tv The Papers BBC News November 13, 2018 10:45pm-11:00pm GMT
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evening this idea that this evening theresa may was apparently calling in the cabinet members one by one to try and convince them to back her, and before then tomorrow she has pm queues to get through and a crucial cabinet meeting at 2pm tomorrow which really will be a crunch. will all of the cabinets will be in position at 2pm tomorrow? we do not know yet. there is this fascinating echo of mrs bacher who at the very and had to call and her ministers one by one when she actually was then bought by the advice they gave her to give then bought by the advice they gave herto give up then bought by the advice they gave her to give up and back out. it is a really high—sta kes gay her to give up and back out. it is a really high—stakes gay men for theresa may because not everything in the deal which is also not quite finalised will appease the hard mind remainders or hard minds —— hard—line brexiteers.
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remainders or hard minds —— hard-line brexiteers. probably after the 2pm cabinet meeting, philip hammond looks like someone has jabbed him with an unclear or something. i am jabbed him with an unclear or something. lam not jabbed him with an unclear or something. i am not sure what happened there but he is startled by the approach. and the brexiteer has to get it through parliament in that they says it all. there are many circles of chaos here in the first one is the cabinet that he gets worse because you have to get the deal through parliament after that and that is where it gets very easy in terms of part that my politics. in terms of the headline now back me, who would theresa may be most worried about? in a cabinet, it will be the brexiteer supporters. weirdly enough you might think, one of the key figures is actually the brexit secretary himself because we have a man whosejob secretary himself because we have a man whose job it is to get a brexit deal and then get it excepted, who actually is not particularly in favour of getting a brexit deal in letting it be known that he thinks
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no deal would kind of be ok and indeed preferable. to a bad deal? yes. some of us would say that no deal is so bad, but in the deal would have to be pretty bad. there are would have to be pretty bad. there a re key would have to be pretty bad. there are key figures who might well walk tomorrow or they may wait and may walk when she is in difficulties as it goes through parliament. ligo now, if you have one shot at it to change direction in many people believe that the pm is not the one to change that direction and she is wedded to this, and to her credit, she is resilient but she won't do what they want which is find a different approach to brexit. so some are saying that there might be mass resignations when this deal probably won't go through parliament and that is the moment of weakness or her. is this deal pretty close to
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be checkers deal with a few wrinkles around it? it seems that way but what we are not too detailed, we are looking at what will be in a customs union for the british isles and that will be great britain and northern ireland in some checks in the irish sea. it is hideously complicated. it is checkers plus or minus and that means they have a sort of compromise about the northern irish question which means they cannot have a hard order between northern ireland and also keep northern ireland and the rest of the uk and pretty much a similar arrangement. imagine a swimming pool, the diebel is where the northern ireland is and gd is in the northern ireland is and gd is in the shallow end. there will be a problem getting it through parliament. swimming pools and
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chocolate eclairs, neither of which i was anticipating in this conversation. tickets to the express , conversation. tickets to the express, tell me if you are surprised that there is slightly more of an editorial view on the front of the express which has been a staunch a staunchly pro brexit paper. i would argue would get in line with theresa may to get us out with something next march and i am told or they would tell me that the express move down to backing theresa may with a possible spelling mistake in the headline. i think this is interesting because you could've imagined the daily express as he quietly —— as you said campaigning for leaving the eu for years, coming out tonight with a great betrayal type headline, that is supposedly what their suppose it here as i've been saying all afternoon but their headline and enormous type, this brexit deal is best for britain. it
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is putting the case for theresa may's deal and actually even the reporting is extremely straight on saying she has found this deal. they have an uncritical quote from hard chief whip saying it is exciting. not twisting any arms which is very unusual. i would say in terms of coverage from the papers it is a relatively fair when considering the fa ct relatively fair when considering the fact that in politics this deal has almost no friends. all the reaction tonight is from the irish broadcaster, which is different countries reporting what is going to happen so maybe... i do think it is the beginning, it is page one of war and peace but there is lots of pages to go. we are on the preface. is that 0k? it is, we still have a long
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way to go. deal or die is what the eyes says. —— deal done is what the eyes says. —— deal done is what the eyes says. —— deal done is what the eyes says. twitter is not sure on that. in her mind yes she has been a deal which he can do with the eu, it isa deal which he can do with the eu, it is a draft deal that is going to go through parliament and the eu have approval and i think it is nicely summarising all the hurdles ahead. just one point which is the government promises to show the full legal advice which is something that emerged via the house of commons today. how much does that matter? probably went mps come to vote in it, they will see the workings, that underlie the deal. i think it is worth mentioning on this absent
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question... i have written it on immediately. one of the things that happened immediately after downing street announced the deal has been done, and we will put it together tomorrow is the irish government we re tomorrow is the irish government were briefing quite heavily that it was not final and there were still technicalities on this order issued to be ironed out. and that is as high up as the deputy prime minister briefing this. the key things are the easyjay, will the european court have any rights over as here and whether we can actually quit the deal after the transition period. how deep is the deep end of the swimming pool, that kind of thing. we will know tomorrow. swimming pool, that kind of thing. we will know tomorrowi swimming pool, that kind of thing. we will know tomorrow. i wanted to ask you, i think you are in the house of parliament, where the central lobby when all of this... house of parliament, where the central lobby when all of this. .. we we re central lobby when all of this. .. we were summoned by a text rum the tory
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mps to gaggle in the house of commons, and boris johnson mps to gaggle in the house of commons, and borisjohnson was doing a live bbc interview by and they all got very excited and upset. that was reacting to the irish broadcaster, trying to get the reaction for us to balance the cabinet as they go into numberten, looking at balance the cabinet as they go into number ten, looking at twitter and seeing others being really upset about the deal, and colour their view going in. it is probably an example of getting a retaliation in first. no one has resigned, is that right. no one has seemed to resign so right. no one has seemed to resign so far. it is very interesting though, as chris was saying those ha rd though, as chris was saying those hard brexit or is in the tory party thought it was incredibly important to get their version of what the deal meant out as quickly as possible so there was this rushing about to be on the telly for an hour
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and then at downing street, they got some of their supporters to appear on the tv and saying brilliant, at last. we have progress. to see how it will go tomorrow, will the momentum be with the objectors or those who say look, let's have something because it is on the mac asap on the way towards the exit. tomorrow will be a day that we all identified. one other word, are we enjoying matt on this quiz? is looking at the academy at 2pm and if you can read that it says the headline is eu and uk agreed final wording of the deal and it is brexit means brexit. back at the beginning of the hold process... some 20 months have a lack —— have elapsed. it has a groundhog day quality
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doesn't it? even if we'd talk about some other part of it. the other thing to focus on well away from brexit is on the front page, the photograph on the telegraph. couple have used this picture, a family photo to mark the 70th birthday of prince charles and his remarkable we thought looking at the picture for how uniformly tan they are on the teak bench. but they also, he has done a guest edit of the country life magazine which he talks about, as he is 70, people should look after the countryside, and adapt to march of time and adapting to generations, which is a conservative message, the essence of conservatism. that is how the
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telegraph and others aren't celebrating his birthday. that is it for the moment, but do not run off because you are back a little bit later. that is it. 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 later on bbc iplayer. thank you for the moment to my guests, miranda green from the ft, and christopher hope from the daily telegraph. we'll all be back for a longer look at the papers at 11:30. the weather is next. good evening, finally we lost the nuisance showers today and a much better day for many across the country and we take a look at the
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satellite picture from earlier on you can see how well broken the cloud was, as it came through, not quite pleasant out there but the cloud is now gathering out in the atla ntic cloud is now gathering out in the atlantic and a weather front will bring some rain to the west facing coast overnight tonight and into scotla nd coast overnight tonight and into scotland and northern ireland for tomorrow. when direction still south—westerly and still a mild source for another day at least and that means overnight lows will stay incredibly mild and instead of driving a lot of cloud generally across the country but we are only going to see temperatures falling between five and ii going to see temperatures falling between five and 11 degrees, pretty much where it should be by the middle of the day rather than through the night. some of the rain will be quite heavy as it moves its way through northern ireland in western scotland, the same time it will be pretty windy as well. the first thing in the morning we can see gusts of winds in excess of 45 mph in places in the rain will rattle throughout quite a pace and we are expecting improvement into the afternoon at the same time, not a bad day for england and wales,
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largely fine and dry, and decent spells of sunshine. here we see temperatures 13—15d and even in eastern areas of scotland, we see at least 15 if not higher with a little bit of shelter. looking further ahead, the weather story should settle down but we could have a problem with lighter winds at this time of year, in the early morning mist and fog which would produce a rather great end two our working week. you can see how the story is mainly quiet with its thing out in the atlantic and we become more under the influence of high pressure on the near continent. on thursday, a murky start to be day, hopefully that will lift away, to cloudy skies. whenever we have sunshine coming through, still some more particularly in england and wales, 14 to 17 degrees as a high. but looking further ahead, and the start
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of the week it stays dry at the wind will change direction for just a little bit cooler as we move into the start of the weekend. take care. this is bbc news. i'mjulian i'm julian worricker. the headlines at 11pm: hello, chancellor, is the agreement a good read? london and brussels produce a draft agreement on brexit. in downing street this evening, some ministers were shown what's been agreed, but there was evidence of deep division even before the contents were known. the prime minister's been very clear, that we've got to deliver the right dealfor clear, that we've got to deliver the right deal for britain that fulfils the terms of the referendum, that's in the interest of the united kingdom stop it the whole cabinet is united, and that's the right thing to do. for the first time in 1000 years, this place, this parliament will not have a say over the laws that govern this country. in california, a wildfire that has raged for five days is now officially the deadliest on record.
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