tv [untitled] June 13, 2021 4:30pm-5:01pm +03
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zones a by insisting that they are sold at cost and i think that's a fairly effective way of doing it the way i think. but i think the g 7 agreed to to look at that and see what they could do to expedite knowledge transfer. but it can a transfer of take manufacturing capability. but the particular solution that we've come up with, which is said making sure that, that the vaccines are distributed. costa, on a nonprofit basis, i think is the, is the right way to, to go, can we get to and from hello get era of thank you very much prime minister since the very beginning, your global britain as significantly brought forward the importance of the in the pacific region and the far east, and it's pretty stress on the g. 7 final come unique, mostly regarding china,
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in your personal view and after the 7, why is that ease and will this area be vital for our west western democracies? and why for you this new, crucial, and this for you, the new crucial dimension of the trans atlantic to his security in the future. and secondly, if i may, you apparently have a great respect for the time. prime minister might be jackie, because i remember that last year while announcing the full of scheme and the financial package against it to you quoted him more than once that with whatever it it takes. and also now i'm into the states the other day. you also said that the mistakes made it during them 2008 financial crisis should ever be made again, and also was the initial mentoring, the re reversing it. and also on the other end,
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mario jackie was deeply inspired by the example of do you came back sedation campaign? so apart from the couple 26 and the g 7, g 20 connections. what might be dragging means g to you? and if the rece, the relationship between the italy and the u. k, even though i know that you don't like this labor, thank you. thank you. and so there's obviously a, a very close and d special a shift in italy and, and the u. k. where we're actually intensifying that now where we've just signed a partnership agreement that's been in the produce, but for 2 years now to intensify corporations, everything from a security to to tech, to trade? correct. yeah. or we've, we've just, we've just,
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we've just finished the work and we started adding a couple of years ago because obviously we see it, it is an incredibly important partner. but all that, but on that you will have, you will have access to it as soon as it can be convenient. be arranged until the call on marriott draggy. i remember vividly being in lancaster highest, i think in in 2012. when he made use of your famous speech, the drag he put when he said we would do what he would do, whatever it takes to save the euro. this is, that was a good thing, that type of thing when they did draw a value over that, but it, it was incredibly successful. and i think that he is a brilliant economist. it's an absolute pleasure to, to listen to him. and i think that he gave a very,
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very balanced summary of what we're going to leave at that point. that was private as far as johnson of the u. k. speaking at the end of the g 7 conference in corner, which of course as private history of the u. k. bars, thompson was the host that's got some analysis from diplomatic. it's a james base, is to trigger a castle in the saint ives in cornwall. the world was looking to us to drop the nationalistic approach that my dearly response to the pandemic. the prime minister said james, i do hope that we've lived up to optimistic hopes and predictions. have they? well, with regard to the pandemic in regard to the actual concrete action that they have taken, i think the jury is really still out and many would say they haven't. the main commitment right now is a 1000000000 doses of vaccine that they're going to donate to countries around the
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world. but just listen to one of the other participants in the g 20, which is dr. ross, the head of the world health organization. yes, he's invited to the g 7 now he wouldn't have been lost yet because if that had to be g 7, it would be provided over by donald trump, who froze him out and cut all the funding to the w h o. but he says, rather than the 1000000000 they've offered to stop cobra, 900 eradicate cobra, 900, you know, need 11000000000 doses. so nowhere near that i think is, is the, is the view of the main un agency that deals with this. i think this will be seen as the coven 19 summit. i think it will be seen as the summit that came off to the trump era. and certainly the image they're trying to portray is one of the world returning to the way it was before the trump era allies close together. these g 7 partners and the u. s. very much in the leadership role. but i think the still a question marks about that,
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i think many looking over their shoulder wondering how long president biden will be here. and whether in 4 years time they'll be a president, donald trump, back in the white house for another. trump like character. i think it's interesting when you heard that news conference, adrian that in many ways that didn't really sum up what has been going on at this summit. it was a very you case centric news conference. the questions were about reopening in the u. k, especially in the mountains on that tomorrow. whether you can go back to its pre covered stage questions about the england football match that is taking place. a lot of questions about no, none of which is clearly was a sour tone of this summit. the trading entrance after breakfast, but there was no great breakdown or breakthrough with regard to north. norland. i think they just agreed not to fight the battle here, but to fight it elsewhere. and i think it's worth pointing out why you saw that very you case centric news conference. that's because most journalists from
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international media, like myself most from the other g 7 countries were not invited to that news conference. the vast majority of questions where from the u. k. media, because the vast majority of people in that room were you. k journalists, there were 2 questions, one from the new york times one from la republica of italy, both the journalists that the long time u. k. correspondence of those organizations are james for the moment. many thanks, data diplomatic. it's a james pays the in cornwall in the united kingdom. we'll move away from from that because that there's a lot of other news to cover this house. ah, that has been a chaotic start to a confidence vote on israel is new government is a live pictures from the connected where far right lead enough really bennett who is expected to be the new prime minister is currently speaking. he's being constantly interrupted by politicians. some of the schools it out off the heated
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exchanges, but it's one of the leaders, a french on the lines of a political parties that are determined one seed, benjamin netanyahu from power, that includes parties across the political spectrum, the right, the left. and for the 1st time it, israel's history of palestinian israeli party, there you go, you can hear it again. let's, let's listen to this from other people. there will be who we are here to do. what everyone will work for everybody to be on call home. i call the or above your party chose not to go into the coalition. that does not mean your vote is not represented. i will represent
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the new government to those who study the 2 of them. a b as staying does have thousands of years in exile with us will be we will know by up on it, we will not stop those who want to integrate into the society and the labor market, much kit tiffany. the ot law. loma the kits of the nation. my formula come see you know enough credit be orthodox jews and there is a place to build more even the new jewish or city in his bus on the move on to the new master ellison. i have been asked to
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mention the 16 year old to be paid in our move on the lawn. last i was asked to mention him. we will not forget him. we will establish an insular committee over investigation about money miguel. and i'm looking for the iranian nuclear project is coming to a critical point in the gumble. if you have been new means you've been told to learn more about the true resolution there, regard to established tara strong holders in syria, gaz lebanon, short short of skilled building milan. but the nuclear agreement with the on is a mistake,
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will legitimize one of the dark and dangerous regimes in the world. that is, ro will not allow you on tap nuclear. israel is not part of the agreement. money. israel will retain them to the board, little retain of flexibility of action. well, that was the primitive designate to natalie bennett, speaking at the start of this confidence debate in the israeli connected to today. let's bring in, i was here a stephanie deca who's outside the connected in west jerusalem stuff. it's been ill tempered, noisy, can asset members have been rejected? what are we to make of it? absolutely been heckled right from the start. some of the right wing parties are
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really cute, of course, that's part of the character, your prime minister, benjamin netanyahu yelling at maps. and as he was trying to, to full him a lawyer, one of them saying he was elected, not you referring to the c. recruit, of course, the biggest part in the connecticut with 30 seats. naturally, bennett party holding only 6, but when it comes to really politics, it's down to the mouth and who could form a coalition. so he's been talking for about half an hour now is now going into what the government policies will be. a couple of members of parliament of m. k members of classes have been ejected. we are expect you to hear from me after bennett. he is, of course the man will be if the vote of confidence passes, the foreign ministry is also the mad credited with putting this coalition together . but what you're seeing now is really the divisions of the right that has split when it comes to this new government agency. does that mean she comes in all? sure. yeah, let people be hearing from benjamin netanyahu. so i think, you know, certainly very interesting what's gonna happen inside the method,
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but to all intents and purposes at the moment what we understand, everyone thinking that even though it is a fractures coalition, even though they only have the majority by one number that they do believe this vote of confidence will go ahead, regardless of the heckling and the back and forth that you're seeing right now. and they'll be no nasty surprises. steph? sorry, did you repeat that? said, though, be no nasty surprises in the vote. it's going to pass on this razor thin majority. well, i mean, i'm not going to, i'm not going to put my name to that. anything is possible in israeli politics until that boat actually goes ahead. but there has been some back and forth of some members of parliament today think they may not vote because of certain issues. this is a coalition of opposite adrian. really, these are parties that would never have thought together. actually have to be said in the past. we will not sit together, this is why also, naturally bennett is being called as sell out by other members of the right.
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particularly also you have a coalition now for the 1st time with a policy and is really part of the united arab list. so you have a lot of conflict, a lot of pressure of all these different more parties coming together. so one is dep now is whether it's going to positive though to competent in general, people believe that it will. the next step is how long is it going to survive at the moment their united when it comes to getting prime minister benjamin netanyahu out of that seat after 12 years. but then of course, this is the country that governing this is the country that had 2 years. political instability was for election. you've had no budget for 2 years. they're very real issues. issues that this government is going to have to deal with immediately on tuesday. you have an alternate most right with march being allowed to pass through the occupied east jerusalem just in front of damascus gate. already we're hearing policy calling for a day of rage in response to that before the police. i'm internal security had already said it wasn't the right time to do it because it's been such a dangerous and sort of inflammatory situation on the ground that smell set for
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tuesday. so tomorrow is monday. this is something going to have to dealing with immediately. there's also a prospect of potential evacuation of parts of an output in the occupied westbank. these are political cards, but benjamin netanyahu has thrown towards this government, as you say, is made up of left of centrist of bright. it's something that you've never seen and is ready politics such a wide spectrum. so of course it's going to be very interesting. i think an unprecedented to see how they're going to govern moving forward. but certainly at the moment the next couple of hours will i have to wait and see the officer will be back and forth speeches and heckling, and that will probably go on. once that vote of confidence pulses that probably benjamin netanyahu will no longer be the leader of this country up to 12 years. i'll just stephanie deca reporting live from western eastland. stephanie, thanks d. joining us from west to recent mitchell barrack, poster for keyboard and global research. he was also spokesman for the form is rarely president shimon peres. content with mitchell. what do you make of what's
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going on in the connected right now? well, i have my tv running at the same time, and i have to say i'm sitting here for the last 25 minutes, embarrass, sad that this is the behavior of the new opposition parties, meaning tale bennett is. and the whole group of people that are forming this coalition have done everything to compromise, to work together to get the country out of this quagmire. out of this being stuck, you know, in an election cycle and not being able to govern. and he gets up there and he acts very prime ministerial. he talks about uniting people he talks about representing even those voters that didn't vote for the orthodox and says, don't worry, we will represent you. we will respect your values. we will respect your way of life. and all he got in return was yelling was screaming was personal insults the law makers seem coordinated in, you know,
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speaking up screaming some holding up signs until they were asked by the orderlies to leave. and it's totally inappropriate. and one of the things, the prime minister elect, bennett said is, this is a, this is a holiday. this is a time when, when the government is handed over from me and he said one generation to the next, which is really true because there seems to be the nathan yeah. generation and all of the people in the coalition are really younger than him. by about 10 years or more. so there is a generational change here, and this should be a day of celebration. they should respect it. and they should be wishing the new government well, like in every government, if you don't when it's still in the best interests of the country. so the only thing i could, i could, you know, say to sum it up, it seems like these opposition parties believe code, which is the prime minister's party, as well as the ultra orthodox party. it seems like you know, everyone in the israeli connected, it is on a boat. and these guys are drilling
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a hole in their room because they say we can drill a hole. and then it's not the right way because if they do, the boat is going to sink. they can be a vocal opposition. they can fight for their legislation. they can try and bring down the government. but this is just disrespectful. it's not good and educationally to show people that this is how we hand over the government. what sort of government, if it, when does this, this confidence vote after all of this, the shouting of this, this irritable, ill temper noisy debate. given that it's made up of parties who have, who have very little of the way of mutual political ambitions, other than to oust prime minister netanyahu. what's going to be able to achieve? well, well they've, they've achieved that. if the vote goes through. and i know that you are speaking to your correspondence, stephanie, in jerusalem, and she is right. it could be surprises, it doesn't look that way because also the joint error bless has said if there are people that don't show up for the vote or vote against that they will. they will
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back the government in order to get it in, which is itself monumental. but they, yes, they have to get rid of nathan. yeah. but it's more than that. they have to be able to govern the country. and that seems to be the, the common denominator among all these parties is that it's time to put the country back on track. it's time to do their jobs as members of connected as a government and, and pass a budget for example, which hasn't been done in 2 years. we'll get the country back on track and get people to have confidence in the government. so i do think that once they do succeed and it looks like they will in our thing, that then you know, after 12 years and after 4 elections in 2 years, once they achieve that, they do seem likely to be working together and may be simply because they are so different when you have many parties that are the same, they're all buying for the same thing. they're buying for the same voter. busy base, in this case with all these 8 parties, and historically it's a historic moment when it is really our party of months or
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a bus comes in the government. they have, it's all in their best interest to keep this government running electrically or them. and for the country, which are what sort of prime minister will, will bennett be? how similar is he to netanyahu? politically, will he be able to keep his political instincts in check for the sake of this fragile coalition? 2 bennett really has run in past elections including this one as out flanking the prime minister on the right out flagging that the now on the right. now he does have more right of center views, but that's where he fit into the constellation of israeli parties. and the parties on the right that is prime minister, you know, there's that, there's a saying in hebrew that every prime minister says when they, when they're elected and they take office, they, they always the journalist and as people say, you know,
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you said you wouldn't do this you wouldn't do that and they say, there are things you see from here, from the prime minister seat that you don't see from there when you're not prime minister. and i think he's going to have a very, very quick education and a rude awakening in many ways that he's going to have to do things for the good of the country and the good of the government, which is not exactly how he imagined it. now remember, he had always seen himself as a prime minister. maybe he's even getting it sooner than he thought even maybe sooner than he wanted. but he always saw and stuff as a prime minister of the right leading the right. now he's a right of center politician leading a left of center, right of center unity government. he's going to have some all his own personal adjustments at this point. but he's going to have to be prime ministerial, i think from the speech that he made. he certainly complimented prime minister nathan, you know, he complimented his wife, which he didn't have to do, you know, private affinity you know, has yet to call prime minister elect bennett,
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has yet to have a meeting with him to go over. you know, when one prime minister takes over for another, there's usually a series of meetings to say, these are the issues on the table that has not taken place. now, there has not been a phone call, it's ok now the democratic, it's been a really good talk to you many thanks. cindy mitchell bark that from western lisa. and as you can see, credible president, price and welcome is about to address the media at the g 7 and call the less listening to take i think, you know, leopard who is our charge at the embassy filling in for him. master and ambassador, who have one soon, but she did a great job supporting the entire team and yell is vital to keeping the u. k. u. s . partnership going and moving smoothly as it is now. we've just wrapped up what has been an extraordinary collaborative and productive meeting g 7. everyone at the
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table understood and understand the seriousness and the challenges that we up against and the responsibility of our proud democracy to step up and deliver for the rest of the world. that's the g 7 is all about. and rallying the world's democracy to meet the challenges that the world faces and deliver for our people and for people quite frankly, everywhere and in a pan demik and maintain a robust support for an equitable, inclusive global economic recovery. are the top priorities of our nations as we got together. we know we can't achieve one without the other. that is we have to deal with the pandemic. and in order to be able to deal with economic recovery, which as we're doing in the states. but we committed that we're going to do more for the rest of the world as well. the fact is that we,
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the u. s. contribution is the foundation, the foundation to work out how we're going to deal with the 100 nations that are poor and having trouble finding vaccines and having trouble dealing with re reviving their economies if they were in the 1st place in good shape. and we, i committed that we would provide a half a 1000000000 half building beyond the 80000000. we've already got half a 1000000000 doses of pfizer vaccine, which we contract to pay for. in addition to money we put into the coven project, which is that covered. i know you all know of a lot of people may not know what covered is. that is a system whereby they are going to provide funding for stage to be able to get access to vaccines on their own as well. but the bottom line is what that generate, it was a commitment by the rest of our colleagues to g 7 that they would provide another
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half 1000000000. so we're going to have a 1000000000 doses of vaccine. and in our case, the that includes sharing more than not, not just $1000000000.00 doses overall, but we're going to provide for $200000000.00 of those doses by the end of the year . another 300000000 by the 1st half of next year. and so it was greeted with the summit, susie as him, and we've agreed to work together so that the world is better prepared to detect and deal with future pandemic because there will be future pandemic. we have a, i'm sure you've seen it. if you haven't, you'll get it a joint statement. we put out of the g 7, you'll see that i'm sure and we are committed to follow on to do some significant work, including not only how we deal with the distribution and help and get
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a shot to an arms for the rest of the world. but how we're going to deal with putting together mechanism to anticipate and deal with and be aware of the next the next pandemic when it comes on and there will be others. and we also agreed to take important steps are going to support global economic recovery by laying the foundation for an equitable global economy. critically g 7 leaders endorsed a global minimum tax of 15 percent. still many corporations in engage the motor, essentially tax havens or deciding that they would pay considerably less and other in other environs around the world. and, but there's going to make sure there's a minimum tax and i'm going to have, i'm going to move on this at home as well. minimum tax for corporations to pay for the property they make anywhere in the world. and this agreement is going to help arrest the race to the bottom that's been going on among nations, attracting
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a corporate investment at the expense of priorities like protecting our workers and investing in infrastructure, but also made him manage commitment at the g 7 to help meet more than 40 trillion dollar need that exist in for infrastructure in the developing world. i put forward an idea that was called we named build back better world partnership, which is we're calling to be 3 point is that what's happening is that china has his belt road initiative. and we think that there's a much more of a way to, for the needs of countries around the world. and so it's, it's been as values driven, high standard, transparent financing mechanism are going to provide support projects and for kia key areas, climate, health, digital technology and gender equity. and we believe that will not only be good for
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the countries, but to be good for the entire world and represent the values that are democracies represent and not autocratic, lack of values by harassing the full potential of those who are harassing. we're going to have to try to change things. that's the whole idea. but here's the deal. we're going to make sure that we are able to pull together the ability to use the development finance institutions and other development tools to expect the ball new infrastructure investment in low and middle income countries over the coming years. much of it coming from the private sector, which will generate the capital put in will generate significantly more capital from the private sector. we also made a historic commitment to permanently eliminate use of our public finance to support unabated coal projects around the world. and to end to end by this year,
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the g 7 agreed to that and those are not members been visited members who are participating. 7 who have coal fired facilities and also agree that they would work in that direction as well. so transitioning the world to clean energy sources is urgent. it's essential if we're going to beat the climate. and there is one of the things i, some of my colleagues said to me when i was there as well. united states is lead leadership recognize there is global warming. and i know that sounds silly, but you know, we had a president last to basically said it's not a problem for me. it is the existential problem facing humanity. and it's meant treated that way. so we're going to provide up to $2000000000.00 to support developing company countries as they transition away from on the beta coal fired power. in addition, we also agreed to tackle corruption, which is
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a threat to societies everywhere. i pointed out in a conversation i had with, with one of the leaders of, well, actually with china. and i was, it was a request me for me not to try to. when i was asked what i was going to be doing. after being elected, i said, we're going to re establish the strength of american relationships. we can be counted on alliances and suggested that, well, maybe you shouldn't get the quiet meaning india, japan, australia, in the united states working together. and maybe you shouldn't be pushing on strengthening european union to deal with the west, not just to have it and so on. and i said for an american president to every, every president to be sustained or prime minister has to represent the values or.
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