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tv   The Papers  BBC News  September 13, 2019 10:40pm-11:01pm BST

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at the world para swimming championships. she won herfifth gold medal tonight, with victory in the women's 50 metres freestyle. and five gold medals soon became six — as tai was part of the great britain relay team that won the 4 by 100 metre medley — setting a new world record time. world champion bianca walkden took silver after a golden—point loss to arch rival shuyin zheng in the +67kg world taekwondo grand prix final in japan. it was the first meeting between the pair since walkden‘s controversial victory in the world final in may. dutchman mathieu van der poel extended his overall lead in the tour of britain as he won his second stage of the race. he now leads matteo trentin by 12 seconds in the general classification going into saturday's final stage. there's been racing success for frankie dettori today — as he eased to victory
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in the doncaster cup. dettori rode the 9—1 on favourite stradivarius to victory. the win was a tenth successive victory for stradivarious — an unbeaten run which stretches back nearly two years. finally, tyson fury has weighed in over half a stone lighter than his last fight for his showdown with otto wallin on saturday night. the heavyweights tipped the scales in las vegas ahead of their ceremonial weigh—in, with fury sporting his trimmest figure since november 2015, weighing in at 245.4lbs. he's the overwhelming favourite to win ahead of that much talked about rematch against deontay wilder. that's all from sportsday. we'll have more sport throughout the weekend. but from me and the team for now, goodbye.
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hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are dawn foster from the guardian and broadcaster john stapleton. many thanks for being with us. let's just show you the front pages already in and a certain former prime ministerfeatures already in and a certain former prime minister features on a lot of them. david cameron breaking his silence ahead of a long awaited memoir. the times has the exclusive interview with the former prime minister who insists he was right to hold the referendum —
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but says he's sorry for the division and uncertainty it's caused. the daily mail calls it cameron's revenge — as the former prime minister accuses boris johnson and michael gove of acting ‘appallingly‘ during the campaign. and the fall out from the interview leads tomorrow's daily telegraph too, as david cameron says a second referendum should not be ruled out. while the daily express leads with the news that the former pm was shocked so many people voted to leave the eu. the mirror reports that david cameron admits in his book to smoking cannabis with his wife. the ft weekend leads on the news that the prime minister — borisjohnson — plans to try and force a new brexit deal through parliament in 10 days,. that's if he gets a deal. there we are, flavour of the papers. i'm sorry, ifailed, is the times. in the interview they have, along with
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andrew, who has spoken to david cameron. we constantly hear from tony blair, we constantly hear from john major. former prime minister have been coming out and speaking about politics, speaking about brexit, and david cameron, the architect of the referendum, has been clearly silent. he has come out and said he is not unhappy he held the referendum but unhappy with how it went. he has gone to the times, they have been very careful about how the interview went, and so the interviewer had to go into the office, was not allowed to write down notes. he has finally broken his silence. he is very sorry for a lot of what he did. but as you say, he does justify holding the referendum. he says it was notjust overdue but necessary and i believe ultimately, inevitable. that is his line. it was in the tory party
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manifesto he wouldn't do it. he felt as if he had to do it to stave off ukip at the time, and his party. he mentioned seriously underestimating the strength. he mentions, he wakes up the strength. he mentions, he wakes up every day worrying about it and what might happen from here on in. he deeply rest the outcome and... he failed. i'm sorry i failed. he says he's usually depressed. sort of reminded me of tony blair — very differently, obviously — of tony blairand iraq. do differently, obviously — of tony blair and iraq. do you think he wonders, if only i did not have that referendum? arguably, he would still be there, in downing street. i believe them when he says he was
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concerned about the countries going and the way this has divided the country. this has divided the country, and some people would say it will never be quite the same again, and he will get the blame for that and he will be remembered for that. they are all remembered for the disaster not what they achieve a. it's exactly the same as tony blairand iraq and a. it's exactly the same as tony blair and iraq and eden and suez. he talks about how the conservatives around him who world remain voters drastically underestimated what nonvoters would do. the reason the referendum moved to leave is a lot of people who did not normally vote voted. he says 2013, he decided to have the referendum, and he thought very deeply about that but he denies
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it was pure politicking. he would say that, wouldn't he? some people would say! the other interesting thing about the book and the interview is, the daily mail is calling cameron's revenge but really, having a right go at doris johnson and his former friend, michael gove. —— borisjohnson. johnson and his former friend, michael gove. -- boris johnson. they behaved appalling, they trash the party, and he's clearly... michael gove, he was clearly close with michael gove. he feels let down by michael gove. he feels let down by michael gove. he feels let down by michael gove. michael gove, during that campaign, along with boris johnson, along with priti patel, left the truth at home. a reference a macro a reference also to penny
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mordaunt about turkey during the year —— mordaunt about turkey during the year——a mordaunt about turkey during the year “ a reference... mordaunt about turkey during the year —— a reference... turkey did not have a cat in hat chance of joining the eu. he uses, about michael gove, the word mandate shows. —— the word mendacious. when he put that to cameron, the interviewer, he said i don't the guy said that. quite a strong line. absolutely. cameron says, in the book and in the interview, that he's been very honest about his feelings about how the referendum went and how, the behaviour during and after it. all the remarks are out there, he is... his strongest words are held for michael gove and boris johnson. he thought boris was a good
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mayor but may not be a good prime minister and that gove, as you said and cameron said, left the truth at home. telegraph similarly, cameron lashes out at gove and johnson. also on johnson now. sharp practises committee proroguing of parliament, the expelling of 21 mps as well. he is part of the established sort of tory party. a lot would agree with david cameron. it does appear sharp practise. scotland seems to have taken that view but we'll see what the high court says a. and when he says he does not rule out a second referendum committee is not action calling for its... he is not. i think what he was saying, what david cameron was saying was, think what he was saying, what david cameron was saying was, we think what he was saying, what david cameron was saying was, we may have no option to go to a second referendum —— but to go for a second
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referendum. the telegraph points that he was asked twice about whether he trusts borisjohnson and refused to answer he has come out very strongly —— refused to answer. he has come strongly. he says no deal is a terrible idea. let me ask you honestly, on the basis of all of this, is it's a book which is presumably hundreds of pages long you would like to buy and read was blue i suppose we should. —— by and read? i suppose we should. i don't know who, anybody who will buy this book. i knew a lot of people who wa nted book. i knew a lot of people who wanted to read the blair book. there's a lot of interesting thing about iraq, etc, what i don't know anybody desperate to read... but
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people have passionate feeling about brexit? i think we are fed up with brexit, quite honestly! we weren't fed up with the war in iraq, you weren't fed up of it. we are fed up of brexit. all of us are fed up of brexit. it's been serialised in the newspaper, even brexit. it's been serialised in the newspaper, even the coverage today and tomorrow morning. you've got it. you've read it. i am being told it is more than 700 pages long. 750, yes. that is quite a read. i don't know who is going to read it. if you are going to read a book about brexit, you would want to read a book by one of the architects, maybe dominic cummings. the second the pulse came out, he left. brexit killed him as a prime minister, he wasn't involved afterwards. i don't know who is desperate to read his book. the mirror have a different
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angle on the memoir. his confession! it's a little confession. 0n the copy we have seen here, it is two paragraphs, and that is about it. david cameron admits to smoking with his life and getting off his headwall. .. not with his life and getting off his headwall... not with boris his life and getting off his headwall. .. not with boris johnson! not with borisjohnson! and that is more or less it. the times, refers toa time more or less it. the times, refers to a time he went to the teams and smoked dope. will anyone care? my view is, not any more. 15, 20 years ago, that would have been political death. i think some of with cameron's background, it's assumed he has taken drugs. he admits he smoked dope with his wife. he was
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asked about cocaine and, like a michael gove, he did not answer. bring us more up to date of the looking about borisjohnson and he was saying today, optimistic by the brexiteer. how many times have you heard that? quite a lot of times. the ft also say if he gets a deal, he is going to fast—track it through the commons. how is he going to do this? i haven't the faintest idea. he said yesterday... there is no sign of what it is going to take. he also said there is a landing space for a deal. a landing space for a deal, yes, and cautiously optimistic. all i am hearing on your
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news bulletins and only read in the newspapers... i thought you were going to say all i here from top sources in the government! all i am hearing on news bulletins from the bbc and itv, kind of everything, says that is firs the eu are concerned, nothing has changed. and ireland, nothing has changed. what is this magical deal that he's going to put their intent days? there might be stuff going on... there might be stuff going on... there might have been for three years! this story is interesting because as the first time you've seen any evidence that borisjohnson actually has a strategy other than no deal. i don't think it's going to work but at least he has one! does he need to focus on a deal if no deal is essentially a legal? he has to try and avoid no deal, he has to talk to
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the dup and sort out the ireland problem. he has a couple of weeks to try and cobble stuff together, speak to the eu as fast as possible, run back to the house of commons and desperately trying get something through in a parliament where everybody hates him. and at the same time, again, according to bbc bulletins, downing street is playing down this meeting monday with the top brass. what are we to believe? all will be revealed at some stage. just be patient! don and john, thank you so much. —— eu and john. that is it for this hour. they will be back with me at 11:30 p:m.. and don't forget you can see the front pages of the papers online
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on the bbc news website. it's all there for you — 7 days a week at bbc.co.uk/papers. thanks again to dawn and abdelkader bensalah. ifrom again to dawn and john. we have made it to the weekend and the kind of weather you can expect this weekend depends very much on where you are spending it. the further south you are, a lot of dry weather. those temperatures will climb as the weekend wears on. further north, the greater chance of seeing some outbreaks of rain at times. certainly not all the time. it will actually turn cooler. quite windy in the far north as well. low pressure will be trained to muscle its way in here whereas further south, high—pressure holds firm, giving a lot of dry weather. underneath that area of high pressure, as we go through the rest of tonight, clear, starry skies
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overhead and the winds are light. it is going to turn rather chilly. some spots in the countryside might get down to around two or three degrees, but temperatures actually coming up a bit as the night wears on for northern ireland and for scotland more cloud spreading in here. a brisk breeze and some outbreaks of rain getting into the far northwest of scotland. that is where we have the wettest of the weather for tomorrow. claudia generally across scotland. for england and wales, once any early mismatches have cleared, a lot of some chance or the day and separate high temperatures as well. could get to 23, they be 2a degrees towards the southeast, a degrees towards the southeast, a degree or so higher than we had today. further north, not too bad. could see gusts of 60—70 mph, maybe a little stronger than that, in the most exposed spots. this weather front pushes its way southwards. it
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is running into a generally high area of pressure, an area high—pressure. babel peel off the front to some extent. as it wriggles around, there will be some wet weather at times through northern ireland, southern scotland, but uncertainty about the exact position. 0ne uncertainty about the exact position. one thing is for sure, it will feel quite cool to the south of it. 25 or 26 degrees into the north of the front, some rather cool air, 14 of the front, some rather cool air, 1a degrees in glasgow. as we go into the new working week, not that you will want to think about itjust yet, iam will want to think about itjust yet, i am sure, we all get into some of the cooler air. a few showers at times but equally, a lot of dry weather and some spells of sunshine. yes, it is mixed fortunes as we head to the weekend.
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this is bbc news. the headlines at 11:00: david cameron breaks his silence on brexit. in an interview with the times, the former prime minister says a second referendum cannot be ruled out. meanwhile boris johnson says he is cautiously optimistic about getting a deal on brexit, but a heckler in yorkshire tells him to get back to parliament. why are you not with them in parliament, sorting out the mess that you made? would you would you mind? i'm very happy to get back to parliament very soon, but what we want, ithink parliament very soon, but what we want, i think to see... why don't you sort it out, boris? the family of a teenager who died from an allergic reaction after eating out want the law changed to improve food labelling in restaurants. the number of people killed
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as a result of domestic violence

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