tv The Papers BBC News May 29, 2019 10:40pm-11:01pm BST
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chelsea. chelsea has a habit of hiring and firing managers but still having success. but what a story would be if sarri comes back from the debts of what we saw earlier in the debts of what we saw earlier in the season. think back to the league cup final when he stormed down the tunnel ina cup final when he stormed down the tunnel in a rage and had a plan refuse to come off as is altitude. came to this final and entering session style hamster off again to my throwing his cap to the floor, kicking it around. he clearly was not happy about something that perhaps that was motivation because he leaves the trophy and chelsea makes a long journey back home in high spirits. david is joining us from azerbaijan. all the reaction to the football tonight on the bbc website and app. that's all from sportsday. coming up in a moment, the papers.
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hello, and welcome to our look ahead to what the the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are writer and broadcaster mihir bose and former pensions minister ros altmann. thank you both for coming in. many of tomorrow's front pages are already in. the metro leads with the story that tory leadership favourite borisjohnson has been ordered to appear in court over claims he lied by saying the uk gave the eu £350 million a week. a government review which is released tomorrow will recommend that university tuition fees should be reduced to £7500 to give students better value for money, says the telegraph.
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the times reports that the same review will mean that millions of graduates will still be paying back their student loans in their 60s, as new plans will see graduates starting to repay their loans sooner after leaving university and continuing to make payments for a full a0 years after completing their degrees. former cabinet minister and conservative party leadership hopeful esther mcvey is calling for a new "police covena nt" and £3 billion a year to fight crime in a bid to help restore the conservatives' reputation as the party of law and order. that's according to the express. the guardian leads on us special counsel robert mueller‘s first public statement on the russia inquiry. earlier today, mr mueller said charging president trump with a crime in his investigation of russian interference in the 2016 election was not an option. the financial times reports that europe's markets watchdog has abandoned plans to prevent investors in the eu from trading some of
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the uk's biggest listed companies, including bp and vodafone, in the event of a hard brexit. that is a brief summary of what is going on. now let's hearfrom the guests. johnson in the dock, but not quite yet. no, notjust yet but a private prosecution which has been crowd funded has been found to have a case and is going to be going forward. thejudge a case and is going to be going forward. the judge actually has said that he may or may not be guilty. she is not finding any findings of fa ct, she is not finding any findings of fact, but there is enough evidence of potential misconduct this to go forward. it could be really serious if he is found guilty but we are a long way from that. his defence,
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which was this is politically motivated, just trying to overturn the referendum result, was thrown out by thejudge the referendum result, was thrown out by the judge and she says that there is actually some kind of potential case to answer. looking down just at the story as it goes on, i mean, they are actually quoting other candidates in the tory race into criticising or warning the chilling effect on democratic debates. this could become an issue if you like in the election. it could amount to boris johnson's benefit because many people in the tory party, the majority wanted to leave, they could see this as the remainders's revenge and things like that it would not see as a criminal charge that has to be answered rather than a political campaign. of course, it could lead to a situation where boris becomes the minister and
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he is facing changes after he is prime minister. indeed, let us move on from that because there is not much more can say really. let's look at the guardian. just staying with brexit stories for a minute longer, got a story about £97 million spent on breakthrough advisers, explain that. what the guardian has found is a draft report of the national audit office which says the government has hired private consultants to advise oi'i hired private consultants to advise on brexit, including no—deal brexit. recall, when brexit happen, there was a lot of debate about how are we going to discuss the issue, how are we going to plan about it. at that stage, there was a lot of talk that it was going to be done in the civil service and they would provide. but it seems that the government has gone out and hired private consultants and already it has cost 97 million and the report was also critical of the lack of transparency. so if you like, of course, 350 million is coming back
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thena 7 course, 350 million is coming back then a 7 million is nothing. course, 350 million is coming back then a 7 million is nothinglj course, 350 million is coming back then a 7 million is nothing. i think then a 7 million is nothing. i think the whole point of this report is that by 2020, the cost could rise up to 240 million and i think people are concerned this may be a huge gravy train for a lot of these private consultants coming in and helping what should be the civil service doing thejob helping what should be the civil service doing the job that they were supposed to be doing. the you know what, we will leave brexit now. let's go to the express because it has a to wit leadership candidate who is talking about something other than brexit. sarri, former cabinet minister, talking about the decades of cuts which have broken the traditional bombs in the tory party and the police force. —— esther mcvey. she says they have to rebuild that bond and we need to offer them above inflation pay rises and a new
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cove na nt above inflation pay rises and a new covenant between the government and police officers. now clearly there is an issue across the country and people are becoming concerned about the rise in knife crime and the general rise in discontent among the police force and it is important that we must make sure that we have a strong and motivated police force. she is talking about spending more money on the police and i am not sure she has cleared any of this with the treasury... £3 billion it looks like. indeed, i imagine some discontent in that department... she is standing on the blue colour tory vote and she wants to regain that old bed rock of tory policy, the law and orderand old bed rock of tory policy, the law and order and get a strong police force in the old days and hang them and flog them. but she recognises she needs another policy apart from
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brexit and in no—deal brexit. interesting to see what the others come up with. we should crack on and quite a rich day for stories. let's look at the telegraph, start us off with this tuition fees caps at £7,500. a report commissioned by the prime minister and it said the tuition fees in the moment, the current cap is 9250 issue brought down to 7500 but the same time is also saying that student should start paying it over a much longer period, 40 years which means it could be well into their 605 paying. but it also makes it a couple of other points that is that our post 18 education has not been well looked after and we are not doing thing5 looked after and we are not doing things in terms of giving them proper qualifications. that is to fir5t proper qualifications. that is to first review 5ince proper qualifications. that is to first review since 1963. proper qualifications. that is to first review 5ince1963. it is going to cost a lot of money, likely 6
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billion. as somebody with... as somebody with a daughter in finals, this is not music to my ears. there isa this is not music to my ears. there is a proposal to rename this a student attribution which i think make sense. importa ntly, student attribution which i think make sense. importantly, reduce the interest rate, at the moment, it is 6.3% which is an enormous rate. reducing that to the grey of inflation but to offset some of the extra costs, starting asking stu d e nts to extra costs, starting asking students to repay their loans when they reach £23,000 of income. at the moment, it is 25,000. but i think also what is important is although the telegraph does not pick up on this, only half of the school levers to go on to university education but there is a huge need for more technical qualifications, and the report is recommending a national network of further education
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colleges that will help people with the technical skills that they need. not everybody will benefit from going to university but everybody can benefit from some extra skills and improving social mobility is a really important part of the spending that we do on education. also talking about maintenance gra nts also talking about maintenance grants for also talking about maintenance gra nts for low also talking about maintenance grants for low pay coming up... and important issue. the feeling that the scrapping of maintenance grants, which happened in the 2016, has not been a good sensible policy. a lot of stu d e nts been a good sensible policy. a lot of students from poor hassles of put off going to university, so now morning back grants that will give about £3000 a year to help students from poorfamilies about £3000 a year to help students from poor families i about £3000 a year to help students from poorfamilies i think is an interesting idea. when george osborne policy. we have to move on. the guardian‘s story, a lot of coverage on this this evening but
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their line, mueller, i have exonerated donald trump. trump said in the summary of the report that thatis in the summary of the report that that is the end of it and what mueller has said is the justice department's guidelines, you cannot go intoa department's guidelines, you cannot go into a case against the president in effect, the president cannot be prosecuted. basically he has reopened the case and it seems he has thrown the ball to the congress. especially the democrats in the congress to decide whether now there is sufficient evidence to impeach donald trump and this can be quite interesting for the democratic party because the more noises coming out, it seems that while the understatement of the party do not wa nt understatement of the party do not want to impeach, the younger members who were fairly on the left would like an impeachment. maybe this will ignite the impeachment debate. pretty hypocritical because what mueller says if we had confidence the president did not commit a crime, we would have said that. we
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did not however make a determination as to whether the president did commita as to whether the president did commit a crime. so he isjust throwing it open and saying to people make of that what you well and we will sing with the politics does. it is extraordinary to hear him say that the president of states... it certainly was not a total exoneration. trump is proclaiming that. indeed, case closed as he twitted today. back to the independent for their interview with a certain german with a big match coming up here. yes, the manager of liverpool, playing tottenham hostpur. we have to talk to him supporters here tonight. very successful manager, a german who shows great emotion and one of out who shows great emotion and one of our best writers has interviewed him. the way he has moulded this
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liverpool team is been quite fascinating in the way he has got them together to play the way that it does. we looked with interest at the interview when it comes. let's ta ke the interview when it comes. let's take a look at the interview, have i got this in the wrong order, everything is. i think we can be really proud that all these british teams, english teams, who have got through to the finals. so football is showing how to stay in europe. that is a brexit vote surely. and i found it. the cricketers we will talk about. with the queen. a subject close to your heart. lovely picture. the queen discussing quite seriously with the captain of the england teen who start their woke up tomorrow against south africa and what is interesting, england the first time have a team that looks like winning the world cup. they start of the workup back in 1975 and it never wanted. they are the number
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one team in the way you look at this picture suggest the queen is giving advice to him as to how to fix his batting order. is that how you take the picture? i think you can take in lots of ways but it would not be how i would've seen it. but however, i just really hope, we have a good chance commit would not be great to have an england victory at the world cup? you will no thing about that because we still have a few seconds left. what else do we know about the impending matches of the world cup. first of all, if england, they had beenin first of all, if england, they had been in pre—— three previous finals and if always choked, that if the problem. they see the price there in front of them and they cannot seize it. this captain has proved very good and england has a very good players and provided the english weather plays out properly, i think there is a very good chance we will win. if you had a message... if you are delivering that message to the england captain, what would it be? just go out there and back for your
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country and do your utmost commit we know you can do it and we are right behind you, we are rooting for you guys. i think that is what she is saying. actually, yes, that will be right. do come back again. that is it for... that's it for the papers this hour. mihir and ros will be back at half past eleven for another look at the papers, and 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. see you shortly. goodbye. hello. lots of cloud across the uk at the moment, i think you'll have to wait until the weekend to see
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the best of the sunshine in the next few days and then we could see some really warm weather on the way for some. pulling in air from the atlantic, but it's coming into the south of the set of weather fronts. that is what's going to keep things cloudy for the next couple of days, at least some heavy rain to come into the north west here before high—pressure settles things for saturday, allows the sunshine through and some warmth as well. but today, though, lots of cloud and for the northern half of the uk, more in the way of rain as well, becoming increasingly persistent through the day, heavy at times for northern ireland the southwest of scotland and the northwest of england. for the south, we could see some sunshine and sunshine for the northern isles, breezy across—the—board however and particularly gusty in the west, quite murky for many western coasts and hills, too. but in the best of any sunshine, we could see temperatures up to 23 in london. just 11 though in a very overcast aberdeen. through thursday night on into friday, more rain across the northern half of the uk.
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but the south, hopefully the cloud will thin and break a little, starting to set us up for a slightly brighter day and southern areas on friday. at the end of the night though, you can see the next batch of heavy rain waiting to move and to the north west. but at least a mild enough start for friday, thanks to a sitting in the mild air, and that covering of cloud. but here we are on friday, you can see how the fronts drape themselves across northern ireland and scotland, some really wet weather to come i think for the southwest of scotland in particular. further south, though, hopefully some thinner cloud, more in the way of sunshine and temperatures pushing up into the mid—20s possibly in some spots. milder for aberdeen, but still pretty grey here. by saturday, though, the highs influence spreads further north, so we should see a brighter day across—the—boa rd and potentially temperatures up to 27 celsius in the southeast of england. but a very short—lived heatwave, because come sunday,
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this is bbc news, i'm carrie gracie. the headlines at 11:00: borisjohnson is to appear in court to face accusations of misconduct in public office. it relates to claims he made during the 2016 referendum. he says the case is politically motivated, but his accusers say it's in the public interest. mr paul considers that politicians have made or said things that are untrue, and he wants to ensure that there is a better standard in politics. new analysis shows much less is being spent on social care per head in england than in wales and scotland. i'm desperate, and i'm not the only
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