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tv   The Papers  BBC News  August 28, 2018 10:45pm-11:01pm BST

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isa is a vision alternative vision. it is a vision and plan? that is what people want to see and that is the argument against the brexiteers. that they are all very good at coming at the prime minister and saying your band is rubbish. what are they actually thinking? it will be interesting to see if boris does do this ambush at the conference, whether it is a land. and at the conference she is seeing a softer brexit than you imagine he is going to come up with. and she is saying she wants the co nfe re nce and she is saying she wants the conference to focus on their achievements, and health, education, housing. maybe a shore conference. well, you will want to talk about anything but brexit. particularly wants to focus on helping the young people on the housing ladder. but i don't think that is happening at the moment. and he helped to buy scheme, the latest research i saw was saying it was focusing on people who really had enough money to go on with and not the poorer people that are getting it. interesting talking about focus because he or she ism africa, first leg on a four—day trip
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to drum up trade and what are we all talking about? talking about boris johnson. well, ithink talking about? talking about boris johnson. well, i think she did do a bit of that talking on the plane on the way over. i think she may have wa nted the way over. i think she may have wanted to get it out of the way as well. and then talk about trade. we believe well on the way to doing a trade deal with various countries in africa and that is what people want, we wa nt africa and that is what people want, we want to see that happening, whether the big deal is that we really wa nt whether the big deal is that we really want to see it at the end of the day, it is small deals at the moment and hopefully will lead to other things. that is the sort of pr she wants to do. she does not want to be talking about boris all of his achievements at some point, at the moment it is brexit. if you look at the deals we are doing currently with africa, about 4 billion with south africa compared to 240 billion with europe. yes. but i think it would do anything to do a positive headline at the moment. obviously boris isn't a great one, but they me further down the line miguet one. well, she is sharing the front page with the headline. a reference to
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the comments by the former rabbi chief, chief rabbi who has said the labour leaders were marks on china's where an echo of enoch howell, these rivers of what speech. these are strong words from the former chief rabbi. how significant do you think his intervention is? it is fairly big. front covers for a start. yes. the critics onjeremy corbyn‘s side of things would put that on the front page and it is the mainstream media having a go. so the people who are supporting him, you do not really see them falling away from supporting him. he just really see them falling away from supporting him. hejust see it as really see them falling away from supporting him. he just see it as an attack on him again. i think from the people who normally vote labour. a long, have been a labour voter in the past myself. it does put you off. jeremy corbyn‘s labour party. as the intention. he has got a very serious point. those comments were offensive. it did seem as though it
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was towards jewish offensive. it did seem as though it was towardsjewish people. offensive. it did seem as though it was towards jewish people. they were taken out of context. he says he said it in the accurate political sense of zionism, whatever that is. the way that he said it way that he inferred that probably these people have lived your lives, so that suggests the migrant people. have lived your lives, so that suggests the migrant peoplelj have lived your lives, so that suggests the migrant people. i am not political. when i was thinking of him in about ten years ago i was approached from every political party a pa rt approached from every political party apart from labour, so there you go. the thing that really annoys me about all of this is if labour are serious about wanting to run the country, for goodness' sake get rid of all this anti—semitism stuff, because it is so boring and annoying. it is partly done by right—wing papers. but they are in a complete mess. you cannot sort out this one issue and there are a third ofa this one issue and there are a third of a millionjewish people in this country. there are not a huge number. and for this to be
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dominating the front pages week after week isjust... dominating the front pages week after week isjust. .. but he dominating the front pages week after week isjust... but he hasn't apologised. he just comes out with comments like i meant it in the accurate political sense rather than accurate political sense rather than a euphemism for dispute —— for jewish people. very easy for him to do and it is to accept and internationally recognised definition of anti—semitism and let's move on. and it appears he will not. the body is meeting next week. you not think he will accepted there? it doesn't as will be accepted because they are ready trying to water it down so people can still attack israel in a political sense. i am sure they get similar caveats and ways out as well—rounded. i don't think this is going away and i think it is damaging the labour party day after day. 0k, well you are in agreement about that. let's move onto ft. you are talking about the so—called right—wing bias because we have copies headline... this is donald
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trump saying basically that google is suppressing positive news about him. that is what he's claiming. just recently the chief executive at the national enquirer, a big supporter of child and he's recently given protection from the molar inquiry, i cannot even remember his name. but he's been protected lately. a sickly he has lost the national enquirer as is the support. so this might be his usual diverse contact x. take me away from what is happening to my right—wing friends over there and let us attack someone from the left wing ideas. is he right? he could be right. this appears to have come from this morning when he was awake around 6am and he was googling himself and realising he was not getting very
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good results. 6am he was googling himself, he did not like what he saw and he started tweeting about it saying that google and others are suppressing conservatives, hiding information. a lot of others are been saying he might have been referencing a right—wing blog which had done some nonscientific work and found 96% of stories about trump had come from left—wing press. he did seem to be referencing that as well. i think he is under a lot of pressure at the moment. he clearly wa nts a pressure at the moment. he clearly wants a good headlines. it is 6am in the white house and he cannot see anything. so instead ofjust shutting up and not saying anything and fanning the flames and putting more bad news out there, he starts tweeting about it and then there are some more bad stories about him. and this has not moved, they still support him in the number stated before. you can say that as well with jeremy corbyn. before. you can say that as well withjeremy corbyn. it is the base. the rump of the support behind him and they all think it is the
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mainstream media and there is our fault that there's all this bad news out there. the metro. and rather startling how mine here. police we are under attack. officers become targets of society. at is in quotations. who is saying that? well, the guy he was saying that. hang oni well, the guy he was saying that. hang on i had it... from the police federation. it has been massive rise in attacks on police. it is happening in america as well and we are all very worried about it. over here it is notjust the met. 72 a tax on police constables a day. one every 20 minutes. the biggest area of attack is the met area police, second is a west yorkshire, the third was hamster was really surprised me, then it is canned at manchester. it is all over the country that this is happening. it he pulled his their names and the
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press or then game is celebrated for these attacks. it will only increase. the numbers have gone up by over one third. we are seeing a lot of it as well because people have smartphones. so we are seeing a lot of this footage was this was an woman making an arrest in a mc donald's and hackney and london. interesting because there was a policeman the other week saying, a chief constable, saying we don't have people on the beach any more but we have targeted officers in targeted areas. if they are in targeted areas. if they are in targeted areas. if they are in targeted areas where there is trouble that maybe you are more likely to face trouble, if you see what i mean. there's going to be more troublesome people in those areas. does we not see police, do we? because that might be dangerous. there are fewer of them and they are under more pressure. and they do not report minor assaults on themselves either. so what we're seeing isjust some of the assaults, not all of them. well, we started with theresa
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may. let's for now and with her. the picture on the front of the anti—which was her dancing today. dancing queen, isn't she? you thought she had some good news. well, i just thought thought she had some good news. well, ijust thought if thought she had some good news. well, i just thought if you're thought she had some good news. well, ijust thought if you're going to go out there and everyone is going to be dancing on you yes, you're going to be criticised but you're going to be criticised but you may as welljustjoin in. people have been calling her the may not and things. it was like a robot! we have not all, we cannot all bust a move. don't try and make yourself something you are not. instead she could have clapped, she could have nodded along. so you don't think she should have danced was not i don't think she should have done that. or i think she should be on strictly domestically and learn to do it properly. it is impossible because otherwise she is damned if she does damned if she doesn't. they were all dancing, everyone is enjoying themselves. there she is, stiff as a
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port not dancing around? you're making my point. you don't have to do things that you feel really uncomfortable doing. anyone can say clapped, well done. it is the most british thing in the world to be polite when you are abroad and just join in, even though you are massively uncomfortable. add sauce to her. on the bbc news you will see every programme in her really awkward dancing. and i don't think for a prime minister that is a very good look. well, i think the ship has already sailed with what people think of her anyway. i think we will have to agree to disagree on that one. for now, thank you both so much. that is it for the papers tonight. don't forget you can see the front pages of the papers online on the bbc news website. it is all there for you seven days a week. and if you mist the programme and evening, you can watch it later on the eeg player. thank you to you both. and thank you for watching. we
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are back at 11:30pm. until then. good evening. sunny for a favoured few, but probably for most today. in fa ct few, but probably for most today. in fact this weather watch has been sentin fact this weather watch has been sent ina fact this weather watch has been sent in a few hours ago, illustrates the bracket of cloud pushing him from the northwest. some rain arriving now as we speak. his weather front will continue south and he to cross scotland and northern ireland through the night. at the same time, a few scattered showers the southwest. melo does was in land across to the isle of wight into east anglia. anywhere south and east could see a few showers overnight. here temperatures will stay at around 13 or 14 degrees, just that little bit fresher behind that weather front. that front will continue to introduce some fresher air. let's take a look at the detail and little more. tomorrow morning will start off with that rain, easing away by dawn. behind some
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showers already pushing into the far northwest. and brighter start into northern ireland, but by 7pm the rain would have slipped out of the borders into the north of england, wales and the southwest. odd spot of rain as well still a few showers lingering away from east anglia. a bit of a messy start to our wednesday morning. eventually that weather front will continue to go south, pushing into lincolnshire am in the midlands and down towards the dorset coastline. by then really a band of clown. brighter conditions for us later on with a scattered showers in the northwest. 14—70 here. possibly a high of 21 degrees. we will start to see an area of high pressure building. really the high pressure building. really the high pressure will stay with us for the remainder of the week. but there will be some dry weather around. it is certainly worth noting that we could start to see some chilly nights and indication that september is just around the corner. if we ta ke is just around the corner. if we take a look at the temperature profile, green is denoting where the lowest of the values unlikely to be.
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in towns and city centres, 6—11, it in rural spot welds in the figures not out of the question. we start off on not out of the question. we start offona not out of the question. we start off on a chilly know. but there will be some son around to start off with. a cloudy afternoon for many, what they whisk of an isolated shower almost anywhere. favourite spots west of scotland, maybe by the end of the day into the southwest as well. as i say, it looks likely to stay predominantly dry and quiet warming upa stay predominantly dry and quiet warming up a little into the weekend. that is it. take care. this is bbc news. i'm rebecca jones. the headlines at 11pm: one of the biggest fires in belfast for decades — a major blaze guts a primark store in one of the city's historic buildings. it had just been refurbished. we have concerns that the building
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might collapse, so we need to ensure that the firefighters are fighting ina that the firefighters are fighting in a safe way and are not impacted by the collapse of the building. a new relationship with africa after brexit — theresa may announces plans to be the g7‘s leading investor by 2022, and a change in the way uk aid money is spent. detectives say a mother and daughter stabbed to death at their home in solihull yesterday were on the phone to police as the attack unfolded. also coming up: remembering the queen of soul in her home town.
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