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tv   NEWS 30min  Al Jazeera  July 5, 2024 2:00am-2:30am AST

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come round with the french elections and i'll just say the name and then slide you take, exit. polls predict victory for the opposition leave the policy ending 14 years of conservative party route. i'm james bay's outside number 10 downing street in london, which looks like he's going to be the new hope of a new prime minister as richie so next conservatives face what may be the worst defeats the policy is history, the johnston. this is all just there. a life and so also coming out as a palestinian desktops, 38000 gallons of us says there's been
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a break through negotiations between how mass and israel us will be live from mexico's coast. has thousands of people race for the impact of parking barrel. the beginning and united kingdom exit polls to predict to the landslide victory for the opposition labor party, if possibly ending 14 years of conservative rule. guess thomas policy is projected to secure 410 now to the 650 seats in the house of commons. that's an absolute parliamentary majority. meanwhile, the conservatives off predicted 2 in 131 seats, the west edit performance in decades. the bill democrats, sa, predicted to come to the total of $61.00 seats and the right wing reform u. k. policy is set to win 13 states as well. these, the last pictures of counting going on ballots have encountered across the u. k.
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and the results will continue to come in throughout the nights. what am i meant to have from that? i know this one eviction bond at north london with both sobbing county. but 1st, let's head to 10 downing street and speak to l just it was james base for us now a several hours of counting still to go, but it's looking very much like a label on slide. yeah, i mean we need those that the big picture from an exit polls. so a projection of how things are going to go box given the scale of the exit poll and the victory that late, but look like they're going to get. the next is next. it poll, i can't really see any reason why it's not maybe a labor victory even if it wasn't as great that lead as suggested by this exit poll, the margin is just so huge. a majority of a 170. you compare this to last time around when labor only got $202.00 seats. the
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exit polls is producing. they're going to get 410 last time was the worst slave the result. since 1935, this time the conservative. if this exit poll is right underneath $31.00 seats, that will be the worst result, the conservative party as ever had in an election. it really is quite studying. if these are matched by the results. it means of course, as we go through the night into the morning, each of the constituencies will declare the result, each will come up with then pay the end piece will total up. the policies that the m p 's belong to. and if we match what the exit poll says, then labor, we're going to get a landslide and the next prime minister, that in number 10 downing street is going to be stomach, remember, is different from say in the united states where you have an election and then the new person takes office a few months later in, in the us. it's an election in november and january, the 20th,
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the new president know they. so we're going to happen in the next few hours and in the u. k. a very, very false way things work here. and what seems likely if we have this land slide confirmed by all of us, then probably as early as tomorrow morning, where she soon will come and announces resignation to go see the king. and then to stall him about the afternoon. we'll be in downing street as the new prime minister and james some significant results for smaller parties to the piece. so yeah, i mean, i think that's important to the big picture here is interesting when you look at what's going on around the world, there's, there's something going on i think, against incumbents. but also you look at some of that maybe to do with, with cobit and the cost of living in the and the like. but there's, there's also europe where we seen in the european elections a lot of the of the right policies doing well will general direction of travel in the u. k. is towards labor towards the left box. there's also, i think,
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an important gain of seats. okay. it's not a large number, but reform, which is the party, the strongest lead support breaks it the on the hard, right? 13 seats in the projection. and we've already got a couple of results in. we've got blogs and ashington and also how and some gloves south. look at the something themselves. a result of labor goes $18000.00 votes. the number 2 was real full with 11000. so i think the showing of this reform party might be another piece of the story also. no. so the voter in scotland of the, the scottish national policy, they've had a very, very bad night, is the projections are right. projections. say that only going to get 10 seats. well, in 20195 years ago, the last election, they got 48. so it's clearly i think going to push the cause of scottish independence back quite a bit. james,
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thank you. a but spring in the best one of it, shoes as a counting sentiment bonnet to north and on. now at 3 constituents is, i mean counted the end, it's viewed as one of the capitals key areas. so you are at one of the most important backgrounds in what's happening that in the month. that's why we housing is that the way here there will add force museum 8th the 3 constituents? is that how the traditional conservative hotline is? one of them has had the same since having to them uses 2005 threes as many as but she is set to use that sees according to the exit. paul, another one. well that the constituencies had an n p. that was the full month for just 5 minutes to margaret thatcher in the pause and that constituency, according to the exit pool, is also set to go to the liberal democrats this, i'm sorry, conservative also set to lose that one as well. we matching that nationwide picture,
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but let the accounting you'll still underway. we've got a whole night to go. and as james was saying, 3 seeds of a sofa declared that resolved all of them laboring all 3 of the most of which is interesting. is there a phone call to the far right policy, led by nigel farmers. one of the architects of rex it here in the u. k. now they have the 2nd really eating into that conservative birch. now we've got a number of all the sees that we will be looking at throughout the night is going to be probably a little a few hours. and then we're going to start getting more results around 4 am. and so, and hopefully a clearer picture of how the nation is looking at about 7 am putting d that else way and then what's all the key seats to account for as well as, as of course, the car and prime is richie. see you next. these in a new england dot is suppose to comment about for the cm and as for us as
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a test on the label lead a seat in north london around the same time that is a very safe season and he's expected to, to retain that to win and now what's also quite interesting is that it seems that a number of conservative cabinet ministers, us set to lose that seeds a nearly the child that time you vice a huge army, hon. so he seems to, to be on calls to lose his see. but of course we, we let him know that until the results of dick's lead and the full back conservative lead in duncan spins also. seems to be on close to these histories in the east of england, the one pass and that it seems to be on course to actually we received for the 1st time ever is the reform policy leader nigel forest is his 8th attempt to become n, n p. and according to exit polls, he might be actually successful this time. okay, in the font, it's in london, forest from 9 to thank you. let's take a closer look. now,
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the man who's on the cusp of making history test start. so know how ripples too much of the british public before the election campaigns, the kids stomach wasn't quite the right fit either as labor party leader or as prime minister to don't know radical enough to establishment. my dad works in the factory. he was a to my, to my mom was in the us, we didn't have a lot of publication as pains to remind the country of his countenance roots named doctor the laker, fancies fest upon them in the lead, a liberal defense lawyer with reforming instincts, late to no cheap for his service as chief public prosecutor at the next general, like jeffrey robinson 100 stomach is a young human rights lawyer. he interviewed very badly is that you were a colleague and one of my colleagues said, we can't possibly take someone who weighs cardigans. it was a role that would bring style, why the claim holding pilot to account on behalf of ordinary people and culminating
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in his appointment as the director of public prosecutions. he has said that it's really the human rights act that brought him into politics. he's sol, the link between the getting rights for under privilege, people and politics. and i think that even any political decisions that he would make, that he will go and be guided by the principles of human rights. a man on the custom to trumpeting his other treatments. the red lips is what motivates him. yeah . what, what was this thing that if this is an injustice or a wrong the job is to fix it. it's not just talk about it. and what he feels he wants to achieve, having switched from the new or to politics less than 10 years ago. yes. tom or the
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labor of body style, the campaign to get into number 10, downing street around that promise of change change of to 14 years of conservative governments of course, but also a more fundamental change. putting right what is wrong? that's thomas says he's driven by the policy, but will he have the results is to deliver i have a vision for this country towards higher growth and i just back on it's feet secure, borders, cheaper bills, safer straits and opportunities for adult children. i think there's a big test for care summer last 6 months, funds prime minister, which will be can you explain to the british people what has happened? and therefore what that means for the next 2 years, next 3 or 4 years. will you take hold of me, cried will that be sufficient? is also for level government suspend. these are the big things that will decide whether a sound the government will be successful in that. and persuading is still skeptical
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public. the being sensible and a little boring can. so it means simply getting the job done. jo, nicole elders 0 number of course, hopkins is a physical research director at the podium company. so then to congress, he joins as long as not from london. welcome to the program at 1st we explain if you will, these exit polls for us and how accurate we can expect them to be. yeah, i mean, the exit polling has a real strong history to ukiah, about to say, i think the last time it had a major arrow was, you know, my style a or at least 2 years ago. the generally basically how they work is rose, be small sort of polling stations where people stand outside and not in a different genetic paul and convey as opposed to here's what we're trying to measure. the pulses is, are the intention, but what they have to apologize to measure is by to, by yeah, good. it is all the actual actors i leave to fill in essentially,
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i'm all about i from exactly the same way that they just did. and it is obviously looks at the change based on the last time, but i know most of my students are in this case 2019. i tries to project that change. and i say in, in, in, in the selection bias, all of the following sections, extrapolate across the country. and yeah, the site i've gotten incredibly high level of accuracy. i think of the last election goes out. why in the hands, let's see. so i think we can feel fairly confident and, and what we've seen so far, although i think if that was ever going to be again where the whole house did get few things slightly more wrong than usual. it would be this one particular with the boundaries in the, in the case of the constituencies and also with arise that will be kind of instigating the really style and the way the, everybody consistencies of the products of policy that pre assess the data in 2019 and given what you say, this does look like a huge results for labor and the tory disaster. i mean, why would the conservatives have done so badly?
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yeah, yeah, i think, yeah, we've been talking this now for for a long time and i don't think you're but the real swing stopped it. waking the kids up to pumpkins was the light of policy when mar thompson was the prime minister free policy guy on the policy. is that what we do is we have during the current of ours pandemic, i think that was when i 1st started to distrust it. concerns policy and perhaps believed. and that they, you know, that we want when it together is i, i've been said throw on demick. nothing for this truck with no super placing bars, johnson and they can set the policy lost all of their normal credibility, which and do they have such a key component for a lot of their electric victories. i do like a policy and recent is and then for the she said i can look it up to boston, but i just lose boxes not just like a box of goals that i have to reform, u. k. a. and that was generally for a sense the record because of the deposit couldn't be trusted to deliver what i promised. right so, so let me ask you the rest of it. give me does cast. i'm
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a really have great popularity. you will have the conservative symphony shot themselves in the foot. i think it's definitely more of the loss of that in the fall of driving. cassandra is the mind corporate of a politician in the ukiah, and it hasn't been it. but his of his own writings on particularly high, this is a relative and i think it's absolutely more down to the conservative barnabees throwing things away the like a winning selection. but here, there isn't all about this really in the u. k. that the opposition is that when elections, governments lose them, i think the literally being the case of what's happened here and frankly, is re, bins and exempt has been in power now for 40 years. but really, we've already seen a real strong moves and away from the conservative policy. and the last 2 of the, as a matter has been proved, a succession department. this is the lowest trust. so the bridge is people inside of the back comes and say, well, send the truck but they can be believes and then that they will deliver. right. so some of the things the other side of that. okay. well that may, austin,
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how would you expect to a care storm, a government to government and what would he looking to appease the left of his party or looking, as you mentioned, to appease reform u. k. policy support is very briefly. yeah. i mean, the case always going to be very, very happy. mom does a thing he, you know, i think the, with far all, i have a, a burst on majority that are in our long, but we house it historically the policy with lots of minorities do end up having more on rest. and perhaps more and more rebellions within that policy, and i think that they would pop into that as, as a and e. i think that, you know, it's going to be important. it gets almost out of the guys, but it's up to like, it's up to boston. frankly. don't i? the headlines go through that here to salsa. are actually the guy drops to as they are likely to be looking for new lead, i think with absolutely your expect. he's your next resignation tomorrow. i saw it by some of the numbers. um, but yeah, like with the to it and it needs a guy let look it's up to go home with bob, but there is going to be some difficulties for the policy down the road. i'm sure
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that will be a very difficult you. 19410. i'm going to use this be x. i'm always exactly right. okay. um, but you know, test always going through a long periods. not also in the last week, but he is really trying to unify the life policy. and yeah, he's not difficult on his house, but i think it might probably be during the sort of the majority of, of our small one. okay. we very much appreciate your time. chris hopkins. thank you . a bus to the head. donalds is era who is the target is rarely minute, 2 sides of the barrels of missiles, as israel continues to strike. subbing them in the hell are welcome to look at the international forecast and or have are comparable now starting to we can slightly but it's still a major harbor. $295.00 plus just per hour on those when this is making it's way
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general wesley direction. and it's still waving pretty quickly as we go on for a friday and makes his way across the top peninsula with copious amounts of frightful things i'm past. could easily say a 100 millimeters of right also, so that will be flooding. it'll punch this way out into the gulf of mexico as we go on into fact, i just noticed a lot of nasty little to that just so i'm heading back into jamaica. the flooding concerns here and then slides lot, brittany, line 5. certainly a possibility, something to watch out for that way. when making his way back. it's a good part of the keeper as well. eastern honest by this stage, generally dry with plenty of sunshine in his drive. and plenty of sunshine across that western side of the us. we could do with some right here, particularly how you would tools northern parts of california, where the wall fost continue to. but i made said, meanwhile showers across the, your northern plains over towards the midwest, running right down into the tennessee valley right into the mississippi valley side,
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louisiana, mississippi, alabama. 6 of went to where i'm at. so making his way a little further east was this week the the . ringback the, the
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the deal with, i'll just have, or a mind of off the top stores exit polls in the u. k. have predict the lance slides victory for the opposition. neva punched his thomas parties project to, to secure upon and mentioned majority of a 170 seats practically ending 14 years of conservative products. as tobin counted across the liberal democrats, a full cost to comes to a $161.00 seats by the right wing reform, you take policy, which is set to win 13. the u. s. president joe biden has oppressed is very prime minister benjamin netanyahu to close a deal with him. us for ceasefire and garza and a captive release. that comes off a senior us official said that being
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a breakthrough. we negotiations even as fighting and does it continues. official said her mouse has made us is this like an adjustment to its position and indigo. she ations reports indicate the head of the is very intelligent service, will travel to countertops to discuss the details in his call with joe biden. nothing yahoo! reiterated the war with only at the israel, a cheese it's goes. whitehouse correspond, it can be help. it has more of the call between the us president and the is really prime minister, took about 30 minutes and was attended by the national security adviser, secretary of state and vice president. now, the purpose of the call, according to the white house, was to work out the final details in terms of trying to get the captives that were captured on october 7th, released as well as to finalize ceasefire negotiations. so the prime minister president were walking through the draft agreement of the proposal that was put
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forward by president biden back in may. the framework deal according to us officials is now in place, but there are still some outstanding issues that need to be overcome. the president and his national security team has been reviewing the response put forward by him us in the last day or so. and so far, the response by the united states has been this as the what has been put forward by how moss has been constructive. but there are some issues that still need to be overcome. now, what we do know is that the president is very much uh, welcoming the decision by the is really prime minister to send a delegation to doha, to engage with us to tarry, add egypt, and mediators. they see this as a significant opening to in fact close the deal. this is the 1st time that the is
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really prime minister and you as president, have spoken since may 6th, but they may have the opportunity to speak face to face. the is really prime minister will be speaking to a joint session of the us congress later this month. and when asked if in fact the 2 will meet face to face, the u. s. official said that he expects that precedent by then. i will try to find an opportunity. kimberly health is al jazeera, the white house for the spanish is a fellow at the institute for policy studies. she's always as long as not from washington dc. welcome to houses here. how do you view this latest push on the specific wording that may or may not have been used? well, we don't know what would make it a breakthrough. we don't know the details. there was in one report that the us official briefing reporters today said that what was now on the table was
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a quote cause in finding a pause that implies that it would maybe not be a permanent ceasefire, while some, or maybe most of the hostages. all the women and men over 50 would be released if that's the case. that would imply that it was not a permanent end to the finding of permanent in 2 of these rarely assault on gaza. that would be a major shift in how masses position from the beginning. i'm also said that they need a permanent ceasefire. so that even if negotiations continued after the 1st phase, that a ceasefire needed to remain in place. israel, of course, was refusing that and saying that the israeli position is that the fighting can resume after the 6 weeks of the, of the 1st phase. we know that the us has a huge stake in, in getting a ceasefire underway. but we don't know what makes it a breakthrough. the only real breakthrough from my vantage point that we could confirm would be a breakthrough,
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would be if president binding announced that he was stopping all weapons transfers to israel. the weapons that are now being used to enable is real genocide. if you cut off those weapons, that would be a major breakthrough. when you mentioned present, bye, think the and the way we look at what was on the table before remind us of what the sticking points were with the sticking points was very much about this question of what the ceasefire itself be permanent, or would it only be a pause in the fighting. these really position was we are not going to end the war until we have ended a time us. what that means has never been very clear. a prime minister netanyahu had been in insisting that there would not be a permanency spires, and in that way he was, among other things opposing the position of many is riley's particularly the families of hostages, as well as his military leadership, who was saying this war simply have to end from the beginning,
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how mouse has said there has to be a permanent cease fires. that was the key disagreement between the 2 sides. whether this is simply a, a, a pause to release the hostages. and then israel goes back to resuming it's terrific bombing, or whether it actually is an end to the bombing and the negotiations would be over . what comes next in terms of humanitarian assistance? returning the last of the hostages, the numbers of the palestinian prisoners who would be released in return, all of that was to be under negotiations, but based on a permanent ceasefire. and the that means, forgive me, i mean, this comes as the election campaign continues in the us we, we just had joe biden to not reach rating that he's not dropping out. how to election precious play into this briefly few as well. we don't know for sure. but it's certainly possible that time ask who's paying a lot of attention to this challenge to binds re election that we've been seen. they may be thinking that while the item has consistently provided the weapons and
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protection of israel, that it wants in carrying out this genocide and gaza. that they may be thinking that their position would be even more dangerous with a new president. trump, given the positions that trump had taken when he was president, when he went to israel in 2018, among other things, move the embassy to jerusalem. recognize the israeli occupation of the goal on heights as somehow legitimate said, that settlements were legitimate. that an a, an attic section of the west bank would be ok, massively extreme positions. so if they were looking at that, they may have made a judgment that this is looking not very good for the possibility of a new election of a new president biden terms. and if they had to face a new president trump term, but that would be worse. so they want to get a resolution to this quickly. so that's possible, we don't know that for sure. okay, we'll leave it there for the spanish. thank you very much indeed for joining us. thank you. from the ground in gaza,
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thousands of palestinians have been killed and is very strikes across the street. at least 5 of them were killed in this rock refugee camp in central garza. but it's very minute treat talking to the house, the injured would take them to the o. x, the hospital for treatment 11 and it has but all says it find a balance of 250 missiles and explosive drugs into northern israel. the group targeted several is rarely minute true positions across the board, multiple fines for accounting, the occupied going on heights and in the region of galilee. israel says one of its soldiers was killed in the go. that heights latest escalation follows the killing of a senior has been combined in evidence on wednesday. a motherfucker some within the tough campaign against 11 on we have set the principles on where the home's us is of that mind. we're making that the reality in practice. we know that there was a long way to go, but we had the time to restore security to the law phone, unreturned residents securely to that homes of. and he is now hurricane barrel is
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heading. it's was mexico's, you all can top 10 minutes to the category to store is expected to make land for early friday morning. the storm is left to trailer destruction, across the se, caribbean killing at least 10 people. that's cost saving now to our that's in america. edit tennessee, a newman, who is in the dell, come in in new mexico. so me to a little to say the power can is expected to enter the company. and so as a category to heart cannot how, why would, should people be well, i think that you'll have to be very, very careful about saying just category 2 for 2 reasons. sometimes a very, very strong hurricane means that it will go through very quickly and not dump as much water on land as it would otherwise we're going slower. and we have seen this in the past where the most dangerous part of the hurricane is precisely when the rain and the strong winds,
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but especially the rain dumps. huge amounts of water online that is already saturated, as is the case here. and then you can find peninsula that just suffered a huge storm a week ago. so that's the 1st thing. secondly, we're hearing now that this part of pain is moving more quickly. it should be here within 5 to 6 hours coming into the room, which is just about an hour from here. and so there are certainly reasons to be concerned, because you can never really predict how these storms will behave, how fickle they can be, and how much damage they can cause, honestly, as well as dangerous arrest. and so what's happened to the thousands of tourists who have been strength? well, that is quite interesting. i mean there's more than a 100 flights, so it cancelled today both.

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