tv The Papers BBC News October 2, 2018 10:45pm-11:01pm BST
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soa so a few different headlines but let's be honest there's no escaping from the tory party conference in any of the papers, and let's start with the mail. very arresting headline if nothing else. daggers drawn and this is obviously in the wa ke drawn and this is obviously in the wake of borisjohnson‘s appearance of the tory conference today. he sort of arrived like a walking bomb and did his bit, and of course the media loved him. and he does a good show. he really should go into acting. he does a good show and is exactly what he intended to do which is to destabilise this very important conference for them and theresa may. you say that, but he did he do or say anything that changed anything? 1500 people turned up changed anything? 1500 people turned up to his changed anything? 1500 people turned . ig changed anything? 1500 people turned up to his gig which is a fringe gate and the home secretary was talking
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the same time and barely less than half of it was full. they love the showman. he's a break in my view, he is totally unreliable as the only thing he cares about is himself. he's like one of those characters from the roman hierarchy. false modesty, no, idon‘t from the roman hierarchy. false modesty, no, i don't want the crown, i really don't want the crown. and then stabbing theresa may in the fronts today. interesting using the media loves him because the grassroots. interesting with the getty male commenters had to say. deeply disloyal, profoundly unrealistic and for once i agree with them. i think they're right on the subject. the other interesting approach from the mail is just as they need unity to crush corbyn they say he has scared them. jeremy
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corbyn will be looking at this feeling quite pleased about it and many in the party will. suddenly they look of boris johnson as a liability. one of the things i have to say we look to the other papers is theresa may earlier today, they're also treating borisjohnson like a spoiled child of an aristocrat. and they are nannies. and have to put up with the snottiness. they should stop it actually. they should name and shame and slap him. i don't mean physically. he has gotten away with people not trading him seriously and for some reason the british people seem for some reason the british people seem to have an affection for him. they like the buffoonery and shambling sides. people should call him out. he's a very dangerous man. it's fair to say he won't be on
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either of your christmas card lists. let's move onto the telegraph. cabinet demands may set the date to quit. she faces threats everywhere. what can she do? i think all she can do is hang on. the story tells you thatis do is hang on. the story tells you that is no agreement in the cabinet and some of them want her to quit as soofi as and some of them want her to quit as soon as break happens is something she should move onto the election probably to carry of the blame. no one quite knows in the conservative party what direction they can go in have not got a plan they can go and have not got a plan they can go and have not got a plan that is no but they all does theresa may but they're happy to let her take the blame. the coveted reactions of the abolition is it the rest of the world doesn't exist at the moment for them. there are more people now wondering whether they knew what they are voting for this a demand for the people's vote. there's a lot
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of serious business to be thinking about and they are like rats in the sack and i don't understand. i do feel, and i've never everfelt sorry for any tory in my life, but sometimes i do these days feel how does she put up with this? she is incredibly resilient. and she has been written off many times before and she is still here. because they never give up. she has been written off as she still there but this really not a viable candidate to replace her. they say they're looking for a new and fresh leader to reinvigorate the party and take them into the next election and kill off the threat ofjeremy corbyn. them into the next election and kill off the threat of jeremy corbyn. my dearjacob is the man. one of the things she could do is really make a rousing speech tomorrow at the conference, not cough, get through
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it. perhaps, with some big ideas and so it. perhaps, with some big ideas and so let's look at the guardian because they along with some of the other papers i have to say are reporting what she is going to talk about in this speech. many appeals to quote a the patriots in effort to halt the leadership bid. samuel johnson said patriotism is the last refuge of the scoundrel. i hate it when people start whipping up this false patriotism and they have got nothing else to say. poverty has increased genetically. the cuts to austerity is hurting people. when we took about that instead of this vacuous patriotism? the descent from a moderate and patriotic? what does it mean? it does not mean anything. it is no direction for the country is going to does not map of away of how we can approach a very uncertain future, it'sjust jargon. she will
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end this by drawing onjeremy future, it'sjust jargon. she will end this by drawing on jeremy corbyn for the many of the few slogans. she will say it should be not for the few was a for anyone willing to do their best. it's the working poor that are suffering and have been suffering under these people. it's as if the wind rush scandal never happened. i saw him andrew marsh and show is unrepentant. happened. i saw him andrew marsh and show is unrepentantlj happened. i saw him andrew marsh and show is unrepentant. i expect which he speaks tomorrow we will be led to believe austerity never happened. they have said other things. should we pause from this conference for a moment? we better go and buy our flags. amazon raises minimum wage as critics prompt jeff does flags. amazon raises minimum wage as critics promtheff does is to listen. they're good to raise the
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minimum wage for workers in the uk and according to the ft it's unlikely to move the needle. so presumably that of a job that a mack truck in the ocean. the amount of money he has got is amazing. it won't stagger them. they were effectively on zero—hour contracts. and having to give state benefits i mean in the united states bernie sanders suggested big companies whose employees are on benefit should be taxed more and they should be. amazon has undercut a lot of businesses across the entire world. and throwing people out of work and yet there are paying people peanuts. ages 18 in five trading days he made
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$6.1 billion. five days. and this he thinks is going to win him praise and applause? that he is paying his, giving them one more peanut? but it is unusual for bosses of these kinds ofjobs. tony's is unusual for bosses of these kinds of jobs. tony's kudla the right. -- com pletely of jobs. tony's kudla the right. -- completely right. all the stories about how they cannot even go to the bathroom without being punished for it orfalling ill, or it'sjust, it's worse than the victorian period. the commitment in the united states and united kingdom to deregulation and to lose workers' rights is appalling, and brexit will allman make that worse.|j rights is appalling, and brexit will allman make that worse. i think it's fairto allman make that worse. i think it's fair to sayjeff will not be a christmas card list. moving on is interesting yasmin he mentioned that
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sajid javid was making his covers featuring empty hall and boris johnson was making his buddy didn't make interesting announcement which the times is trumpeting out after a few investigations of forced marriage victims to get protection. this is really good it is notjust the times, many of us have been writing about this for 30 years. there has been in nervousness about really tackling this issue in a practical way and if this actually happens i hope it's not used as another way to control the judgement immigration and marriages between agreed partners but where it is forced and proven to be forced the spouse will not be getting a visa which is good. one thing is interesting, it's not only women who are forced into marriages it's also man. this is an important regulation if fairly implemented. the fear is,
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and put a lot of people have e—mailed me and said this isjust another way of stopping people coming, soi another way of stopping people coming, so i don't know. i don't trust anybody anymore. do i assume you'll agree on this one as well? yes. the problem was that when the victims of forced marriage or abuse wa nt victims of forced marriage or abuse want it to stop the sauce is coming to the country they had to make public statements and i love them anonymity. that executes different because obviously people of forced marriages have issues within the family that want them in this marriage. as one of the things that ijust thought, marriage. as one of the things that i just thought, the fact that he is of those bum and pakistani background make it easierfor him to do this. because of course there was a lwa ys do this. because of course there was always the nervousness that it would be seen as somehow prejudiced where it is if somebody like him is going to do this at the right reasons, and in the right way, it may be the
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first time i've actually supported the home secretary for the tory party. it's been a night of firsts. we must posit there. that's it for the papers for this hour. don't forget you can see the front pages of the papers online on the bbc news website. 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 thank you to my guests, tony evans and yasmin alibhai—brown. and we'll all be back for a longer look at the papers at 11:30pm. but for the moment, it's goodbye. good ending. today brought a few different types of weather across the uk. it does to the sunshine was around the areas of scotland and dutiful blue skies and a keen
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breeze. further south wales saw a lot of cloud and drizzle. because even sell a picture extensive cloud effect in many southern and western parts of england and wales also clearer skies at the northeast. more of us would get into this cloudy and mild and humid weather as we go into wednesday because this warm front will be working its way northeast. behind that of the name suggests the airturns behind that of the name suggests the air turns warmer. also quite moist and humid. that's going to bring a lot of cloud it to go through the rest of tonight. the coasts and hills in the west. users scotland in northeast england clear skies for good part of the night. as temperatures would dip away as they hold up to double digits. more mild areas is no on through tomorrow. some coasts and hills in the west and operates the rain but i'm hopeful that this guy was at times
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grey cup to give spells of sunshine and when that happens will be in the warm air. as temperatures will climb quite nicely up to around 20 degrees. going into thursday the southern areas of the stage. the north and west is bringing outbreaks of rain and some be in the heavy side and that heralds the arrival of a slightly different to the weather because this rain is associated with a cold front which will slip southwards as we develop wriggles along this system and we will hold in place across the part of the uk. the humid airsea in place across the part of the uk. the humid air sea quite dense fog patches and he tearing to get spousal sunshine and warmth. to the north spousal sunshine him but among nine of the weather front will still see some cloud and patchy rain. that's edited we can look like
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saturday will bring heavy rain some of us and uncertainty about where but for the majority sunday should be dry. this is bbc news. i'm rebecca jones. the headlines at 11: boris johnson fiercely criticises the prime minister's brexit plan at the conservative conference. this is to do that. there are is time. this is the moment to chuck chequers. he will put on a good show. what we have been doing here at conference and what matters to people out there is what the government does and what we focus on in terms of their day—to—day lives. new immigration rules after brexit. focus will be on the skills workers bring to the uk, not where they are from. the desperate race to save lives in indonesia, as the death toll reaches 1,300 and continues to rise. this city has,
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