tv The Papers BBC News October 31, 2019 11:30pm-12:01am GMT
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hello. this is bbc news with martine croxall. strong we'll be taking a look at tomorrow edi“? “azg‘ “fiffirfi “s“fif‘fl strong wind with scales. severe mornings papers in a moment — first the headlines: and strong wind with scales. severe gales on the southern flank of the low pressure wherever that may be to as the election campaign gets underway, get may bring some wind gust on 70 president trump wades in — he backs boris johnson mile an hourto and nigel farage and attacks get may bring some wind gust on 70 mile an hour to but it is not set in stone. just showing you this to get an idea of the possibility for the labour leader. saturday. temperatures drop a few degrees but there is destructive corbyn would be so bad, rain and wind. follows the events on he would take in such bad places but your country has tremendous potential, saturday so keep across the it's a great country. forecasted glow pressure into sunday building a little bit becoming less strong. the wind is not as blowing on sunday but there is still some wet weather around the low pressure as it begins to slowly edged further the president's criticism came just hours after labour launched its election campaign — east, closer to that across parts of with a promise to take on, scotla nd east, closer to that across parts of scotland and north—east england we what they call, the establishment elite. could see long spells of rain and we are going after the tax dodgers, we are going after the dodgy elsewhere some showers but there will also be dry moments and landlords, we are going sunshine at times. he comes another after the bad bosses, we are going after the big polluters because we know whose side we, area of low pressure to hot on its the labour party, are on. tonight, antoinette sandbach — hills as we go into monday moving a former conservative mp who lost into the uk. less strong than the the whip after rebelling over brexit one on saturday but it will be
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blustery around that. and that will — defects to the liberal democrats. still be some wet weather to the list there will be some showers, the body of the british backpacker amelia bambridge has been some bright moments around at times found in the sea near a cambodian island as well and temperatures are fairly a week after she went missing. close to average for this time of year to the latest area of low pressure than begins to edge away and as it does so, watch what happens to the flow of air around the low precious, tilting north and north—east to the cool air following hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the the papers will be its departure to on tuesday disclosed enough to either give some bringing us tomorrow. spells of rain or showers and there with me are economist ruth lea and nicola bartlett will be areas of escape. notice the from the daily mirror. many of tomorrow's front pages are already in. temperatures coming down, however, in the metro, the generation x particularly in scotland. cool air election: 300,000 register to vote injust1i8 hours, and two—thirds following the area of low pressure by mid week and then again another are under the age of 34. lull in the weather, a cold one then in the i, a pledge to tackle and there will be frost at night but the wealthy elite from jeremy corbyn that lyle does not last very long as labour kicks off it's and as you can see, as we get through the second half of the week campaign. it looks a low pressure from the atla ntic it looks a low pressure from the atlantic will return and there will be wetter weather on the way to just in the daily mail, trump tells again, watch the situation on borisjohnson and nigel farage to do saturday if you have outdoor plans 00:02:01,726 --> 4294966103:13:29,430 to we will keep you updated.
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a deal, to save britain from corbyn when the country goes to the polls. the financial times leads with impeachment hearings in the us — pressure piling on president trump as the house of representatives formally votes proceed with the inquiry. in the sun, kyle bile. it says footage of vile tirades — edited out of the programme — have been leaked to mps, who've accused itv of corporate failure. and in the mirror, from speaker of the house to i'm a celebrity. the paper sastohn bercow had been in talks to appear in the new series next month but itv wouldn't match his £1 million pay demand. that's a lot of money. donald trump didn't have a lot of confirmatory things to say aboutjeremy corbyn. he thinks is bad and he repeated it continually. i think donald trump i believe thinks he's doing boris
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johnson gave it. he is a big fan of doris. butjeremy corbyn will love the fact is being attacked by donald trump. a lot of his arguments about the dangers of a post brexit us uk trade deal and the potential that has four damaging the nhs. it's really interesting that trump wades in and says borisjohnson and farage needs to do a deal, exactly what his friend nigel farage have been arguing for the tory have resisted. it might mean the brexit party stands aside in constituencies where they are vying for votes with the conservatives. they're they are vying for votes with the conservatives. they‘ re understand that might have been —— happen and the brexit party is divided. some would and wouldn't like to do a deal with the conservatives but we know the problem for boris is even though he is well ahead in the polls, well ahead of labour, quite a substantial
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number of the exit boats go to the brexit party, you might not get his majority and he is looking for his majority and he is looking for his majority and he is looking for his majority and in a way, some deal between the conservative party and the brexit party makes a lot of sense. my guess is that something will happen along these lines at some point. it's very interesting about trump's attack on corbin because i take nicola's point, when barack 0bama because i take nicola's point, when ba rack 0bama intervened because i take nicola's point, when barack 0bama intervened in the brexit referendum, it did not end well for the people who thought 0bama's intervention would help the remaining cause. itjust did the opposite. it's this feeling that people are interfering. particularly for a lot of people who wanted to leave, they didn't want to be told bya leave, they didn't want to be told by a city or a parliament sitting in a foreign country what should happen in this country. it's just adding more fuel to fire. i suspect this
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will be forgotten by tomorrow. another of my great forecasts. much of which most of which have been completely wrong. we got you to admit that. this is the challenge for the tories to get beyond this particular argument about the nhs because labour are keen. donald trump said, i don't know where this idea has come from that you can find reference to it from the american ambassador to london and donald trump injune. ambassador to london and donald trump in june. there have been a dispatches programme which alleges meetings have taken place. very short memories. philip hammond in his budget last year, he put an extra £20 billion into the nhs, a lot of extra hunting. that comes after yea rs of lot of extra hunting. that comes after years of cuts. the nhs has not been deprived of that much money but they put a lot of money in last year
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's budget. but when you look at the waiting times. it's a bottomless pit. they do put a lot of money into it, to be fair. the fte. ashley hits back at clueless jeremy corbyn as business warns on labour's tone. mike ashley has said he is upset because corbin said he is one of the bad bosses. he is not beenjust announcing mike ashley, the founder of sports direct and newcastle united but others like jim radcliffe, the duke of westminster, rupert murdoch. inevitably, in this particular article, rupert murdoch. inevitably, in this particulararticle, basically rupert murdoch. inevitably, in this particular article, basically mike ashley is saying, if you're going to call me a bad boss, i'm going to retaliate is retaliated by accusing corbin of being... didn't you vote
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for leave and then leave the country? the chamber of commerce and the cbi are very concerned about this. this antibusiness rhetoric from corbin because of course, there are challenges. there will be difficulties about investment and jobs. it will damage jobs and investment if these people pull out of the country. a lot of people think that about leaving the european union, don't they? he's got to appeal to a very diverse constituency, hasn't he? it is a form of populism in a sense to attack the elite but this has been a successful area for him in the past, even though he is, in a way, an
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establishment politician because he's been an mp for years, hitting himself on the outside has worked well forjeremy corbyn and it appeals to people's sense in which they see unfairness in their lives and they want to blame it on something and to be fair, mike ashley, although he is very entertaining, a larger—than—life character, he has been called after his employment practices, he has got a bad record and even the cbi admits where there are faults, business should be challenged. let's look at the i, jeremy corbyn going to transform the uk by tackling the wealthy elite. usually win from the middle. it's not the middle. he is basically marxist and so is john mcdonald, they want to turn the country into a second venezuela. isn't thatjust a country into a second venezuela. isn't that just a lazy assessment? no, it's not. it's the truth, martin. we are a far cry from
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venezuela. look at the policies they set out in the last manifesto. they we re set out in the last manifesto. they were a lot less radical than the rhetoric itself would suggest and that's what's interesting about someone likejohn that's what's interesting about someone like john mcdonald... huge public expenditure commitments. but so do the tories. this is the ifa ‘s. so do the tories. this is the ifa 's. i do think corbin is to be careful about his antibusiness rhetoric, i really do, because it will damage jobs and when he's going on about tax dodgers, the top 1% of taxpayers actually pay over 25% of the income tax in this country. but isn't he talking about the big corporations who pay almost nothing in tax compared with their profits. the problem with that, there is a lack of international cooperation about that. it doesn't make it right. the avoidance of tax. there
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isa right. the avoidance of tax. there is a lack of international corporation and its difficult to fix but going into business like this is extraordinarily damaging. it might win him some votes. the shadow chancellor has made overtures, it's very different sounding. it's not the prawn cocktail offensive or whatever that was. and all right, some of the businesses are worried andi some of the businesses are worried and i take your point about the rhetoric but a lot of them do seem to find points of agreement with him so there is a disconnect between the stump speeches and the overblown rhetoric and what they are planning to do. let's look at the guardian. marching orders. bercow leaves the chambers for the last time a speaker. how sad do you think he is after ten years? i think he is sad, he adores sitting in the chair and he adores sitting in the chair and he absolutely adores his voice.
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whenever the deputy chairs the base, they seem to go on half the time and he did let it run today when there we re he did let it run today when there were tributes paid to him. but he is a very controversial character. his reforms the house of commons a lot. you see him there wearing a simple black robe, not the bigwig in all of that but his predecessors wore and is made a lot more time for backbenchers, given them more power but equally he's been accused of being a bully and his never really... is always denied that. but he's never really been held to account for some of those accusations, they just account for some of those accusations, theyjust kind of been forgotten because of the political nature of the house of commons. he said he was going to go quite some time ago. extended his own deadline, a bit like brexit. at least he's gone. i know you are not a fan. i'm not a fan. even though he has made the house of commons a more
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interesting place for the general public to watch? that may be the case but bullfighting and gladiator finding fighting was probably entertaining to watch by some people as well so i don't know if that's a good thing. what do you want from the next speaker? lindsay hoyle would be superb and eleanor lang. lindsay, when you see him in action, he is actually very fair and is not biased and he doesn't try and stretch the conventions of the house of commons as mr bercow has, stretch the conventions of the house so that comments could thwart brexit. conventions are conventions. strict conventions... that is what is so fascinating, we are lucky, sometimes forget briefings from the clerks about how these things work and it's fascinating because a lot of these things have been set down for years but people have played with the
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conventions and have tried different things. parliament is really come into its own in the last year. they thwarted exit, they did not have properly. mps voted against no deal. they voted against everything. they have expressed very diverse views and shown there is no majority for any of them. i think that behaved appallingly because they should remember that appallingly because they should rememberthat ina appallingly because they should remember that in a representative democracy, representing the people. but that's a plebiscite, the referendum. but it was politically binding stop we were told so. not advisory. it was politically binding. we are still going to leave. i should calm down. this is your forecast? i'm not leave. i should calm down. this is yourforecast? i'm not forecasting anything, dangerous territory. nose, we don't know who is going to win, corbin has different ideas as to the liberal democrats. joe swinson is going to be the next prime minister. you've got to say that. what's the
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point of taking part if you're not ambitious. let's have now to the united states and the trump impeachment hearings. it is all coming out in the open thunder fascinating. from our kind of drama over to theirs.... i also like the democratically elected houses holding the president to account. that is a place he has been quite —— nancy pelosi has been clever about this. she has decided to switch her vote and that kicks off the process. so she has shored up off the process. so she has shored up her own position by doing it under the charges, he has been impeached, the charges are there from the house of representatives
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that trump pressured the ukrainian president to investigate charges regarding joe biden, one of the leading democrat challenges. these will be tried in the senate and i suspect that that is when they will fall down because the senator that makes and still controlled by republicans and i think it will be party political. finally, thousands of england fans — to japan for the by of england fans — to japan for the rugby final. . i might watch the last five minutes. like to watch the last five minutes. like to watch the last five minutes of everything. i just the last five minutes of the cricket, i don't see the point in watching it all. the last five minutes is boring when it's all been decided. the last time england was ina rugby decided. the last time england was in a rugby world cup, the last five minutes were the most gripping. this
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is brilliant, brilliant that these fa ns is brilliant, brilliant that these fans are trying to get out there last minute and i love this line here thunder that you have until 7pm to catch a flight thunder travel advice. how helpful. anyone wanting to visit japan on advice. how helpful. anyone wanting to visitjapan on a whim... what will i do friday night? i'll head to japan thunder you can get a flight at seven o'clock on friday evening from london to tokyo, landing at the airport two hours before kick—off thunder about a 30 minute taxi journey from the airport under it is a long flight thunder it would be exhausting thunder but it is fantasies under we are flying first class, no carbon footprint done that you can lie down and sleep the whole way that under but i never can sleep on
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a plane. a teacher from oxfordshire gave up her job a plane. a teacher from oxfordshire gave up herjob so she could spend six weeks injapan bingeing on by. six weeks injapan bingeing on rugby. she bought a ticket for the final. it was with the pond.|j rugby. she bought a ticket for the final. it was with the pond. i hope for her sake and for all of the country. japan. a fascinating country. japan. a fascinating country. and they have made people very welcome. even if they don't really understand rugby. it has been very successful. that is it tonight. you can see the front pages of the papers online at our website. seven days a week and if you miss the programme in the evening you can watch it later on i play it. lovely to have you both here. that is it from us. good night to
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the countdown is on and england head coach eddiejones has named named an unchanged team for saturday's world cup final against south africa. captain 0wen farrell will continue at centre. george ford stays at fly—half. this is the team walk—about after training in tokyo ahead of saturday's final. we heard from head coach eddiejones today, he says they've been building up to this moment for four years. we also heard from hooker jamie george about the influence of the captain, and the emotional team meetings he holds, for only the players on the eve of matches. he leads from the front. he is incredibly committed in the way that he performs, the way that he carries himself day in and day out. that is the sort of person we want to
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follow. i think also he has developed in terms of his messaging to the team and how he builds that up to the team and how he builds that up towards the game on saturday. he makes his messaging through the week is brilliant and it makes the team feel ready for saturday. it builds our confidence through the week. a large part of that is down to him.. south africa have been able to bring back wing cheslin kolbe into their starting side after he missed the semi—final with an ankle injury. the springboks are looking to become the first team to lift the trophy after losing a match in the pool stages. it has definitely been frustrating, especially coming through the pool stages and being injured against italy. in the last few seconds of the game. i have been training with the game. i have been training with the team for the last two weeks so i am confident as a player that i am back to my old self and the ankle
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has healed nicely. i am grateful to get another opportunity to wear the green and gold nines the, especially playing in the final. arsenal's granit xhaka has apologised for his behaviour at the emirates on sunday after he appeared to swear at fans while being substitued during their draw against crystal palace. in a statement on social media xhaka said he loved the club but that he had been hurt deeply by the abuse he had recieved from fans on social media, allegedly threatening him and his family. he said he let himself be carried away — reacting in a way that disrespected the group of fans that supported the club. he went on to say "that is not my intention and i'm sorry if that's what people thought. craig levein has been sacked as manager of hearts and will also leave his role as director of football at the club. only goal difference is keeping the scottish premiership side off the bottom of the table. the former scotland boss levein had said that turning around the club's poor run of form may be the biggest
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challenge of his career. they have won only once this season. two british teams were playing in the women's champions league tonight. arsenal are comfortably through to the quarter finals after beating czech side slavia praha 8—0 on the night, 13—2 on aggregate. but glasgow city had to work a lot harder. the danish champions brondby won 2—0 in glasgow, meaning the sides were 2—2 on aggregate. it was the same score after extra time, which meant it went to penalties. and after two great saves from lee alexander, it was down to veternjo love to put the ball in the net — she did so and glasgow city are through to the quarter finals. kyle edmund was brushed aside by world number one novak djokovic in the third round of the paris masters. the brit ended an eight—match losing run when he won his opening round match against ricardas berankis, before defeating 14th seed diego schwartzman. he did take the first set to a tie—break but djokovic won that and the second set was far more comfortable for the serb,
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winning 7—6, 6—1. that's all the sport for now. we have more on our website. the first few days of november are looking decidedly unsettled. we will see wet and blustery weather across the uk and for some of us there is the uk and for some of us there is the potential for stormy weather, the uk and for some of us there is the potentialfor stormy weather, at least for a time. that is because of low pressure drifting in from the west. various frontal systems spiralling around bringing outbreaks of rain at times. but with that low pressure we will have a south—westerly flow of air across during friday and that is something considerably milder. a milder start to the day to rain outbreaks drifting across scotland's and eastwards a cross drifting across scotland's and eastwards across england and then we see a zone of dry and potentially bright weather before more outbreaks of rain return to northern ireland,
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wales and the south—west by the end of the day. those temperatures are just a touch higher than they have been, particularly in the south pacific 15 or 16 degrees. perhaps a bit cooler in glasgow. into friday night, further bands of rain driving north eastwards across the country but the wind becomes an increasingly big feature of the weather, as our area of low pressure deepens. i will show you saturday's with a child and you can see the low here. there is a little uncertainty about the exact positioning and the exact shape of this low pressure system but on its northern and southern flanks you can see a lot of white lines and isobars meaning there will be some very strong wind and some outbreaks of rain just strong wind and some outbreaks of rainjust lumbering strong wind and some outbreaks of rain just lumbering around that area of low pressure. there will also be some dry and bright intervening moments and in the centre of the low, the potential for light moments and in the centre of the low, the potentialfor light wind. at the north and particularly to the south there are likely to be some very gusty winds and those wind gusts might reach 70 mile an hour or
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more towards the south coast of england. those conditions will be very stormy indeed. the potential for travel problems and localised disruption. state into the forecast if you have plans on saturday. into sunday, the low pressure is still with us but the white line just stretches apart a little meaning the wind will be a little lighter. will still be outbreaks of rain at times but a fighting chance of seeing some dry weather and some spells of sunshine and a top temperature of 10-14 sunshine and a top temperature of 10— 1a degrees..
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you are watching newsday on the bbc. i'm sharanjit leyl in singapore. the headlines: the next phase of the impeachment inquiry into president trump — the house begins hearings in public. rd's about the truth. and what is at sta ke ? rd's about the truth. and what is at stake? what is at stake in all of this is nothing less than our democracy. as african swine fever spreads, international experts warn of the greatest threat to commercial livestock in a generation. hello. i'm nuala mcgovern in london. also on the programme: new studies show how measles devastates the body's immune system — making it harder to fight off other infections.
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