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tv   The Papers  BBC News  January 18, 2019 10:45pm-11:00pm GMT

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put the she doesn't do it, he was put the conservative party but some will have a0 tories voting against her. he must be like countdown over there. the customs union issue is going to be of concern to everyone, is it knock was meant as we have her come a a0 trade deals that fox as we have her, a0 trade deals that leah fox and say will be done are not done it. because nobody has quiet white they are dealing with. all those trade deals. the best we have a switzerland saying we have to do something similar in that has been hailed as some kind of breakthrough. if you have a customs unit in place as part of the come that will stop the struggling trade deals. this is a fundamental insolubility at the heart of brexit. this is why we have so heart of brexit. this is why we have so people saying we must leave with no deal because we cannot make a deal so stuff it then and will have no deal. it would be a managed wto. those rules would solve everything
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but it does not cover services and 80% of the british economy is service based so you are taking a risk with 80% of our economy. we do not know what it would do or what rules or would operate under. just suddenly leap onto wto rules, and preparation has to be done and we have not done it. it can only lead toa have not done it. it can only lead to a general election which will then go on to deadlock again. it will just then go on to deadlock again. it willjust become, then go on to deadlock again. it will just become, they then go on to deadlock again. it willjust become, they seem to be doing politics for politics sake. you can see there was a poll the daily express of this week that they have lost the trust of the entire nation. the only way for parliament to get through this by the storing peoples faith in the process which i think parliament is done quite well in various bits of it but to restore people's faith generally on at leave and remain is put party politics of all sorts to one side. call for a general election, it will not happen. with that the one side.
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that's a resume of want to fight amongst themselves about what kind of tory party or who want to be there, you have to put that aside and have a grand collision were all politicians come together in the national interest. you're funny. are you listening to this? that would be the only way. the one thing that while most this week with the pictures between the lobby and division lobbies. voting this week as if they are part of this great moment in history, all smiling and looking at the cameras going to vote, just get on with theirjobs and do it properly. don't grandstand. what equipment they are doing theirjobs we pay them lots of money for. they want evidence that they are doing it. they're just walking around the corner and pressing a button. not knocking 24 hour tv. they are enjoying nec them and enjoying speed to people like yourself outside of parliament. for
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some, this is a moment in the sun and they have been ignored in the back benches for 40 years. let's look at page nine of the times. they have a double spread there with all sorts of different brexit niceties. compromise or risk party split? deputy tells jeremy corbyn. this compromise or risk party split? deputy tellsjeremy corbyn. this is tom watson. delivering a message thatis tom watson. delivering a message that is going to be difficult for jeremy corbyn. difficult for a bunch people. tell us more about it. they have had a rocky relationship and they managed to row alongside most of the time but it is a fairly e nforced of the time but it is a fairly enforced railing i think on both sides to co—operate. an audit temple. he makes a speech at a society tomorrow where he says labour must engage intelligently with theresa may. no one is sure how that can happen. but stop short of criticising jeremy corbyn but did sort of say we —— it will be nice to
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have the conservative party being nationalist and sectional list, using —— accusing them of nationalism is a strong thing to do it, and he is talking about labour has to go and grab the centre ground and has to appeal to people in the ce ntre and has to appeal to people in the centre and not just a traditional heart lands, which is how tony blair swe pt heart lands, which is how tony blair swept to people in the centre and notjust the traditional swept to people in the centre and not just the traditional heartland, which is how tony blair swept the power. it does sound like new labour doesn't not? all parties are to appeal to the middle, don't they? can't on appeal to the middle, don't they? can't - on just one side. to appeal to the middle, don't they? an 1't - on just one side. to appeal to the middle, don't they? an election 1 just one side. to appeal to the middle, don't they? an election outright. side. to appeal to the middle, don't they? an election outright. theresa win an election outright. theresa may is talking to the conservative party base principally and the people that she thinks are angriest about brexit and potentially i suppose most xenophobic or fearful about it. jeremy corbyn is talking to the people who are younger and most anti—and socialist as possible already without trying to convert them. another friend in which your
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equipment does not want, he wants brexit. some labour wants brexit? yes they are. come together in a spirit of national unity. all of us. the defence minister is saying we should delay brexit and asked in article 50 because no deal would be a terrible self—harm with profound consequences. so there is another voice say there is not one unified voice. i do not think we are going to get one of was me drastic happens, maybe a war. one interesting little bit and here is they are polling and founding that remain supporters are more bothered if someone married in their family who supports leave. they would not like it and be against that person marry into their family. but leave does not mind as much. leave order, a bit more relaxed or whatever. remain tend to be younger in the survey and the snowflake so—called generation appears to be a little
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bit less tolerant of others. skinny headed borisjohnson which is one of my favourites so far, since he lost his way he is stepping theresa may. is that all it takes? would if you do not eat chorizo at midnight? it is not help me. we have done brexit. that's over. let's talk about parking. the times, £1000 to park at work. you are going to face a charge if you want to drive and park at work to try and get you to give up your car. i was thinking that we are not taxed enough really. we need more stringent taxes on us. this is £1000 a year, up to, between 501,000 at work and it will be a tax on workplaces with more than ten parking spaces. if you work there, you bring your car in and the aa have called it a poll tax on wheels.
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again, it is another way of hitting us again, it is another way of hitting us in the pocket. some do not have much choice about how they get to work. and you have a shift workers from people who worked in the nhs, hospital car parts are some of the biggest ones i have ever been to. if the costs as they are in some places of having taxes on the spaces are passed on to the workers, there is a bit of issue. but you are attacked and people who already don't have a lot of money to tax with. before the congestion charges, there was a suggestion they should have taxed company car parking spaces instead of the congestion charge in london because then you are taxing the mercedes and bentley driving ceos who insist on driving into the central city in their company car and parking underneath her office because they cannot be bothered to ride the train. why not tax them? they say it is about pollution and congestion but it is not, it's about getting money out of your pocket in my pocket. but it's going to local authority coffers. but it has not
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helped though? but they do help fund and social care. is it going to the right place, combine the? well, who knows? and other tax, it is the plastic bag taxing with that is rubbish as well. not enough, is it? if you make over 50p, you can bring about that bit. you have come to complain tonight. everything put in front of you. what about this man?|j do front of you. what about this man?” do not have enough benzema a my letter anyway. if i do this, what do you think i've? let your fingers to the walking. the final pages of the daily mail, the last print copies.” was surprised. i thought it would ta ke was surprised. i thought it would take a lot longer than that. there have been one of four editions and lots of different areas in the last one going digital. i can recall in
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the pages that had a pink session in a blue session and i would sit down and actually read because i also interested in the adverts look at all the things in here. and now the la st yellow all the things in here. and now the last yellow page was like this big in that then and now it is not even to be recycled. the final adversity for the who write yellow pages writing for a book shop. the name is a yellow pages book shop. maybe they will. i cannot recall the lesson i had one actually. but as you say, they have a shrunken shrunken people just do not want to be in any more. people move because they want to google it if you need a phone number, they have gone the way of the dodo. spent with the aa so you are right at the front. i got mine mum to look up in the proper phone book, the paper phone book eight friend's mum's phone number and we got it. i used to like making prank
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calls with it. if they went digital, maybe they would be a better way of doing our online searches rather than google that is always taking oui’ than google that is always taking our data and tracking where we move and see what we are looking at. nothing is free. use yellow pages instead. 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. we'll all be back for another look at the papers at 11:30pm. but for now, goodbye. hello there.
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we have seen sleet and snow coming over the hills and is moving eastward so it will not be as cold as it was last night with the pictures down to —11 in scotland. some clear spells here and there but on the whole a lot of cloud to come tonight. a bit past year ray around and fora tonight. a bit past year ray around and for a while some sleet and snow mainly over the hills of northern england and into scotland. a touch of frost but frost not far away at all tonight but not the low temperatures that we had last night. the temperatures did not really rise very much at all the day of the hills of scotland and northern england. some sleet and snow mainly over the hills of northern england and into scotland. a touch of frost but frost not far away at all tonight but not the low temperatures that we had last night. the temperatures did not really rise very much at all the day of the hills of scotland and northern england. simpson shaffer on the eastern side of the country. not much for northern england but wonder whether still there across wales in the southwest when shelley bursts of rain to the southeast of england and much of the midlands and east anglia and maybe drive for most of the day with a few showers in the morning
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perhaps an fine weather for the most pa rt perhaps an fine weather for the most part in the afternoon but a lot of cloud. doorfor most part in the afternoon but a lot of cloud. door for most of us with some sunshine in norma scotland and we could get a bit in the east and perhaps some heavy showers in the southwest of england. double figure temperatures here and much colder for the north and east at around 5 degrees or so. we should tend to lose those showers overnight with pressure building across the uk. at the same time, we had this week weather from pushing from the northwest and ahead of that with more broken cloud, the more likely to have a touch of frost with the pictures at —1 or —2. that week whether front of their then producing rain and at some sleet or snow over hills but nothing very much at all. ahead of that, we should see some sunshine at times across england and wells and sunnier skies behind through the afternoon across scotland and northern ireland and the northwesterly breeze and temperatures typically at six celsius so staying cold. stays cold in the outlook as well. early next week and what we have got stronger aiming and 777" week and what we have got stronger ? g; and bringing week and what we have got stronger fi 5; and bringing more and snow over
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get into more i a wind that will. cold with the wind direction enough. with the wind direction changes as goes enough. with the wind direction changes as - goes on and we changes as the la?“ goes. an. anagram ,,, ., ,, .. , likely theheee es the tit/ii gees. eh engage-.. ,,, ., ,, .. , likely to pull in are likely to pull in a northeasterly wind and that will make it feel that bit colder and with the cold air continuing, there is still a threat of snow and ice. this is bbc news. i'm martine croxall. the headlines at 11: this eyewitness described the moment he was able to turn over and that was the first time i saw his face, andi was the first time i saw his face, and i realised i was holding the duke of edinburgh. a buckingham palace spokesman said contact has been made with the two women injured in the collision, his former lawyer to lie to congress about his business
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links with russia. a prescription problem. patients complain of long delays in getting painkillers and anti—depressants, as pharmacists warn of shortages in over 80 common medicines.
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