tv The Briefing BBC News July 22, 2019 5:45am-6:01am BST
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next to the bbc website. india will for the second time attempt to launch a mission to the moon, following technical issues which stopped the mission last week. and finally to the the times‘ world section. it is a brave new world, with singapore planning a rollout of cleaning robots to help out around the house, to be controlled through an app, at a monthly price of £800. robots replacing humans. there you go. with me is market commentator david buik. we were talking earlier this week about the importance for the uk, or papers are leading with that but the metro has got hammered exit, this is him announcing on bbc yesterday morning on the andrew marr programme that he is going to go before his
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sack. very forceful and he made it very clear that in no way he could count an ideal situation at all, greg clark from the business department of course, marie stewart who made a good showing in the initial situation with leadership contest. there will be others like alan duncan and various other people who will follow as well but they are not cabinet ministers. what i find fascinating is that there is no question that the countries in the mood that if we are going to brexit, could you please get on with it. but you don't do it all cost and so right, that is the date, we are out of you. there has to be some deliberation, one can only hope that we haven't had this. this hiatus for the last three weeks people have been sitting there whistling and thinking, christmas night, let's get
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on with the 23rd ofjuly, i hope they have some planning in place because we certainly don't know about it. european union appears to be not very interested in what anybody has to say, away the withdrawal agreement. one can hope that there is a new personnel there that there is a new personnel there that will bring in the best in people, whether going to see the home secretary, stephen barclay, will he still be the abraxas secretary, or will he still be the abraxas secretary, oi’ someone will he still be the abraxas secretary, or someone else will he still be the abraxas secretary, or someone else finish thejob secretary, or someone else finish the job that he started doing? anybody who thinks that this could be done with aggression over the top, i think are wrong. that we do need a very forceful approach to this to bring this to a natural conclusion quickly and sensibly, we hit the european union are in a slightly better mood to listen to alternative plans by the deputy you
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—— the deputy was relentless at night saying, no change. i wish them all well, whoever it is but it's not going to be easy. it won't be easy. it looks at philip hammond and the fa ct it looks at philip hammond and the fact that he sang, i'm off, i will go before i'm sacked. then you move on to the other papers who as you say look at the various other resignations that will flow in. but many have mentioned the fact that including chris mason are political correspondence and others over here at the bbc, that even though the leadership of the tory party will change and we have new premise to, a lot of the other elements have not changed at all of the you mentioned a new leadership within brussels. i'm not looking for anything from them. i think it will be even more in transient with her but i'm hoping that chancellor merkel and others of the 27 members will be a little bit
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more consider true in the tone of being able to listen to what might being able to listen to what might be the alternative. i'm not saying the going to react but... when it comes to a stalemate in westminster itself, if we have these six ministers resigning, some are saying they will quit in protest, a further six tory mps that could affect to the democrats, there's going to be moving around within the conservative party sure, how will that help or hinder a new premise to get a deal to parliament because that has been a real problem? they must around the numbers haven't changed, from what you have just said, there was. so a consulate return, even though it is really important to get this through, we cannot have this drug on for another two years was a it is just so dangerous for the country we do not wa nt to dangerous for the country we do not want to enter a recession. but what you are saying, you boys been very
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open and forthright for brexit, right from the get go, is you want brexit but you don't want it at any cost. that is not in a deal. where we are today, without bended respect, the fact is that we don't know. it appears that the original restorations were so badly handled and that we went there sang, ever so sorry to trouble you governor but would you possibly consider negotiating with us instead of... this is what we want. and bang bang. let's talk about it and be forceful but without a majority but —— and on the first ofjune, good night. but without a majority but —— and on the first ofjune, good night. the eye looks at how ministers —— i. on what the situation would be like if there was a no deal at the end of october not priorities government. the story talks about how food is
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not the top parity many of us thought would be that would be the case, obviously very important medical devices and medicines is top priority which you would expect. but other things as well, head of it like parts wanted the power plants ta kes like parts wanted the power plants takes precedence over food, like parts wanted the power plants takes precedence overfood, i know it's an iron detail but this is what has to be considered. this paper for a short read is an excellent newspaper but has no talent for the conservative government at all. this poetic license. no—one could say to me, andi poetic license. no—one could say to me, and i don't believe anybody in any government, any member of the human race doesn't put medical at the top of the list. all those drugs and things that we need to go both ways, absolutely fundamental in this picture here which is illustrating the food is almost equal. and everything else whether it's nuclear or anything is superfluous to requirement, of course is important, i'm not trained to be trivial and quite but those two things, whoever
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you are others who are not a member of the human race, those are top by a mile. thus the mouth feel about it. we want the opinion on this was not let's move onto the japan times, moving away from the uk for a bit. shinzo abe we've mentioned already, his ruling coalition stairs he hasn't got a super majority which would help and push through the agenda but shinzo abe has been prime minister for quite agenda but shinzo abe has been prime ministerfor quite some agenda but shinzo abe has been prime minister for quite some time in japan because of his staying in the job. having lived there for a couple of years, i've got a minuscule amount of knowledge about it and the culture. the japanese people of the most conservative people in the world and they don't like change. they hated. and what they want to do is to have consensus so we suddenly decided that you have the best thing since sliced bread and television, we re since sliced bread and television, were going to suck you, we would discuss it, discuss it with the person who cleans the floor although out to the chairman. the politics is very similar, i was appalled to see
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that only 49% of the people voted. very low turnout. so if you wanted to those majority to get the radical moves through the diocese they call it or parliament here, you need a lot more than that but i think the japanese people will be very co mforta ble japanese people will be very comfortable with that that shinzo abe, who is respected globally and a degree of frustration, i would be pretty ha p py degree of frustration, i would be pretty happy with that. that's go to the new york times, we running out of time, 50,000 customers without power in new city, huge heatwaves there, they're going to get cooler weather now which is great news, we're bracing ourselves for a heat in the uk. and in europe as well. more scientists —— more signs and signals that our world is getting hotter. we are having these extreme temperatures and stories of extreme weather all the time. nobody denies for a minute that climate change is
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actually —— absolutely of fundamental importance but we don't wa nt to fundamental importance but we don't want to be hysterical about it for the simple reason that if we go back, we've only been alive for some are between 25 and 75 years so we missed what happened in the 1800s, the 70 hundreds, they had shocking weather than. at this temperature is really fierce and got a much more sophisticated population and we need to deal with that has them turning off this power in the eastern seaboard of the united states will stop a0 degrees, the other people people —— the other thing people forget is that humidity is horrific. we need to look after it for the next few days because i thought were going to get. we have run out of time, that's a real shame but that is ok because i'm good you treat for my view is a story about the robot clea ners my view is a story about the robot cleaners in singapore and also the india moon mission lots, they have reset the time, thank you so much david and thank you to for your company, have a good day and will see you soon.
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hello. it has been a bit of a mixed weekend weatherwise but as we head through this coming week, it's going to be all eyes on the temperature because things are turning increasingly hot and humid too. not dry for all of us. some rain in the north—west during the course of monday and later in the week, we're expecting some thundery downpours to develop. and the reason for the heat and humidity is that we've got high pressure sitting to the east of the uk, with the winds rotating around that, drawing in all this hot air from continental europe, and it is particularly hot. in fact, in paris, we could see temperatures up to a2 celsius later this week, which would break the all—time temperature record recorded in the french capital. we've had this line of cloud and weather fronts pouring in from the atlantic during sunday night and through the day on monday, they're going to be bringing further rain, initially across northern ireland the west of scotland. further south, it's a mild and quite a murky start to your monday morning so we've got quite a lot of that low cloud, lingering around western
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hills and coasts through the day but elsewhere, the cloud should tend to in and break across much of england, northern ireland too. that rain pushing its way northwards, so sitting across western scotland for much of the day were it will be quite heavy and persistent but in the sunshine, temperatures up to about 28 or 29 degrees. it'll feel pleasantly hot monday afternoon and then into monday evening, we eventually lose that wet weather from the north of scotland, lingering through the course of the night, but by tuesday morning, most of us dry with some clear spells, a bit of patchy cloud here and there are those temperatures from the word go will be in the mid—to—high teens so through the day on tuesday, probably the driest day of the week across the uk. lots of long spells of sunshine with a southerly breeze, top temperatures by tuesday towards the south—east up to about 33 or even 3a degrees. further north—west, we're looking at those temperatures into the mid or possibly high 20s so a hot sunny day with light winds on tuesday but as we had to tuesday night, it's going to be fairly warm, fairly uncomfortable for sleeping. in fact, about 10pm, temperatures still nearly 30 degrees so you'll certainly notice that things are going to feel pretty
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sticky through the course of tuesday night and with all that humidity, heavy showers and thunderstorms are possible, they're likely to push northwards tuesday night and through the course of wednesday, some uncertainty about where they are going to be, probably the north and west. the south—east likely to stay dry through the day on wednesday and here, temperatures could well reach about 32 degrees or so. again, it is another hot day for most of us but a little fresher in the far north—west. things continue to heat up later in the week. 35 in london on thursday but do watch out more heavy and thundery showers, mainly in the north—west. bye for now.
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good morning. welcome to breakfast with dan walker and louise minchin. our headlines today: voting closes today, as conservative party members decide who they want to be the next prime minister: boris johnson orjeremy hunt. gangs of mystery men dressed in white t—shirts attack dozens of activists in hong kong, after another day of chaotic pro—democracy protests. shane lowry dazzles at the open championship.the irishman dominates to win his first major title by six shots,
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