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tv   The Papers  BBC News  September 25, 2018 10:45pm-11:00pm BST

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labour and an attempt to slip away some of the playwright stopped at the sly dig at gordon brown perhaps? guess. he other thing, the sly dig at gordon brown perhaps? guess. he otherthing, getting the sly dig at gordon brown perhaps? guess. he other thing, getting the conversation operative. —— yes, and the other thing. —— conversation operative. —— yes, and the otherthing. —— getting conversation operative. —— yes, and the other thing. —— getting the conversation off of brexit. and not to make it about party division and things people will be sympathetic to, ten years on from a financial crisis, very few bankers are and just must people. and it feels like nobody never answered to the problems that were created. so i think it is a very populist message that he is making there. and then the grainjobs, that sounds very vague to me but at the same time that has a point we should be focusing on the country. —— green jobs. i think that would be popular with young voters. i'm assuming there will be a lot more meat in there will be a lot more meat in there tomorrow. i was at the labour conference in liverpool and the strange thing is, having moved to covering the media, i have covered politics for a few beers, for the
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last three labour conferences, the whole thing was basically canjeremy corbyn stay in control. —— i have covered politics for the past two yea rs. covered politics for the past two years. can he stay in control amongst the fighting against the tories. the amazing thing was is is an kino and control of the party machine kodaly running the show, all the people who were activists, and wearing sousa running around organising everybody. —— aptitude. they have professionalized to and extraordinary degree. —— corbynism. and some of the policies he wants to get through, that are much more presumably kind of old labour. talk even earlier that they would possibly reinstate clause four, talk a renationalization. they think he is going to shake things up so much that some of these people get nervous or he has a stacked enough with his real supporters? within the party, he's in their terms of its
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own now. i felt party, he's in their terms of its own now. ifelt the party, he's in their terms of its own now. i felt the citrus work at the acceptance stage of grief. a lot of the mps who didn't figure would jeremy corbyn simplyjust an internal to the labour conference to share. they basically know it is not their party any more. a lot of the activist mps have seemingly accepted that. yet it has the been dominated by brexit talk and there has been disagreements, divisions that have their undoing to some extent when they try to get a message across. we sought keir starmer pudding remain oi'i sought keir starmer pudding remain on the table. —— we saw. getting a really hot sending, a slow one. —— putting were made. a really hot pink... i thought he kinda snuck in the line about... he said there was all agreed at the meeting and donald all agreed at the meeting and donald a got the wrong end of the stuck clearly. that really did up the split their but also, it was applauded to apply quite an odd way.
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not a normal congratulation. it slowly trickle. that is a very accurate representation of where labour is. this looked to the daily telegraph. somebody open for a standing ovation small, theresa may. she has a wood to go until she has the conservative conference but she is in new york and going to make a sales pitch. —— she has a week to go. we already got the third lowest rate of corporation tax and the g20. here she say we will flash to the lowest to make it attractive to business to get rid of some more regulation or what is being dubbed as smart regulation. applause laughter it isn't that big a cut but many people don't think it is low enough. it is really setting out a big gap between labour and the conservatives here. we have labour oi'i conservatives here. we have labour on one conservatives here. we have labour on one hand saying business is about
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time dance to the problems they created and baking. and then you have theresa may saint post brexit, we will be very welcoming to businesses. we will be cutting corporation tax according to this to 17% as a country. that would be the same rate in singapore. we would have the lowest. a couple of things that intrigued me about this. why do being run out, the telegraph, a pro—british paper, the positioning process theresa may broadening the eu. -- process theresa may broadening the eu. —— being run now. terry get into a bad tax haven if they give us a bad deal. i'm a fan of the fact that you smart regulation and quotation marks without clarification. what a smart about the? find out on page two. most of all, this plan i'm pretty sure was of the tory ma nifesto, pretty sure was of the tory manifesto, so fair play for giving a big speech to business leaders on something we should know already.
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the ft has got a picture of donald trump with a rather wry smile. addressing the un general assembly, he was rather taken aback when they laughed at him. they did. and rather good bit of video. he announced how wonderful a job he was doing, and the un laughed and actually, not to give him any credit really, but he did that sort of actually handle it 0k did that sort of actually handle it ok but towards the end of the speech, he went on and lost all energy and kind of paces out and he seemed like a half falling asleep. but of course, he did his usual kick boxing of going through all the people he hated and had a goal and i ran and all the usual suspects. a standard trunk space for the reaction was quite brilliant. nothing more damning with a really powerful man than laughter. —— a standard donald trump space. you can be booed and he would love it. he
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saidi be booed and he would love it. he said i wasn't expecting that. yet the headline here is about him doing his rattle around about people who don't like and this is about oil prices in opec and saying we are tired of being ripped off. the famous cartel of oil—producing agents. we can expect those prices to just tumble straightaway now. let's move to the mail. really some pictures here at the bottom. bill cosbyin pictures here at the bottom. bill cosby in handcuffs after that sentencing today. yes. a guy who was one of the biggest stars in america, brought low by the series of women who came forward when they were not listened to, the woman came forward and eventually, that was enough to tip the balance. it is the fact that all of those individual women were willing to collectively come together to put their names and reputations and the public facings
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on the line number to take this guy down and now he is probably going to jailand down and now he is probably going to jail and that we are with him in handcuffs. when of them described his accusers as a hallelujah moment. i thought that was after all those years, some of these offences outside of the statue limitations but they go back to 1965. extraordinary catalogue. what are the most powerful front pages in the us done on him was that he said and then she said in a repeated she said she said. because it was this examiner catalogue and the depressing part of that is how many women it seems to take to have the value of one man's voice but the right result here. let's being made of the significance of this, i'm not sure if i'm right to say it is the first really prominent conviction but put in the context of the me to move and this is a big one. suddenly. especially since the activation which he denies. —— metoo
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moment. no court cases that have worked their way to the system yet since the harvey weinstein accusation/ year. now it feels like every week, public accusations being made against somebody in the us, and i think you would be very brave hollywood .tv started out to be acting in this way. it is clear that some sort of levy has broken. the judge had pretty strong on this case and made the point that you are a famous person but this is the message going out that nobody is above the law. yes, but the point being that have been above the law foran being that have been above the law for an awful long time. there will bea for an awful long time. there will be a lot of people who this comes very late to or in some cases, other accusers who will have died when this happens. it is greyjustice has been seen to be done here. but it has taken been seen to be done here. but it has ta ken clearly been seen to be done here. but it
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has taken clearly to long and it is too difficult. —— it is great. has taken clearly to long and it is too difficult. -- it is great. take us too difficult. -- it is great. take us back to the telegraph. turn to the bottom, benching girls overtake voice. we are laying claim to fame here, not great way. at the risk of...i here, not great way. at the risk of... i don't want to be got. i don't want to be complacent about drinking but when you read the story, this isn't teenage is going to get getting drunk every weekend. actually, the young generation are remarkably outstanding disc. they drink less than their predecessors and take fewer drugs. they have less six. they're pretty well behaved. i don't think is actually necessarily the worst worse behaviour imaginable. ithink the worst worse behaviour imaginable. i think we highlight how bad kids are but however what it is saying is that a mature opinions, teenage girls in england scotland and wales, three to the top six places, we are not worse country at
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this. that is denmark. then the welsh is next. admit scotland and england. we are competing with denmark, hungary and lithuania and this. it is like eurovision. actually, teenage girls in the uk more likely than boys to get drunk twice as much. i was waiting for a month or something like that. twice as much. i was waiting for a month or something like thatm twice as much. i was waiting for a month or something like that. it is 15—year—old, so just before they can probably just still standing on 15—year—old, so just before they can probablyjust still standing on the edge of the bar trying to get served. you think you have relaxed about this? i think every single election in the gay shows modern teenagers are pretty happy with saying inside and being a snapchat. —— election and english 07. that's it for the papers this hour. i'll be back withjim waterson and rosamund urwin at 11:30. don't forget you can see the front pages of the papers online on the bbc news website.
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it's all there for you, seven days a week at bbc.co.uk/papers. and if you miss the programme any evening you can watch it later on bbc iplayer. next of my guests. we will see you later. —— thank you to both of my guest. good evening. tuesday may have been one day on the calendar but it brought two very different days of weather. for some, the evening ended like this. a beautiful and to the day there in hastings and east sussex. but earlier on in western scotland, it was more like that — some clouds, some outbreaks of rain, more of a breeze as well. a look at this cloudy and wet and windy weather across the northwestern parts of the uk. as we go on through the night but as a consequence of all of that it is going to be mild.
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you can see the orange shades in our temperature chart. temperatures generally holding up into double digits whereas further south under clear skies it is going to be another chilly night. particularly in rural spots down towards the southeast where in some places we might again get down to freezing. and then into tomorrow, where we have that chilly start in the south and the odd mist patch but will have the best of the sunshine. north wales and northwest england as well as northwest ireland have some cloud and some patchy rain in the morning. it should brighten up a little bit into the afternoon. rain continues to pile in across north and western scotland brought in on a brisk westerly wind. but where you can get some shelter to the eastern side of scotland here, there will be some sunshine. and in that sunshine in aberdeen, we are looking at a top temperature of around 21 degrees. and this is a similar story for hall, for birmingham, for norwich, this temperatures into the low 20s celsius. and then as we go for wednesday night, the rain across western scotland will tend to edge its way for the north for a time. it will then sink its way southeast towards us again as we go through the day on thursday. it is a weakening feature so a band
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of cloud and patchy rain sinking its way southeast worth across scotland and northern ireland to the southeast of that, some fog patches to start the day. then we see some sunshine and some real work across southern and eastern areas. this is the warmest day of the week with temperatures up to around 23 degrees. but behind this weakening band of cloud and rain, there's some fresh air working its way. and as we go through thursday night, we push that band of cloud just a few spots of rain by this stage southwards. this associated with a cold front. behind that we get into some fresher air, high pressure still in charge building its way back in from the west. so what that means for you as you head towards the weekend is that we will see some cool days, some chilly nights, some spells of sunshine and for most of us, it will remain dry. this is bbc news. i'm rachel schofield. the headlines at 11pm: the american comedian bill cosby has been sentenced to between three and ten years
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in prison for drugging and molesting a woman in 200a. thejudge said he is a sexually violent predator. labour votes to keep open the option of another eu referendum, and warns the prime minister if mps reject a brexit deal, she'll have to renegotiate. the government will then have to go back to the eu and say, "look, our parliament can't agree to this. these are the parameters that parliament wants us to negotiate on, and go back and do that." at the un, president trump delivers a blistering attack on iran, accusing it of sowing chaos, death and destruction. life expectancy in the uk has stopped improving for the first time since 1982.
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