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tv   The Papers  BBC News  September 3, 2018 10:45pm-11:00pm BST

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‘ express which has a stark image of boris johnson on one side and theresa may on the other. yes, boris johnson has gone so far this time that theresa may has been forced to slap him down, so it seems that the tories are in open revolt, with those on both sides, no one seems to be happy with the chequers plan and it is difficult to say if borisjohnson is ready going to the leadership or just desperate to forge his own way forward and ready does care about brexit. is this the start of all old asia's bid for number ten? sta rt start of an audacious bid for number ten? in public, leaver thirimanne crow will say he isn't bad in reality we are gearing up for a bloodbath and an amazing time. they may not sakes busily this is a
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leadership bid but theresa may is so wedded to any macro —— they may not necessarily say this is a leadership bid but theresa may is so wedded to chequers, her way or the highway, bid but theresa may is so wedded to chequers, herway orthe highway, so there you go. does get to the port that boris johnson there you go. does get to the port that borisjohnson almost has to go for it? —— the point. that borisjohnson almost has to go for it? -- the point. i think so, otherwise everything he has put forward , otherwise everything he has put forward, and when he resigned recently, he spent so long thinking about, sophie doesn't at this point, people will feel he has bottled it so people will feel he has bottled it so he has got himself caught in his own momentum and feels he has to keep pushing forward the challenge —— so keep pushing forward the challenge —— so if he doesn't at this point. theresa may is incredibly weak so everything is on his side in many ways. continuing the theme. voters in tory marginal say chequers is bad
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for britain. exclusive survey, 44 the most marginal tory constituencies, and the voters in those constituencies do not like the chequers deal and two thirds of them are dissatisfied with the way the prime minister is handling brexit and so this goes to the very heart of this electoral challenge for the conservatives, they could lose seats and there are concerns that the conservative government could fall. they don't like chequers, but what do they like question —— what do they like? nobody has put forward an alternative. they said earlier, there is nothing new in what boris has said, and that was rather brutal. he said we need a serious leader with a serious plan and there is no other plan on the table at the moment. that might change. that is
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it. many voters are annoyed both with labour and the conservatives because this has been years and we have had plenty of time and chequers is all that has been put forward and thatis is all that has been put forward and that is universally unpopular with almost everybody. seen as a desperate move to push everyone together, but instead it has upset everybody. it isn't just together, but instead it has upset everybody. it isn'tjust the conservative party that is unhappy, it is everybody, and the tories are terrified they were losing votes after the general election last year and now it looks like brexit will finish it. justine greening is mentioned in this piece, one of those polling in the other direction, about a possible route which will come from the remain side. any substance? one of the most fascinating things about chequers is that this is uniting the
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conservative party, i have seen people screaming at each other on the tory benches over brexit but justine greening is saying that she agrees with boris johnson, justine greening is saying that she agrees with borisjohnson, chequers isa agrees with borisjohnson, chequers is a dead duck, the most unpopular policy since the poll tax. people are coalescing in opposition to the prime and mr's brexit plan which is a very strange position. —— prime minister's brexit plan. and now we have anti—semitic activist, in quotes, voted onto the labour ruling body. peter willsman was removed from the slate for the momentum for days after it opened and the majority of people who voted voted early because of their electoral rules —— momentum. there's a feeling people voted early but they would rather have not. this will inflame the already fraught itinerants
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around anti—semitism in the labour party —— arguments. tomorrow we have the nec meeting where they will decide whether to adopt the example is and the anti—semitism code which caused the original argument over this and i think labour are in a difficult position. many people hope tomorrow will be the end of it when they accept the roles but i think too many people are very unhappy at the moment. —— rules. too many people are very unhappy at the moment. -- rules. it's a massive problem for jeremy corbyn, the moment. -- rules. it's a massive problem forjeremy corbyn, you will get a guaranteed revolt from his own mps and they will be caveats and it will be watered down. the plp will vote the following day to adopt the international definition of anti—semitism completely, and so we could be in a position where we have three labour mps i know, who are considering quitting the party if this is watered—down —— labour mps. we talk about open revolt for the
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conservatives, but labour is as bad if not even worse. frank field might be one. he has said he is agonisingly daily over his position. the daily mirror is going very big on what they say is an exclusive story about chris evans. chris evans is off to virgin radio, and his friends have said this is not to do with money but other sources have said the £400,000 with money but other sources have said the £a00,000 pay rise is a big draw for him and the bbc wanted him to pay more tax which has been an ongoing issue with very high paid people in the media. it will be interesting to see if his listeners follow him there to virgin radio when they don't have as high listenership is the bbc but also to see if a woman like sara cox fills infor him. see if a woman like sara cox fills in for him. there are two aspects, what happens to chris evans at
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virgin radio and who occupies his seat at the bbc. exactly. it is very important that it is a woman, this show is one of the flagship shows has been dominated by men for many years, ken bruce, terry wogan, chris evans. and the line-up across the board for radio 2 is very male. exactly. you have sara cox and surrey ball, very talented women who could do a fantasticjob —— zoe ball. is anyone worth £2 million for presenting a radio show, though much much of extraordinary amount of money. —— a radio show, though?” know you had a look at this one in terms of testing this from your own perspective. unhealthy lifestyles book—ii—macro in five adults —— put
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fourin book—ii—macro in five adults —— put four in five adults at risk of an early death. you can go online, and answer questions and i discovered i have a 38—year—old heart even though i'm 37. you put in things about your life style i'm 37. you put in things about your lifestyle and it comes back with a broad picture. and 1.9 million people have done this. you have people have done this. you have people who have a heart which is five years older than they actually are. but does this actually work? why do you have doubts? are. but does this actually work? why do you have doubts7m are. but does this actually work? why do you have doubts? it is good because it gets people thinking about their health and lifestyle but it asks about smoking, weight and height, cholesterol, blood pressure, but did not ask you about alcohol or exercise, an identical and that healthy but it said my heart is my
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exact age, 30 —— and i don't think i'm that healthy. i'm not entirely convinced it is especially actress but this is getting people thinking about it. —— especially accurate. that is right. the quote here is that they hope it will be a wake—up call, and so if you can do this quietly by yourself and press the buttons and then the result comes up, it might make you behave differently. yes, it is a classic nudge, trying to change people's lifestyles. now we have the dreadful fire in brazil. 20 million artefacts have been lost, the director of the museum said nothing has survived, and it is such a wealth of artefacts around the globe. they have been
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com pletely around the globe. they have been completely destroyed and by trying to get a digital archive going but this is a huge loss for a country that have been going towards a very difficult election. this is notjust a brazilian museum. it goes back 200 years, many of the artefacts are priceless. the fire started because so priceless. the fire started because so many of the exhibits are bonding alcohol which hasjust so many of the exhibits are bonding alcohol which has just gone so many of the exhibits are bonding alcohol which hasjust gone up. —— farmed in alcohol. very costly for the nation. questions being asked about why. that's it for the papers this hour. dawn and steven will be back at ii30pm for another look at the papers. don't forget you can see the front pages of the papers online on the bbc news website. it's all there for you — 7 days a week at bbc.co.uk/papers — and if you miss the programme any evening you can watch it
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later on bbc iplayer. good evening. three very distinct types of weather across the country today, south—eastern areas were bright with patchy cloud and hazy sunshine and pretty warm. in the north—west it was cool and fresh but it was a beautiful day here in county down. and in between we had a weather front affecting parts of lancashire for example. down into wales and the south west. you can see the stripe of cloud on the radar picture, behind the frontal system. largely cloudy skies to the rest of the night, with the odd splash of rain, especially in the north—west of england. in the south—east, dry,
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and not mac cold, but in scotland and not mac cold, but in scotland and northern ireland it will turn quite cold —— and not that cold. out in the countryside, the scottish highlands, likely to dip below freezing, so a touch of ground frost perhaps. but a beautiful day tomorrow with some sunny spells in the north west. also sunny spells in east anglia and the south—east. in between we have the weather front, a band of rain, but not much rain in it by this stage. still into the 20s across the south—east. not much will change as we go through tuesday evening, the cloud beginning to break up, but the potential still for a few showers to creep in the near continent. high pressure is broadly in charge of the scene as we get onto wednesday. this area of u nsettled get onto wednesday. this area of unsettled weather is still with the potential to clip a few showers into the far south—east and certainly extra clout and we'll serve fans
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thickening up through the day, and outbreaks of rain beginning to push in here. eastern scotland into much of england and wales, sunny spells, 17-20, but the of england and wales, sunny spells, 17—20, but the uncertain whether in the north west and the near continent isjoining the north west and the near continent is joining forces, bringing low—pressure riot in place across the british isles, so very u nsu btle across the british isles, so very unsubtle —— low—pressure in place across the british isles so very uncertain and it will feel breezy and decidedly cool at the end of the week. this is bbc news. i'm julian worricker. the headlines at 11pm: downing street hits out at borisjohnson saying he has no new ideas for brexit, after he criticised theresa may's approach. england's heatwave this year makes the record. the met office confirms it was the hottest ever and that 2018's summer across britain was the joint hottest on record. going forward into the future, it is
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expected that because of greenhouse gas emissions and global warming, these kinds of heatwaves will occur more regularly and, when they occur, we will at higher temperatures as a result. the home secretary issues a stark warning to tech companies, saying that he won't be afraid to take action if they don't do more to tackle online child sex abuse. he can do many great things.
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