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Jun 10, 2024
06/24
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BBCNEWS
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her party, the centre-right dpp _ the moment. her party, the centre-right dpp got - the moment.ight dpp got a - the moment. her party, the centre-right dpp got a very| centre—right dpp got a very strong result stop she could continue this traditional grand alliance with the socialist and liberals but it is not going to be easy negotiations and there still is this open question as to whether she will ally with the greens in order to ensure a very stable majority or possibly with one of these radical right groups, probably the meps from the party of georgia moloney initially, the brothers obviously. there is a lot to play here. but it looks like ursula von der leyen will have another five year term as president of the european union. ,, , president of the european union. ,, . ., ., union. she may choose to align with the greens, _ union. she may choose to align with the greens, their- union. she may choose to align with the greens, their slice - union. she may choose to align with the greens, their slice of l with the greens, their slice of the pie has shrunk, and the eu has been
her party, the centre-right dpp _ the moment. her party, the centre-right dpp got - the moment.ight dpp got a - the moment. her party, the centre-right dpp got a very| centre—right dpp got a very strong result stop she could continue this traditional grand alliance with the socialist and liberals but it is not going to be easy negotiations and there still is this open question as to whether she will ally with the greens in order to ensure a very stable majority or possibly with one of these...
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. >> and when you dpp, who did you have it then? private health care?'t, that's it. >> so one of your dpp director of public prosecutions , with his of public prosecutions, with his own pension plan set up in an act of parliament. he didn't also use private health care. even then . so he's got in him. even then. so he's got in him. he's you know, he did care for his mother, who was very ill. of course, we appreciate that. you know, he's got a baby, but i don't quite get this. >> you know, margaret thatcher back in the day was asked about this. she gave a really clever response, which was, i pay my taxes and my national insurance contributions so that the nhs can treat the people it needs to treat. i can afford private care. i take it a because i want to get in and out very quickly because, by the way, i only sleep for four hours a night and b so that i can free up the nhs for those who can't afford private care , i don't private care, i don't understand. we've now got some shame attached to private care, even though wes streeting, the man that wants to
. >> and when you dpp, who did you have it then? private health care?'t, that's it. >> so one of your dpp director of public prosecutions , with his of public prosecutions, with his own pension plan set up in an act of parliament. he didn't also use private health care. even then . so he's got in him. even then. so he's got in him. he's you know, he did care for his mother, who was very ill. of course, we appreciate that. you know, he's got a baby, but i don't quite get this....
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Jun 9, 2024
06/24
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BBCNEWS
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but it is also unlikely to join in a coalition agreement with the dpp, because the socialists and the it out. 0bviously greens and the liberals have more or less ruled it out. obviously there is a lot of speculation. but my best bet remains that the current coalition will be confirmed, but it will be far more heavily influenced by the demands coming from the radical right. by the demands coming from the radical right-— radical right. thank you for that. we are continuing _ radical right. thank you for that. we are continuing to _ radical right. thank you for that. we are continuing to watch - radical right. thank you for that. we are continuing to watch the i we are continuing to watch the screen behind us. i can see some of the polling stations are still open in the 27 countries. imagine what it must be like here in belgium, because they have got federal, regional and at the european elections in belgium today. the big question is how a very divided country here in belgium will come together. in the dutch speaking region, the extreme right is ahead in the polls. the extreme left is i
but it is also unlikely to join in a coalition agreement with the dpp, because the socialists and the it out. 0bviously greens and the liberals have more or less ruled it out. obviously there is a lot of speculation. but my best bet remains that the current coalition will be confirmed, but it will be far more heavily influenced by the demands coming from the radical right. by the demands coming from the radical right-— radical right. thank you for that. we are continuing _ radical right....
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Jun 11, 2024
06/24
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CNBC
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there is more to some right extreme but, overall, the biggest party dpp is centre right and very center hold and that is good. having said that, it's probable that in some policies, there will be some reconsideration for migration that is already happening because big part of them think europe is not sufficiently credible protecting its borders, so that is something that is already evolving. also climate change. while people remain very committed to the agenda, the climate agenda and they believe there is too much effort and forget the social dimensionand the competitiveness issue for europe. so i will not be surprised if we see some -- of these policies slightly to what we usually call right but remain in the mainstream political european and i think that is good news. >> new survey has shown that 36% of respondents want the french national rally party to win the upcoming election but double that examine it to win. french far right parties hold emergency talks about a potential electoral election. projected to gain the most french seats in sunday's european parliament vote. >>> moodys
there is more to some right extreme but, overall, the biggest party dpp is centre right and very center hold and that is good. having said that, it's probable that in some policies, there will be some reconsideration for migration that is already happening because big part of them think europe is not sufficiently credible protecting its borders, so that is something that is already evolving. also climate change. while people remain very committed to the agenda, the climate agenda and they...
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every time i say thank you to them and i would use them when you dpp, you did have it, then . did haveinteresting. he's paid £122,000 as mp and party leader. his wife works, but were his children or any family members to get very , very family members to get very, very ill waiting for treatment in an nhs queue and there's lots of people doing that. he wouldn't pay people doing that. he wouldn't pay for help , pay for health pay for help, pay for health care, and that's a choice which many people choose to take private health care. he wouldn't. and that says something about his principles. >> it does perhaps , chris, and >> it does perhaps, chris, and fair play to him. but it's also worth pointing out that in previous interviews, when he's been specifically asked on the labour party's policy regarding using private health care to alleviate the burden from the nhs, he said a very different thing in an interview with sky news last january , when pushed news last january, when pushed on this matter, he said one of the issues we've looked at is whether we're using the private sector effecti
every time i say thank you to them and i would use them when you dpp, you did have it, then . did haveinteresting. he's paid £122,000 as mp and party leader. his wife works, but were his children or any family members to get very , very family members to get very, very ill waiting for treatment in an nhs queue and there's lots of people doing that. he wouldn't pay people doing that. he wouldn't pay for help , pay for health pay for help, pay for health care, and that's a choice which many...
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william lai, the, of the dpp was elected president, in the january vie elections.ive yuan, we've seen, a majority, by china's taiwan's two main opposition parties, the guomindang and the taiwan people's party. and in recent in the last week, these two parties have got together and introduced a series of new, laws, a draft laws in the legislative yuan, which, if enacted, would serious restrict the dpp ability to govern and would enable the opposition, for example, to have much greater oversight and say in things like military budgets , and, you know, military budgets, and, you know, the guomindang in particular has been very critical of, taiwan's efforts to develop a new modern submarine fleet, which would be one of the most effective things they could do to deter a pla attack . so i think xi jinping is attack. so i think xi jinping is looking at all of these things and thinking, okay, well, the situation is not that bad. and maybe by continuing, a process of attrition, carrot and stick, but mainly stick, we might still be able to pull this off peacefully. i think p
william lai, the, of the dpp was elected president, in the january vie elections.ive yuan, we've seen, a majority, by china's taiwan's two main opposition parties, the guomindang and the taiwan people's party. and in recent in the last week, these two parties have got together and introduced a series of new, laws, a draft laws in the legislative yuan, which, if enacted, would serious restrict the dpp ability to govern and would enable the opposition, for example, to have much greater oversight...
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the dpp needs to be disclosed. the timing of the explosion is inevitable, followed by a new one, thate passions, bet worse than in turkish tv series, dolphin, new season, and what’s wrong, everything is wrong, but we’ll figure it out, today 20:00 on ntv, beyond, this is beyond... tatyana velitova was born with a rare pathology, one of her legs is three times larger than the other. the grandmother admitted that her son and daughter-in-law knew about the girl’s illness even before her birth, but they hid it from her. i saw my granddaughter for the first time a month later, when they arrived from moscow, i was shocked, because no one else has such a pathology. when zlata was 6 months old, her mother said. she loves to dance and walk, but all this is not easy for zlata, her leg is too heavy for her, her mom and dad are trying their best to make sure the baby gets better as quickly as possible. laser therapy, magnetic therapy, century baths are provided to us and compression garments are a must, she takes her medicine on her own. there are no problems with this, dear, once a quarter we tak
the dpp needs to be disclosed. the timing of the explosion is inevitable, followed by a new one, thate passions, bet worse than in turkish tv series, dolphin, new season, and what’s wrong, everything is wrong, but we’ll figure it out, today 20:00 on ntv, beyond, this is beyond... tatyana velitova was born with a rare pathology, one of her legs is three times larger than the other. the grandmother admitted that her son and daughter-in-law knew about the girl’s illness even before her...
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Jun 12, 2024
06/24
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CNNW
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i mean, the dpp sayyed that you saw me take there. i felt like i had to take another one now salted when i would walk is very difficult to rationalize when the people you're talking to acknowledge there's no there's no there there. >> and it's interesting to think about what is dr. phil doing? why is he motivated in that way? what is jim jordan thinking? i think they're trying to make sense of a complex world. conspiracy theories help simplify complexity, but they do so by taking shortcuts and real world and real life with real-world thinking, there are no shortcuts that's these guys are trying to take shortcuts, trying to use code words and buzzwords and propaganda in order to satisfy an audience by taking shortcuts. and there are no shortcuts in this real complex. >> we're just as a point on civics. the complexity is the point that is actually how the system is designed to work so that it doesn't get rigged up so that i do want to move on to what msnbc host rachel maddow has said she said in an email to cnn's reliable sources i am w
i mean, the dpp sayyed that you saw me take there. i felt like i had to take another one now salted when i would walk is very difficult to rationalize when the people you're talking to acknowledge there's no there's no there there. >> and it's interesting to think about what is dr. phil doing? why is he motivated in that way? what is jim jordan thinking? i think they're trying to make sense of a complex world. conspiracy theories help simplify complexity, but they do so by taking...
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Jun 12, 2024
06/24
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CNBC
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in our summary of economic projections committee participants generally dpp gdp growth to slow from lastrojection of 2.1% this year and 2.0% over the next two years. in the labor market supply and demand conditions have come into better balance. payroll job gains averaged 218,000 jobs per month in april and may, a pace that is still strong but a bit below that seen in the first quarter. the unemployment rate ticked up but remains low at 4%. strong job creation over the past couple of years has been accompanied by an increase in the supply of workers, reflecting increases in participation among individuals aged 25 to 54 years and the continued strong pace of immigration. nominal wage growth has eased over the past year, and the jobs to workers gap has narrowed. overall, a broad set of indicators suggests that conditions in the labor market have returned to about where they stood on the eve of the pandemic. relatively tight but not overheated. fomc participants expect labor market strength to continue. the median unemployment rate projection in the s.e.p. is 4.0% at the end of this year an
in our summary of economic projections committee participants generally dpp gdp growth to slow from lastrojection of 2.1% this year and 2.0% over the next two years. in the labor market supply and demand conditions have come into better balance. payroll job gains averaged 218,000 jobs per month in april and may, a pace that is still strong but a bit below that seen in the first quarter. the unemployment rate ticked up but remains low at 4%. strong job creation over the past couple of years has...
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Jun 18, 2024
06/24
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GBN
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he's taken some really difficult decisions as dpp. so i don't think he'll be fazed by government .government. and again, i strongly supported tony blair. i was privileged to be part of his government, did prop up corbyn as a former co—chair of the stop the war coalition . well, i think the war coalition. well, i think he's given some explanations for that already , and i'm not going that already, and i'm not going to try and do better than he's done. but the reality is all of these things were said about tony blair before 1997. and the reality is he demonstrated what a great prime minister he was, but he took him time. he also has written that the first 12 months or so were very difficult , but i actually think keir starmer is better prepared than we were in 1997. >> okay, hold that thought. because we're going to be speaking a bit later in the show about putin and what on earth he's doing in north korea. so stay where you are, jeff, just to say, because we've mentioned geoff hoon, former defence secretary and other former defence secretary, will be presenting state of the nation.
he's taken some really difficult decisions as dpp. so i don't think he'll be fazed by government .government. and again, i strongly supported tony blair. i was privileged to be part of his government, did prop up corbyn as a former co—chair of the stop the war coalition . well, i think the war coalition. well, i think he's given some explanations for that already , and i'm not going that already, and i'm not going to try and do better than he's done. but the reality is all of these things...
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Jun 17, 2024
06/24
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GBN
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you know, when starmer was dpp , remember he starmer was dpp, remember he actually he actually said thatmigration law was inherently racist. so they don't want to close the doors to people coming here legally or illegally. and, you know, it's not actually an immigration policy to say to everyone who comes , you can stay. that's not comes, you can stay. that's not a policy. and what it does is put a great big fat advert out there saying , come, come to soft there saying, come, come to soft touch britain. >> well, unfortunately what we do have now and that is what that is. there is an advert there is that massive advert out there is that massive advert out there now and they are saying to these people who are in calais and not just there, but also anywhere in france and anywhere around the area in europe, that if you stay in mainland europe, you're going to be deported. the best thing for you to do is to get to britain asap. you heard it from a security source there, speaking exclusively to gb news benjamin, that we are about to get a massive influx. is that not a concern for potentially i
you know, when starmer was dpp , remember he starmer was dpp, remember he actually he actually said thatmigration law was inherently racist. so they don't want to close the doors to people coming here legally or illegally. and, you know, it's not actually an immigration policy to say to everyone who comes , you can stay. that's not comes, you can stay. that's not a policy. and what it does is put a great big fat advert out there saying , come, come to soft there saying, come, come to soft touch...
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when you dpp, you did you have it then private health care?can have 100% confidence in the nhs as much as you like, but the reality is that waiting lists are huge at the moment, and that's not going to change, don says. >> can i just say i believe keir starmer 100. >> can i just say i believe keir starmer100. his wife works for the nhs and so he knows firsthand what a good job they do. he's not like rishi sunak, who's got more money than god. what's that got to do with the price of fish, it's extraordinary how many people in the nhs, i think are an awful lot of doctors. >> you'll find now who work for the nhs, use private health care because they know what's going on. i also make one other point about left wing people and state health care in the soviet union. the politburo, the chiefs of the communist organisation, had their own private hospitals surrounded by a 15 foot wall with its own park and gardens and doctors brought in from abroad to treat them, and special access to drugs which other people didn't get. there's nothing actually partic
when you dpp, you did you have it then private health care?can have 100% confidence in the nhs as much as you like, but the reality is that waiting lists are huge at the moment, and that's not going to change, don says. >> can i just say i believe keir starmer 100. >> can i just say i believe keir starmer100. his wife works for the nhs and so he knows firsthand what a good job they do. he's not like rishi sunak, who's got more money than god. what's that got to do with the price of...
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every time i say thank you to them and i would use them when you dpp, you did you have it then?rivate healthcare? no, i didn't . didn't. >> sir keir starmer well it was an emotional time in the welsh senate today as the first minister, vaughan gething , wiped minister, vaughan gething, wiped away tears as colleagues spoke to defend him in the welsh parliament. but he still went on to lose a no confidence vote. it follows criticism over accusations of accepting donations from convicted criminals and misleading the covid inquiry over deleted messages. he's called the defeat a desperate gimmick by the conservatives, and he's defiant that he won't step down. >> today was an exercise in muck throwing the range of different things that were said that members know are simply not true is really quite disgraceful . i'm is really quite disgraceful. i'm going tonight to normandy. i should have been in portsmouth today honouring our d—day veterans. i will go to normandy to do my duty for my country, as any first minister should . that any first minister should. that means a long drive overn
every time i say thank you to them and i would use them when you dpp, you did you have it then?rivate healthcare? no, i didn't . didn't. >> sir keir starmer well it was an emotional time in the welsh senate today as the first minister, vaughan gething , wiped minister, vaughan gething, wiped away tears as colleagues spoke to defend him in the welsh parliament. but he still went on to lose a no confidence vote. it follows criticism over accusations of accepting donations from convicted...
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Jun 9, 2024
06/24
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BBCNEWS
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so the dpp will have 183 seats with renewed europe getting 82 seats within national projections.he top three parties remain the same. it is not the end of the evening yet, so we don't know what will happen next, because some countries are still voting and we are still getting results and we are expecting the more accurate results at ten o'clock london time, but what we are seeing now is less concerned because we are seeing the far right are not getting the majority of the seats in the european parliament so far, although even despite their significant gains in france. and other interesting thing is that it is the first european parliament election after brexit, so the first european parliament election being held without the uk and i asked about the numbers come at the statistics about how many european parliament votes have been taken in the uk, and there are no statistics because there are around 5 million european citizens who have applied for the uk settlement scheme, but it is not clear how many of those people are registered to vote and what are their preferences because of
so the dpp will have 183 seats with renewed europe getting 82 seats within national projections.he top three parties remain the same. it is not the end of the evening yet, so we don't know what will happen next, because some countries are still voting and we are still getting results and we are expecting the more accurate results at ten o'clock london time, but what we are seeing now is less concerned because we are seeing the far right are not getting the majority of the seats in the european...
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t refuse to help her childhood friend, i remember seeing ira dubtsov for the first time, i’m in the dpp, i say, populist, ugh, you’re not fashionable, it’s like, what’s that there, and something we somehow talked to her, come to us, hello, unique video from the personal archive of prokhor chaliapin, ninety-seven, the children's group jam has a snack after the concert. the leaders of this group, ira’s mom and dad, viktor viktorovich and natalya borisovna, well, they are quite like that, our leaders were strict, but i had good ones with them relationship, because natalya borisovna once told me, yes, life is all about you, you know how to listen, here she is, i’ll come, she tells something, i listen to her, i don’t understand anything, but listen, she says, here i am i can at least talk to you, but i listened to everything and , well, i forgot everything, naturally right there, and as if the person had spoken out, but here the guys are rehearsing in the assembly hall, familiar faces are immediately visible, prokhor chaliapin and irina dubtsova, he is smiling and radiant eye, today there is
t refuse to help her childhood friend, i remember seeing ira dubtsov for the first time, i’m in the dpp, i say, populist, ugh, you’re not fashionable, it’s like, what’s that there, and something we somehow talked to her, come to us, hello, unique video from the personal archive of prokhor chaliapin, ninety-seven, the children's group jam has a snack after the concert. the leaders of this group, ira’s mom and dad, viktor viktorovich and natalya borisovna, well, they are quite like...
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Jun 13, 2024
06/24
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GBN
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. >> he's not talking about when he was dpp. he was a life of service. and i made the most difficult decisions. hang on a minute. >> you became you became 100. so he's saying the people. so he's saying the people. >> if people are people are sort of giving, doing public service, they should do it for free. i mean, that's that's a new argument, but don't then sell it as though somehow you were because he wasn't. he's never said that. >> and of course, when he was in the shadow cabinet, he was earning an absolute shedload of extra money as a lawyer. >> well, andre, do you want to talk about mbappe second job? so that's a conversation i'd be happy to have now, he says. >> labour mps shouldn't have second jobs. he had one. >> well, well, look, i mean, i think that but he had a lot of scandals, this question. >> but do we want to hear anything of what angela rayner says. >> no, we're just going to carry on. apparently we're not. well, we know what it's going to be. >> i'm always outnumbered on this panel. it's not fair to have three
. >> he's not talking about when he was dpp. he was a life of service. and i made the most difficult decisions. hang on a minute. >> you became you became 100. so he's saying the people. so he's saying the people. >> if people are people are sort of giving, doing public service, they should do it for free. i mean, that's that's a new argument, but don't then sell it as though somehow you were because he wasn't. he's never said that. >> and of course, when he was in the...