According to US media reports, the White House is attempting to explain Musk's vocal opposition as a response to the bill's cuts to green energy subsidies, including tax credits for electric vehicles like Musk's Tesla cars.
Mr Hunter didn't survive the operation - the Royal College graded his care as "very poor". His daughters - just like Dorothy Readhead's family - had no idea what had happened during his operation until we showed them the report."We were led to believe that dad had a heart attack on the table and unfortunately passed away," said Mrs Fisher. "To find out three years down the line that what your father actually passed from wasn't the truth is torturous.
"I feel angry as well, and so does the rest of the family, that [the hospital] just outrageously lied. At no point do any of us find it acceptable. It's just not."After raising concerns about Mrs Readhead's case in 2020, Dr Bragadeesh was asked to step down from his role as clinical director of Castle Hill Hospital's cardiology department as part of a wider leadership reorganisation.When the rationale for the reorganisation was challenged, the trust asked the RCP to conduct its 2021 review, including assessing whether the decision to change the management team and his role was correct.
There were poor working relationships within the cardiology department, found the RCP at that time, with reviewers adding that they "positively acknowledge the decision to step down the cardiology leadership roles".Dr Bragadeesh continued to work at Castle Hill but took the trust to an employment tribunal.
In December 2023, the tribunal dismissed three of his 29 complaints and said of the remaining 26 that they were out of time, concluding he should have brought his case earlier.
He now works at a different NHS trust. He says the failures identified in the 2024 Royal College of Physicians review "show I was right to raise concerns about the TAVI procedure"."These BIS standards are really about cleaning up the market. We've had too many low-quality products flooding in, and consumers deserve better," says Sandeep Sharma a journalist and footwear industry expert.
But many in India can't afford shoes from well-known brands.Serving them is a huge and intricate network of small shoe makers, known as the unorganised sector.
Their affordable products are estimated to account for two-thirds of the total footwear market.Ashok (he withheld his full name) counts himself as part of that sector, with shoe making units all across the district of Agra in northern India. He estimates that 200,0000 pairs of shoes are made everyday by operations like his across Agra.