The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/11/08 at 12:00 EST
Episode Date: November 8, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/11/08 at 12:00 EST...
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Hey, I'm Sarah Marshall, and there's one story from the past that I've been circling around for years now.
This eight-part series traces the hidden history of the satanic panic in North America.
We'll connect the dots from Victoria, BC, to the backroads of Kentucky.
Satan was having a moment, the sensationalist heartthrob of our time.
The Devil You Know, available now wherever you get your podcasts.
From CBC News, the world this hour. I'm Claude Fagg.
Saskatchewan's governing party is hoping to regain support in the province's major cities.
A convention this weekend will focus on winning back urban boaters who largely backed the NDP.
As Alexander Silverman reports, the party could face an uphill battle.
The Saskatchewan Party's election victory last fall, clouded by a steep loss in urban support.
Premier Scott Moe, addressing.
the shift in his victory speech.
We must do better.
Doing better and regaining support in Regina and Saskatoon, the focus of the party's convention.
Ken Chevaldeoff is the only MLA to win a seat in the two cities.
Political analysts say Mo's leadership has turned to a focus on socially conservative issues.
He aligns himself much more vocally with the right of his party.
Tom McIntosh is a political scientist at the University of Regina.
He says the party needs to focus on.
on issues like housing, urban poverty, and addiction.
They need to solidify that support.
The Saskatchewan Party says it's demonstrating working for the cities
with plans for new schools and urgent care centers.
But whether or not that approach resonates will have to be tested at the ballot box.
Alexander Silberman, CBC News, Regina.
U.S. airspace is a little less crowded today
after FAA restrictions to call the number of flights
as the federal government shutdown grinds on.
Katie Nicholson has the latest.
Got bombed yesterday.
Mark Duck is among the thousands of travelers
affected by new flight restrictions
brought in by the Federal Aviation Administration.
Hundreds of flights were canceled Friday
and that number is expected to skyrocket
as the FAA eyes scrubbing 20% of flights.
Air traffic controllers aren't being paid
during the federal government shutdown.
Now, when it's 39th day.
Nick Daniels is the president of the National Air Traffic Controllers Association.
They're calling in saying, I don't have enough gas to get to work.
Congress has been deadlocked on the issue of health care tax credits that are set to expire.
Travelers like Darlene Burns are losing patients.
I just wish Congress would do what they need to do so that we can get back to normal.
But with American Thanksgiving travel season looming and Congress at a stubborn impasse, normal may be a long way off.
Katie Nicholson, CBC News, Washington.
Hungary has won a reprieve from U.S. President Donald Trump.
Prime Minister Victor Orban visited the White House days after Trump threatened new penalties
for countries that are buying Russian oil.
Hungary is one of them.
But the White House has now given the country an exemption of one year.
The CBC's Julia Chapman has more.
U.S. sanctions on Russian oil aimed to pressure Moscow to end the war in Ukraine.
But they also affect its energy.
customers. Hungary is Russia's biggest in Europe. Its right-wing Prime Minister, Victor Orban,
has found a sympathetic ear in Donald Trump, who acknowledged Hungary's geography limits its energy
options. It's a big country, but they don't have sea. They don't have the ports.
Last year, it imported 74% of its gas and 86% of its oil from Moscow. Orban also remains
friendly with Vladimir Putin. He resists many European Union efforts to pressure Russia.
to end the war in Ukraine.
The only pro-peace government is the United States government
and the small Hungary in Europe anyway.
Meanwhile, the Hungarian Prime Minister faces a re-election campaign next year.
Securing a reprieve on oil sanctions
will help him keep his promise to voters
to maintain low energy prices.
Julia Chapman, CBC News, London.
The biggest names and music are gathering tonight.
The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremonies
happened tonight in Los Angeles,
honoring a class that includes outcast, Cindy Lopper, and Salt and Pepper.
Every decade from the 1950s through the 2000s will be represented.
The ceremony kicks off tonight.
And that is your world this hour.
For CBC News, I'm Claude Fagg.
Bussigoo!
Ah!
Oh!
