tv The Papers BBC News November 26, 2018 10:45pm-11:01pm GMT
10:45 pm
if‘ai‘it that has to be changed? and that has to be unchanged. who knows what little bits of wiggle room you could find, possibly in the political declaration, it is so tricky but she has nailed her colours to the mast. she is effectively on the titanic and the iceberg is huge, it is two weeks away and not showing any sign of changing course to avoid it. that is what is rarely puzzling at the moment. she is warning of uncertainty of not taking any steps to cause a different outcome. there isa to cause a different outcome. there is a chance, so they say, that labour could come to her rescue, evenif labour could come to her rescue, even ifjeremy corbyn does not want his mps to vote for it. downing street had a briefing for labour mps to try to win them over, a tactic by the way that would infuriate conservative mps, but fewer than 30 labour mps turned up to this, and when you have 90 of your own mps who have said they are not go to vote for it, then having 30 who are interested maybe interested is not
10:46 pm
going to balance the numbers. the telegraph, there has been an intervention from america. trump: made's deal means no trade deal. barack 0bama got into trouble when he intervened in the brexit discussions before the referendum but president trump is lying on anyway. it must have been a terrible day for theresa may, at least required a lot of stamina, and you would probably check your phone, or an aid does it, and then the president says he hates your deal as well stop not what you want at 90 at night but trump has been all over the place on this. if you remember, initially there was a loving, trump and may in washington. holding hands. this was going to be broken's future outside the you're. then when he was initially down on the deal, chequers plan, didn't like it at all, whenever bikey would ruin his visit with the queen, he wrote back and said, great future together. now
10:47 pm
he is down on the deal again. he has been the least reliable ally for theresa may. what happened to the special relationship? we question it. you're a memberthat special relationship? we question it. you're a member that very embarrassing plan that was leaked supposedly from number ten that was talking about all the things she was going to do, right down to the japanese prime minister she has seen everyone piling, the president says he hates it as well and now she finds out as well that shinto abbey, who was going to come for a visit to the —— shinzo abe is not going to come, and it is a hideous taper the prime minister and her deal. she doesn't have much choice to plough on with it because the eu 27 have said that is your lot. the referendum campaign, we had
10:48 pm
lots of interventions from foreign figures, barack 0bama was about the most popularfigure you figures, barack 0bama was about the most popular figure you can figures, barack 0bama was about the most popularfigure you can imagine that that time, and yet british voters said actually we will make this decision for ourselves and there is something to that that downing street wanted world leaders to help them but i think actually they are quite peripheral to this. this is a british debate, and we don't like people like jean—claude juncker or donald trump or are they telling us how to act and how to vote on this. yes, if the eichmann was we don't want people we haven't voted for in the european union telling us what to do, that will apply to lots of other foreign leaders. i think that's right, and in some ways they were trying to address some of that when she wrote the letter, which made the front page of some of the sunday newspapers, tried to make it direct, and quite an emotional appeal, quite and quite an emotional appeal, quite an unusually emotional appeal to the electorate, saying look, this is my offer, it has been a long and hard road but this is as good as it gets and these are the reasons we should
10:49 pm
support it. the problem is the noise coming from the other side is quite deafening at the moment. when you have people like borisjohnson getting the front pages of the telegraph and other papers... that he writes for. that he writes for, explaining why it is such a bad deal, knew how people in parliament unilaterally from all other party saying it is a bad deal conserver whether you are conservative or labour, it is very difficult to rise above that noise i think when there isn't anybody really speaking up for it. staying with the telegraph. police face calls on mental health issues every two minutes, having to pick up the pieces when people are not caught by the health service. pick up the pieces when people are not caught by the health servicem really is a tragic state of affairs for stop what this is saying is that they have now got so much on their hands to deal with people who really should be dealt with by the health service that it is actually stopping them from doing their day—to—day work, so dealing with those very serious incidents. and of course the
10:50 pm
prime minister, who was the home secretary of course, really tried to address this problem by looking at these places of safety, and that was supposed to be the big revolution in trying to sort of get the police away from having to deal with mental health at the sharp end, but it hasn't worked. and of course what this is exposing is the number of people that are needing that kind of acute help is growing and growing and really the only people that can deal with it will be your 909 professionals, and most often they will be police, who have to keep them safe in their cells. even if people end up in a&e, often the referrals they will have... exactly, the nhs is the part of the welfare state that has been most favoured by the government's economic policy, protect nhs funding, give it rising. what this underlines is that the
10:51 pm
welfare state as a whole has to be joined up and it has to have the people who are trained to deal with certain problems having the resources to deal with it, otherwise you have one week link in the chain becomes very congested, it becomes very problematic to address the needs of his people. the guardian, alarm as breast implant health risk. this is exclusive by the guardian. it feels like a revisiting of a story that we covered in a different form not that many years ago. the pip scandal about unsafe silicon implants being used. if you think about breast implants, one of the amazing things is that they are presented as a completely normal choice. celebrities use them, it is seen as almost an ethical decision rather than a medical one, about whether you want to change body, and it presents as a surgery with such frequency that you might not think there was any risk attached. what there was any risk attached. what the guardian is saying is, look, there have been some studies, they haven't shown that many publications
10:52 pm
but when you dig deep you find a very significant number of women report problems, they have more than 1200 serious incidents, often cases where more surgery 1200 serious incidents, often cases where more surgery is required, where more surgery is required, where there has been an allergic reaction, or where the implant has moved in a way it was not supposed to. there is a worry that there isn't the tracking that there should be the these kind of operations. when we were talking about the pip scandal it was because non—medical grade silicon was being used. he would have thought that had been stamped out but it appears not. no, it seems there are different varieties of this silicon material, andl varieties of this silicon material, and i think what has happened here is that in france they have started, so is that in france they have started, so there seems to be different regulations in different countries which has created some of the problems here, and in france they are talking about this specific type of silicon that has become very dangerous, this textured silicon, and although they have banned the use of that, in france, we are still using it in the uk here. other use of that, in france, we are still using it in the uk here. 0therthan the 1200 serious incidents, there
10:53 pm
have been links between popular textured material and very rare types of cancer, so it is building ona types of cancer, so it is building on a scheme, and now they are saying that lots of the other material that are used, the different and new material also has similar risks. the ft. material also has similar risks. the ft, bitcoin loses three quarters of value. bitcoin was worth a fortune if you had invested in the right time and got out at the right time. that is exactly the point with all these things, and often by the time he heard about some investment in your neighbour pops round and says have you tried bitcoin, that is most certainly the moment it is too late. a year ago it was $20,000, now down to 4000, so lost three quarters of its value. there is a bit of fun to be had because ms online forums like subtitles by red bee media., they are now crying and saying how unfair this whole system is. there is a real question. this was meant to be the future, bitcoin,
10:54 pm
the alternative to pounds and dollars and the conventional money we know, but regulators got worried, there are doubts about the currency, it uses a huge amount of electricity, a huge climate change problem as well, so the whole thing has proved to be rather less stable than people would have hoped. i am so than people would have hoped. i am so glad i didn't understand it well enough to even dabble. we have to think about it. i remember when we we re think about it. i remember when we were growing up we would use cash all the time, and were growing up we would use cash allthe time, and now were growing up we would use cash all the time, and now use our debit cards all the time, so i was assuming this would be the natural progression of events. but you don't hear about crypto currency that often today think it will take off ona often today think it will take off on a massive way, but it's as like they have had a massive downturn. staying with the ft for the last 0re, new havertz chart the full and rise of the british pub —— new habits chart the fall and rise was that they depends on location. the narrative we always hear about the
10:55 pm
numberof pubs narrative we always hear about the number of pubs closing, and actually the research that has been done is suggesting that, yes, they have falle n suggesting that, yes, they have fallen on the outskirts of towns and cities, but actually in the centres of cities and tourist areas, they have actually really taken off, and there is actually still life in pub life, which is great news. but it would see me half to diversify, you can't just rely would see me half to diversify, you can'tjust rely on alcohol sales to the pew afloat. exactly. if you don't enter the numbers i wonder if there would be something quite sad, talking about 10,000 pubs closing, and the ones that remain get bigger 01’ and the ones that remain get bigger orare and the ones that remain get bigger or are bigger, so it is those local pubs that maybe have a family owner 01’ pubs that maybe have a family owner or where you might get to know your community, not your big wetherspoon‘s, they are the ones struggling. the ones that do well serve food and maybe have the scale to survive, but i think 10,000 pubs that have closed the decade might be the ones that communities feel most
10:56 pm
attached to. journalists were always found in the pub the afternoon, that has changed, hasn't it? there used to be pubs at the end of our corridor in the house of commons, certainly not open to the hours it used to be. it was the same in local radio, you would have a liquid lunch and then take to the airwaves for the three cup bulletin under the influence. lots more people aren't thinking, for whatever reason. certainly not in the pub. 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 dot co uk forward slash papers — and if you miss the programme any evening you can watch it later on bbc iplayer. thank you to my guests this evening, caroline wheeler and henry mance. and we'll all be back for a longer look at the papers at 11:30. but for the moment, goodbye. the weather is next. good evening. heading towards our shores, each one
10:57 pm
preparing to bring about effort and windy weather, but as we go through the rest of tonight, still the last vestiges of the quiet chilly spell, because there will be some fog patches around, a touch of frost in places, many spots will be dry through the night. down to the south—west though, here's our first batch of wind and rain. as we go through tomorrow, things turning wet very quickly across the south—west of england, a good part of wales and northern ireland, heavy burst of rain with strong gusty winds, 50 mph 01’ so some rain with strong gusty winds, 50 mph oi’ so some exposed rain with strong gusty winds, 50 mph or so some exposed coastal spots in the west. the print of the day, this rain will continue to push eastward,
10:58 pm
behind it now to something milder, 12 degrees in plymouth, head of the rain band, east anglia into lincolnshire and yorkshire, probably staying dry, staying quiet chilly as well. wet in north—west england, the rain pushing out of northern ireland for the end of the day but then setting and across south—west scotland. quite a lot of wind arrows on the chart, strong and gusty winds across the western side of scotland. as we go through tuesday night, we will see that first batch of wet weather clearing away, but more to come. no weather clearing away, but more to come. n0 pressure once again weather clearing away, but more to come. no pressure once again winding itself up in the atlantic. wednesday will be a very windy day. widespread gales across the country. al breaks of rain pushing north—eastwards. good to see 50 —— wiggo 250 millimetres of rain in southern scotland. these are the wind gusts, some exposed sounds in the west. look at the temperatures, 12 to 15 degrees, the winds coming from the south or south—west pulling some
10:59 pm
pretty mild air our way. then into thursday, you guessed it, another low starting to spin up. this could be quite wet and windy on thursday. as we head towards the weekend, still u nsettled as we head towards the weekend, still unsettled but perhaps not quite as windy. this is bbc news. the headlines at 11: nasa's insight spacecraft lands sucessfully on mars. the first of its kind designed to study the internal structure of the planet. a day after striking the deal in brussels, theresa may goes to parliament to face critics from all sides of the house of commons. we are back this deal, deliver on the vote of the referendum, and move on to making a brighterfuture of opportunity and prosperity for all oui’ opportunity and prosperity for all our people, or this house can choose to reject our deal and go back to square to reject our deal and go back to square one. meanwhile, president donald trump warns that the prime minister's deal may make it harder for britain to trade with the united states.
11:00 pm
53 Views
IN COLLECTIONS
BBC News Television Archive Television Archive News Search ServiceUploaded by TV Archive on