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tv   The Papers  BBC News  March 2, 2019 11:30pm-11:45pm GMT

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hello. this is bbc news. reaches southern scotland later, it reaches into northern ireland, the pennines, we could see snow to the hills from i'm martine croxall. we'll be taking a look at tomorrow morning's papers in a moment. that. the winds are picking up. but first, the headlines: the 17—year—old girl stabbed to death in a park in east these are some of the gusts we are london has been named as jodie chesney. going to be getting during sunday. she's the 18th homicide victim the black arrows are wind gusts. it in the capital this year. is down towards the south—west of i have a daughter who is 17 years the uk initially where the winds picked up late in the afternoon. it old. many londoners and many people is on the southern flank of this the around the country have children who isobars are close together. this is are young and not for the grace of where we get the strongest winds. we god could be the child who lost end sunday, late afternoon, into the their life last night. evening, with gusts up to 70 mph because of wales in western england. the former lord chancellor, lord falconer, has revealed there is a chance around the welsh that he hasn't yet agreed to take up a new anti—semitism role coast —— welsh coast of getting 80 within labour, despite the party's mph. then 65 elsewhere through other most senior official saying he already has. parts of england and wales as this pushes on elsewhere sunday night and america's ambassador to the uk urges britain to embrace us farming methods to help into monday morning. there could be secure a post—brexit trade deal, dismissing fears over damage in places, maybe interruption chlorine—washed chicken and hormone—fed beef. to power supplies and travel bernie sanders launches his campaign disruption from storm freya. if you for the white house at a rally are travelling sunday night before in new york. the senator is hoping to be chosen to run
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you head out on monday morning, against president trump in 2020. check the situation nilla. very windy monday morning in eastern after a successful launch, parts. storm freya head out into the the first astronaut capsule launched from american soil in eight years is on course to dock sea. a few showers tracking their with the international space station tomorrow morning. way eastwards. they cool a filter the weather on monday. that is a sign of things to come through the week ahead. sun and showers at first. wet and windy again midweek. if you want a repeat of the warmth of last week, that isn't coming. temperatures will be below average for the time of year in some spots. that is your forecast. hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with us, the political editor of the sunday mirror and the sunday people, nigel nelson, and the political commentator, jo phillips. welcome to you both. tomorrow's front pages then. starting with the mail on sunday, it reports on the murder of 17—year—old jodie chesney, who was stabbed to death in a park in east london. she's the 18th victim of homicide in the capital this year. the express says the 17—year—old
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was a model student and a scout with a bright future. the sunday times reports that leading conservative brexiteers are willing to back the prime minister's deal with the eu within days, if its passes three tests drawn up by the european research group and the democratic unionist party. the telegraph leads on what it calls a major shakeup in the laws surrounding non—disclosure agreements. according to the paper, the government plans to ban employers from drawing up gagging orders that prevent staff reporting cases of discrimination and harassment to the police. the observer leads on a new row within labour. the paper says higher—ups in the party have rejected recommendations to suspend officials accused of anti—semitism. the independent has a poll which says labour voters in leave areas overwhelming back jeremey corbyn‘s decision to back another brexit referendum. sorrow, we will start with several exit stories. first, the sunday times. —— so. brexiteers for peace terms to theresa may after 3—test,
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can you tell us what they are?” can. the attorney general will come back, the 3—test broadly say that we can get out of the irish backstop, that it will be temporary and legally binding. the subtext of this story is that brexit could be done and dusted by next week, so what seems to be, what a number of papers, including mine, are reporting is that the european research group, jacob rees—mogg's lot in the toy brexiteers and the dup all minded now to accept theresa may's deal, pending these three tests on the backstop that geoffrey cox brings back on by the sound of them, they are not too onerous. —— tory. by the sound of it, brexit goes through and we live on the 29th of march. 50 the backstop is goes through and we live on the 29th
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of march. so the backstop is not quite the block we thought it was.” think this is mood music, i think this is about the european research group and the dup signalling that yes, they are not trying to obstruct brexit because elsewhere in the papers, the sunday telegraph, andrea leadsom and jeremy hunt joined papers, the sunday telegraph, andrea leadsom and jeremy huntjoined an article saying that people who are seeking to frustrate brexit are denying the will of the people, but i think what is interesting here is it also talks about michel barnier in the sunday times article because oi'i in the sunday times article because on friday, he apparently said that i'io on friday, he apparently said that no progress had been made in the talks are geoffrey cox, but an interview that has been published in a german newspaper this week and, he said that the european union was ready to give more guarantees and confirmations and clarifications that the backstop is only temporary. the sunday telegraph says, it talks
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about michel barnier as well, it says the later brexit is now unavoidable for some kind of technical reasons. exactly, which seems completely contradictory to the report in the sunday times, it also seems completely nonsensical that they would be any delay if as nigel says, and why would we doubt nigel, ever? thank you very much. mind you, he dismissed my first question tonight and put me firmly in my place, but we will not dwell oi'i in my place, but we will not dwell on that. it is going to go ahead, why would there be delay? i am asking you. well, that is the point. why should there be a delay? they have rushed the necessary legislation through, some of it can actually be done before march 29. what is interesting is michel barnier seems to give slightly different versions of things depending which country's newspaper he is talking to. funny that. what
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he is talking to. funny that. what he says to the germans... do you think somebody has used google translate and just got it a bit wrong? i was wondering that. sunday express, help is out here, nigel, page six. plot to help amber rudd become tory leader. the idea is that she would move seats, are you happy about that? he's not happy about that, he had a very sexy reply to that. can you broadcast at? no, it you can't. 0k, that. can you broadcast at? no, it you can't. ok, so we would leap at. if this story turns out to be true, if theresa may gozo announces she is going to go, probably in early may. having delivered the deal. having delivered the deal, got her legacy, then there will be a tory political
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leadership contest over the summer, with the winner being crowned in manchester in november. amber rudd you would think would be one of the people who might be in the frame, but the majority she has in hastings and rye is slim, and you could not have a prime minister could be asked at any time. so somehow, if she wa nts to at any time. so somehow, if she wants to do it, she has got to try and find different seat to go to, i cannot quite see how she does that. it looks terribly cynical, whatever point you actually do it, so i see her more as a kingmaker in at the moment it is looking like doris johnson, michael gove, jeremy hunt, are more likely to be the contenders for the leadership and she will back one of those. 0k. for the leadership and she will back one of those. ok. that is my guess, after you. which is only got a majority of the hunt and 46, so she is not going to be much of a kingmaker in the majority is so slim anyway. yes, it can't be prime minister with a 346 majority but you
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might be chancellor. the sport that you do not know anything about. the 0bserver, labour faces new you do not know anything about. the 0bserver, labourfaces new row you do not know anything about. the 0bserver, labour faces new row over effo rts 0bserver, labour faces new row over efforts to curb anti—semitism, disagreements over how that should happen. whether lord falconer will feel that he can take this post a p°ny feel that he can take this post a pony has defined his terms. exactly, it all seems a little chaotic. —— ta ke it all seems a little chaotic. —— take this post when he has defined his terms. he was interviewed elsewhere in the sunday papers talking about what he would do, but presumably that was before this interview. between march and may last year, covering the period immediately afterjeremy corbyn
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promised to be militant opponent of anti—semitism and it reveals, according to the observer, that officials acting on behalf of the newly general secretary, jennie formby, who was appointed in april last year, oppose recommendations to suspend several members and another case, jeremy corbyn adviser argued for more leniency to a member who had defended the anti—semitic mule that caused such controversy. had defended the anti—semitic mule that caused such controversym had defended the anti—semitic mule that caused such controversy. it is the trust issue, who do you trust to sort this out? trust and perception. —— mural. also, there is the sense thatjeremy —— mural. also, there is the sense that jeremy corbyn did not get to grips it quickly enough. i think that they struggle with their language over israel because they tend to be pro— palestinian. i do not think the leadership is anti—semitic, but it strays into anti—semitism once you start backing the palestinian cause. the other
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story on the observer, our facebook tried to block new data laws targeting politicians all around the world. and apparently, according to the observer, facebook is targeting george osborne, and the idea is they are lobbying because they are terribly worried about data privacy legislation they are right to be worried because there is a load of coming their way worried because there is a load of coming theirway and worried because there is a load of coming their way and they think some senior politicians, or ex— politicians, it might be able to get them out of a hole. i think it is too late. if they had actually done a bit more to police themselves, then they would not need to be policed by the government. and the former deputy prime minister is now involved. yes, exactly, nick clegg. i think it is important that they be regulated, they hugely profitable businesses, just that we have seen in the tobacco industry, it the gaming and sports industry, and opt
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in other industries. they really do not do enough to actually control the output. let's look at the mail on sunday's story now. this is the story we have been reporting all day, at the 17—year—old girl who was killed in romford last night. she has been named asjodie chesney and while we have been on air in the past half—an—hour, police have now set a 17—year—old boy has died as a result of stab wounds near altrincham. that is two murders we are reporting unit two days, and the question is what do police antiauthority is due to crack down on knife murders? there will be pa rents on knife murders? there will be parents hoping in praying that their children come home safely. jodie chesney, i7 children come home safely. jodie chesney, 17 years old, she is the
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fifth person in just chesney, 17 years old, she is the fifth person injust over a chesney, 17 years old, she is the fifth person in just over a week in london, and as you said earlier, 99 stabbings in birmingham this year. and in 2018, the numbers were... so ina way, and in 2018, the numbers were... so in a way, it comes back to the internet because that is where a lot of these absolutely obscene weapons are being purchased, because you can buy them. i do not know how you bandits, the problem is you get into this of, this terrible, terrible upsurge in completely mindless violence. —— ban it. year weeping pa rents, violence. —— ban it. year weeping parents, broken communities, desperate teachers, police who absolutely racking their brains. —— you here. but until you stop the way in which people are getting hold of weapons, it will continue. the trouble is if you are going out and a nervous and are living in an area where you think you might be likely to be attacked, are you then going to be attacked, are you then going to start carrying a knife? the
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sunday telegraph is where we will end. the ban on gag orders that stop reports to the police. so at the moment, these non disclosure agreements can actually stop people going to the police to report harassment, racism, and so on. the business ministry is going to change all that on monday, there will be a new law and simply say nothing will be able to stop you reporting a crime to the police, gagging orders will not be able to do that. now, the daily telegraph makes the point that this may not go far enough. they are quoting geoffrey robertson qc, he says well, 0k, they are quoting geoffrey robertson qc, he says well, ok, the police are fine when
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