tv NEWSHOUR Al Jazeera November 7, 2024 10:00am-11:01am AST
10:00 am
right now, but you will soon feel the same. we feel every day from home come, then you're gone. the 3 women, gruff, who would be in fact of the front line after this. do you future children on a jersey to the, [000:00:00;00] the hello, i'm elizabeth put on them and this is a news our life some to how coming up in the next 16 minutes. donald trump prepared for power after winning the us presidential elections. he's on track to win the popular vote. while i can see this election,
10:01 am
i do not concede to fight that fuel this campaign. household support has to keep slicing for that idealism. to should donald trump to concede, defeat world leaders congratulate trump summit concerns of how his 2nd term with impact allies and focus on like the federal registrar. it just me says away from phases. air force is waiting for us to escalate the taxes and that at least half of the and israel, defense of season modem, gaza columns. the target has and bait law. here the us president elect donald trump, a celebration his election victory with family and friends. he won the electoral college and is on track to win. the popular vote is currently ahead of his
10:02 am
democratic arrival. coming to harris, nearly 5000000 voters, the president elect as already starting to shape his next government tests a 1000000000 it on mosque suite had this picture on his social media platform, x katelyn geno also posted on social media that spring. and she had baton z. i correspondent joining us live from washington dc. so she had the presidential races over the race for the white house isn't and trump will want to see a clean sweep of control over them. they just let you right. i, i the house system up for grabs. so i think what we're looking at now is to see whether once again donald trump achieves to try fact data that in $26.00 team, that is achieving the presidency. i'm taking control of the presidency and the house and the senate. uh the house. they still too close to cool that we can see the republicans are getting more and more confident that they will matters to
10:03 am
retain control control of a house. and as you said, what was different, now, there is a while trying to be raf republicans is troubles or has managed to get a majority of the popular vote that's relatively baffled for the republicans accidentally. and if they, if they got all full then you know, i think anyway, there that the republicans are taking this as a huge mandates mandate together. and perhaps more accurately, it's a reflection of just how does all sort of virus campaign was whether it's it's failure to logic with any real vision for the future to connect with devices other than well yeah, i'm more of the same, but this time with uh, with dick cheney and she have when we see that mandate reflect a do think in the makeup of the cabinet a. i think this is what's going to be so interesting because although the republican party has now united behind donald trump, it's still a functional, very fractional part of we have the old school republicans, the neoconservatives,
10:04 am
then they are liberals who believe in endless war and the regulation and loving wall street by a factory rather economic policy. but we have about popular swing, embodied by you know, none other than the vice president of lex, j. d. vance, and donald trump, son as well, or the don't junior and others talk a call soon. the populist tv personality, so i mean, the business card postal that we, we're already beginning to see on the way as to what, okay, what does this actually mean then what do it, what does american fast means in real terms in the next trump administration because it last time around in the added look, pretty, pretty near come, conservative and pretty new liberal extra despite all the rhetoric. so what we're seeing better advised as baffled lines drawn up. busy national security website j events is going to be amongst those matching the national security national security potential appointments. but then so we've just had is brian hook who is in charge of the transition to the state department. he is the neo conservatives americans over there. so no real players that we think of names being footage of the reflect,
10:05 am
all these different strings of national security in foreign policy. then you also have economic policy. you've got it on mosque who's talking about in the homeless austerity. you will new liberal economic policies. but the j d pounds normally is against donald trump in the past has been a gains or slashing social benefit safety math and then all that kind of stuff. so it's gonna be really, isn't to say what all is. rhetoric actually means in real terms. yeah. into some names of people who are newly asked for the invite she have for now that as she have restaurants a live from washington dc. a democratic candidate because of the house has conceded the presidential election and of course to have republican rival. sure. and the 1st address to the nation since the laws has told her, supposes to accept the results, balance, and keep fighting for democracy and the ruling of no company. healthcare reports from the house and action h q at howard university in washington, dc. speaking at her element made or howard university us
10:06 am
vice president connelly here is acknowledge the disappointment at her election loss, but encouraged christopher's to keep fighting for the ideals of her historic going to the white house over the 107 days in this campaign we have been intentional about building community and building coalitions, bringing people to gather from every walk of life. harris. so as her family and running may, minnesota governor tim was looked on, looting to trump 2020 election laws and refusal to accept the results. workers here is tools the crowd of fundamental principle of american democracy is that when we lose an election, we accept the results. that principal, as much as any other distinguishes democracy from monarchy or tyranny. it's
10:07 am
a principle harris says she underscore did trump earlier on wednesday in her telephone calls. we can see the election. but she says, while i can see this election, i do not concede the fight that fuels this campaign, the the vice for freedom, for opportunity, for fairness, and the dignity of all people. some of the crowd were visibly emotional. as harris spoke, she offered these words of encouragement. sylvia table. oh, i think it is okay to feel sad and disappointed. but here's the thing. here's the thing. sometimes the fight takes a while. that doesn't mean we won't win. like the u. s. vice president president
10:08 am
joe biden, also called president elect donald trump, to discuss his historic campaign on thursday by then we'll address the nation to discuss the election results and from the transition to the white house. timberlake helped get l. g 0. washington. well, let's bring it. i guess i'll show the house on as a democratic political strategist and found at convey communications. and james davis is a republican strategist and president of touch down strategies. great to have you both with us on out to 0. thank you very much for your time. i want to begin with trump winning being on close to win the popular vote. finally, 5000000 at the time of counting 5000000 more people voted for him and comment of harris. james, why do you think that is? well, i think he spoke to a lot of the frustrations many americans were having great, like he really validated, you know, people who felt left behind by the economy,
10:09 am
people who were struggling and figuring out, do i buy this or do i buy that? like you have to really make major trade off choices. given the costs of goods and services. he spoke to people who were concerned about their safety and he said, you know, we're going to make america safe again. he spoke to people who are concerned about the forever wars that we've seen in our place and standing in the world and what it looks like to be a foreign are to be a leader in the free world. and. and so dr. peace, he spoke to the chaos that we see at the american border and getting some structure around that. and i think a lot of people felt, you know, like assured, and they were looking back and thinking, you know, what, we didn't experience these things under his presidency. and maybe we didn't like this about him and maybe we didn't like that about them, but i think he understands me. and so that appeal to a broad, diverse coalition as we saw in the voting. all right, our show do think that trump won this presidency or that has lost it. you know,
10:10 am
that is the business saying that people care more about how they're affected. then if they're offended. do you think that that's something that's being the case. you know, many americans have been struggling economically. the economy was the number one issue, voices and for whatever reason versus rated trump higher with his handling of the economy then house. i think one of the biggest questions that democrats have to ask themselves is about the people who didn't show up in those who are the people that we didn't quite connect with. so we've had, you know, over a 100000000 people show up and vote in an election, but that also means as tens and tens of millions of people who take a look at the 2 candidates and decide, nope, i don't want to get involved in this election i think that's where we lot, that's where we could have had or how, where, where we lost the best we could and i believe should have had. so i'm really that's the question i would like democrats to really dig into and ask for the voters. it
10:11 am
didn't show up and why. okay, and james, what do you think that, you know, there's a lot of questions now about what the next cabinet will look like. and a lot of thinking that it's not going to have the kind of traditional republicans that were involved in the 1st administration. what are your thoughts on what we can expect from them next? trump presidency? yeah, i think a lot of folks had similar questions around his campaign, and could he assemble a campaign team after the 1st administration knowing that some of the members from that administration, we're not going to return for his his re election campaign if you will. and what we saw was he stopped himself with some really great professionals. susie, whiles his campaign manager is one of the most impressive of women in republican and all the politics. i would say, i mean, she's just really, she's fantastic. i mean, as you can see, they've had more discipline in their campaign over all this time around. they also
10:12 am
had a chris las vegas who was a tremendous talent and kind of a co campaign manager of sorts. but i think he's appeal to a lot of folks outside of the political establishment is talking to people, you know, um in the business world and bringing them in like you on mosque and what, what role is he on was going to have, you know, as an outside advisor or inside a person and there's some value to that, right? getting a different perspective, maybe shaking things up a little bit and bringing new ideas and challenging the status quo. oh, of how we do things. can we do things more efficiently? i'm sure we can, i do want to talk more about it on most of before we do, i think that we have something from donald trump on this list. just bring, bring that up or and we're going to bring the line in. anybody anybody that could anybody could land or
10:13 am
rock that the way you and it as you gather, because it's like a 20 story building, right? that they use gum and then i'm talking to somebody is at all that is very important versus at all that. but that was the last i spoke to him coming down to they said, oh, it's going to grow. she's got an expression to the ganglia. so and then those engines kicked in the fire and the flames sides for and out of the left side is that's pushing it over. and it comes down to those big, beautiful arms a hug. did like you hug your child that see i'm not exactly sure what he's talking about them now media their mind, but our show what role did you think most being such a novice, a portion of trump in the selection campaign? the move in a $100000000.00 that he spent on the trump campaign. what role do you think that has played and has victory? what was that? i guess is a feeling or
10:14 am
a philosophy inside of silicon valley where it comes from to disrupt things, to be a disruptor. and in, in the industry that might be seen as a good thing. now let's try something new. for example, the government isn't meant to disrupt people's lives. it's really meant to. ready is it's a group project essentially, to keep society running. at least that's how i see it. having somebody with you, i must try to cut 2 trillion dollars out of the budget number that is honestly made up. but also it'd be something, it'd be devastated we disruptive to, to the functioning of government. i think he's okay with that and i'm not. and i don't know because, you know, government works well. you don't see it a whole lot. i don't know that most americans understand the level of disruption that, that kind of cutting we do. there's a reason american, these have an austerity budget. huh. all right. can i jump in? right. yeah, sure. i mean, if you look at what you wanted for the electric vehicle,
10:15 am
right. he brought the new technology to market well beyond it advanced by 4 or 5 years, at least right in bringing it to market. and it disrupted the market in a way that made uh, electric vehicles, more available for every day americans at a cheaper and lower price. uh that kind of efficiency. and that bolt process the, the way you run a business can be applied to government. when i work for the secretary of defense, i work for secretary rumsfeld, one of the great innovations that he had while he was there, but often get overlooked is he had a transformation project inside of the department of defense where we were able to go. and we had more of an amazon style market where we could buy products and service because we were buying technology at the time from the pentagon that was exponentially more expensive and less capable than on iphone. right. so why not challenge ourselves to do better for the american people with the money that they give us now for, you know, with our taxes to provide better goods and services. yeah,
10:16 am
but there are so many questions about whether the government should be run like a corporation, a lot to pick up on and laser discussions are, shall have fun and james davis. thank you both for your analysis. we do appreciate it. thank you. and your client in president and for not him as a landscape among many world latest to acknowledge president and that trump victory as you have it dies to you, but i'm well, i congratulate him on this victory in general. it was extremely important for us and ukraine and for all of europe to consistently see the woods of the dean for the 1st president of the united states, about peace through strength. and if this becomes the policy principle of the 40 statements president of the united states, america and the whole will, will, i'm definitely benefit from it was the last case, relationship with trump has often been tens. tom has made no secret of his admiration for russian president vladimir putin, usually a shop,
10:17 am
a lot of it has moved from moscow. the most popular opinion with he in russia is that relations between laska and washington will remain tense, but still less could believe that under the new president, the united states can help and the russia, ukraine conflict. trump once promised to ended within 24 hours, but many in cuba fear that he will order to reduce us weapons supplies to ukraine, of his way to, to make territorial concessions or freeze the conflicts. and these are unacceptable conditions for ukraine, but her for negotiations between the 2, worrying sides on the trump presidency remains. so no illusions though he about donald trump being nice to russia just recently he revealed his involvement in the shut down of the russian notes stream to gas pipeline during trumps previous presidential tents. despite his seemingly nice relations with presents regiment, patient washington continued to impose on to russian sanctions and expelled diplomats. washington also withdrew from several arms control agreements. the on of tracy,
10:18 am
which was signed by ronald reagan and may have global charles as well as the multi natural open skies tracy. but at the same time, defiance is that during the previous time, it was relatively calm in the don't boss region in don't ask a new governance with very small number of civilian casualties that well during the obama bytes and advanced ration rupture to control a swan. mia in 2014 and under the binding harris administration, if unleashed its special minish operation in ukraine in twice twice to. and from many times blamed his opponent, drew binding full starting its you less of a to z, right most are in china as president. she's been paying has cooled. donald trump, because imagine a him on his election when the 2 leaders have had a difficult relationship, had a difficult relationship. june. trump says to mot by trade dispute. and because the 19 pandemic which trump blamed on china, they'll face areas of disagreement on taiwan terrace and technology when trump
10:19 am
returns to office. mcbride has moved from badging in china, coming to terms with the prospect of a 2nd to trump tab and office on goal. so what that means are full trade with the united states and in particular, terrace terrace that it remembers from trump's 1st term in office. combined with that phrase was with trump reckoning to put terrace of 60 percent on chinese exports in his 2nd tense. but some of the terrorists have continued during the current us administration and they seem to be now the new normal of trade between the us and china to and i think there is an acceptance that there is no a for us the relationship in washington when it comes to attends of trade, but also an acceptance the given the fact that these are the 2 worlds biggest economies, they have to co operate. they have to get on. and we see that in some of the statements that we have come out from china as far administrator as saying that to
10:20 am
the new trump administration well congratulating the trump on his victory thinks that they have to find a way of a mutually respectful relationship. that is a win win for both. we've seen similar remarks to that in the conversation between presidency, jim ping and donald trump saying that when oppose us and china co operate, they both gain and conversely, when there is confrontation, then they both lose out. i think there was also an acceptance as a given the a for us, the trade relations with the us and also in some respects with west and your that china has to be looking to develop both the economic and diplomatic ties with other groups around the world. the world that it sees as being a multi polar wants to have some develop relations, for example, with other members of the so called bricks club of developing a fast developing economies and also with other nations in the global south. so
10:21 am
a while it looks at the prospect of this transition with a certain amount of and these, it goes also looking at 2 assets as a sense of opportunity. rather pride i'll just say relate to the 11 on our, on his radio strike has had close to be rude airport. this video capture the moment it comes off to intense randy attacks and some of an east and 11 on. and that means government hasn't used as round a project in diplomatic initiatives. while hezbollah says it's open to talks on the officer, the aggression ends. zayna for the has more from they would say a force. well, some of the overnight is really strikes where the closest yet to baby's international airport, just a few meters from one of the runaways. i'm going to show you the miss aisles
10:22 am
impacted behind those trees. it caused some material damage. but as you can see, we're going to show you faith international airport. the only commercial airport in the country is still operational. this airports really is a lifeline for the country for the people of the country they, they're able to leave, they're able to come back home and it's also a humanitarian lifeline because they must either too many korean aids or drives to i've been on the series just airport, so the closest strikes yet there were other strikes in baby southern suburb. you can see the black smoke still hanging over the area. they were intense, strikes, overnights and in those neighborhoods which are largely empty. but the, this, this incidence followed an incident if you'd like on wednesday in tel aviv, where a miss sile impacted on the grounds of tel aviv international airport has the
10:23 am
law claimed responsibility for targeting a military position close to tel aviv international of the airport. so this seems to be a response because as well and has, well, i really have been sending messages to each other and has a belie using a new weapon. if you like. it deployed the fact that $110.00 ballistic missile surface to surface and the so that has a range of 300 kilometers and it carries up to 500 kilograms of explosives. so as you can see, both sides are negotiating under fire, trying to showcase their military capabilities. but the spike has been laws, you know, it's increasing the operations across the border and it's joe graphical rates. but so far, israel has not been deterred it's zane is joining us live from favor. so as well seems to be escalating itself relations and 11 on against against 11 on say now what does that leave for a cease fire? well,
10:24 am
israel is trying to step up military pressure on how's the law and the theater and the intensity of the exchanges of fire are expanding. it's not just as well as we mentioned. there has been led to increasing the temp over to operations, but of the prospect of a cease fire. many doubts that there will be a new initiative on the table if you like, a new diplomatic initiative because of the transition and us government that there will be no, you know, serious initiative, at least until us president elect donald trump takes office in january. and so the fear here is that we are going to see an escalation, and we heard from her as well as newly appointed secretary general, yesterday of being very defiant, saying we will not surrender. we will be victorious in all the resistance needs to do is continue to target areas in israel and prevent as well from returning people to their homes. so this could be a long and costly well with has well also saying that they are prepared for
10:25 am
a long war of attrition. so as well stepping up its attacks in the region of balls but alone yesterday, that's in the east of the country. there were more than 30 air strikes and just the span of a few hours with dozens of civilians killed. we visited the area. uh and you know, people are still there and this is why you have this height civilian casualties old because they have no other place to go and they are so poor. and you know, we, we heard, we listen to their stories in the middle of the rubble and devastation. there's still life. but this park is no longer a place where children are safe. the ancient city of baltic and eastern 11 on has been repeatedly hit by is really strikes. i am highland springs, the sound of the bombing. i miss my friends, day one somewhere. and this point, at least half of the city's population left when these really army issued,
10:26 am
forced evacuation orders late last month. but there are those who refused to do so . among them, the medical staff at the main hospital in the area does as one of the most of the doctor in charge says they will remain in his words, steadfast, despite nearby is really strikes that causes damage to the facility, meet them, a call them or they want to pressure people, display them and done them gains that are just of this one property and dealing with people here at our supporters of the resistance. we won't leave our families and our now much of eastern 11 on has been engulfed in war. this is as well as heartland. villages are empty. 6 weeks of intense air rates have destroyed so much when people in this impoverished region already had so little. it's a similar situation in the south of the country and in the southern suburb of beta, 11 ounce prime minister. and as he mccarthy has criticized the international
10:27 am
community for remaining silent in the face of these attacks. people here say they feel the same. they say israel has been given a green light to destroy and kill as well says it is targeting has the law and its infrastructure. this was the famous restaurant, not far from baltics historic center. the owner says this was about hurting the economy. already the reconstruction bill is in the billions of dollars, and this is a nearly bankrupt state. has the law and israel are negotiating under fire. all. yes, says she knows her children's future and lives are at risk. but she says she's choosing defiance over surrender. the mother to make an independent, their lives have change because of the way they see the instruction on areas or the use to pay and know they are deprived of enjoying and those pay stubs. but marie and yes may not appear to have found their own safe space, at least for now,
10:28 am
center for their elders either follow the eastern 11 on the head analysis. there. i'm gabriel's on the, i think, united nations in new york, where people here are deeply concerned about the ramifications of a 2nd. trump presidency, the the, that there are still some shells running over the wall, most of the west and med, but spain isn't particularly risk. now the by the arts might get a shadow too, but precious, generally rising here, and it's pretty high across the whole of you with all the weather being stayed around these by weather. i mean with the rain typically. so that when the weather may be here, and there are shares round about the arts and they may well catch the eastern side as they sped back into us to new, easier sicily possibly. but then the thing like the risk we had before. so you
10:29 am
shouldn't be considered the wrong warnings out of any significance either, though, but most of your november is traditionally quite often code and sometimes over cost . and for example, proud is like to be like that's right. so is that it's fairly brightens up on friday and saturday because it's more of a breeze coming up from the science where the client doesn't exist. so the know through a fee and pay and gets a bit, bryce, i will send you an the showers move towards it. to me, you'll notice that most of north africa is fairly drawn, and there was a hot mountains come in, which is the seasonal wind that tends to pick up dust and bring it a long way size that tends to suppress shares. and you are the sun's taking the right and generally speaking for the serv, so that you have some coastal shelves from the outer because towards nigeria, the focus is probably going to be gap them or surf of the
10:30 am
repair. it is sure visual and to see through boston, and i mean, i wasn't here, i shot him dead. the controversial us know, stand your ground. you're saying that these laws actually encourage more violence given your statements the right to can. we're sending the message that you can just do this. this is ok. i'm denying justice to victims. families. lines investigate, license to you on, oh geez 0. shilling the doc chapter in the cause of a war. it just took our id, cards, mailed them. they asked him about his name. they killed the prison, the scene of unspeakable horrors. so i saw a pile of bodies. we had a lot of questions about how these men come to be dead. that goes over to bravo, i must have shut. those are coming soon on that because he,
10:31 am
you the, you watch a going to the out of me in the put ottoman of a mind to about home stories for solace. donald trump is already starting to shave his next government, which is his cabinet in the coming days. and just 6 weeks, he won't be in all the way. so as the 47 us president of the winning tuesday's election, he has, he's also on track to win the popular vote in the face of democratic presidential candidates coming to have as has can see that the election to have a public and viable has told psychiatrists to accept the results and vowed to keep slicing to democracy. and world leaders have been from graduating from one to selection factory in china as president susan king, as the latest cool,
10:32 am
the president. and that the 2 leaders had a difficult relationship to encompass. first, him by trade disputes and the cause of 19 pandemic. and there was dave concerned about was the 2nd donald trump presidency, the main for the united nations. during his 1st term, trump caught funding to a leading you an agency. gabriel, that is on the looks at what may be a head this time round for the world, 40 or know where is the, where are you more acute about a 2nd. donald trump presidency then at the us population fund known as u. n. f. p a. the agency that focuses on sexual and reproductive rights for women and girls in a $150.00 countries in 2017, during his 1st term and office trump completely cut off $70000000.00 in u. s. contributions to you at f. p. a president joe biden reinstated the money and raised us contributions to a $160000000.00,
10:33 am
making washington the agencies largest single donor. now that trump will be back in office when f p a is bracing for all of its money from the us to again be cut off, right for c a u n s p, a official tells l g 0. without us funding, they would need to shut down 13 health clinics and vocational schools in afghanistan, that on average health, $30000.00 women every month. and with these reels continued on parchment of gaza and open hostility to the you when there is real world. this time around is real pressure, trump, to make deeper cuts. one major challenge to the u. n. is the world. donald trump doesn't care that much about the institution. that a lot of republicans in congress who have very angry about the way that you and officials and un general assembly have criticized the israel, is rarely some of the guys. and so i think that will be
10:34 am
a big push from congress to 0 outs. um, extensive parts of view and budget really and revenge for this criticism of the if it's rarely campaign on wednesday and bassinger said they were in a wait and see mode. we still hope that the top of demonstration where see the value of my 2 actively, some and working together for the benefits of having about last month. israel's parliament pass legislation to shut down the un relief and works agency for palestinian refugees known as unreal. if this legislation is implemented, it calls for shutting down and run by the end of january. coincidentally, it could fall on the very week. donald trump is sworn in as the next president of the united states gabriel's on to i'll just either, if united nations new york, us and we're now joined by model on the shadow. i'll just be a senior political analyst mode one. i'm so glad that you're back in does how just
10:35 am
in time to get into him. so get into trump 2nd presidency and what that will look like and what that will mean, especially for the region nothing yahoo on surprising the one of the 1st will lead is to pull them. congratulate trumps, calling it histories. grace has come back. we know nothing. yeah. who knows a thing or 2 about political comebacks. donald trump has totally left him yahoo! a number of occasions that he wants this war to end on one occasion saying he wants it to end by the time he's integrated. do you think he means that? and if so, is that something that method you all who will think about doing? and by what means? i would say he does mean that, but i'm not sure how much he means that in the sense that he probably would prefer it or if there is no middle east crisis on whose hands the day he steps in the office on january the 20th and less problems a better, or there is no doubt about that. but does he really mean it in the sense that he
10:36 am
really ones ones that the ones down, judging from his various statements over the past several months. he's not very much concerned about human rights in palestine. he's more concerned about israel is, could ability and public relations in the west, and especially in the united states, he could selling these raney's. you would even need to one to down. you're not looking good out here in the media as if that's the issue. the issue is the representation in the media and not what's happening to the other students. or you would think that he would want the one to done, but under what conditions that's also important because nothing. yeah, also would want to wind on the war if how much, for example, surrender is as it continues to say. yeah. or if he can re, okay, by the northern part of guys of us on that part, the black one on an annex, the west bank. are these positions acceptable with the in the war? i don't think so, of course. so it's not just about saying we need to wind it down. it's also about
10:37 am
on what conditions and when he 1st started making these comments in the election campaign about one to one thing, nothing, you all have to wind up the war. so a lot of people, especially the jewish leaders in america who read that as and said that this is trump given us. and y'all has a blank check. full gaza. do you think? is that how you read it? no, no, i don't think so. you know, i don't think the trump has vested interest in design is i'm the way, say by didn't did. he's not even if angelically attached, he has eventually go based, but he's not eventually attached to his. right. so i think for him, it's a question of uh, you know, that balance sheet, you know, what do we, what are we getting out of it? what is the united states getting out of as the war widens and as living on gets involved? and as perhaps this is going to involve a law next, i'm not sure. trump is interested in the beginning of his 2nd term to be involved in some of these. there's no more look you can say whatever you want to say about
10:38 am
trump, he's a hyper nationalist, some people called him fascist, whatever. but he's not an interventionist in the sense that he's going to rearrange the affairs of them, at least on behalf of his read. he's not that type of leader. yeah. but he's not afraid of doing things that have a huge impact on the middle east. like he pulled the us out of the iran nuclear deal of his 1st presidency. he had, he was behind the assassination of how some, so they money, the invalid and revolutionary god come out of this. so that the head. so what do you think? how much do you think has presidency might emboldened as well and its actions against around? let's look at that to the context of a trump endorsing every single bama. right? and 2016 when it came in, he would have actually everything obama, right? he doesn't have to diverse, much of by the end because by the end followed on tom's footsteps, it's,
10:39 am
it's mind bundling in the middle east by the not reverse any of the more important decisions they can buy from the gold on high just the next. the nice by the united states, that the invest in east jerusalem recognized by the central binding did not reverse trump by trump reversed obama. does that mean that you don't see? much of a change in u. s. foreign policy when it comes to the middle east? i'm the president trump, the we would be gullible, to say everything changes with advertise, then we would also be cynical. just like nothing changes, no things do change, but we have to be very specific. what does, what doesn't, what are the signals for change? and the trunk would be what secretary of state, and what's the secretary of defense? i'll give you one stocked example. if president obama decides to put tom cotton, senator tom cotton to be his 2nd of state or sect of defense as it's been predicted once. and again,
10:40 am
then you can be sure that trump is going to be bullying confronting get on like there is not a more because that to be assigned that i'm bringing the guy for the mission. the guy for that mission, there is no greater any movie or one in the united states on tom cotton, and he's also eventually go christian and so on, so forth. so he does see the region in the, in the vision of an upper political connect to now who died confrontation with the one. if he puts a different sector state lindsey graham, we will see more approachable between is right. and so the idea as the main key issue, not confrontation with the accepted etc. so a lot of the scenario is we would know more about them as the next 6 weeks. we these based on the evolve and who he assigns for those chunky assets and one of the bit of stories to watch over the next 6 weeks. a lot of one. great to have your analysis. thank you so much. the 5 people have been killed and several wounded in gaza,
10:41 am
often in his riley strike had a house and bade la here that follows an earlier strike fips code, at least for the palestinians in regards to city bodies of the victims, a strewn on the streets as people scrambled to help the wounded striped targeted, a 1st aid center that's broken, our correspondent thought it was him. he's joining us live from the in central gaza and thought if you're hearing that is really on the, is preventing president logan gosh says from attending. so they hollins, what more can you tell us? well, uh, generally uh the is what it won't cause that's been pretty much protracted as the minute to be a parade. sions, an area that tax, and they know that part of this trip intensified generally. and primarily the key been sense is that including bait, nyah and body, which wet densely populated sensors indeed the cause of cause. as far as we know,
10:42 am
that the escalation dies as to the ongoing that tax have closed and led to such tensional casualties amongst civilly and said particular to be more precise. and in fact law here. well, as far as we know, we have trucks of information from home, medical sources into that. he's saying that the residential building that has been completely flat since at least 5 read them sweat that completely kills. a group of residents has been directly going out by. it's very hard to read in valley a refugee camp as well as 6 have been come from killed as far as we can really know from power sources the most of the territory. but apparently, what's going on is a very precarious escalation taken from the east very side by preventing civilians from returning back to the house as how we can do that. they have been following a very systematic military approach presented in supposing of wide spread the level of disruption for civil infrastructure. so residents cannot have any source of
10:43 am
civil services including having access to foods to water as well. in light also or the destruction of the vast majority of medical census in the northern garza. and basically they have been binding to the ground main if actuation centers. what people have been using as a proper alternative of the destruction of the house and the even boost families of the solar eclipse. the top makeshift tends on the ruins of the buildings. they have been not allowed to do so would you to be on stable security conditions the most of the district. but not only they know that part of gone with that has been very relentless. is when that tax within the past 24 hours to be happy and also visiting the sites and i'm, is that right trip to come. we show a 3 story building been completely reduced to the russell off side that strikes that target. said that building we have been getting confirmation for medical sources in the hospital setting that 6 palestinians have been confirmed. killed was 17. others was completely wound. didn't know they are getting,
10:44 am
gets region 4 and i was a hospital in missouri kemp and then the ox hospice ox from where we are at the moment. and apparently the, the, the level of disruption is quite extensive and the site of the attack. what these on going uh is valley attacks on multiple areas whose district did a key sign for palestinians that there was no new suit and the signs that this was done, a witness. i'm sort of a slow wrinkle, even an engine sites product. thank you very much. for that update thought otherwise, i'm with the mesas on the situation across gaza. this is ready to protest as have rallied again in west jerusalem a day after prime minister benjamin netanyahu fired defense minister you off gallano, crowd slip fires and march to nathaniel, whose house on wednesday night. they said glance remove, we could delay an agreement for the release of captives held in gaza. the full
10:45 am
minister has been publicly critical of nothing. you all his handling of the v that's bringing that correspond that new to the issues. joining his life, i'm jordan's capital, i'm on because that is where the government has banned alger 0 from the fulton in israel and the occupied west back. so nude, what's been the full out of nothing yahoo 5 and that the well, elizabeth, it just added to the polarization that already exists and is rarely society, 52 percent of these really public oppose this move by nathan, yahoo! according to a full conducted by these really public broadcast or 58 percent. don't really have any trust in the incoming minister of defense, who was israel's foreign minister and has no military background the disagreements between deland and nothing yahoo! pre date, the war on gaza and it really has a lot to do with domestic issues in the way, not to india, who runs his government. he does not consult with ministers. he's more worried
10:46 am
about his right wing coalition than consulting with the security establishments. kalonde, we have to remind our viewers as the man who calls palestinians human animals. he's the one who imposed the bond on food, water, electricity, and fuel on gaza. any may be i c c prosecutor requested arrest for it's for good launch on nothing. yeah. well, because they are both accused of committing more crimes, including using starvation as a weapon of war. so the firing is not so much about gaza and the way the war is going in gaza, maybe tactically, but more about israel's, the israeli government coalition. and how nothing, yeah, who wants to keep it and preserve it at the expense and the view of gallano of certain policies like the conscription law and other legislation that is now up for debates in the can who thank you very much for that. that is not, or they live in
10:47 am
a mine and we're joined by tom with the cable with associated professor of public policy at the institute for graduate studies. thank you very much for your time. firstly, what if anything, do you think a lot of dismissal doesn't mean for as well as military operations and gaza? elizabeth, i don't think it will, has any effect city of effect. i mean, as we told them to petitions continue. i mean, the genocide the content isn't, goes on also it's, it's, it's expanding and level as well. so this is this, this is a political, the maneuvers, it's a and it's, it's, it's, it pertains intended foods to them, nothing you all condition and the positioning themselves to get to the, for a new page or shift that with a new us administration. busy i mean, gallant was, i have close ties with the, with the, with the, by the ministration. he was perceived as the most reasonable ration and politician or administered in the nothing else cabinets. he had direct communication channels
10:48 am
with the americans as well. and he would bypass nothing, he also and send messages to the americans. i think nothing else has done with them . so it's for me, it, it seems as is as if he's signaling that he wants a better unified clinician or loyalist at to get that for the new stage. when from assume support for this like nothing else and knows what the next stage is. because one of the criticisms and that has, that has even come from your kalonde, is that nothing, you know, who doesn't have, he might have an end goal. but he does not have a strategy, and it's to it. so i mean these, these, the learning, the learning more or less by experiment, think that i had an error, of course, with the huge, tremendous goes on, on the people skies the on the people are flipping on. but those things are stuck to the ultimate goal. i mean, i've been gold, i think that the model is these are in the go button. nothing you know has prepared these are the society that this would be
10:49 am
a long war. it's not going to end soon. and it will take different tactics, different strategies until they achieve or get to close up the shipping, the goals they want, and the 100 percent. and the, i think what's competing for them that, that they have. trump not empowered as when trump might give them this uh, the older to continue the support distributors and the so i think stephanie, i was comfortable. so this is what he's focused, not in on, on, on the organizing his own and turned that house, making sure it was some new annual position that the, the team that surrounds them is a team of loyalists. and then to prepare for a new stage, a new transition with the buy didn't have no solution to what and thought i'd, we've got the is writing forecasting authority just this morning saying that is the israeli army is preventing people from pertaining to their homes in northern gaza and we've heard from the highest officials even at the you when saying that they are worried about the possibility of ethnic cleansing in northern gaza. so to what
10:50 am
end a lot there. and i think, i mean, certainly again, because because of, of, of, of the failure of the national community, i mean only relevant act. so it has to stop this crazy project is what it is in bucking on, which is ethnic cleansing, which is demographic is real good. i think engineering of the guys flip everything they're doing specially in the notes. it's signals that they are preparing themselves to stay. there's going to be a longer if your patient, by the displacing people by creating government is committed to the post. now somebody puts up and then think that on, even though the headboard doesn't, then it's sitting buttons and even in the most inside garza. so creating, know, put them in a ministry force and the sense that is what it is. good. think of the need to stay in the for a long time. if there's audio creation of it as a, a slowly engineering demographic, geographically engineering of gaza. i'm in preparation for the day after the plans, which are not clear to reflect any one but what the doing that would make it easier
10:51 am
for once the bigger plan is out with and i think it will be off once trump is good with a, it's a it's, it's some thoughts what elements of the need of the essentially or something else with some bob that was the reason of partners, but that's what it is, is doing was moving now to a to prepare for the after glance. but it's, it's hard to find because if it's ethnic cleansing, it says it's, it's, it's bringing back and supervision. progressive is going to be put minutes. and i hope i hope that that's that, that's the lower regional populace gets involved in the settings because it would be disastrous for the region. and for the, for the students as well. i'm going to kind of go thank you very much for your time . we really appreciate it. thanks. there's still a head on algebra. gemini is going coalition isn't a crisis off chance to the shots. bias is finance minister paving the way for early elections next year. the
10:53 am
the job and these 3 policy governing coalition has collapsed on tons, not or the actual fuzz finance minister question then in a dispute or the economic policy shown says he will hold a confidence, flows in january. and that's one likely to get an early election. then a smith has moved, fumbling in this coalition of the left and the right is managed to hold together since 2021 bow over the last few weeks. not coalition. zip has become increasingly strange and it's spectacularly imploded this evening,
10:54 am
essentially because on the right, the finance minister, christy and lynn, he wanted to cut taxes and cut benefits to put germany to try to improve germany's economy what all i've shown. so the chancellor wanted to increase the funding and increase following partly to way the funding for the war and ukraine. it means now that we're going to have a vote of confidence, shoulders calling about confidence in january. he's almost certainly going to lose that, which will lead to elections in march, which again, his party will most certainly lose with the opposition. on the right, looking to make gains in the election of your homes in march, i had of chevy all the elections, which was supposed to happen in september. and all of this happens at a very delicate time. so your, just with donald trump victory in the us, because germany is the 2nd largest contribution financially to the war effort in to
10:55 am
ukraine's war effort against russia's invasion. if donald trump, for stacy's forces, ukraine's home forces some sort of a resolution between u. k, ukraine and russia. then germany is expected to be at the forefront of a coordinated your a p and response macro, and also a manual micro knowles, a very weak and in france. but with jeremy suffering such internal tribulations and difficulties is going to be hard for the your opinions to how this coordinate is responds in, in terms of whatever donald trump has, has to say regarding ukraine. 2024 was on track to be the horses via on rack would, exceeding the $1.00 degrees celsius. booming limit that's according to the european climate agency, copernicus the new doctor comes days before nations gather for the annual is due in climate change conference. us president elect donald trump says he will again withdraw his country from the powers agreement intended to reduce emissions of the
10:56 am
greenhouse gas, the schools, and global warming. we are bound to see more and more experiences at the and the level. so these are the 1st, it wouldn't be the last, it would be every single year, it would become more likely for the temperature to pass the $1.00 threshold and eventually in, in 510 years time. basically, every single year would be above $1.00 people in cuba, reading off to see us hurricane ripped through the island and knocked out the country's power grid. the state run good operations said high winds have caused the electro system to crash the entire population of 10000000 people who are reported leave without how the tricity and the 2nd such incident in less than a month based right in the governments. i was planning to band children on the sustain from using social media findings to anthony all the names,
10:57 am
it says social media platforms will be held responsible for and fixing the new nor the move comes as astray and parents have increased quotes for their children to be protected from hom, online, including bullying. social media is doing harm to at kids. and on cooling tom, on a spike and his thousands parents, grandparents and these and uncles, di locked me a worried sick about the safety, backwards online. and i want a stride and parents and families to know that the government has your back. i want parents to be able to say, sorry, man, it's against the law for me to get you to do this. or. and that's set for this a news off, but we have plenty of more information analysis, extended coverage on the west selection. and as well as on guys out on our website
10:58 am
. the address for that is alj a 0. don't com. stay with us though. we all back in just a few minutes with organizations updates. thank you for watching. the this small company in tokyo is doing something many japanese businesses wouldn't. death to do, given, gets employees an extra day or 4 weeks. company executives, you need the food, you mores often spends the extra day off following his passion. so music, life gain more time to reflect on my own life and think about what truly makes me happy. it's estimated fewer than one in 10 companies. only give that work as the legally mandated one day off. it's a work ethic that sewing range of a japanese language even has a word that means literally desks from over what karachi we'd at least 50 such
10:59 am
fatalities. so yet this company is finding less time in the office can be more productive. the employees feel they want to protect the company and maintain this new working styles for employer and employee, a waiting balance, a weekly look at the world's tough business stories. what does a rake cost in the united states main for the rest of us from global markets and economies to construction small businesses should that be beyond the us? so people have spent a lifetime working that part of the answer to understand how it affects the nights with still remain before we can truly say that we are in the say 10 x ray counting the cost on m g 0. the latest news civilians are having no place to go through because they already have been forced to this place from full shooters,
11:00 am
is to nowhere with detailed coverage. it's not just the north of the entire thread is under attack by is really missile fighter jet. and it drones from the heart of the story. all eyes are now on un member states, and whether they will defend the organization or simply act we, yes, to is really exceptionalism. the donald trump has the power to winning the us presidential election is on track to win the popular vote. the hello. i'm elizabeth donovan. this is allen, just a life from jo. how so coming up while i can see this election,
11:01 am
4 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on
![](http://athena.archive.org/0.gif?kind=track_js&track_js_case=control&cache_bust=214669365)