ii. the idea that i come to normandy and not make the short trip here to pay tribute, it s the same story. think about it. america showed up. america showed up to stop the germans. america showed up to make sure that they did not prevail, and america shows up when we need it, just like our allies show for us. mr. president, what do you hope americans take away from you coming on this interest in? that the best way to avoid these kinds of battles in the future is to stay strong with our allies. do not break, do not break. this trip to honor d-day was also about establishing an implicit contrast with donald trump. biden never mentioned trump by name, but he touted alliances, allowances that trump has threatened. he s promised to stand strong with ukraine while trump has time and time again sided with russia and then even yesterday he concluded his trip with a visit to that world war i cemetery. it was the same one that trump skipped when he was president because it was raining. and while the president was saluting the veterans over the weekend, trump was delivering an off the rails campaign speech in las vegas. in sweltering heat yesterday trump struggled to speak and dealt with teleprompter issues throughout the afternoon. that caused him to go off script, results in some revealing and some confusing moments. he just came up and i said, did the teleprompters not work? he said not a bit. and then they came up with a story and said, trump doesn t pay. i don t paycor tractors that do a [ bleep ] diop. that s a [ bleep ] job. that s a [ bleep ] job. this is the worst border in the history of the world. no third world country has a border like that. i ll tell you what. i hope the military revolts at the voting booth. i went to a boat company in south carolina. the boat i said, how is it? he said it s a problem, sir. they want us to make all electric boats. i said, let me ask you a question. he said nobody asked the question. it must be my relationship to mit. very smart. i said what would happen if the boat sank from its weight and you re in the boat and you have this tremendously powerful battery and the battery s now under water and there s a shark and there s a shark approximately ten yards over there? did you notice that? i watched some sharks. well, they weren t that angry. they bit off the young lady s leg because of the fact they were not hungry, but they misunderstood who she was. these people are great. hi said there s no problem with sharks. they just didn t understand a young woman swimming. a lot of people were in shock. i said, so there s a shark ten yards away from the boat, ten yards over here, do i get electrocuted if the boat is sinking and water goes over the battery. do i stay on top of the boat and get electrocuted or do i jump over by the shark and not get electrocuted? he didn t know the answer. he said, nobody s ever asked me that question. i said i think there s a good question. i think there s a lot of electrocution in the current. i ll take electrocution over the shark any time. really not sure what he was talking about there. we move on now to far more important news. israeli forces have rescued four hostages from hamas captivity. on saturday they found noa argamani, almog meir jan, andre kozlov, and shlomi zee you. the hostages were being held by armed captors. no argamani was in an apartment alone while the three male hostages were held together. on the ground troops provided heavy shelling to provide protection for the forces trying to rescue the hostages. one was killed in the raid. more than 200 palestinians also died during saturday s operation. it s not known how many of these were militants. four four had been kidnapped during the nova music festival on october 7th. the hostages were found in good medical condition. they were taken to an israeli hospital for evaluation where they were reunited with their families. some beautiful scenes there. joining us now retired cia officer mark papadopoulos. marc, first of all, tell us about this operation, how difficult was this. do talk to us about the civilian toll, and do we the it could foreshadow other similar rescue operations. good morning, jonathan. a really extraordinary recovery operation. it s going to go down in my history of the world of terrorism. they had their undercover police tactical unit infiltrate into the area. they went in there, they recovered the hostages. upon exfiltration is when they had contact with hamas and that s when a lot of casualties ensued, but that s after they were removing the four hostages. it s reallying they assisted with this. they used three september services for this. of course, one part of this is that the commander of the israeli tactical team was killed in the operation. it reminds many of us of what happened in 1976 in an airport in uganda where they rescued hostages back then. the older brother of the prime minister was killed in the special forces utility. huge relief in is real. there was joy. tv commentators were crying. my contacts were absolutely relieved and overjoyed. one key point on this, jonathan, the us raleys that i talked to said while this was a one-off, the real way to get back the hostages is through the cease-fire deal which we know is still pending right now. let s talk about that. in moments secretary blinken is set to touch down in ee 1yi79 to try to push for that. benny gantz is resigning from israel s war cab it citing prime minister netanyahu is not capable of going forward. talk about that seismic development. it s interesting. there was a sense of relief and you forrial, but the political reality of what s happening with the israeli fast has now crept back into the equation with benny gantsz leaving. what does this really mean? he s left the war cabinet. another observer also resigned and now you have prime minister netanyahu really reliant on much more extreme kind of nationalist hard-liners, even harder to come by. secretary blinken arrives in the region amongst this political dysfunction. let s not forget it s actually an israeli deal that they re backtracking from now. you can use all sorts of words to describe what blinken has done. it s pretty damn difficult, but the administration is right to try. that s a deal hanging over the israelis. they have something historic at their fingertips. can netanyahu deliver now? it s skeptical. good on the administration for trying. you said that well. euphoria about this rescue operation. retired cia officer marc polymeropoulos diop lus. still ahead, manhattan attorney alvin bragg, he sets his own timeline. plus, we ll take a look at election results from overseas as far right parties make big gains in the european parliament. those stories and a check on sports and wler when we come right back. we come right back so this is pickleball? it s basically tennis for babies, but for adults. it should be called wiffle tennis. pickle! yeah, aw! whoo! these guys are intense. we got nothing to worry about. with e trade from morgan stanley, we re ready for whatever gets served up. dude, you gotta work on your trash talk. i d rather work on saving for retirement. or college, since you like to get schooled. that s a pretty good burn, right? got him. good game. thanks for coming to our clinic, first one s free. missing out on the things you love because of asthma? get back to better breathing with fasenra, an add-on treatment for eosinophilic asthma that is taken once every 8 weeks. fasenra is not for sudden breathing problems or other eosinophilic conditions. allergic reactions may occur. don t stop your asthma treatments without talking with your doctor. tell your doctor if your asthma worsens. headache and sore throat may occur. tell your doctor if you have a parasitic infection. step back out there with fasenra. ask your doctor if it s right for you. 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( ) and enxtra for focus and clarity. centrum, powered by clinically studied ingredients. it s derm s day off, but neutrogena ultra sheer sunscreen is still on the clock. vital sun protection goes six layers deep blocking 97% of burning uv rays. it s light, but it s working hard. unlike me. neutrogena ultra sheer sunscreen. welcome back as we turn to some of the morning s other headlines. alvin bragg will testify in connection to former president trump s hush money trial conviction. bragg responded to requests from trump ally and judiciary committee chairman congressman jim superior is dan on friday saying he s willing to testify but not before trump s sentencing date next month. jordan had originally requested a hearing next week. bragg s response counters that date saying the court proceedings are simply not yet over in the case. the d.a. s letter also asked to speak to the committee about the scope of the proposed testimony. congressman jordan and numerous other republican lawmakers have publicly blasted trump s hush money trial corrupt despite finding him guilty on all charges. turning overseas, early forecasts show that far right parties have appeared to have made major gains in the european parliament elections. they will still maintain a majority of the parliament, but conservative groups in france, germany, and austria appear to be making major inroads in those nations. the results in france were so significant president emmanuel macron hot off the heels of a meeting with president biden called for snap electionings at the end of the month. meanwhile the leader of awe try ja s right wing party gives them momentum for a national race, adding, quote, one election influences the other. to india now where narendra modi has been sworn in for a third consecutive term as that nation s prime minister. modi and his cabinet took the oegd of office yesterday at the presidential palace in new delhi. the 73-year-old leader narrowly won his position by relying on coalition parties after his party failed to win the majority. modi is only the second to retain power for a third five-year term. next up here, we ll turn to sports and the winners of the men s and women s french finals over the weekend. plus we ll bring you the recap of game two of the nba finals before the game shift this week to dallas for games three and four. those highlights and a check on monday morning forecast when way too early returns. n monday morning forecast when way too early returns. but no matter what business i m in. my network and my tech need to keep up. thank you verizon business. (kevin) now our businesses get fast and reliable internet from the same network that powers our phones. (waitress) all with the security features we need. (aaron) because my businesses are my life. man, the fish tacos are blowing up! so whatever s next. we re cooking with fire. let s make it happen! (vo) switch to the partner businesses rely on. here s to getting better with age. here s to beating these two every thursday. help fuel today with boost high protein, complete nutrition you need. .without the stuff you don t. so, here s to now. boost. this isn t charmin! no wonder i don t feel as clean. here s charmin ultra strong. ahhh! my bottom s been saved! with its diamond weave texture, charmin ultra strong cleans better with fewer sheets and less effort. enjoy the go with charmin. i m jonathan lawson, here to tell you about life insurance and less effort. through the colonial penn program. if you re age 50 to 85 and looking to buy life insurance on a fixed budget, remember the three p s. what are the three p s? the three p s of life insurance on a fixed budget are price, price, and price. a price you can afford, a price that can t increase, and a price that fits your budget. i m 54. what s my price? you can get coverage for $9.95 a month. i m 65 and take medications. what s my price? 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we re not there yet, bill, come on. a lot of areas are going to have a beautiful day, but the problem areas are going to stay problematic all week long. so here s all the rainfall we re going to see in florida. today isolated. but watch what happens. this is not a tropical system, but it is going to pour. if you chose this week, it s going to be umbrella weather like on and off every single day. these are the rainfall totals. it could rain ten inches. florida has sandy soil, so hopefully the flooding won t be too bad. urban flooding will be a problem. in the west t heat will be back on. it s going to be one of those summers, almost like last year, endless heat. so phoenix to tucson, expect hot temperatures in the middle of this week. 110 to 112. even today, california, reading, 104. sat lake city not bad at 8 8. we do it again. great weather. low humidity. beautiful morning in the great lakes. no problems whatsoever. and as we go into tuesday and wednesday, it starts to get warmer. we should be looking at our first 90s later this week. be prepared for that. can t say i m looking forward to it. bill karins, thank you so much. still ahead on way too early, we ll turn to politics and donald trump s potential vp contenders hit the sunday morning talk shows as the rate for the number two spot on the gop ticket heats up. we ll take a look at who may be at the top of the list as well as some possible dark horses. we ll be right back with that. ks we ll be right back with that. in her face, hands, and feet called tardive dyskinesia, or td. so her doctor prescribed austedo xr a once-daily td treatment for adults. as you go with austedo austedo xr significantly reduced kate s td movements. some people saw a response as early as 2 weeks. with austedo xr, kate can stay on her mental health meds (kate) oh, hi buddy! (female vo) austedo xr can cause depression, suicidal thoughts, or actions in patients with huntington s disease. pay close attention to and call your doctor if you become depressed, have sudden changes in mood, or have suicidal thoughts. don t take if you have liver problems, are taking reserpine, tetrabenazine, or valbenazine. austedo xr may cause irregular or fast heartbeat, or abnormal movements. seek help for fever, stiff muscles, problems thinking, or sweating. common side effects include inflammation of the nose and throat, insomnia and sleepiness. as you go with austedo (male vo) ask your doctor for austedo xr. austedo xr. sup? -who are you? i m your inner child. get in. listen. what you really need in life is some freakin torque. [ engine revving ] oh yeah man, horsepower keeps you going, but torque gets you going. [ engine revving ] oh now we re torquin ! - i love car puns! oh, i know. pppp-powershot! 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(old spice mnemonic) welcome back to way too early. it is coming up on 5:30 a.m. here on the east coast, 2:30 out west on this monday morning. i m jonathan lemire. thank you for being with us. the auditioning for donald trump s vice presidential pick continued yesterday with several of the contenders hitting the sunday talk shows. senators j.d. vance of ohio and tim scott of south carolina both answered questions about the veep stakes. take a look. have you sent the necessary paperwork inin terms of vetting, the vice presidential spot. yeah, i haven t spoken with donald trump. until i do, this is a lot of media speculation. do you think you satisfied the requirements and could help him win and become president. there s no question we have a great republican party. president trump doesn t need any help. what he needs is amplifying his voice. joining us now, national politics reporter for the hill julia manchester who s watching the veep stakes so closely. in a minute we ll talk about them. give us a sense right now as to people you talked to. where do they think things stand? look, right now at the top of the list is south carolina senator tim scott. he s seen as someone who might be more of i don t want to say more of a moderate voice, but someone who could reach out past conservative circles and maybe bring outside voters in, a person who could particularly play well with the suburban female, for example, or even black voters. we re unsure of how big of an impact that will be. that s the logic i ve gotten coming from some republicans. them you have doug burgum. they say he doesn t have as big of a chance as scott, but he s someone who s proven himself to be a good fund raiser and he s built his public profile in recent weeks. he s been a regular on cable news and conservative media, also seen as someone who could be palatable to a voter outside of the maga or very conservative circles. then, of course, you have senator marco rubio, one-time rival of the former president going back to 2016. but the issue for marco rubio is that he is from florida and we know that former president trump is now a florida resident, so there would have to be some way to skirt the 12th amendment or some sort of a loophole, but that seems to be the biggest issue for the senator from florida. so let s talk now about the potential dark horses. share some of names. the number one person is nikki haley. we know this has been a very, very contentious primary between donald trump and nikki haley, but things appear to have somewhat smoothed out in recent weeks. we know haley said she would vote for trump, saying he was a better ailtive to biden. trump has said she would be an integral part of the trump team, she served in the trump administration. just as i was saying about marco rubio before, trump has a history of having these very contentious primary competitions and then essentially smoothing things over with those former rivals. so we ll see what happens there. then you have a few lesser known names like, for example, congresswoman maria salazar from florida. she s been a name that s been floated, someone who could play very well with the latina vote. once again there s that 12th amendment issue. if there s someone who s going to be looked at from florida, it s going to be marco rubio. then there s the candidate from new york. he s very important because he s very much a very good fund raiser and he s someone that certainly made inroads in a very blue state, losing to governor kaly hochul in the 2020 midterms by less than ten point. that s sort of an improvement for republicans in that state. you ve heard his name quoted. there are some like trump s last vice president, threat of being hung. trump seems in no hurry to make a decision. julia manchester. thank you for joining us this morning. still ahead we ll go live to cnbc for an early look at what s driving investors as the feds meet on interest rates. that s going to be held later this week. we ll be right back with busy news. right back with busy news nice to meet ya. my name is david. i ve been a pharmacist for 44 years. when i have customers come in and ask for something for memory, i recommend prevagen. number one, because it s effective. does not require a prescription. and i ve been taking it quite a while myself and i know it works. and i love it when the customers come back in and tell me, david, that really works so good for me. makes my day. prevagen. at stores everywhere without a prescription. 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yeah, good morning, jon. certainly it would be a question mark of the repercussions, how they make this marketable move. so far you re seeing a little bit of a downtrodden week. it manned to move up. significant gain. passed $3 trillion in market cap. just last week they re losing its place to apple at some stages when it valuation. but those tech counters are the ones to look out for. there s the fed putting out their interest rate decision this week. it s not going to be about this decision. what happens in the future? will they be cutting any time soon? so job growth in the u.s. shot up much higher than expected last month. we got that data during morning joe on friday. so what does that mean for the state and trajectory of the economy, arabile? yeah. so it actually falls hot and cold a little bit, jon, believe it or not. it was more than the 190,000 anticipated at best. it means it s still a fairly hard labor market in that respect. you saw the jobs numbers head out to 4%. that could be perhaps a little bit worrying for the fed. they didn t want that figure to ultimately reach there. it shows the level of buoyancy in the labor market that still kept up and remained below 4%. could this weakness ultimately mean they now have to begin to cut interest rate as little bit in order to ease the pressure on that labor market? so those are key questions the fed will have to answer this week as they kick off the fomc meeting. lastly, according to a new study, the u.s. has outpaced the rest of the world in making new millionaires. tell us what fueled that growth and commonwealth last year. yeah. so, i mean a lot of growth has been seen just out of stockmarket growth. that s pretty much what happened. a lot of people are investing in equities all over the world and particularly the united states. a lot of that growth, particularly the tech shares that have been able to move things quite significantly, they have invested quite significantly in artificial intelligence. you re seeing they have invested, your nvidias, the likes of your microsofts and apples, all managing to move significantly higher as you have seen as well with even the billionaires whose growth has happened over the last four years or so. that has continued to be at play. you re seeing 6,000 new millionaires out of the united states. cnbc s arabile gumede live from london. thank you as always. next up here, donald trump is reportedly set to have an interview with a probation officer today. what that means for the former president as he awaits sentencing for his criminal conviction in the new york hush money case. way too early will be right back with that. ney case way too early will be right back with that and keeping it off? 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jonathan, let s start in the reverse. i think hunter biden would not testify. i think the law he s being charged with is so straightforward, it s going to be difficult absent any other testimony we would not know about to have him take the stand and it would be beneficial to him. i think if there is a proto him testifying at all it s possible that he could human ietz himself in front of the jury, but i don t see how he would do that without taking the fifth a number of times in which he criminalizes himself, but he runs the risk in front of the jury of looking like a guilty man. ultimately a his attorney i m advising this would not be a good idea. walk us through the case. so far you ve mentioned the evidence seems somewhat clear. give us a sense as to the timeline as to when this may wrap up, when we may get a verdict, and your sense of how the prosecution has done? i think the prosecution had a relatively low bar given the elements of the crime. it s a straightforward case and has essentially two elements. the first is that hunter biden possessed a gun while he was addicted to a controlled substance and the prosecution is establishing that through circumstantial evidence. the other is he lied in order to get the handgun. two straightforward charges. they don t need hunter biden s testimony to refute that. whatever it is they re putting on regarding the gun store owner handling the app indication, those things should be sufficient if it s compelling. this is a case that should wrap up at least in terms of the cases both by the defendant and the prosecution this week along with closing statements. so we could be looking at a case going before the jury before friday. donald trump has got a presentence interview with the probation officer today. you re familiar with these things. give us a sense as to what that s like and we, of course, can only imagine how unhappy trump will be to participate in such an event. listen, jonathan, these are probation officers who handle things in volume, so it s going to be very straightforward, and these questions are relatively routine. you alluded to a lot of it. they re going to want to know who the contacts are, who s living with you in terms of income. they re also going to want to know what your propensity is for a flight risk and also what respect you have for your the law in general. so done is going to have to toe a particularly tight line given everything he said publicly and basically feign respect for the law, feign an understanding of his conviction, and basically convince this person he should not be put in some sort of 40e78 confinement or more serious custody. all right. msnbc legal analyst, we appreciate you helping us out this morning. up next here on way too early, donald trump continues to offer his sympathy for those who stormed the capitol on january 6th. we ll play for you his comments at a rally in nevada yesterday. and then coming up on morning joe, a radio host is raising awareness about antiabortion with the story of his wife s devastating miscarriage and the treatment she was denied. plus, we ll bring you live reporting from israel just days after forces rescued four hostages in gaza. the latest on that operation, and the political turmoil within the israeli government as a key member steps down from the war cabinet. what that means for prime minister netanyahu. also ahead, oscar-nominated actor jude law will be live in studio with a look at his new film fire brand. morning joe just a few moments away. you won t want to miss it. just w moments away you won t want to miss it. [coughing] copd hasn t been pretty. it s tough to breathe and tough to keep wondering if this is as good as it gets. but trelegy has shown me that there s still beauty and breath to be had. because with three medicines in one inhaler, trelegy keeps my airways open and prevents future flare-ups. and with one dose a day, trelegy improves lung function so i can breathe more freely all day and night. trelegy won t replace a rescue inhaler for sudden breathing problems. tell your doctor if you have a heart condition or high blood pressure before taking it. do not take trelegy more than prescribed. trelegy may increase your risk of thrush, pneumonia, and osteoporosis. call your doctor if worsened breathing, chest pain, mouth or tongue swelling, problems urinating, vision changes, or eye pain occur. what a wonderful world ask your doctor about once-daily trelegy for copd because breathing should be beautiful. here s to getting better with age. here s to beating these two every thursday. help fuel today with boost high protein, complete nutrition you need. .without the stuff you don t. so, here s to now. boost. if you have chronic kidney disease you can reduce the risk of kidney failure with farxiga. because there are places you d like to be. farxiga can cause serious side effects, including ketoacidosis that may be fatal, dehydration, urinary tract, or genital yeast infections, and low blood sugar. a rare, life-threatening bacterial infection in the skin of the perineum could occur. stop taking farxiga and call your doctor right away if you have symptoms of this infection, an allergic reaction, or ketoacidosis. far-xi-ga welcome back. at his rally in las vegas yesterday, donald trump once again suggested that he would pardon the january 6th insurrectionists in a second term. he deemed those insurrectionists hostages, victims, and warriors. he also accused the capitol police, many of whom were brutalized during the attack, of setting up the rioters to be arrested. we re going to do a lot of things. we re going to look very strongly at j-6, those people. there have never been people treated more horrifically than j-6 hostages. the j-6 warriors were victims of what happened. all they were doing is protesting a rigged election. that s what they were doing. then the police say, go in, go in, go in. go on in, everybody. go on in. what a setup that was. what a horrible joining us now, the host of the podcast on brand with donny deutsch, donny deutsch making his way too early debut. we ll have him back frequently. 15 years on morning joe, making my way. appreciate it. made the big time. donny, let s start with donald trump. this is not a new refrain, him praising the january 6th insurrectionists. now, calling them heros and contrasting them with the capitol police, just a new low. also using the word hostages, you know, with what s going on in israel. we have hostages, and we know all too well and sadly. to call them hostages is ridiculous. j-6 is now a thing. he s branded it. and that the police said, come on in, it s as if the video tape never existed, as if we never saw footage. showing it now. it s amazing how he can defy any sense of reality, and his followers believe it. j-6 was the shorthand where he is speaking to this bubble, like this ecosystem on the right. expect this video to be played a lot between now and the election. yeah. you know, it s been a few years, and we ve got to just continue to refresh people s memories. when you see it, you just wonder, how can anybody vote for this side, who relishes these people, who calls these people heros, champions, victims, hostages. you re staring at this and going, what planet am i on? it s going to be really important for the biden campaign and other democrats to remind people what the trump years were like, including how they ended. president biden was in france for several days last week, and his team really set about creating an implicit contrast with donald trump. biden was there for all the d-day events praising alliances. we know trump has tried to sabotage nato and other american alliances. president biden reiterating commitment to ukraine. we know trump frequently backs russia and not kyiv. then even yesterday, president biden was at the world war i cemetery that trump, when he was in office, skipped a ceremony there because it rained. do you think this messaging is breaking through? the biden campaign is going to be about contrast. they ve been very, very clear about that. lifts it upside by side. one guy who is serious, one guy who is stands for the gravitas and great things america is about. another guy is about negativity and tearing it down. i think you ll see a lot of this, one side talks about how america sucks, and the other side talks about elevating america and the greatness of america. i think the message is going to resonate. you re an expert on branding, advertising, and breaking through. no doubt, it was noted in wilmington by the biden camp this biden trip did break through. they acknowledge, a lot is because the eyes of the world would be on the 80th anniversary of d-day. they were pleased how front and center the president was. talk about the challenge they re going to have keeping him front and center going forward. look, they have to. the american public has a great sense and a great sniff test. if all of a sudden he s not around, they re hiding him, and only doing certain events, and we re going to coddle him this way, he s got to be out there, aggressive, front and center. this all, of course, leads up to june 27th and the debate, which is going to be huge. president back on the world stage in a few days, heading to italy for the g-7 later this week. let s talk about the debate. still three weeks off, two and a half weeks off. he has time to prepare. what are some of the things he needs to accomplish that night? first and foremost, and there s not a close second, and it happened in the state of the union, he has to answer the question, is he too old? has he lost his fast ball? does he not have his punch anymore? i don t want to say substance over style, but he has to come off as full of vigor and ready to go and answer that one, oh, well, you know, he s too old, and just answer this off the bat, the same way he did state of the union. second thing, and this is why the style plays with the audience, it s about content and about who has a better grip on things. i think trump does not have the bells and whistles around him, so i think this plays to biden. first and foremost, he s got to come off full of vigor. lastly, donald trump has a probation officer interview today, something he deeply detests. just talk about how you think he ll take that, and what sort of impact you know, sentencing, month off how is that weighing on him going forward and how it may impact what he says. i think it is weighing on him. obviously, the sentencing is going to be interesting. most people don t think he ll get a prison sentence. neither do i. look, you know all this just eats away at him. probably, he ll be sitting there like this at the probation meeting. we know his court stance. he certainly ain t loving this. the good news is, he s back on the campaign trail, saying the things he says. i think the great news about the trial was a guilty verdict, and he is back on the streets now. biden team thinks that, as well. the trial sheltered him. yes. now that he is out and about, americans will be listening to him and turned off by what he says. the biggest moment is the debate, underscoring how large that looms. donny deutsch, thank you so much. we will talk again later this morning on morning joe. thanks to all of you for getting up way too early with us on this monday morning. morning joe starts right now. i wanted to come and pay respects. it matters a lot. everybody was so worried yesterday about you, and they never mentioned me. i m up here sweating like a dog. there s no quit in america, none. none, there s no quit in america. secret service said we have to make sure everyone is safe. i said, what about me? oh, we never thought of that. the best way to avoid these battles in the future is to stay strong with our allies. do not break. do not break. you feel the breeze? because i don t want anybody going on me. we need every voter. i don t care about you. i just want your

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slam title won the next two and looked on course for victory only for the spanish third seed, to find another gear. he only lost three games in the final two sets as he fulfilled what he called his childhood dream and emulated one of his heroes and compatriot rafael nadal. winning a grand slam is always special. winning your first. every grand slam. it was super special. but in roland garros, now with all of the spanish players who have won this tournament and to be able to put my name on that list is something unbelievable something unbelievable something that i dream about being in this position since i started playing tennis, since i was five or six years old. so it s a great, great feeling. he is a beast. he s an animal, for sure he is a beast. he s an animal, for sure. and the intensity that for sure. and the intensity that he for sure. and the intensity that he plays tennis at is different to other people. and he can different to other people. and he can do different to other people. and he can do so many different things he can do so many different things i he can do so many different things. i think that he changes tactic things. i think that he changes tactic a things. i think that he changes tactic a lot in the fifth set. started tactic a lot in the fifth set. started to play a lot higher and started to play a lot higher and a started to play a lot higher and a lot deeper for me to not create and a lot deeper for me to not create as and a lot deeper for me to not create as much power especially with the shadows on the court. it was slower again. but he s the court. it was slower again. but he s a the court. it was slower again. but he s a fantastic player. and but he s a fantastic player. and physically, he s fantastic. so i and physically, he s fantastic. so i have and physically, he s fantastic. so i have to look at myself and i so i have to look at myself and t have so i have to look at myself and t have to so i have to look at myself and i have to look the at the team that i have to look the at the team that i i have to look the at the team that i have and see what i can do to that i have and see what i can do to become at the same level. so for zverev the wait goes on as he tries to reach the heights that australian open championjannick sinner and carlos alcaraz have reached this year. here s our tennis correspondent russell fuller. alexander zverev is very middle aged compared to the two other, because he s 27. and hard for him mentally having lost another final over five sets to really think that he can compete with the very, very best in the game. you would suspect that he would have more opportunities. alcarez is very similar age to jannick condition sinner. winner on surfaces. seven men have done that and he s the youngest. and the only one is on the hard courts of the australian open, and there s absolutely no reason to think why he wouldn t be able to win that as well. so he is the player of the current crop of those names that we mentioned, who is most likely to be the dominant player of his era. butjust to remind him that there s some serious competition out there. in a while, it could be sinner and not carlos alcaraz who could take over as the new world men s number one. meanwhile the us open champion coco gauff and katerina siniakova won the women s doubles title with a straight sets victory over sara errani and jasmine paolini who lost the singles final on saturday. it s gauff s first doubles title at a grand slam. at the men s t20 cricket world cup, india survived a scare to beat pakistan in a thriller in new york in front of over 3a,000fans. put into bat in slippery conditions after morning rain, india struggled for runs virat kohli out for just 4. rishabh pant s aggressive 42 was imperative but their 119 all out didn t look like it would be good enough, and with muhammad rizwan setting about chasing down that total, pakistan were heading to victory, 80 for 3 with six overs left. but jasprit bumrah, spearheaded a brilliant fightback, took 3 for ia as pakistan fell short. two defeats from two for them, whilst india are on the brink of qualifying for the super 8s. the biggest positive for us was the calmness. because when we were batting in the morning, there was a lot more help. and when we started bowling, the skies opened up and the skies stopped and there wasn t a lot of lateral movement. so we had to be more consistent and more accurate. we as a unit were very calm and clear with what we wanted to do so we were happy that we could contribute and create that pressure. i knew it was going to be a really tight game because it s not an easy wicket to bat on. and sometimes, the small little attention to detail can make a massive difference. but credit to the bowlers, i thought that they did job on the whole. to be honest with you, we had that game for 35 of the 40 overs. really, we had the game. we played good cricket and did everything that we needed to. so it s a disappointing loss. elswhere, scotland comfortably beat oman by 7 wickets for their second win of the tournament. a wonderful unbeaten 61 from brandon mcmullen guided the scots to their target of 151 in under 1a overs as richie berrington s side delivered a statement win. that result means scotland currently top group b having after 3 games, they sitjust above australia who s convincing victory over england has put the the current world cup holder s chances of progressing to the super 8 s in serious doubt. our cricket correspondent henry morean was at that game in bridgetown and says england are making too many bad decisions. well, it s very easy to overreact to such things. and perhaps, if we have seen what happened in the 50 over world cup last year, it would be put down to one bad day at the office yesterday. but england are getting into a little bit of a habit now of making bold calls at the decisions of the captain and the coach that just aren t working. yesterday, they won the toss, elected to bowl first. yes, both captains said that they would have done the same thing, but it didn t pay off. there was the decision to bowl willjackson in the second over. that over went for 22 and australia were flying. you go back to the 50 over world cup and the decision to bowl in the mumbai heat against south africa proved to be a really disappointing and incorrect decision from england s point of view. so it starts to build up a bit of a pattern where the big calls are being made and england are getting them wrong and it s costing them cricket matches. but what they ve got to do quite simply against namibia and oman is to win big. they ve got to boost the net run rate and got to find a way of clawing themselves back into having some degrow of control in the group and also build a little bit of confidence, if nothing else. they d expect to build namibia and oman and beat them handsomely. the other factor is that although the time of the year, although it is boutful here in the caribbean, there is rain around. if england were to lose another rain to the weather, that would cause real problems. normal service has resumed for the formula one championship leader max vertsappen after he won a rain affected canadian grand prix. the three time world champion could only manage sixth at the monaco grand prix a fortnight ago. despite missing out on pole to george russell in montreal, the changeable conditions saw two safety cars and verstappen was able to get ahead during pitstops to take victory. in a thrilling battle behind him lando norris claimed second in his mercedez, ahead of fellow british driver, mclaren s george russell, who completed the podium. at the european athletics championships in rome, britain s dina asher smith has won gold in the women s 100 metres. she took victory in 10.99 seconds, crossing the line ahead of poland s ewa soboda and italy s zaynab dosso. it s asher smith s first major international medal since winning european 200 metres silver in 2022. i v e i ve been working really hard on my top end speed and i was really happy to, despite not getting the best start for me, being able to work it back. and that s definitely a new skill that s definitely a new skill that we ve worked really hard on. but yeah, i did. that was a bit hairy! just a little bit! but you know, made it! with the tour de france three weeks away, primoz roglic has showed his yellowjersey credentials by winning the criterium du dauphine with a gutsy ride on the final day. carlos rodriguez of the ineos grenadiers won stage 8, but matteo jorgenson who was in second place overall wasjust behind him meaning a struggling roglic had to finish within 56 seconds of the american. he made it across the line with 8 seconds to spare, to win the dauphine for the second time in his career. golf, and scottie sheffler s incredible success continues as he claimed victory at the memorial tournament. he finished just one shot ahead of colin morikawa for his 11th pga tour title. he s the first player to win 5 times in a season sincejustin thomas in 2017. meanwhile, linn grant came from 11 shots back on the final day to become the first woman to win two dp world tour titles as sebastian soderberg blew an eight shot lead in the final round of the scandinavian mixed. an extraordinary implosion from soderberg who needed par on the last to win. had this shot for bogey for a playoff but remarkably his effort lipped out making it a final round 77 and handing grant victory by one shot after her final round of 65 all the more special in her home town of helsingborg. you can get all the latest sports news at from the bbc sport app, orfrom our website that s bbc.com/sport. from me and the rest of the team at the bbc sport centre, goodbye. hello there. weather for the week ahead is perhaps not the story you want. no significant summer sunshine or warmth, i m afraid. in fact, the story in armagh on sunday really sets the scene just a high of ten degrees. we had cloudy skies with light rain or drizzle with a cool northerly wind as well. now, that rain is sinking its way steadily southwards and it will clear away from eastern england and south east england during monday morning. behind it, this northerly wind and this cooler air source starts to kick in across the country. so a rash of showers, a cold, brisk wind driving those showers in off exposed coasts and drifting their way steadily south across scotland and northern ireland as we go through the morning. here s our cloud and rain still lingering across east yorkshire, lincolnshire first thing in the morning, some heavier bursts that will ease away. best of any brighter skies, perhaps across southern england down to the south west. here, showers should be few and further between. but nevertheless, that wind direction still really digging in right across the country. so sunny spells, scattered showers, a brisk northwesterly wind for many, so temperatures just below par really for this time of year, a maximum of 10 15 degrees for most. we might see highs of 17 or 18 if we get some sunshine across south west england and wales. now, as we move out of monday into tuesday, the low pressure drifts off to scandinavia, high pressure builds. it should start to kill off some of the showers out to the west. but with those clearing skies, well, those temperatures will be below path through the night as well, low single figures for some, quite a chilly start to our tuesday morning. hopefully some sunshine around on tuesday. there will continue to be some showers, most frequent ones running down through central and eastern scotland and england. further west, some brighter skies and once again, highs of 17 degrees, but for many, just a maximum of 10 15 once again. moving out of tuesday into wednesday, winds will fall lighter still for a time, but there s another low pushing in and that will bring some wetter weather to close out the end of the working week. it will gradually start to change the wind direction. so, after a drier day on wednesday, it will turn that little bit milder, but also wetter as we head into the weekend. live from washington, this is bbc news. emmanuel macron calls for a snap election after his alliance is defeated by the far right european parliament vote. elsewhere in the elections, voters snub the governing parties of germany, spain and belgium, the prime minister of italy and poland had cause to celebrate. benny gantz quits and demands an election. hello, i m helena humphrey. glad you could join me. france is going to the polls again. the country s president, emmanuel macron, called a snap parliamentary vote sunday night after his centrist alliance was trounced by the far right in european parliament elections. in a speech after exit polls were released, he said he could not ignore the results and he said he could not ignore the results and the dissolving parliament is an act of trust in the french people. translation: the rise - of nationalists and demagogues is a danger for our nation but also for europe, for france s position in europe and in the world. and i say this even though we have just celebrated with the whole world the normandy landing, and as in a few weeks we will welcome the world for the olympic and paralympic games. yes, the far right is both the result of the impoverishment of the french and the downgrading of our country, so at the end of this day, i cannot act as if nothing had happened. the far right party was the winner of the eu elections

Court , Player , Team , T , Handing-grant-victory , Grand-slam , Title , Course , Seed , Spanish , Two , Person

Transcripts For BBCNEWS Sportsday 20240610



welcome along. thank you forjoining us. we start with a history making win for carlos alcaraz the new french open champion who, at the age of 21, is the youngest man to win grand slams on all three surfaces, after he beat alexander zverev in a gripping five set final at roland garros. alcaraz bottom of your screen who s previously won the us open and wimbledon, took the opening set, playing the better tennis. but zverev, hoping to win his first grand slam title, won the next two sets and looked on course for victory, only for the spanish third seed to find another gear. he only lost three games in the final two sets, as he fulfilled what he called his childhood dream and emulated one of his heroes and compatriot, rafael nadal. winning a grand slam is always special. winning yourfirst grand slam is always super special. but in roland garros, knowing that all the tennis, all the spanish players who have won this tournament, and to be able to put my name on that amazing list is something unbelievable. it s something that i dream about being in this position since i started playing tennis, since i was five, six years old. so it s a great, great feeling. he s a beast, he s an animal, for sure. and the intensity he plays tennis at is different towards other people. you know, he can do so many different things, right? i think he changes tactics a lot and starts to play a lot higher and deeper in the fifth set. for me to not create as much power, especially with the shadows on the court, it was slower again. but he s a fantastic player, and physically, he s fantastic. so i have to look at myself and i have to look at the team that i have and see, you know, what i can do to become at the same level. so for zverev, the wait goes on, as he tries to reach the heights that australian open championjannik sinner and carlos alcaraz have reached this year. here s our tennis correspondent, russell fuller. well, zverev is very middle aged compared to the other two. he s now 27, and hard for him mentally after losing another final over five sets to really think he can compete with the very best in the game. you will suspect he will have more opportunities. alcaraz is onlyjust 21, a similar age to jannik sinner. and as you pointed out, the winner on three different surfaces. seven men have done that now. he s the youngest, by quite some margin. and the only one he hasn t won is on the hard courts of the australian open and there is absolutely no reason to think he would not be able to win that as well. so he is the player of the current crop of those names we have mentioned who is most likely to be the dominant player of his era. butjust to remind him that there is serious competition out there, in a few hours time, it is jannik sinner of italy and not carlos alcaraz who takes over as the new men s world number one. meanwhile, the us open champion coco gauff and katerina siniakova won the women s doubles title with a straight sets victory over sara errani and jasmine paolini, who lost the singles final on saturday. it s gauff s first doubles title at a grand slam. at the men s t20 cricket world cup, india survived a scare to beat pakistan in a thriller in new york, in front of over 3a,000 fans. put in to bat in slippery conditions after morning rain, india struggled for runs virat kohli out for just 4. rishabh pant s aggressive 42 was imperative, but their 119 all out didn t look like it would be good enough. and with muhammad rizwan setting about chasing down that total, pakistan were heading to victory. 80 for 3, with six overs left. but jasprit bumrah spearheaded a brilliant fightback, took 3 for 1h, as pakistan fell short. two defeats from two for them, whilst india are on the brink of qualifying for the super 8s. the biggest positive for us was the calmness. because when we were batting in the morning, there was a lot more help, and when we started bowling, the skies opened up and there wasn t a lot of lateral movement. so we had to be more consistent and more accurate. and we as a unit are very calm and clear on what we wanted to do. so very happy that as a unit, we were able to contribute and created that pressure. and then we were able to get the win. i knew it was going to be a really tight game because it s not an easy wicket to bat on. and sometimes, those small attentions to detail can make a massive difference. but credit to the boys, they did a greatjob on the whole. to be honest, we had that game for 35 of the 40 overs. really, we had the game, we played good cricket and did everything we needed to. so it s a disappointing loss. elswhere, scotland comfortably beat oman by seven wickets for their second win of the tournament. a wonderful unbeaten 61 from brandon mcmullen guided the scots to their target of 151 in under 1a overs, as richie berrington s side delivered a statement win. that result means scotland currently top group b. after three games, they sit just above australia, whose convincing victory over england has put the current world cup holders chances of progressing to the super 8s in serious doubt. our cricket correspondent henry moeran was at that game in bridgetown and says england are making too many bad decisions. well, it s very easy to overreact to such things and perhaps if we hadn t seen what happened in the 50 over world cup last year, it would be put down to one bad day at the office yesterday. but england are getting a little bit of a habit now of making bold calls. the decisions of the captain and the coach jos buttler and matthew mott that aren t working. yesterday, they won the toss and elected to bowl first. yes, and both captains said they would do the same thing. it didn t pay off. they bowled willjacks in the second over. australia were flying. go back to the 50 over world cup, their decision to bowl in the mumbai heat against south africa proved to be a really disappointing and incorrect decision for england. and it builds up a bit of a pattern where big calls are being made and england get them wrong, and it costs them cricket matches. quite simply, against namibia and oman, they have to win big. they have to boost the net run rate and find a way of clawing their way back into having some degree of control in this group. of course, they will build a little confidence, if nothing else. they would expect to beat namibia and oman handsomely. the other factor is although it is beautiful here today in the caribbean, there is rain around. if england were to lose another game to the weather, well, that does cause real problems. normal service has resumed for the formula one championship leader max vertsappen, after he won a rain affected canadian grand prix. the three time world champion could only manage sixth at the monaco grand prix a fortnight ago. despite missing out on pole to george russell in montreal, the changeable conditions saw two safety cars, and verstappen was able to get ahead during pitstops to take victory. in a thrilling battle behind him, lando norris claimed second in his mercedes ahead of fellow british driver mclaren s george russell, who completed the podium. at the european athletics championships in rome, britain s dina asher smith has won gold in the women s 100 metres. she took victory in 10.99 seconds, crossing the line ahead of poland s ewa swoboda and italy s zaynab dosso. it s asher smith s first major international medal since winning european 200 metres silver in 2022. i ve been working really hard on my top end speed and i was really happy, despite not getting the best start for me, of being able to wake it back. that s definitely a new skill we have worked really hard on. but, yeah, that was a bit hairy! just a little bit! but, you know, i made it! with the tour de france three weeks away, primoz roglic has showed his yellowjersey credentials by winning the criterium du dauphine with a gutsy ride on the final day. carlos rodriguez, of the ineos grenadiers, won stage 8, but matteojorgenson who was in second place overall wasjust behind him, meaning a struggling roglic had to finish within 56 seconds of the american. he made it across the line with eight seconds to spare, to win the dauphine for the second time in his career. golf, and scottie scheffler s incredible success continues, as he claimed victory at the memorial tournament. he finished just one shot ahead of collin morikawa for his 11th pga tour title. he s the first player to win five times in a season sincejustin thomas in 2017. meanwhile, linn grant came from 11 shots back on the final day to become the first woman to win two dp world tour titles, as sebastian soderberg blew an eight shot lead in the final round of the scandinavian mixed. an extraordinary implosion from soderberg, who needed par on the last to win. he had this shot for bogey for a playoff. but remarkably, his effort lipped out, making it a final round 77 and handing grant victory by one shot, after her final round of 65. all the more special in her home town of helsingborg. and just a reminder before you go. you can get all the latest sports news from the bbc sport website, including reaction to carlos alcaraz s french open win. from me and the rest of the team at the bbc sport centre, goodbye. hello there. weather for the week ahead is perhaps not the story you want. no significant summer sunshine or warmth, i m afraid. in fact, the story in armagh on sunday really sets the scene. just a high of ten degrees. we had cloudy skies, with light rain or drizzle, with a cool northerly wind as well. now, that rain is sinking its way steadily southwards, and it will clear away from eastern england and south east england during monday morning. behind it, this northerly wind and this cooler air source starts to kick in across the country. so a rash of showers. a cold, brisk wind driving those showers in off exposed coasts, and drifting their way steadily south across scotland and northern ireland as we go through the morning. here s our cloud and rain still lingering across east yorkshire, lincolnshire first thing in the morning. some heavier bursts. that will ease away. best of any brighter skies perhaps across southern england, down to the south west. here, showers should be few and further between. but nevertheless, that wind direction still really digging in right across the country. so sunny spells, scattered showers, a brisk north westerly wind for many, so temperatures just below par, really, for this time of year. a maximum of 10 to 15 degrees for most. we might see highs of 17 or 18, if we get some sunshine across south west england and wales. now, as we move out of monday into tuesday, the low pressure drifts off to scandinavia, high pressure builds. it should start to kill off some of the showers out to the west. but with those clearing skies, well, those temperatures will be below par through the night as well. low single figures for some. quite a chilly start to our tuesday morning. hopefully some sunshine around on tuesday. there will continue to be some showers, most frequent ones running down through central and eastern scotland and england. further west, some brighter skies, and once again, highs of 17 degrees. but for many, just a maximum of 10 to 15 once again. moving out of tuesday into wednesday, winds will fall lighter still for a time, but there s another low pushing in and that will bring some wetter weather to close out the end of the working week. it will gradually start to change the wind direction. so after a drier day on wednesday, it will turn that little bit milder, but also wetter, as we head into the weekend. live from washington, this is bbc news. emmanuel macron calls for a snap election after his alliance is defeated by the far right european parliament vote. elsewhere in the elections, voters snub the governing parties of germany, spain and belgium, the prime minister of italy and poland had cause to celebrate. israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu under pressure after a member of his war cabinet benny gantz quits and demands an election. hello, i m helena humphrey. glad you could join me. france is going to the polls again. the country s president, emmanuel macron, called a snap parliamentary vote sunday night after his centrist alliance was trounced by the far right in european parliament elections. ina in a speech after exit polls are released, he said he could not ignore the results and the dissolving parliament is an act of trust in the french people. translation: the rise - of nationalists and demagogues is a danger for our nation but also for europe, for france s position in europe and in the world. and i say this even though we have just celebrated with the whole world the normandy landing, and as in a few weeks we will welcome the world for the olympic and paralympic games. yes, the far right is both the result of the impoverishment of the french and the downgrading of our country, so at the end of this day, i cannot act as if nothing had happened.

Man , Final , Carlos-alcaraz , Surfaces , Slams , Screen , French-open , Who , Alexander-zverev , Five , Three , 21

Transcripts For BBCNEWS Business Today 20240610



minister for a third consecutive term. however, it marks the first time his bharatiya janata party has needed allies to form a government. so will that impact mr modi s ability to push through economic reforms? priyanka kishore, the director and principal economist at research company asia decoded, gave us her take. modi is actually working with an alliance which has a lot of experience of pushing through successful reforms under the government. and they will draw upon that experience. of course, i think there will be a slowdown in decision making in certain areas and the big calls that people are expecting, that won t come through. but we will not completely see a stalling. labour reforms, i think, will be prioritised. we can debate the outcomes, but the reality many people talk about is that in the last ten years, india has seen bold economic decisions as well made by the bjp government, and many feel that has worked in a way for international investors. are you likely to see that continue? the bold decision making means executive reforms and administrative reforms can happen. but as a result of those decision makings, we have not seen land reforms or agricultural reforms. now this is a new landscape, and the reason i think we may see labour reforms happen is because there is an impetus with employment becoming a key issue, and we could see more dialogue. so i think, eventually, investors will come round and see this is not such a bad outcome. the government spending on capex has been a big priority. what more needs to be done? is private investment something you would be keen to look out for? yes, definitely, that s a great point, actually. for the labour interventions that need to happen, we will see some shift in the expenditure mix in the fiscal. so i expect capex to be curtailed a bit. it will still stay, but it will not be as high or surging. and money will go towards education, training, social sectors, which makes it all the more essential for private investment to kick in. and i think the way for that to happen is to stop to happen is to start promoting trade and exports and making imports cheaper. on paper, india has one of the fastest growing economies, but there are several pressure points. what would be your first course of action to see? definitely like to see dialogue and movement on the labour side. we have focused on infrastructure and other supply side initiatives. the labour contribution has lagged for too long in india and the time is now to pick up. priyanka kishore. turning to the oil industry. aramco, the saudi arabian energy giant, says international investors have snatched up the bulk of shares sold in its latest offering. the state owned company is expected to raise more than $11 billion from the move. the sale came just days after the head of the united nations called fossil fuel companies the godfathers of climate chaos , who had deceived the public for decades. for more on this, we re joined by saul kavonic, senior research analyst at mst marquee. the equity sale of aramco by the saudis is very much in the bigger context of what is happening here and that is saudivision 2030. that s where the saudis are looking to really modernise the economy and diversify away from oil and gas. and we expect the money raised, the $11 billion, $12 billion raised to go into saudi arabia s public investment fund. that is where they are undertaking a transformation of the saudi economy. the public investment fund is key to that. and if you look at some of the ambitions the saudis have, we are talking about $1 trillion of investment notjust in the futuristic city neon which many talk about, but in areas like green energy both at home and abroad, manufacturing and areas like sports and tourism, which is going to see a very fundamental change in the saudi economy and society over the next ten years. this plan of the saudi government to diversify beyond oil, how do you see that progressing and the kind of steps or actions likely to come ahead? for those of us who have visited riyadh lately, it is very, very different to only a few years ago, certainly ten years ago. cranes are everywhere. society and the economy is being fundamentally transformed. if you think about it, for example, most of us when we are thinking of going on a holiday, i don t think saudi arabia is even on the list. but in ten years time, saudi arabia could be one of the top tourism destinations. for those of us who remember the transformation of dubai a few decades ago, what we see in saudi now is very much like that, but on steroids because they ve got a lot more money behind it and they are attracting a lot more foreign investment and it is a fundamental transformation. they are trying to do what a lot of western economies have taken 100 years to do in 20 years. malay ship will remove blanket subsidies on diesel starting from monday. the move is expected to save the government around $850 million a year malaysia. diesel will now be sold at market price that will be set quickly, except in the eastern malaysians states. there, it will remain subsided. norway s sovereign wealth fund says it will vote against ratifying tesla ceo s elon musk s $60 billion pay package. the fund which is a shareholder in the electric vehicle company said it remained concerned about the total size of the award after voting against it in 2018. mr musk s pay package is the largest for a chief executive and corporate america. it was voided by a judge earlier this year. it will be put to tesla shareholders for a vote this week. let s take a closer look at nollywood, the nigerian entertainment industry, comparable to hollywood and bollywood in india. in april, nigerian film starjunior pope died when the boat he was travelling in from a film set capsised. an investigation found a number of safety failings, including the fact that the boat driver wasn t certified. hannah gelbart, from the bbc s what in the world podcast, has been speaking to nollywood actors and producers in lagos about the industry s safety record, and what needs to change. nollywood is booming, but it s got a darker side. this is a cultural centre here in lagos, and what you can see around me are some of the remnants of a huge nollywood premiere that took place here last night. it had some of the top names in nigerian cinema. nollywood is one of the biggest film industries in the world. it s up there with hollywood and india s bollywood, and it puts out more than 2,500 films every single year. but recently, there have been some concerns over things like health and safety in its films. in april, top nollywood actorjunior pope died in a boat accident. it capsised after hitting a canoe in a river, killing five people. in this clip, filmed byjunior pope the day before he died, he s clearly concerned about his safety. an investigation found multiple failures. the boat wasn t registered, its driver had no licence, and only one passenger was wearing a life jacket. that s because they d brought it on board themselves. the bbc has obtained a now deleted video clip from the producer s instagram, where she says she was told there were life jackets and junior pope was offered one, but didn t take it. actress and screenwriter ruth kadiri was a friend ofjunior pope s, and she was shocked by his passing. it was much more painfulfor me because i have been in that exact situation before. so i understood the fear, everything he must have felt at the last minute of his life. i had to shoot an epic movie, so we couldn t use lifejackets. i asked everybody, the team, if everything was ok. they said, yes, the canoe was fine. so i got on the boat. action , they said, and then they started to paddle. the canoe just tumbled into this very big river. so my colleague, frankincense that s his name he grabbed me because i was like, i can t swim, you know? and stuff like that. it s. it s an experience that i will never forget. actor chidi dike says the industry is learning from its mistakes. the safety record has been quite low, but right now, it s better. so i think the incident was a bit of a wake up call to everybody producers, directors, actors. right now, we have to go back home one time. come on now. lives are important, too. we all do crazy things for the love of this job. going home later at 3am on a date. we re doing things that we normally would not do. 0urtiming forfilming, it s insane. the industry should have proper rest days. i also think individuals should look out for themselves and just fix rest days for themselves. as nollywood continues to thrive, the world will now be watching how it treats people who work there. hannah gelbart, bbc news, lagos. the actors guild of nigeria said in a statement afterjunior pope s death that it has set up a committee to look into improving safety guidelines and protocols. some more news before we go. shares of game stop have fallen by almost 40% in the united states. after a livestream states. after a livestrea m appearance states. after a livestream appearance by keith gill, also known as roaring kitty failed to spark investor enthusiasm. mr gill is credited with helping the struggling firm s shares explode 2021, contrary to the bets of many professional wall street firms. four passengers from the us, turkey and italy travelled to the edge of space and back on a virgin galactic flight. richard branson s space tourism company will now take a two year break from organising space flights, to upgrade its fleet. and that s it for this edition of business today. thanks for watching. hello and welcome to sportsday. i m chetan pathak. coming up on the programme: will he be the next king of clay? carlos alcaraz wins the french open, after an enthralling five set final in paris. a thriller in new york india survive a scare to beat pakistan at the t20 cricket world cup. and back to winning ways world champion max verstappen comes out on top at a dramatic canadian grand prix. welcome along. thank you forjoining us. we start with a history making win for carlos alcaraz the new french open champion who, at the age of 21, is the youngest man to win grand slams on all three surfaces, after he beat alexander zverev in a gripping five set final at roland garros. alcaraz bottom of your screen who s previously won the us open and wimbledon, took the opening set, playing the better tennis. but zverev, hoping to win his first grand slam title, won the next two sets and looked on course for victory, only for the spanish third seed to find another gear. he only lost three games in the final two sets,

Government , Reforms , Experience , Modi , Lot , Alliance , Us , Research-company-asia-decoded , Minister , Priyanka-kishore , Term , Time