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tv   The Papers  BBC News  December 20, 2019 10:45pm-11:00pm GMT

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conservative central office on the day of the election, speaking to the electorate, a lot of people who live spoke to who said i have never voted, nobody in my phillies voted conservative before but we are doing a bit as we recognise it as will be ha rd a bit as we recognise it as will be hard slog but actually, summit has to hearus, summit hard slog but actually, summit has to hear us, summit has to hit it with to make that move at the end of january. however long it takes after that, it is almost as if date... initiate that first, let's get to that first hurdle... there was the understanding that it wasn't the end but it was... for some of the people i spoke to. the first hurdle would have been cleared at the end of january 2020. for me, i was shocked when they said, and you lot will be gone. meaning? immigrants. you lot will be gone soon. and there is a lot of that, you know? we'll see. it
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is also, its going to be a long series... i think what boris is really saying here is there was a time when we align ourselves with the revelatory framework that brussels imposed, and what we are i'iow brussels imposed, and what we are now doing is we are saying to ourselves, do we agree with every thing they say? sorry, brussels did not impose it. we are part of it. and now we have the choice. i suppose with some of the things we found very frustrating, we felt that some of these things were being imposed on us and now we have the flexibility to be able to make our owi'i flexibility to be able to make our own rules. now, what boris is saying is, we cannot necessarily assume that the eu had the right benchmark, that the eu had the right benchmark, that may be other parts of the world have different values that are better. can i ask a quick question? why do we call him boris? he is mr borisjohnson. he why do we call him boris? he is mr boris johnson. he is why do we call him boris? he is mr borisjohnson. he is not my friend.
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prime minister boris johnson. borisjohnson. he is not my friend. prime minister borisjohnson. yes, thank you. this intimacy, this, he is one of us, is part of the problem. leaders come in different shapes and forms and there is one thing that a lot of leaders need, charisma. they need to have something that inspire you. and there some thing about his personality, his identity, whether it has been manufacturer not, that it has been manufacturer not, that it has been manufacturer not, that it has actually made people turn their attention to him. and that's pa rt of their attention to him. and that's part of it, that in formality, whether it is boris or trump.|i think he is wrong. and i think he is totally unreliable. let'sjust come up totally unreliable. let'sjust come up before you move on, yasmin, you say people don't have a deeper understanding of what. .. say people don't have a deeper understanding of what. . ii say people don't have a deeper understanding of what. .. i don't know every single voter, but in a sense, this idea that this is it... whose fault is that? i know at the
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bbc, we always talk about commit is is the first. after that comes the trade deal, comes the further negotiations. surely the electorate know that. no. because a lot of the tabloids are quite guilty of doing a very civil view of what is going to be happening. in a way, we are all of us, i consider my support of the problem, my initiate is not done enough of what it should do, it had become a political thing. everyone sighed, you said it was complicated, on the other, you said it can be done. there is the challenge. how to explain the complications. let's turn to the times. something that may worry people more immediately than brexit and the years to come. one doctorfor 11,000 than brexit and the years to come. one doctor for 11,000 patients than brexit and the years to come. one doctorfor 11,000 patients in one doctorfor11,000 patients in some gp surgery. this is actually really worrying. not least because
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the knock on effect of having a situation where the catchment area for a situation where the catchment area fora gps or situation where the catchment area for a gps or larges people cannot get to theirgps for a gps or larges people cannot get to their gps and therefore they bring upa get to their gps and therefore they bring up a villages or picked up at a&e, which impacts those services as well. what we know is, in part of the conservative manifesto, they said they would be having not only more doctors, not only more nurses, building more hospitals. whether you believe that or not, at least they identified this is that really needs to be addressed. the problem is for quite a lot of the clinicians, the doctors, there are issues around their pensions. there were structures in place that led to doctors realising that the more they worked, the less they would earn. so little things like that need to be addressed. to actually make existing doctors commit because obviously it takes years to train a doctor. they actually need to look at some of the
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reasons why so many doctors might have been leaving the profession or saying we are only made doing a certain numberof hours saying we are only made doing a certain number of hours because it impacts on our pensions. can i ask you this? because you are in the are they going to let doctors or invite doctors to come and work in our national health service? yes. i think there's going to be a specific visa in place in order to attract doctors from around the world. yeah. yasmin, you don't sound... the m essa 9 es yasmin, you don't sound... the messages on immigration been so confused and so troubling, actually, from many of us who are immigrants. it is on the one hand, although so much of the politicking behind it is... controlled immigration? but also this kind of fairly threatening rhetoric of
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sending people home and so on. and then at the same time, the australian system is being offered, was being offered. if you look at the australian system, it is proper batty in many ways. it is not a simple solution. they take the very top elite but there is also a lot of problems with what happens to the low—paid workers. problems with what happens to the low-paid workers. what you really needis low-paid workers. what you really need is a system that is unbelievably flexible because at certain times of the year or at certain times of the year or at certain times of the year or at certain times of the decade to you need different people, and you need of some the mature responsible for some and i cannot believe there is not a system that has been designed to be able to say on a weekly basis, this is the kind of person you need, these are the kind of skills. maybe they are not skilled workers. we still need them to come. 0k, they are not skilled workers. we still need them to come. ok, let's turn to the financial times and the two stories on the front page of this paper. first off, though, the announcement we have a new this paper. first off, though, the announcement we have a new governor announcement we have a new governor of the bank of england. yes. it's
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been flagged up for in a couple of days. it has gone to andrew bailey, a bit of an insider. he has been working at the bank of england for 35 years, widely regarded as a safety or of hands. and it is interesting to have somebody who is a banker, whereas in europe, the european central bank, they very former lawyer. that is quite interesting. what is probably more intriguing is the fact that there is already in his in tray, a row about whether there was some banks who might have had access to the feed and if they had access to it, committed their traders have access to it? that is going to be the first application. would not have been really interesting and important to have had a woman for the first time? there was a woman in the running. and she was very, very good, for what i no. but she was not a
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supporter of brexit. who are you referring to? what was her name? supporter of brexit. who are you referring to? what was her name ?m would have been good for this top job, for... changing the way as well, in the sector. do you just wa nt well, in the sector. do you just want to have a woman? no. but these are strong and powerful women who have really proved in full to get an insider... you mentioned the audio feed. that is thrown up complications. an investigation is under way for the bank of england. what do you understand by this, yasmin? it is a matter of seconds. if summit he gets information just seconds before anybody else does, the traders take advantage, and you can... “— the traders take advantage, and you can... —— if somebody gets information for study can make shed loads of money apparently for it is
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very important the rules are maintained and followed and that there is... —— shed loads of money apparently. it is very important the rules are maintained and followed. it is that kind of vector knowledge so it is that kind of vector knowledge so what else has. already, people are saying that looking at the exact rules of the programme, it is a little bit nuanced. because they are not too sure what rules have been broken. the problem comes down to the particular company that's being looked at. they just the particular company that's being looked at. theyjust have unbelievably fast transmission. basically promoting a service. they are very clear about that is one of their offerings. lettuce there. -- let us and here. cartoon. how does he do it everything will day? this is about the floods. in east and we st is about the floods. in east and west sussex. and how it is affecting some quite important parts of
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logistics, in terms of gatwick, the roads around it. i think people getting away from christmas, try to getting away from christmas, try to get away for christmas, it must be so get away for christmas, it must be so stressful. and still is. were you affected by it at all? ijust hate the rain! we have had enough! it has not stopped yet. more to come. if you are interested, the weather forecast is coming up shortly for forecast is coming up shortly for for now, thank you to yasmin and to lucy. we are back at half past 11pm. will be back after the weather forecast. and don't forget you can see the front pages of the papers online on the bbc news website. i shall see you shortly. don't go away.
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good morning. i'm sure the weather wish on most people's christmas lists is for a dry christmas period. it does look as though things are a little bit more optimistic until then, —— optimistic for some been till then, it seems like this. flooding rains have been an issue across the country. in fact, by close of play on friday, the country has 90 flood warnings. please do log on the bbc weather website for further updates. let's ta ke website for further updates. let's take a look at what is going to happen over the next few hours. this little trough here will enhance some showers. some of them heavy with hail, possibly even some thunder. plenty of isobars following in behind us all before another weather front pushes in but it should only affect southern england through much of saturday. we start off with some showers easing away during the early hours of saturday morning. they will do so. the best of early sunshine on saturday likely to be in scotland. a foggy start for northern ireland,
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cloudy skies into the afternoon. a little bit of brightness for england and wales before that rain arrives into the eyes of scilly, the channel islands as well. just reaching south wales by the end of the day. that potentially drifts its way eastwards through saturday evening, clearing off into the near continent through the early hours of sunday morning. hopefully, sunday will be a slightly quieter day. we will start off on the chilly note with some clearer skies in scotland, maybe a touch of light frost here, but too much cloud into which other breeds further south and still the remnants of a little bit of light patchy rain to ease away. that will do so. sunday will be a day of sunny spells and scattered showers for brother windy unexposed south coast. just in excess of 40, 50 mph, but a better gene generally across the country. —— a better day. as we move out of sunday, towards the christmas period, it does look as though an area of high pressure will build as we move area of high pressure will build as
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we move through christmas eve and into christmas day. the showers will fade away and things are likely to quiet down. a brief period at least. and so if you are travelling, and you are not going away, it is going to bea you are not going away, it is going to be a shall restart to the christmas week. dry for a time for christmas week. dry for a time for christmas eve, christmas day. probably will be an issue with it turning wet later on.
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this is bbc news, i'm lukwesa burak. the headlines at 11:00pm: the ayes to the right, 358. the noes to the left, 234. after four failed attempts and more than a year of parliamentary wrangling, the government's withdrawal bill passes with a significant majority. now is the time to act together, as one reinvigorated nation, one united kingdom. the duke of edinburgh is admitted to hospital in london for what buckingham palace describes as a pre—existing condition. the teenage motorcylist harry dunn, hit by a car in august. now, the american woman involved is charged with causing death

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