tv The Papers BBC News June 1, 2019 11:30pm-11:45pm BST
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showers will return here later on. and in scotland, a band of cloud and showers continues to work eastwards as well. from sunday into monday low pressure m oves as well. from sunday into monday low pressure moves across the north of the uk bringing windy weather, blustery wind across the northern half of the country. outbreaks of showery rain on monday as well. further south your showers, more dry weather and some spells of sunshine to be had but for all of us by this stage, temperatures 15— 20 degrees. no more mid to high 20s or 28th on the chart. and that sums things up for the week ahead. rather cool. but there will still be some spells of sunshine. whichever way you slice it, a humid nightahead sunshine. whichever way you slice it, a humid night ahead for all of us. hello. this is bbc news with lukwesa burak. we'll be taking a look at tomorrow mornings papers in a moment — first the headlines.
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jubilation from liverpool fans, as their team win the greatest prize in european football, the champions league, beating tottenham 2—0 in an all—english final in madrid. it's their sixth european cup triumph. president trump defies protocol, ahead of his state visit to the uk, by praising borisjohnson and his bid to become prime minister. i've always liked him. i don't know that he's going to be chosen, but i think he is a very good guy, a very talented person. peter willsman should be expelled from the labour party, according to former justice secretary, and labour peer lord falconer. mr willsman, who's accused of saying the israeli embassy was "almost certainly" behind complaints of anti—semitism, was suspended yesterday. a bomb left under a serving police officer's car in belfast was "intended to kill", say detectives, who believe violent dissident republicans were behind it.
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hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me arejo phillips and nigel nelson. many of tomorrow's front pages are already in. the sunday times has an interview with donald trump who calls on britain to send nigel farage to negotiate with brussels and pursue a no—deal brexit if the eu refuses to give britain what it wants. liverpool's triumph over spurs in the champions league final is pictured on the front of the sunday telegraph. the paper leads with michael gove telling cabinet he is prepared to delay brexit until late 2020 rather than leave without a deal.
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on the front of the observer — the mayor of london sadiq khan compares donald trump to a 20th century facist ahead of the us president's state visit to london that begins monday. the mail on sunday warns britain's spy network has been stretched to breaking point by a new barrage of deadly threats according to mi5‘s whitehall boss. and brexit party leader nigel farage tells the sunday express he vows to "smash the two party system" apart and believes he is on track to win the next general election. we will start off with the telegraph isa we will start off with the telegraph is a bit of leadership, bit of brexit, the subject matter is michael gove. one thing that is astonishing is that not one of them have come out to something, some
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bright idea to actually sell brexit. michael's idea doesn't solve brexit but it kicks up questions. he says that we shouldn't leave with no deal on october 31 as planned, and he is talking about going on into 2020 two try and negotiate a deal. the only thing i'd say about this is that on the sensible side, it seems to me that the idea of an october date now with theresa may resigning, leadership crisis, parliament going on holiday for a long summer recess, that day was never going to be met. so probably it is worth going into the next stage, i would have thought the next stage, i would have thought the only hope of getting a deal is a customs union. i don't know if that is what we're going to with but we seem to be getting the idea that yes, brexit will take an awful lot longer than we ever thought. so he is compromised? that's what it looks
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like. it's putting clear blue water between him and the rest of them who for brexit. it would be interesting to see what jeremy for brexit. it would be interesting to see whatjeremy hunt, the foreign secretary has got to say about this because he is more likely to be a no deal, we mustn't leave with no deal. as nigel says, the idea that we would leave on october 31, is now receding into the distance. but there are still people, namely boris johnson, and —— who are hellbent on coming out, whatever. this makes a difference and the other interesting thing in the story is that the working pension secretary now appears according to this article to be giving michael gove her support, having rejected borisjohnson. she brings with her that one nation to review. about 60 votes that which is quite significant. that's quite a
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significant difference. when you look at this, jeremy hunt says something similar, we risk the party, we riskjeremy corbyn, getting into number ten. for the british public, what matters? delivering brexit or keeping your position within the party and keeping your in one piece? it's a very good question. it is a good question and i think that one of the things that the european results show is that people now about the accident than the political allegiance. it's the parties that wa nt to allegiance. it's the parties that want to drink it themselves together but all this is true. if you take the last opinion poll, what that will deliver would be labour would have the most mps, tourers have 111 mps, you would need quite a big coalition if the labour party was getting into power. look at the european results and you see a surge of exit and lib dems. and the
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greens. does everything to play for. i think the other problem is an awful lot of people are thinking, for heaven 's sake, get on with it. toa certain for heaven 's sake, get on with it. to a certain extent, what michael gove is saying and it is clear eyed, he sang actually, it is not going to be that easy. that's look at another candidate. not talking about brexit, but a bit of a policy loan. yes, something away (. the home secretary says he would scrap the top rate of income tax if he was to become tory leader. arguing that if you get rid of the 45p top rate, it would inject more dynamism into the economy, i again, his developing a divide between him and the former brexit sarah —— secretary who says he wants
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to focus because on basic rate income taxpayers than the higher earners. whether or not there is a hope... they are both mad. the idea that having just got out of austerity, we can now back into taxcutting, it really is for the birds. if you take one plan, it is at least £20 million it would cost, you would lose money on the nhs, on schools, go back into another age of austerity. the rates sends all the wrong signals, ok, cut it for rich people but anybody else we won't bother with. this is the man who cut short his holiday at christmas time declaring a national state of emergency because of the number of migrant boats crossing the channel. anybody could have told him that as sooi'i anybody could have told him that as soon as the weather got better, they will cross again. i don't think we're going to —— i don't think we're going to —— i don't think we're in state of emergency. that's
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cross to —— let's cross to the sunday times. a lot coming from donald trump. just in case you wanted any advice, he is there, isn't he? he is like in agony. this isn't he? he is like in agony. this is him saying send in nigel farage and go for no deal. this is a rather hideous play out of the apprentice. it's all a game. lots of chaps being bullish and brush and everything else. he says, nigel farage can go in and we should be prepared to walk away with no deal. completely the opposite to what michael gove is saying which is what we have been saying. as she said, political and trumpet don't often appear in the same sentence and they certainly don't in this one because he has ignored all the usual diplomatic rules about getting involved in the country he's coming to visit as a guest of the queen but also in another country. can i ask you to
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turn, so we can get as many stories as we can, to the observer. yes, he has said that the labour party is about to collapse and what is suggesting is thatjeremy corbyn fires his top aides and that would be the keep indications cheap, and the chief of staff. it won't happen, and i'm surprised that david has actually entered the free pr. at that kind of level. it seems to me that kind of level. it seems to me that whatjeremy corbyn needs to be pressured on is to make it clear what his brexit position is. it seems to be on the basis of what he said on thursday that if he wins the election, holds a second referendum after that, although he is a bit vague on what the question would be on the ballot paper. i'm not sure even at that. it seems every time he opens his mouth about the subject he muddies the water is a bit more.
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what you make of that?|j muddies the water is a bit more. what you make of that? i think the labour party is in as much turmoil as the conservative party actually andl as the conservative party actually and i think the expulsion of alistair campbell, tony was former head of communications, at the same time as today we hear that peter wells man has only been suspended. he said he had voted lib dem and the european elections after the positive closed, not urging other people to feel the same. if you publicly, you can say what you like, but how you like, the privacy of the polling booth. if you set publicly how you vote and it's against your party, i do think that you should face expulsion. do you? someone got suspended for that. what about all the people that voted for ken livingstone. the one thing is that it must go across the board. anyone that does it, tony blair has done
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it, charles clarke is now so they voted lib dem, they should be expeued voted lib dem, they should be expelled too. but meanwhile, the labour party is not dealing with anti—semitism and not dealing with death and rain threats. it's a big problem because in —— it's a big problem, isn't it? this little coterie of people who are obsessive, they are tribal, to an extent all parties are. but labour and the slot particular. -- this lot in particular. -- this lot in particular. it's very interesting. the wording is the key to it all. it's the definition, isn't it? let's turn to the mail on sunday. another call for money. i don't know if you meant the story couple of weeks ago. we did it with you. the unusual intervention from the head of the national crime agency. remember she done exactly the same previous year. now it is ben wallace who is, did
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you know, he is the longest serving security minister ever? and he has an interview with the mail on sunday, inside hq. he is basically saying it has never been so tough, cybercrime, organised crime, right—wing terror, islamic extremism, et cetera. it's basically a plea for more money and resources because it is stretching... he's talking about 600 investigations still live. you have to try and put these things into perspective and if you take is the most terrorism, we're now talking about 23,000 people who have crossed m15 ‘s radar at some point or other, when one comes on another drops. we know how much damage the ira did, how much more damage to 23,000 people do? it shows a scale of the problem we are dealing with. this is the second cry
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this year, for money. we're going to end with a picture, on the front page of the sunday telegraph. liverpool tramping —— triumphing in the madrid. did either of you see the madrid. did either of you see the game? no. i saw bits of it. i was a the game? no. i saw bits of it. i was a sneak to it on the train coming in andjust was a sneak to it on the train coming in and just the first bit which is very dramatic, which the photograph which is the sixth goal being scored. it's all about the fans. thank you both. 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 — and if you miss the programme any evening you can watch it later on bbc iplayer. thank you jo and nigel. next on bbc news it's the film review.
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hello, and welcome to the film review on bbc news. to take us through this week's cinema releases is jason solomons. in his spring linens. so, jason, what do we have this week? i have a schlocky shocker from the blumhouse horror locker. olivia spencer and some gullible teenagers star in ma. a nuclear threat unleashes the titans again in godzilla. should i say i'm armageddon out of here? laughter.
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