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tv   The Papers  BBC News  April 24, 2018 10:45pm-11:01pm BST

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would wwr mgit would put france with america that would put france one with america that would put france on a first footing. —— gobble us out. he is representing the eu with the trade deal with the us before the trade deal with the us before the uk gets it. i get all of that. i find interesting the interpretation because it is macron, somehow different than if is anybody else carrying up to donald trump. he is being seen as shrewd and strategic. where theresa may in other sort of got criticised for trying to cosy up. ithink got criticised for trying to cosy up. i think it is convenient that his ideology is on the right side of the argument. i think there are two levels about. one looks pretty implausible. most republican macron, they get the sense that he doesn't really mean it. he is going be president and playing for president trump and maybe president trump knows that and maybe he doesn't know it. but it is clearly working to macron's advantage at the moment, andi macron's advantage at the moment, and i don't get the idea that he somehow competing with bridge into the america's best friend and come's best friend. i think he has a much
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wider interests. —— competing with the uk. getting sucked into a better place on climate change and the average joe, where we dumptrump has gone on a and extremely critical and thinks he will do things to western governments hopefully will not do. and macron, who doesn't seem to mind being described as a trump west river, is hoping that getting up close, even if it means having the president take dandruff off as collar as he was done earlier today, . .. that is what to do. desktop shoulders. and being very nice about his wife, telling her it was again she's in fine shape. —— dusting off shoulders. kissing him a hand. surely this is rather nauseating for some friends‘s more left—wing elements. nauseating for some friends‘s more left-wing elements. maybe but if there is an ignorant bully with a weapon out there, you don't confront them. you try and calm them down and
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talk them out of it. i don't think macron is an entirely there for peace. a lot of pushing a lot of pushing ourfriends here going on. he isa pushing ourfriends here going on. he is a national leader and he should be doing that. in the context of the eu, notjust supremacy over the uk, for supremacy over germany... he wants to be the boss of the eu. by angela merkel. —— not angela merkel. the daily telegraph now. french kissing in the us. this is just now. french kissing in the us. this isjust an now. french kissing in the us. this is just an camilla now. french kissing in the us. this isjust an camilla is now. french kissing in the us. this is just an camilla is that trump doesn't want to give united states in the iran nuclear deal. he was the pull—out. that could make the whole thing fall apart. macron are suggesting that know you have concerns, donald, my old chum, how about a new deal that is based on the old deal with a little bit of what you want but what we all agreed on? went went went. you're suggesting that macron must to have his gateau and my gin.|j suggesting that macron must to have his gateau and my gin. i think he was so his gateau and my gin. i think he was so much as gateau absolutely. ——
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i think you was either. this man who has come out of absolutely nowhere to be french president is now ameliorating across the pond, good luck to him. i can see why... it would be better for everybody. luck to him. i can see why... it would be betterfor everybody. maybe if he is the trump was recommended that the role of most people who perhaps are quite as bombastic as president trump and need to keep them in check? —— trump whisperer. he said earlier theresa may is having gone very well, thigh trap was very positive towards britain posted visit and during the whole poisoning incident. by saying that he stood shoulder to shoulder com pletely he stood shoulder to shoulder completely supported us against russia... macron is a much better at it. joining indicia reaction. he can turn on the charm... he is french. ——joining in turn on the charm... he is french. —— joining in the syria action. turn on the charm... he is french. -- joining in the syria action. we see it as much. if it works, it
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doesn't matter. i feel like i'm turning into... but the policeman. doesn't matter. i feel like i'm turning into... but the policemanlj think turning into... but the policeman.” think we should do hello hello. you started it. by terrible accident. just to continue, a little bit longer, you believe all governments around the world are trying to curry favour with the leader of the free world, it is just the french have been the best at it so far. well i think that some leaders, camilla mentioned angela merkel, she has been pretty forthright in saying we would deal with them on the basis of common values and beliefs. and clearly, signalling that she has different values and beliefs to trump. i don't think she's been trying to butter him up at all. but ido trying to butter him up at all. but i do think that somebody has to go out there and try to break them into a more sensible position on all sorts of issues. and i think simply brought using that gallic charm, if thatis brought using that gallic charm, if that is what it takes, and have taking some down this 1's with the
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bands playing and i love it, feels that his identity, if it works, good for him. power them. if chum and up with a nobel peace prize, because of the north korean situation, that plant will be basking in his boyfriend's lori. exactly. —— he will be basking again. they both would get it. front page the telegraph. boris called for illegal immigrants amnesty. talking about issues that have not a lot to do with the foreign office. boris and the daily telegraph,/ shot. laughter on policy that isn't quite align with theresa may. this is actually something new that boris is saying. he said this during his take as maryland. if people have been here for long of the figures, and have not committed a crime, and just servicing the black market and not paying tax, would be better to put them on a legalfooting paying tax, would be better to put them on a legal footing and paying tax, would be better to put them on a legalfooting and give them on a legalfooting and give them an amnesty and give them citizenship and they'll be actually
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probably contributing? —— at his term as mayor. theresa may response isi term as mayor. theresa may response is i can see your point but to them that stand out as the wrong message to people who have legitimatelyjump through the hoops, paid a significant amount of money to get british passports, and that all the things you need to do to prove you are legitimately here. to be fair, andi are legitimately here. to be fair, and i appreciate the wind rush scandal was an absolute governmental tobacco that many people look on a think, had to roll and i'm surprised it hasn't, i still think if you look at polling, is around 75% british public are in favour of immigration controls, anti—illegal immigration, let's not do a keir starmer bridge and there was a hostile environment to immigration, it was to the illegal immigration and therefore will look at it and sigh with theresa may here. yes, when rush was a really bad thing that happened. but does that mean the actual public think that illegal immigration should be encouraged? i don't think so. should be encouraged? i don't think so. i don't know. the question, what is the right thing to do and what is
quote
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the most practical thing to do and the most practical thing to do and the best interest of this country. i think actually boris is taking advantage of theresa may weakness at the moment. a weakness generated by the moment. a weakness generated by the wind rash scandal, you can see she honourable. he absolutely believes all of the stuff, he said when he was there. —— the windrush scanner. when he was there. —— the windrush scanner. he knows it is unpopular with the tory grassroots, probably unpopular in the country, but it is i believe the right thing to do. if there is a result as the situation we there is a result as the situation we find ourselves and we can get immigration policy to a better place, and we can get a discussion around immigration to more sensible and humane, then for once i would say good for boris. i read. onto the front of the eye. jewish leaders lashed out at the showdown with jeremy corbyn on racism. there was a meeting tonight with the board of jewish deputies, and the labour leader. supposed to clear the air and perhaps lay out some ground
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rules and it turned into a big old coffee by the something. it backfired. but there is a sense that he cannot win on this because it's been too little too late. the horse has bolted. he trying to close the sta ble has bolted. he trying to close the stable door and a lack of credibility not just stable door and a lack of credibility notjust on a but his reaction to some of the harder elements of a support brace being abusive to people on twitter, being not just abusive to people on twitter, being notjust anti—semitic abusive to people on twitter, being not just anti—semitic but misogynistic, anti—tory... not just anti—semitic but misogynistic, anti—tory. .. they not just anti—semitic but misogynistic, anti—tory... they are all some... it is unpleasant. he often this thing he goes, there are bad elements my party but also that elements in every party. with the jewish community is saying to him here is that you really have to stick your neck out and out and out and condemn this behaviour and be a lot more vociferous and vocal in that condemnation and they failed that condemnation and they failed that he has not do that make them that. i'm not suggesting jeremy corbyn is an anti—semite but we were discussing this before, he is so pro palestinian that perhaps he's lost the ability to see the... that is
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probably a fair assessment of the background to it all. what has changed is that i thinkjeremy corbyn now genuinely assess city as problems and is it a long time to get there to that position. today, with an interview with the evening standard, he was using much stronger language but with the jewish leaders wanted was some action and they point to begin limits in, which is been dragging on for months and months over a year. still no resolution of it. —— they point to ken livingstone. they say it is fine to use better words in terms of addressing this, but you are the leader of the party, do something, at the very least, say that if you have expelled or suspended people from the party for alleged anti—semitism, then your front benches and supporters should be sharing a platform you. he hides behind process if you like, saying it's not myjob to intervene and to say who's right and wrong. it is a
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job. must have an investigation. -- meanwhile, no action taken. that have to be tough action in and about some of his closest supporters. he still fits on this mindset people argue that is to get at him. front pages of the times. ban on young food deals. obesity drive uniting mps apparently. interesting on the sugar tax. the kind ofjamie oliver rise asian of our diet. in the sense that we should not be eating too much young food. —— arise in our diet. and why children are being incentivized any more by buy one get one free deals. and a lot of advertising and prime time, to be fair there is a point on that as a mother of three i sometimes look to the primetime schedule on a saturday night and practically all of the adverts are dominoes. they're not dumb at all. they're targeting my children directly. having said that with all this rhetoric around to my ban this, stop that, there still
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needs to be a better dialogue about children becoming more active and we have the announcement, we slash in the paper are sending aboutjeremy hunt calling on the internet giants to do more about screen time. there isa to do more about screen time. there is a direct correlation i would suggest not just is a direct correlation i would suggest notjust a cigar but with screen time and obesity. so it is a 2—pronged thing. screen time and obesity. so it is a 2-pronged thing. and we do seem to be moving more and more towards an noticed day. not that long ago where this would be frowned upon at the government shouldn't be interfering in comparison with the right decision, not for ministers to determine whether dish of food and what is not. it certainly will be actually hard to enforce because you didn't get into an argument about how many calories of the have to be, had he defined young food? we will hand. we'll have a minute left on sun. schools, clocks can't tell the time. the use of this is what numbers now. enough around and uncle clocks. —— now run analogue clock.
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lot of kids have been busy in a digital. navigating it we teach our children to read the clock. having said that, actually learning the time is quite difficult for games. the concept, dave alleman said in a literary sketch about how ridiculous it was to suggest that a quarter was 15 and five... it is quite complicated. but it's really important. it is notjust young people. how many of us have woken up to bbc presenters in the morning to get rid to clot properly and tell us in the morning to get rid to clot properly and television hour early? no excuses. unlivable. -- unbelievable. don't want to go there. they're probably all in bed right now and not listening. you might get away with that. thank the lord. we will live there. camilla and lance, you. good to have you both. to you for watching, don't forget you can catch up with all of the front pages on the bbc website.
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and if you miss the programme any evening you can watch it later on bbc iplayer. what was that laugh or? i want and name. something. i'm not a psychic. we leave it there. thank you. goodbye. hello, brighter disguising bigger showers, that is the weather for tomorrow. right now some of us are us are still building with some rain, isn't been a wet evening out there for many of us and the main area of rain will clear south eastwards towards england has to go through the night and still some showers around parts of northwest england into the pennines, northern and western scotland but many places become drier and had been a visibility. —— a bit. a chilly night, most single figures to
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scotland. write a chilly start tomorrow, just wait for the cloud to build, quite readily in northern ireland and scotland, big show is breaking out and then elsewhere as we go through the day, very few of us we go through the day, very few of us will escape these showers. some of us will have more than that. if you do get a shower, it could well be happy in a rumble of thunder. thus he wins around but brightest quys thus he wins around but brightest guys come thus he wins around but brightest guys come back after the showers moved through. temperatures in the mid to low teens again. this is bbc news. the headlines at 11:00: jeremy corbyn says he is absolutely committed to rooting out anti—semitism from his party. but following a meeting with the labour leader, jewish community leaders say they are disheartened by his response to their requests for action. our meeting with jeremy our meeting withjeremy corbyn today was a disappointing missed
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opportunity regarding the problem of anti—semitism in the labour party. president trump has warned iran of "big problems" if it resumes the nuclear programme. the comments came as he hosted french president emmanual macron, where the leaders debated the future of the iran deal. a man accused of deliberately driving a van into pedestrians in the canadian city of toronto has been charged with 10 counts of murder.

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