tv The Papers BBC News January 7, 2019 11:30pm-12:00am GMT
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finwur cloud pushing down across england and wales. after a cold start of the morning, temperatures are slow to rise for england and wales, so it will be a cool day. some of the cloud could be quite low, mist patches and quite drizzly with mild weather pushing into scotland and northern ireland. we will see temperatures here in double figures. for friday it is another quiet day. high pressure is still to the west of ireland. a lot of cloud around. we have the temperatures coming up a few degrees, ranging from eight to maybe a ii in belfast. the cloud is thick enough for a few spots of rain in the north—west. the weekend is quiet as well. high pressure, there is, to the west of the uk. still a lot of dry weather, but increasingly thick cloud in scotland brings the threat of rain. still on the mild side with temperatures between nine and ii side with temperatures between nine and 11 degrees. when will we see a change in the weather? it will be next week. the jet stream is change in the weather? it will be next week. thejet stream is nowhere near as amplified as it was on the first chart i showed you. instead we
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have these smaller troughs and ridgers. that is a pattern that is mobile. so we will see changeable weather next week. it will certainly bea weather next week. it will certainly be a lot more windy with spells of heavy rain and some swings in temperatures. we will go from mild one—day to call the next, with hill snow around and maybe wintry showers on some of those days as well. so, an end to the peak area of high pressure, the weather looks much more changeable next week. hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. while you are eating your croissants and your orange juice. with me are the political strategist jo tanner and the associate editor of the new statesman, george eaton. it is good to have you with us. many of tomorrow's front pages are already in. the prime minister has a long—term strategy for the nhs, aimed at starting half a million lives. she
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was hosting drinks at number ten, hoping to persuade mps tobacco brexit plans. the commons will vote on her proposals on tuesday. —— mps brexit plans. lorries have been driving on roads heading to kent to manage the congestion in the event of a no—deal brexit with the fear of extra checks at borders meaning turnaround. man accused of stabbing a passenger to death in front of his teenage son in surrey has appeared in court charged with murder. and police are to be handed extra powers to deal with drones after the disruption caused at gatwick airport in the run—up to christmas. hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are the political strategist jo tanner and the associate editor of the new statesman, george eaton.
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many of tomorrow's front pages are already in. the focus seems to be on many of them the story of the nhs and the ten year plan unveiled by the government today. that seems to be the lead on the i, there is. it runs with the pm's pledge to recruit widely outside the uk to fill thousands of jobs in widely outside the uk to fill thousands ofjobs in the health service. the the guardian also has the new nhs proposals as its top story, saying health service bosses are pushing the prime minister to roll back legislation on private contracts within the nhs. the daily mail focuses on the technological solutions put forward in the ten—year plan to help reduce strain on the health service. that's also the times's take on the launch of the plan, saying digital consultations could become the norm. the express says the government's plan will make the nhs fit for the future, but raises the concerns that a lack of staff could hold it back.
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worries about the staff shortages also feature on the front of the daily mirror, which says the plan is doomed to failure if the issue isn't addressed. the telegraph says officials in both the uk and eu are exploring options to delay the uk's departs from the eu on the 29th of march. and the metro's top story is that the father killed on a train in surrey last week was stabbed nine times by his attacker. we are going to start with the telegraph. the uk puts out feelers to pause article 50. eu sources say officials are exploring delayed that may be faced as a result of the commons vote. the government clearly believes it is not going to win that vote next week. indeed, i think it is
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not going to win that vote next week. indeed, ithink it is seen not going to win that vote next week. indeed, i think it is seen as a given among the mps and the government that they will lose the first vote, they will try to win a second vote, it is not, then you need to start extending article 50. you it the unanimous approval of the eu 27 to get that, but i think they would be unlikely to approve it. the question is would you be doing it for a general—purpose? another general election, a second referendum, would be enoughjust say we do not want an ideal and we want to play for time? theresa may, essentially, ever since she lost the majority, the whole premiership has been essentially just an majority, the whole premiership has been essentiallyjust an exercise in buying time, just trying to delay the inevitable, hoping that things will get better. it is no surprise that people are talking about this seriously now. is that fair, do you think? premiership has been an exercise in buying time, that she has not got another plan so she is just going to run the clock at? does not appear to be another plan, we have all hopes, i think, and the
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reality is that as every week has passed, there has been this clock ticking on brexit day, the actual living date in march. —— out. the problem now is that even the vote being postponed, it is not, the vote is not the only thing, there are several other boats and bits of legislation that need to pass, there are lots of things that need to happen. theresa may was calling eu leaders across the festive period apparently. i think it is inconceivable that the conversation around a possible delay would not have come at, because surely someone is going to say, angela merkel is going to say well, look, love, if you do not get it, what is next? do you do not get it, what is next? do you want us to agree to do it if you need us to? you're going to have that conversation, so it looks, this story is suggesting there is a real official piece of work going on, which again i do not think anyone should really be very alarmed are upset about. however, there are lots of people who will save if we do not
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live on march 29, it will be a huge betrayal, so it is a very risky game. it can also be seen to be convenient to putting these feelers out politically for those mps who are thinking i'm not going to vote against it, brexit could be delayed, maybe i should vote for her deal? yes, and theresa may's tactic is very much been to make mps fear the worst depending. she once brexit sporting mps to be scared of extending article 50 of another referendum, and she wants remain labour mps to be scared of an ideal brexit. their response might be to say let's run the clock down. the remainers hope that at the 11th hour theresa may at might save 0k, actually, we're going to have to focus back to the people. all sides are playing a game of chicken.“ focus back to the people. all sides are playing a game of chicken. is a massive game of chicken, it is the biggest, most risky of chicken we have ever seen. —— it is. there is a
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huge lorry hurtling down the road. why did the chicken cross the road? because of brexit. is going to get hit as he crosses the road. is that now a prevailing ideas within some within the conservative party, george, do you think, that an ideal brexit is no problem? you may have had the bernie jenkins brexit is no problem? you may have had the berniejenkins and bill cash said is not a problem, wto rules, no problem at all, but is there a consensusbuilding that that might be a good way to go forward?” consensusbuilding that that might be a good way to go forward? i think it is very telling and all of the senior conservatives have their eyes on the next leadership contest, as they actually always do in the conservative party. there is never a shortage of people want to be prime minister. and in labour of course. they will have closely studied a poll last week of conservative numbers, showing about 57%, think
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about that, they've no deal. they think that is the best outcome. jeremy corbyn, remain talking about manage no deal. the idea is becoming gradually normalised and it has entered the conversation in a way that it certainly had not in the immediate aftermath of the 2016 vote. sure. 0k, financialtimes, laurie ‘s basic state weight in ideal brexit. this was a test, by the department for transport on just how roads in the south might cope with an ideal brexit, and at a disused airport in kent. —— lorries face a six day. just 89 lorries instead of the 150 that the department of transport will hoping for, but there are 10,000 lorries a day going to divert. exactly, and
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thatis day going to divert. exactly, and that is just over. there day going to divert. exactly, and that isjust over. there are lorries floating around all over the country that are headed somewhere or coming from somewhere. —— dover, because of how many goods to bring into the country by boat. it was an interesting exercise. i do feel sorry for the people in kent are going to have to put up with this and perhaps put up with lots of problems for many years, but this was all part of no deal planning, how will it work? it was essentially, it was i think part of the department for transport trying to show they are on top of stuff. they have had quite a difficult time recently, but six days, i'm sure some of the brexiteers will be saying is only six days, it is fine, just a week, what are you worrying about? i spoke to the head of an association this evening he said he was talking to ministers within a week of the vote to the european union backing 2016 saying you need to plan for this kind of thing, and we had people from the road haulers
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assocation saying this is the kind of thing that needed to happen 18 months ago that ministers just did not want to know. yes, theresa may has never been serious about no deals are the big critique of her from exit is that no deal was never credible threat because the uk did not start preparing early enough. i think theresa may's view has been that you probably could never adequately prepare for an ideal during the space of the two years after triggering article 50. it is all the chaos at gatwick before christmas with one drone and how angry people were there, i think there are lots of elements that people take for granted in terms of being able to get where they need to being able to get where they need to be when they want. that could be those disrupted by no deal and i think that is why theresa may is quite a cautious politician, she is probably hoping that exercises like this will convince slightly nervous mps to ultimately back a deal is not
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clear what about the poor guys and women that are going to be actually driving these things? you head off for a journey that is already massively regulated, your speed, how long you are allowed to dry for. how does this fit into the worker's rights when actually you are going to be sitting somewhere in the midst of kent for six days? with frozen yoghurt. yeah, and you are away from your family. are we actually going to have people wanting to drive lorries and is the result of their job? are we going to have people saying no thanks, i would do something else? people who did vote brexit, you are now saying, george, 5296 in brexit, you are now saying, george, 52% in the conservative party who feel that no deal or manage no deal brexit be ok, today, do you really think this is project fear? this is just not going to happen, it is all going to be as it was before? 0r just not going to happen, it is all going to be as it was before? or do they think there are problems, you know what, we can handle them and it is worth it anyway? i think there is
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a real mixed bag. if you look at the brexit boat, i still do not really know why people voted the way they voted, which means that their own natural views on the world and how things work will be different, they will be very different in that group. so think there are some people that think surely it is all going to be fine, it won't be that bad, the eu will never let this happen. i have actually thought since 2016 it is going to be no deal and we will just since 2016 it is going to be no deal and we willjust have to get on with it, but at the same time there will be others who will be genuinely worried. i wanted to book flights april and i could not get decent information about how likely it was that my plan would take off on time and in the end, highett put it back tojuly because i thought and in the end, highett put it back to july because i thought that as a few months, it might still be a risk. i had a chap on the radio today, i think it is one of the lorry drivers in this action when he was saying yeah, it is not going to get like this, it is not going to be like this because... and they still
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there, doing the whole thing? probably. —— are they. there, doing the whole thing? probably. -- are they. staffers got to be checked and rechecked, it only takes a couple of delays. we all know what it is like. border control, passport controls not work very well and suddenly you have these queues snaking. it does not ta ke these queues snaking. it does not take a lot. we love the queue in britain, we are going to have to get used to it. ok, daily mirror. wrong medicine. we need 40,000 nurses, gps and hospital beds. tory nhs revolution it has on the front page there. the daily mirror not impressed, clearly. yes, this was not the headline the theresa may wa nted not the headline the theresa may wanted from the nhs launch. i think this is very much designed to signal that the government is not com pletely incessa nt that the government is not completely incessant brexit, that it recognises that there are other things going on, other concerns that people have. —— obsessed with brexit. it is always tricky i think
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for the conservative party to have a fair hearing from the likes of the daily mirror. i think they won't be surprised, but i think they won't be surprised, but i think they won't be surprised, but i think the fear is they have announced this spending increase, which arguably isn't enough after nearly a decade of the biggest period of austerity that the health service has had, but can you get value for money out of it? the understaffing, there are 100,000 vacancies in the nhs, this is a serious concern, which is why some conservatives were warning theresa may, who made this announcement fairly spontaneously, and philip hammond wasn't pleased about it, you have to think carefully about how this money will be spent, because when you start to say the year of austerity is coming to an end, and we will improve the health service, it raises expectations. if they are not met it is a serious problem for
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the health service and labour can say only we can be trusted to renew public services. does the mirror have a point in making it clear that the amount of money that is being given to the nhs is only taking it to the levels that it was getting five, six, seven, eight years ago. this is the big challenge, it has a lot of strengths, but it has serious challenges, and part of what is being announced today is about trying to make the nhs more relevant in the 215t century, people having appointments via skype, booking things on your phone, lots of things just emerging other people are taking advantage of, but there are still hospitals where wards are falling apart. a friend of ours recently, the sun has gone in for treatment, and he will be in for ten daysin treatment, and he will be in for ten days in a room on his own with no tv. this is a 14—year—old boy stuck in hospital for nine days with
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antibiotics going in regularly. you would expect a tv. i am sorry. i think that is a basic kind of need for a child of that age that needs some sort of entertainment rather than being stuck in a room on his own. they are not very expensive i suppose. 0n own. they are not very expensive i suppose. on to the times, continuing the theme, millions of patients to see a doctor over skype, talking about moving into the 21st century, this could be a way to prevent people having to go to hospital for two gp surgeries and therefore cutting costs. and there is definitely an advantage for some consultations being held maybe over the phone. in 20141 was unfortunate enough to have meningitis. i walked in and told the doctor i had a headache and i was finding the light difficult and i had a temperature. and i don't know what it is, but
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according to google it is meningitis. he looked at me and said yes, you are right. i self diagnosed using a phone. i know that it is fraught with danger but there are concerns fraught with danger but there are concerns for people who are using technology, you know, people complaining about parking being paid for by phones and older people being excluded but there are concerns about the value —— valuable consultations with the doctor, you know, people with mental health challenges, victims of domestic violence, things like fgm and the stuff, some of the things that happen, doctors are talking about something different, then they will find something else wrong with someone. so it is a gamble as to whether it can work. the front of the times, kevin spacey on the front, hollywood actor, of course, accused of sexual assault, and appeared in court today. we have the picture of him there. let's go on, though, to the story next to him,
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why positive thinking is the best way to get a grip. yes, so, it is a perennial feature of the year, i think, what psychological tactics do we need to adopt? to handle the next 12 months on brexit. park on help wondering who will be the first politician to crowbar this finding into a speech on brexit —— i can't help wondering. saying, we need to just believe in brexit more. we need to take control. this is a great story. this is the classic glass half full, glass half empty, and people have this view. i was watching a video recently, someone at google had lost his son. he produced a video. he talked about expectations. happiness and the key to happiness is about expectations. if you set your expectations too high, you will be disappointed. the secret is to get your expectations right in the first place and then
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you will feel happier, that gap won't be as big. this whole point, this study from university college london is about, if people saw things as worthwhile, what they did, they were healthier as they age, higher concentration of vitamin d, lower cholesterol, and george and i we re lower cholesterol, and george and i were talking about a programme we saw, a series about young children being put into nursing homes, care homes, it was an experiment that was done, and the older people, because they were caught up in the joy of children, they forgot what was wrong with them, so people who forgot to get up with airframe suddenly got up and walked across the room. maybe we need to start thinking differently and forget some of our woes, for some it could have a positive benefit. is that how we should sort of deal with brexit, do you think? stop talking about it and we will all be happy! laughter. politicians in general have done a good job of
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lowering expectations in terms of recent performance. if you look at the public, they are discontent across the board. so it does give a chance to surprise them on the upside especially if confronted by stories on six days of delays, then expectations are at rock bottom. exactly. that is a cheery thought. yes, thanks! it is good to see you. thank you, jo tanner and george eaton. and forget you can see all of the front pages on the papers on the bbc news website at bbc.co.uk/papers and if you missed the programme any evening it is always on iplayer. goodbye. hello, i'm sarah mulkerrins at the bbc sport centre. after a weekend of shocks in the fa cup, tonight premier league leaders
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liverpool were dumped out by wolves. the home side winning 2—1 at molineaux. a brilliant second—half strike from ruben neves was the difference, asjurgen klopp made nine changes to his team, including giving three teenagers their full debuts. ben croucher watched the action. if you are going out of the fa cup, do it with a ruben neves. molineaux provided the spectacle. walls and liverpool had a first half befitting qualifying rounds. plenty of changes for both teams. it started going wrong for liverpool when this night ended with a ruben neves for a hamstring. the debut for the 16—year—old hauver at centre half alongside a plea from midfield. he is dutch, by the way. still, experienced ones are capable of errors. this from jimenez. that was
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as good as the first half got. it didn't take long to improve. this powerful strike was the best of the game. nevez, might have a go, he did have a go. nevez for wolverhampton! it moved and it beat mignolet! they we re it moved and it beat mignolet! they were this close to an equaliser. that left liverpool needing to send for a couple of familiar faces. they sent their goalkeeper in the dying minutes. the ball didn't make it that far. the competition that wasn't at the top of liverpool's list isn't even on their list any more. 0ut not so much with a bang, but a whimper. it was a very good game for us. i think we did well. against a very
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good team. we played well. that is how we want to play every game. sometimes it's difficult, but we showed again that we are a great group, a great squad and we can do very good thing. we could have played much more football. the boys can play much better. it is always a problem. it is my responsibility, they have no rhythm. it looks like that sometimes. you expect a bit more. that is what we did the second half, scored 1—1 from long—range and the ball was in. that is the story of the game. the draw for the fourth round has been made and tonight's winners wolves will face either shrewsbury or stoke after their replay. the pick of the ties, arsenal against manchester united, 0le gunner solkshar will certainly remember the old days of their fiery encounters. a couple of other all—premier league ties, tottenham will travel to crystal palace, and manchester city host burnley. and for the upsets this weekend, barnet of non league will host championship side brentford. 0ld ham will face doncaster. full details on the website. and for newport manager michael flynn, well he's getting
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ready for their trip to middlesbrough. yes, it is a long journey, a tough game. it would be good to see tony pulis, the newport man, in charge. it is again we will look forward to. hopefully they are concentrating on going for promotion and getting into the premier league. they are a big clu b the premier league. they are a big club and they take their eye off the ball and we have a very good and surprise them again. world anti—doping experts are to be given access to the russian lab data that could lead to the prosecution of hundreds of drugs cheats. the original deadline of new year's eve was missed, but an anti—doping team will now be allowed into the moscow facility tomorrow. a three—year suspension of russian athletes was ended in september. that's all the sport for now. good night it is time for a quick look at the
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weather before you head to bed. today has been blustery for northern areas. we have had wind gusts in excess of 70 miles an hour in northern scotland because of this swirl of cloud, a deep area of low pressure. the strongest winds tomorrow will transfer to eastern pa rt tomorrow will transfer to eastern part of the uk. as this low moves across scandinavia we are left with white lines on the chart, quite a lot of isobars squeezing across eastern part of the country. brisk winds continue through the night. the odd shower. many places have a dry night. into tomorrow, a lot of dry night. into tomorrow, a lot of dry weather around, some sunny spells, but it will be breezy and particularly windy across the east coast. now, that brisk northerly wind will blow one or two showers in at times, particularly northern and eastern areas. those winds close to the east coast of scotland up to 40, maybe 45 miles an hour. similar strength across the east coast of england, may be closer to 50 miles
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an hourfor england, may be closer to 50 miles an hour for east anglia. that could combine with high tides to give the risk of coastal flooding here. elsewhere, temperature—wise, highs of 79 degrees, but they in mind in the northerly wind it will feel a bit colder. tomorrow night into the early hours of wednesday, some showers into the east coast, some clear spells and lighter winds for western scotland, north—west england, into the midlands, with a touch of frost to start wednesday morning. many places will start one or two degrees above freezing. wednesday, largely dry, quite breezy, not as windy as it will be tomorrow. we will see a lot of dry weather and spells of sunshine, potentially showers for north—east england, east anglia, and thicker cloud for northern ireland and western scotland later with patchy rain. those temperatures are not especially impressive. temperatures will climb into the end of the week. high pressure builds back in, and we start to bring the air from the atlantic. so initially in the
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north—west we will see some mild air pushing in. holding on to something chilly in the south—east on thursday. maybe even frost here. we could see sunshine through the day. north—east england, eastern scotland see sunshine. elsewhere, cloud, drizzle, but noticed the temperatures creep up across north—western parts. as we head into the weekend, all of us getting into the weekend, all of us getting into the mild air. they will still be a lot of cloud, patchy rain in the north. that is all from me. good night. i'm rico hizon in singapore. this is newsday on the bbc. the headlines: seven weeks after his arrest, former chairman of nissan, carlos ghosn is to make his first appearance in a tokyo court. thailand says an 18—year—old saudi woman — who's seeking asylum — wont be deported against her will. i'm kasia madera in london.
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