tv The Papers BBC News August 16, 2017 10:45pm-11:01pm BST
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ireland or use it for come into ireland or use it for direct bikes from london or belfast. he will move onto studies which look at... eu migrants have come to live in britain after brexit, this will beapr in britain after brexit, this will be a pr nightmare for some brexit fears that is brexit was meant to be about taking back control and copy them of movement, which look like it will continue. that is what is described in the times as a david cameron plan was rejected. '5 henry stop rejoicing in your remaining. this is about what you can always do and always have been able to do, if someone and always have been able to do, if someone wants to come and live here in the democratically elected governments decides it, that is what controls about. as opposed to the unelected unaccountable bloke in brussels. we had a referendum and people said they wanted to end freedom of movement but now it is coming back. it says here companies
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wa nted coming back. it says here companies wanted to hire eu workers and they will have to buy the sponsorship permits. in other words if you want to work here and take the job then let me be clear,... what you're seeing as you will be able to jump on your plane in vilnius, london dublin, get over the border... what is wrong with that? the issue will be you will not be able to work. spot on. you need an employer will have to pay for it. that is something this paper suggests comes from a democratic elected government in britain as opposed to some bloke sitting in brussels who no one voted for. however we voted against this kind of thing. no we didn't! this is controlled. there will still be lots of people who can come to this country without the job, spent a lot of time here and look for a job and the time possibly apply for benefits. yarn as alarmist as nigel
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farage. it is a four-year waiting period, which david cameron suggested. this is about control and westminster, not brussels. people voted for... and happy for the sovereignty of this parliament but la st sovereignty of this parliament but last year the brexit here said it was about control of freedom of movement. i will control the movement. i will control the movement of freedom now. we moved to the guardian. this is good stuff. i suspect you have sat on some business advisory councils.|j suspect you have sat on some business advisory councils. i have. donald trump responds to people resigning from him is to shut them down to the current design. summary said to me, he did not approve it something i did in the cbi and he said i am resigning and i said you have to belong to it first! i think
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he's doing exactly right thing, spot on, position yourself away from party politics in the dock of left 0!’ party politics in the dock of left or right and what you do to take the side of decency and everybody understands what decency means. this should be the, business should not be following logical views or every other and i think the business advisory councils work if people will listen to the advice. but in this respect you do not go associated with this and what worries me is the cliche is that evil flourishes when good men do nothing, and vacuums are filled. when people pull out of the middle ground left or right, and when they pull out because the vilified then the vacuum is filled by extremism. it happens in this country with the labour party and it happens over there with trump. different politics but the same principle. it is amazing that these business leaders have decided to resign from these business councils because of how trump behaved. we have known this all this time, he campaigned and he
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called at the old right to get the nomination, then to win the election so nomination, then to win the election so he's not telling us anything new. trying to claim there is an equivalence between fighting against fascism and being a fascist and wanting to go back to the days where you can lynch black people for fun and kill dues and kill gay people or whatever is extraordinary. slowly but surely it is dawning on republicans that this man is not set. we had in the news channel earlierfrom an set. we had in the news channel earlier from an african—american lady, tracey, she is the chairman of the ohio black republicans and she was clear that the president had done the right thing in criticising all sides. that was her view. did she expect the antifascist turn of the sink and by and we shall ove i’co [ti e the sink and by and we shall overcome and hope that the good folk of the kkk would not run out of town? the one thing he should have done and did not do, he should have
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called them out, so instead of seeing all sides, he should've said, you, the ku klux klan, and then he should have said you, the old left. in other words he should've called them out on both sides by seeing both think you are right,... it is like the magistrate in the song stand the hollow used to sing,. the funny thing is in situations like this, if it weren't for the likes of anti—fascists or whatever you call the people would have been killed. because they were protecting them. when you put a point that i do agree with is that these things get momentum and a move from it is all right and that is ok and one day end up with murder in the long—awaited deal with this is stopping it. thank you both. we move the i. despite
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this fine photograph daniel craig backus pond. it looks like there are now fewer students chasing arrested places. i get worried about this because a—levels are getting easier. lam not because a—levels are getting easier. i am not saying, i am because a—levels are getting easier. lam not saying, lam not because a—levels are getting easier. i am not saying, i am not decrying the huge effort, and the parents who will be watching this to say a few kids you are my child went through how dare you. i understand that. but it is the system is getting easier to progress. what we should be doing is being more selective not about as the chorus good enough but as the questionable for you? one of the papers, the same heading, university fees. nick timothy if i can remind viewers as the man who committed complacent harry keeley is a person
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who had a 23 percentage point lead in the polls and for some reason and love writing for the daily telegraph but he said he paid a visit to the barber. the young man who cut my hair told me he graduated from southampton university with a degree in football studies. i doubted whether he thought his qualification was worth the debt he would carry for 30 years. well with great respect young man don't get a degree in football studies. i bet it was something like the economics of football. it says here he graduated... it is possible he got the facts wrong. the market in this from a—levels through to what you do with those a—levels. .. from a—levels through to what you do with those a-levels. .. it is a market greeted by government doesn't it? it is a market set up by the government to —— for both parties.
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this middle—class norm of what i wa nt this middle—class norm of what i want is for my children to go to university when actually seeing are you getting value for money for your debt? and can you afford to pay, a vice chancellor getting a51 grand a year! it is a big job but responsibility. but as they say some journeys offer students now return for their investment. in a fused i9 and he will find it tomorrow whether not he got into the uniquely once. he won't go into a ponzi scheme! we should point out the fantastic site then, digbyjones who is also a part—time crew ship entertainer. it is true you entertain people on cruise ships from time to time. pedal when a red coat or hold ice cream cones. i think the word entertainment could be loosely applied. what i'm thrilled to bits
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about is i wrote to the dizzy heights of sub lieutenant, but this is the biggest ship the united kingdom has ever built. this is the biggest ship the royal navy have had and there will be two of them in the projection of self—confidence and power around the world will go out, have a bit today regardless of colour or creed or religion or orientation or anything else should be standing a few feet hollow. really? leeway to rubbish this? i am not rubbishing anything. it depends on your political perspective on the city and how you see britain and its empire, it depends if you... empire? we haven't got one. it is the anniversary of partition. do you -- why do use the word empire? we don't have one? do not have mps and cbes?
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the practical question is why do we need it? against who? unique airfield is the world and you won't get the class for the world really is as mobile airfield. cantlie asker special friends the americans to help us out? all please! you're one of those people who criticise until you need the help. how will! need the help? you will be on holiday somewhere and you will be in trouble. it will be palmerston altered again. but in the meantime let's celebrate something. the great british back off, henry? the one of the ratios between the bbc and channel 4, the bbc had a great british bake off and now has an usual with nadia hussain. they will have a ratings battle but it looks
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as though the bbc has decided to withdraw from the field. probably wise. a discreet withdrawal. and tonight it is 40 years since elvis died, and tonight is the day when boycott scored as hundreds hundreds and james bond is coming back. something to be proud of, even reclaiming elvis. if you believe we still have an empire then why shouldn't we have elvis? thank you both very much. i can confirm elvis has left the building. you can see the front pages of the papers online on the bbc news website seven days a week. if you need cheering up why not listen back to these too later on? thank you and good night to henry and digby. next up, the weather. good evening. sunshine and showers
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on the way tomorrow but before that we have a spell of rain. there has not been muttering so far but it is getting its act together, there will bea getting its act together, there will be a few heavier bursts of rain pushing eastwards. it will clearly from northern ireland quickly and then they can run across scotland, perhaps we'll is in the north—west of england but other area seen the latter pa rt of england but other area seen the latter part of the night, keeping the temperature is up. a little cooler perhaps we get the clear skies. tomorrow we have the rain in southern and eastern england, the cloud taking longer to clean—up. that will trigger showers and sunshine across southern england, the midlands and wales but further north in the north of england southeast, may well have a dry day, warm and sunshine. then the showers coming into the north west of scotla nd coming into the north west of scotland and northern ireland. there will be the chance of a edgbaston during the day, if first date night test match on home soil. it will turn chilly to the evening but the
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showers keep going not far away from birmingham as you can see. then overwrite the smell of wet weather pushing back into northern ireland, later into northern england and scotland. that clears away quickly on friday morning. sunshine and showers following behind before we get another spell of wet weather moving quickly across northern ireland into the idc. further south and east it will be dry with sunshine, and temperatures will be lower. not warning up much this weekend, sunshine at times and blustery showers for the first half of the weekend before we get some rain. he is the picture for saturday, showers are more likely across the northern part of the uk with wet and windy weather in the final of scotland. to the south the temperature is disappointing for the time of year, 16 in glasgow and 2! in london and the rain later comes from trekking gear. we get a topical layer, it is not a strong volcano will it be a hurricane as it heads towards our shores but it will
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jostle and come in with this area of low pressure jostle and come in with this area of low pressure across eastern jostle and come in with this area of low pressure across eastern canada, the two will chase and race the way across the atlantic, pushing that warm wetair across the atlantic, pushing that warm wet air towards the uk. it means a lot of cloud around with rain, too. some uncertainty about the extent of the rain, it looks like things will get interesting on sunday. this is bbc news.
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the headlines at 11pm: republicans, including two former presidents, join the condemnation of donald trump for his handling of the violence in virginia. at a memorial service in virginia, the mother of heather heyer, an anti—racist protester who was killed in the clashes, called on people to pay attention following her daughter's death. they tried to kill my child to shut her up. well, guess what? you just magnified her! brexit borders: the government wants business as usual between northern ireland and the republic, ruling out new customs posts. unemployment falls to the lowest level since 1975, but average earnings are still lagging behind inflation. homes buried under a mountain of rock and mud: 600 people still missing in sierra leone.
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