tv The Papers BBC News November 27, 2018 11:30pm-12:01am GMT
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‘ by this stage. the little bit chilly by this stage. the best of the dry weather on friday, down to the south. the further north you look, more showers, some heavy with hail and thunder, perhaps wintry over high ground and those tensed closer to the average for the time of year, 8—10. that low pressure d rifts time of year, 8—10. that low pressure drifts to menorca, but into the weekend, more areas of low pressure and frontal systems waiting in the wings. but these look like they will affect central and southern parts. the further north you are, the better chance of staying dry. chilly across northern scotland. from saturday night into sunday morning, in the north of scotla nd sunday morning, in the north of scotland we could get a touch of frost. on sunday further south, some areas of cloud, showery rain at times and those temperatures ranging from 13 in plymouth to just six times and those temperatures ranging from 13 in plymouth tojust six in aberdeen. heading into the start of next week, more of the same. more areas of low pressure pushing in from the west, but for the middle of the week, it looks increasingly
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likely like this bump in the isobars will move in. a drier interlude with high—pressure. depending on where the high end is up, we might tap into some cold air and relatively mild air. looks like don might like —— ends up. the middle of the week should be drier. even though we could get relatively mild air, with those, conditions, we could see the return of some overnight frost. —— calmer conditions. hello. this is bbc news. we'll be taking a look at tomorrow mornings papers in a moment. first, the headlines. eighteen migrants, including a baby, have been rescued from two small boats in the english channel as they tried to reach the uk. theresa may has started her tour of the uk to sell the controversial brexit deal, which has been widely criticised by mps. a bus company has been fined almost £2.5 million,
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after one of its drivers crashed into a supermarket, killing two people. global efforts to tackle climate change are way off track according to the un, as it details the first rise in co2 emissions in four years. and tributes have been paid to baroness trumpington, a wartime code breaker and former minister, who's died aged 96. hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are the guardian columnist, dawn foster and the former trade minister, lord digbyjones. many of tomorrow's front pages are already in. voters want mps to back theresa may's brexit deal, according to a poll carried out for the daily mail. ‘the brexit backpedalling begins', says the telegraph, which writes that theresa may is going to block the publication of the full legal advice behind her brexit deal.
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the guardian also leads on politics, saying customers of britain's 7,000 biggest companies would be given the right to vote on executives' pay under new labour plans. the i leads on an international hearing on social media, where a facebook executive was quizzed by mps from nine countries over the compa ny‘s use of personal data. the rotherham abuse victim who says that the father of her child was invited to play a role in her son's life makes the front page of the times. sammy woodhouse, who waived her anonymity to demand a change in the law, also appears on the front page of the express. meghan made kate cry, claims the sun, who report on an alleged rift between the two royals over princess charlotte's bridesmaid dress. and the mirror also leads on the duchess of sussex, who say the security bill for prince harry and meghan‘s new home could cost £5 million.
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we will have a look at at least some of those, not necessarily the bridesmaids dress, but who knows? rather rate victim reveals a new ca re rather rate victim reveals a new care scandal. i am really glad we can carry this first because this is disgraceful. at a time of brexit everywhere, the times and the express everywhere, the times and the ex press a re everywhere, the times and the express are putting this up for a close and personal. the important thing, this amazing woman is prepared not only to just come out, but go photograph on a national newspaper front but go photograph on a national newspaperfront page. but go photograph on a national newspaper front page. god but go photograph on a national newspaperfront page. god bless her and well done. she asked her son's commission it she could do this and she he has given her consent. this is about local authority that says, the law says that we have to offer
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the law says that we have to offer the chance to apply for parental rights to the two parents. the man raped this woman, has gone down for 35 years for multiple rape, is inside and some local authority official rights to him and says you have the right to start communication with the product of your disgusting crime. the very fact that some local authority official would have written that letter, or e—mailed, i don't know what it is, didn't official think, the law might say i do this club at should i take this upstairs, shouldn't i ask somebody where is the common sense in this? the point is, it is the law apparently, there are legal requirements. absolutely. whichever
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council official has done this has basically looked through all of the documents that they have to abide by, look at the rules and as has been pointed out, politicians and governments and the legal system has said that this person does have pa re ntal said that this person does have parental rights to the child, even if the child was conceived without the mother 's consent. this will not be the only case that this has happened in the past beforehand, it isjust because this extraordinarily brave woman has come forward first of all to testify against her rapist and to basically talk about the fact that even after he has been put behind bars, she and her son have to face the repercussions of his crime. there need to be more stipulations in place to protect victims, but also victims children. interestingly, she has called for new rules to ensure that no rapist will ever be able to access a child conceived through rate. she has said
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this is not just conceived through rate. she has said this is notjust happening to me, to people all over the country, it is wrong and has got to stop. then the council officials say that council insists it is merely following legal guidelines, but then a formal —— eight former social security ‘s director is quoted as saying, that is those contemporary fashions and ideologies underpinning the notion that perpetrators are victims and hence deserve equal status to who they abuse. i wanted to pick up on that, what is your take on that view? it's that where we have got to, perverse contemporary fashions? it seems very vague statement. one of the issues here is that because basically rape is such a difficult crime to convicted and rape conviction rates are very low, i think there will be a lot of grey areas in the law that look at. for instance, if you are convicted of rape and it is overturned later, at
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what point are people banned from seeing children in the interim? it's probably what has happened here. there has been some strange grey areas and overlaps, but it chose one of the problems with the law, showing that it looks at very specific rules and when it comes under council guidance, it means people 's feelings and how it translates to real—life scenarios are completely awed and it has had completely horrible repercussions. you are right. an excellent analysis, but surely there is a human being who write this letter to the sky. before they did that, wouldn't they just did the sky. before they did that, wouldn't theyjust did i ought to ta ke wouldn't theyjust did i ought to take this upstairs, to somebody somewhere and say can you give me guidance here because the law says i should do this and it is ridiculous. he might have done, we don't know. it is interesting to see what local mpforsaid, she it is interesting to see what local mp for said, she has spoken out over this issue for a number of years.
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and appalling example of the law being set up to favour the perpetrator that worked against the rights of the abuse survivor. and her involvement in this goes back to the initial independent enquiry, taking us back to 2014 and before. it is all well and good to say that the law is a ass and there are times where it it is. it is an active, moving thing that depends on people and one might say that people are and one might say that people are and ass sometimes. and her decision to waive anonymity... how brave! we are going to the guardian, an interesting division of opinion on this. you can go first on this as it is your paper, an exclusive written by larry elliott, labour to give customers of big firms vote on boardroom pay. what do you think? one of the university of sheffield's key economist have come out with a
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package that will help workers rights and address inequality. the big issue that the fact is that the uk has had the weakest wage growth of like nine developing countries. there are a few packages that might help curb this and the fact that the 10% of the poorest in the uk are getting poorer and the top 10% are getting poorer and the top 10% are getting richer. one of those is that stakeholders and consumers getting more say on bonuses and all sorts of things and that rises in chief executive pay. another example is quite a good one, which is that the report says that bonuses should only be paid in cash, rather than shares and dividends. that could help corruption, also looking at, when it comes to high pay, reporting those and looking at the gender and
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ethnicity of the highest—paid. it is a good package that could try to stop the worst excesses at the top and make things a lot fairer. also putting in pay ratios so that the very poorest in a company and never paid much much less as a ratio of the richest. you are rustling your guardian with intent. we have never done the paper review together. i am pleased to see that we were not falling out. we are about to. you don't need to fall out over it! larry elliott, what you don't know is that he has written another article saying that labour have come out for free beer for everybody on fridays and everybody can have a lot of money given to them on tuesdays and vote labour and everybody will run off into the sunset. in case anybody thinks that is accurate, we should say that your time is firmly in your cheek but do go on. absolutely. it is a typical thing
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that an opposition party, especially a marxist, hard left, business hating party, would say. she sips her water at this point!|j hating party, would say. she sips her water at this point! i agree with the last bit of what she said, which is a good piece of work that says are the top jobs and the biggest pay going to white anglo—saxon males, what about ethnic diversity? what about opportunity? it's it being realised? —— is it. that sort of thing, is first—class. then they spoil that by saying this! customers will vote on this. can someone customers will vote on this. can someone explain to me how do you identify what the customer is, what do you do, if you shop and spend £70 per week at tesco and do it for 33 weeks of you get points, stamps and a vote on the bosses pay. bring it back to the issue which they are trying to deal with... back to the issue which they are trying to deal with. .. that is not what they are trying to say. what is
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a customer? i am interested in... in a customer? i am interested in... in a digital world you will have customers in moscow and bucharest. get to the point where they are trying to address a problem, if that is not the way of doing this, what is not the way of doing this, what is the way? firstly, if you are a private company and you have risk your money and you risk your reputation and you have never seen yourfamily is reputation and you have never seen your family is on the way reputation and you have never seen yourfamily is on the way up, reputation and you have never seen your family is on the way up, you are your family is on the way up, you a re successful your family is on the way up, you are successful and you own 100% of this, what on earth does a politician has to do with telling you how much pay you take out of the business? all labour want is to make everything compulsory all forbidden. but if there is a consistent division between the rich and poor... there is clearly an abuse with undeserved bonuses. i will not mention names. there is a big difference, isn't that? for instance, iam difference, isn't that? for instance, i am on record for saying the boss of bt gets fired, and it is
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a couple of million quid for his leaving present. that is ridiculous, why was he rewarded for his underperformance? that isjeremy corbyn‘s mills. if you look at 70 undeserved cases, you understand that reward is a different thing. we are trying to take a sledgehammer to crack a nut of unfairness and that isa crack a nut of unfairness and that is a shame because you will throw the baby out with the bathwater. there won't be a business community because they would have all gone to another country and you end up taxing the poor. a response to that for windows on. the labour party on common is. the labour party on common islj didn't say communists, said marxists, there's a difference —— aren't communists. you don't understand what marxists are either! this is a big report from the university of sheffield, who have looked deeply into this, and they've
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found ways this could work in business. the labour party have done what the conservative party aren't really doing at the moment, looking at what could happen after brexit, what could happen once we've got this out of the way and looking at new and interesting ways we can address inequality. most people are very unhappy with how much profit a lot of these people make. the vast majority haven't seen wages increase in the last ten years, more and more are on zero houi’s in the last ten years, more and more are on zero hours contracts and if the university of sheffield have found a way to look at how to give people more of a say in the companies that own their lives, that's a good thing. i should make one thing clear... very briefly. it might be that jeremy corbyn and one thing clear... very briefly. it might be thatjeremy corbyn and mr macdonald aren't marxists today, that should be said, that's not true, but what is true is they are ha rd left true, but what is true is they are hard left — — true, but what is true is they are hard left —— mcdonnell. true, but what is true is they are hard left -- mcdonnell. we should move on, we've had our disagreement on that. let's look at brexit and
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mrs may's vote, according to what the sun are saying is they will lose this vote by 200. it's not looking good. it's been quoted, so who is saying this? lots of people have been doing of numbers at the stop .mac moment. if you look at who is likely to back it, it is almost nobody —— at the moment. the dup have had a firm line. the lib dems aren't backing it. the dup aren't backing it. how many people in the tory party will rebel? the numbers are looking terrible for theresa may. it was mentioned yesterday that theresa may said if she lost the first vote by under 100 then she saw herself" still in the game". if it is 200, what is she going to do? that would be astonishing. she said here she would carry on pushing it until it gets through parliament. here she would carry on pushing it until it gets through parliamentm is seconds out, round one, isn't it? the first shot across the bow wake
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up, people! the sun is no fan of eight! exactly. i take up, people! the sun is no fan of eight! exactly. itake the up, people! the sun is no fan of eight! exactly. i take the figure with a pinch of salt —— the sun is i'io with a pinch of salt —— the sun is no fan of it. what are you thinking? around 100 you were saying. i think the same. the significant thing is numberio has the same. the significant thing is number 10 has warned the pm will not ditch the deal and it will keep pushing it through parliament until it passes. that comes straight out of the eu rulebook, doesn't it? fred juncker, jean—claude juncker, you've got a country that says we don't like the new, we want a referendum, and when you're told that that's not 0k and when you're told that that's not ok you do it again until you get it right —— the eu. they've got previous. theresa may has learned from that. if she loses in the first time around, there might be some sort of mechanism where people have the chance to think about the consequences “— the chance to think about the consequences —— if she loses it.
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they go back and they think again. she's counted on it. there's no way the conservatives generally think they will get it through on the first goat. she is counting on there being a second vote. at the moment, according to buzzfeed, apparently she has a team called project vote working in number 10 day and night to work out how they can force this through the second time —— first go. abstaining might be a way of putting it off second time round. let's finish with baroness trumpington, i know you met her, digby. extraordinary woman. yes. a person who, when you look at some of the trials and tribulations that affect us trials and tribulations that affect us all in life generally and public life today, we don't know the half of it. this woman... i was in the lord's with her for some years, and she wasjust lord's with her for some years, and she was just an amazing person. by
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the way, that doesn't make her perfect and it doesn't mean she was. . . perfect and it doesn't mean she was... everything she did was absolutely right, but when you think she was part of the code breaking team at ditchley park —— bletchley park, and she was the oldest minister we concluded, not cabinet, oldest minister ever. then she rocks up oldest minister ever. then she rocks up at the age of 19 and starts doing have i got news for you. this is something else, isn't it? i will say to the millennial generation, before you think you are hard done by, look at that woman. thoughts finally? a great woman, a bletchley park code breaker. a big stalwart in parliament. she had a very exciting and varied life, and she carried on to the end. she enjoyed herself in the lord's. a great sense of humour. and that v sign. some people who were archaic from the second world war, that's what she was accused of.
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clearly implying she was quite old. she reminded him that she was cerci amiens. a good way to end. thank you both very much —— churchillian. that's it for the papers tonight. 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. if you miss the programme any evening you can watch it later on bbc iplayer. good evening. here's your latest sports news. manchester united and manchetser city have both booked their places in the last 16 of the champions league tonight. united did it with an injury—time winner against swiss side young boys, while for city, a point against lyon was enough to send them to the knockout stages. sports correspondent
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david ornstein reports. playing at these so—called theatre of dreams has become something of a nightmare for manchester united this season. nightmare for manchester united this season. against young boys, a fine chance to recapture their old habit of winning, though marcus rashford quickly showcased united's more recent trend, failing to find the net. managerjose mourinho unimpressed. young boys began to grow in belief and would have taken the lead if david de gea hadn't intervened. that save proved all the more crucial when maroune fellaini struck in stoppage time to lift the gloom and to some interesting celebrations. in lyon, manchester city fell behind toa in lyon, manchester city fell behind to a breathtaking goal by cornet. the visitors responded well, however. nothing was stopping this laporte effort from levelling the scores. although cornet had looked to have got the decisive blow, city
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had other ideas. sergio aguero securing a point and their passage to the last 16. david ornstein, bbc news. david ornstein, bbc news. leicester are through to the quarter—finals of the league cup after beating southamton 6—5 on penalties at the king power stadium. the match had been rearranged from october following the death of leicester's owner and four others in a helicopter crash outside the stadium. the game went to straight to penalties after finishing goalless in normal time. and after both teams' first five spotkicks went in, southampton's manolo gabbiadini's shot was saved before leicester's nampalys mendy converted for the win. leeds have moved into the automatic promotion places in the championship after a late penalty save secured a 1—0 win against reading. leeds made the break through mid way through the second half when stuart dallas eventually fired home to make it 1—0. reading are desperate for points themselves at the bottom end of the second tier, but leeds goalkeeper bailey peacock—farrell saved their 88th minute spot kick to deny them a point. elsewhere, norwich stay top of the table despite a 0—0 draw at hull city, sheffield united went up to fourth by beating brentford, and middlesbrough were held to a 1—1 draw at preston. sol campbell's been
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appointed manager of the english football league's bottom side macclesfield town after agreeing an 18—month contract. the former england defender was in attendance for this evening 1—0 win against promotion chasing exeter, that's just their third win of the season. they're still three points adrift at the foot of league two. campbell had previously complained that his managerial career in england has been hampered by a lack of opportunity for black coaches. england survived a fightback from uganda to win the first of their three—match netball series. the roses had a nine—goal lead at half—time, but they let the african side back into the game, and the scores were level in the final quarter. but england found an extra gear to win by 50—46. the netball world cup takes place next summer in liverpool. really proud about the players that
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come on. this is about opportunities, giving people the opportunity to play against these, see what style of play actually suits these. i was actually quite pleased with some of the injection that actually happened, but, you know, there were some basic errors we just need to tighten up. in rugby union, scotland's women slipped to an agonising three—point defeat to canada at scotstoun. canada, who are ranked fourth in the world, scored four tries lead by three points in the final minutes. that left scotland captain with the opportunity to tie the game with this kick, but it missed the posts. that is all your sport for now. good night. hello. we've lost the cold, dry, fairly settled weather, replaced with something more unsettled, mild, wet and windy. another area of low pressure hurtling to the south—west corner of the country as we speak, bringing wet and windy weather, but
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this system will be a deep area of low pressure so it could cause issues throughout wednesday. the combination of gales or severe gales in western areas and heavy rain could lead to travel disruption, so stay tuned to your bbc luck or radio. we start the early part... latter pa rt radio. we start the early part... latter part of the night into early wednesday on a fairly mild note compared to recent mornings, but cloudy and wet and windy. one batch of rain will move north, followed by something drierfor of rain will move north, followed by something drier for central eastern parts of england and perhaps wales, but another batch of heavy and persistent rain pushing into northern ireland and much of scotla nd northern ireland and much of scotland through the afternoon and we could sea height totals in southern facing hills across scotland. is 15 or 16 in the south and. very windy, gusts of 55—65 mph in western areas and later on, gusts in excess of 70 mph for north—east scotla nd in excess of 70 mph for north—east scotland and the northern isles. the wet and windy weather could go northwards. a window of dry and fine
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weather before and the next area of low pressure goes to the south on thursday to. this could develop an area of low pressure which could bring strong winds into parts of wales and the western part of england on thursday morning, as it moves north accompanied by a band of heavy rain. that will clear northwards, bright in the afternoon with heavy and blustery showers behind. a mild day to come but not as mild as on wednesday afternoon. we end the week on an unsettled note again with another area of low pressure moving in. tightly packed isobars, the blue colours dragging in cold airfrom the isobars, the blue colours dragging in cold air from the north—west. you will notice the chill on friday and there could be good spells of sunshine around, but plenty of showers, especially in western areas with western scotland having the brunt of the blustery and heavy showers and. tool, ten to 11 or 12 in england and wales. a fresher feel to things. on the weekend, pretty
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u nsettled, to things. on the weekend, pretty unsettled, further spells of low pressure bringing wet and windy weather. it should stay mild in england and wales, 12—13, but something cooler in scotland and northern ireland, a bit of wintryness over high ground. good night. i'm sharanjit leyl in singapore. the headlines: the un warns the world is way off—track in the battle against global warming. we look at why the food choices we make are having a major impact. it comes down to the key and highly controversial question of what we all choose to eat. indonesian investigators prepare to deliver their first report into the lion air disaster, a month after the crash in which 189 people lost their lives. i'm babita sharma in london. also in the programme: how people with paralysis are learning to control devices with just their thoughts.
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