, slated to lead the CIA, previously served as Trump's director of national intelligence and oversaw US intelligence agencies. South Dakota Governor
However he conceded people were expressing their dissatisfaction with both the Tories and Labour."Reform are clearly the protest party," he said.
"What's clear from [Friday] is the Labour vote has collapsed and so has the Conservative vote, to a large extent."Reform are taking votes from Labour and votes from the Conservatives and they're coming straight through the middle."The Green Party's Tor Pingree, who won Riverside from Tory council leader Simon Geraghty, agreed voters were looking for answers elsewhere.
But she said that had also worked to the benefit of her party, which increased its seats on the council from three to eight."They don't really want to vote Labour any more, they don't want to vote Conservative," said Pingree.
"They want actual change.
"They haven't seen it from the two main parties, so they are putting their votes elsewhere."for jokes on American late night television. But its mission is no laughing matter.
“Safeguarding the president-elect is a top priority,” said Anthony Guglielmi, US Secret Service chief of communications, in a statement to the BBC.In the months leading up to the US presidential election, Trump was the target of two apparent assassination attempts. The first took place at a July rally in Butler, Pennsylvania and the other occurred at the Mar-a-Lago golf course in September.
Citing “concern for operational security,” the Secret Service declined to answer the BBC’s specific questions about the use of robotic dogs in Trump’s security detail, including when the agency began deploying the device at his primary residence.Boston Dynamics also declined to answer specific questions, although it confirmed the Secret Service was deploying its Spot robot.