tv Monday in Parliament BBC News March 10, 2020 2:30am-3:01am GMT
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wouldn't it be a good idea if someone like 0fcom could have under your supervision total access to what is going on so they could this is bbc news, the latest reassure us that there was not some headlines: the italian government underlying bias being applied has announced a ban on all public to the way google is reporting politically sensitive information? we are reflecting what is on the internet rather than curating the content we hope would be on the internet. i think it isjust important to have gatherings stopping the premises that clear understanding searched all italians to at home and only move for work and in an because if it is viewed as you suggested, bias emergency. global markets have seen results one way or another, that could lead to challenging misconceptions and meaning their worst day since the financial crash of 2008. as concerns mount we are not dealing with the issue we hope to deal with and society. my position as this is positive. over the spread of the virus and the but we need preserve the value falling price of oil stopping the while we defend against the abuse. three main indices in the united some of the abuse is motivated states or closed more than 7% down by the same thing that causes us on monday, the asian markets seemed to read shakespeare 400 years later because people have not changed to recover slightly. 2500 passengers a bit and he raised out all of the good and the bad who were stranded for days on a and the ugly. cruise ship on the pacific because of the virus have begun disembarking but we are human beings and we should try very hard in california. 21 people on the to make our tools serve us grand princess contracted the illness stopping those needing immediate treatment were taken off in our society in a positive way. first. you are up—to—date on the
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google's chief internet headlines. evangelist there. now on bbc news, it's time now a home office minister has told the house of lords that the government is examining what can be done to stop the use of the so called "rough sex defence" in courts to escape justice. for monday in parliament. last month, the killer of the british packbacker grace millane in new zealand claimed that she had died accidently after "consensual choking". hello and welcome to monday in parliament. the headlines from westminster: the health secretary defends the 28—year—old man, who can't be the government's plan not to take named for legal reasons, was convicted or murder more widespread action and jailed for life. ministers are also planning against coronavirus at the moment. a new law to tackle domestic violence a law that will create a commissioner to stand up we are not at this stage proposing the cancellation of mass events for victims and survivors. because we are followling the scientific advice at this stage. my lords, the domestic abuse bill mps are dismayed by reports that includes an all—purpose definition of domestic abuse to ensure parliament might be closed down that the nature of abuse is fully to contain the virus. understood and emphasising it is not just physical or sexual violence but also includes controlling or coercive behaviour or economic abuse. we can play our part as an organisation in containment without going for the nuclear option of closing down accountability altogether. also on the programme, as part of our plans a tv architect says the uk has for implementing the bill, a housing crisis and it's we are considering options going to get worse. i have been around a number for public awareness campaigns.
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of dinner tables or people have said, great, my house is gone up while i welcome the reintroduction of this bill which will create from 20% for last year. a more effective approach great, fantastic, but then you're to tackling domestic abuse, leaving a whole generation the problem will not stop of young people behind. because of legislation. one in four women in this country will suffer a domestic abuse. one and four. that statistic we may all know someone who is suffering and who can this be? i seen you very much behind closed doors. as being the david attenborough of the digital world. all will be revealed later. but first, coronavirus. the health secretary has told mps someone who is too ashamed, humiliated, frightened it's still too soon to order to come forward, even the cancellation of large gatherings to their family or friends. and close schools to prevent so i hope my noble friend in order the spread of covid 19. to break the silence we really do however, at a news conference need to start a conversation and the government must in downing street, the government's play its role in raising awareness of this horrific crime chief medical adviser said and encouraging all of us there could be a change in advice to confront and challenge an issue within the next ten to 1a days that is still taboo in our society. and people with even a minor cough or fever will be asked to self—isolate for a week. matt hancock's statement included may i agree wholeheartedly with everything that an update on the number of cases my noble friend says. in the uk and he revealed that a fourth person had died. her royal highness the duchess of cornwall made the same point we continue to work to contain the virus, but we're also taking in her speech to the women
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action to delay its impact, to fund research and to mitigate its consequences. of the world that's full just last friday when she said and i quote, laws alone cannot change behaviour, throughout our approach is guided by the that is the bedrock domestic abuse is everyone's problem and the solution must be to. on which we base all our decisions. in terms of the royal government can play, we can see the merits of a public information campaign and are exploring options for it. our plan sets out what we're prepared to do and will make the right choices of which actions to pursue at the right moment. we are still officially but my noble friend is absolutely in the containment stage. right and we all have a part to play at some point, we will need to move in confronting this. it is not to continue to be had into the delay stage in a way as it has been so long. with the noble lady the minister for we will understand social distancing measures except that quite a lot of domestic will be necessary. many constituents are now asking and it would benefit the house if he could explain abuse is intergenerational and unreported because a mother is very unlikely to report abuse for constituents, why we are not yet committed by her son. she would feel ashamed, and so on. considering more home working and should we be asking those over 65 to isolate? should we be cancelling larger events? and those returning from northern italy, should they be taken to quarantine? i think we and derek, ijust think would help our we overlook the number of the abuses constituents if you just run
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that are committed in this way. through the medical advice on those fronts. we are not at the stage proposing i do not think that point has ever the cancellation of mass events been made on this topic in this because we are following the scientific advice house and i think the noble lady and that is not what is proposed raises such a disturbing issue, at this stage and of course, it is true, people perhaps think home working and flexible working is something that in many cases they see it but cannot pinpoint it and i think it goes back is advocated anyway and people will make their own decisions to the point that noble lady made as to when that is appropriate. previously about people being trained to see these things because some older people with the secretary of state explain are and not her in this situation. why the timing of such social distancing measures at least 59 women have been is so crucial and at what point and on what killed in the uk by man basis he will decide if they are necessary? who claims their death was as a result of sex games the first question is how gone wrong, according effective is this measure. to the campaigning organisation. is it effective? we cannot consent to this. this defence has been used successfully in cases that have gone to trial, resulting in a conviction for manslaughter or an acquittal. can the minister confirmed that the government the question is are you going to get when he is the domestic abuse bill unintended consequences of people acting differently in a way that actually hinders the overall effort? it is the scientists to best explain to ban the rough sex defence? the reason they have scientifically come to this advice, but it is clear that there are other measures that we can take that are more effective and have fewer negative side effects. my lords there are some complexities in this but it is absolutely right
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0n morning television, that we do reinforce current case law so the person cannot consent to something that leads to serious injury or adapt. perhaps you can take it on the chin we are looking at the best way to achieve this. lady williams. and take it all in one go and allow covid—19 to move through the population without taking as many draconian measures. can the secretary of state advice the house that this is not the government's official position? no, it is not the position and the prime minister the uk has a housing crisis and it's was explaining why we have taken going to get "worse and worse". the decisions that we have. one of the reasons for growing that was the message from the architect george clarke, concern amongst our constituents who presents property shows on channel four. george clarke, who grew is the only number out there is the 80% reasonable worse up in a council house, case scenario, is it not time says the government is "obsessed with home ownership". for the health secretary he's campaigning for 100,000 new council homes to be built every to share his central estimate year for the next 30 years. of what he thinks the proportion of the uk population is that we'll get this virus, even though i have been an ambassador we will all understand that that for shelter and involved in housing estimate may change over since i was 16 years old, seeing the industry the passage of time. changed massively. matt hancock declined to give such an estimate. several mps had questions about the health service. on 76 in the last year
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and expansion of critical care scene then be privatised at the level it has been and the state taking a step back will add a further eight beds, from building at scale in terms but is he doing to expedite of social housing and council housing provision and i think to expedite this expansion? it is having a detrimental effect on society as a whole that it is creating a kind how many of have and have—nots. additional intensive care beds can does not have property and those be created and how soon? that are on the property ladder we are working very hard right across england and i know and doing well out of it, that my scottish counterparts the houses increase year on year are working across scotland and those that have not. and welsh the same in wales those that are struggling to get to ensure that we get the same expansion of critical care beds. on the property ladder and those struggling to pay their rent given that around 5% of those or save their deposit with coronavirus may in order to buy. require critical care, what is his current best estimate of the number of ventilators that i also think the government is obsessed with homeownership and i think other forms of tenure are not given will be required to meet that the priority that home ownership is being given. i think that is a problem. you brought up council housing back into the vernacular and we have a council estate demand, bearing in mind the point in liverpool, so sell to the vast, that he is made of course having 12.8 billion a year we spent on housing. sufficient staff to operate those, but what is the number that we need? the secretary of state said we'd negotiate with the chancellor the answer is more and as many and head of the spending review, as possible, frankly. how realistic is that they care? we are buying ventilators and a commercial strategy around is it in danger to be seen by that and of course training people
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to be able to use them. the government is absolutely right someone which will never agree to a? to be putting a lot of public money into research into a possible 25 billion a year is paid vaccine, but he will know that by the state on housing benefit. research is no good unless you can produce vaccine at scale, 9 billion a year of 25 billion and this country is not great at producing vaccines. what can he do to ensure is paid to private landlords. that we grow indigenous capacity very quickly so that the uk public in particular, the key workers and our health service do not have to wait in line who are renting back to the state. when a vaccine becomes available? this is a very important point. we do have some significant vaccine capabilities and not so straightaway you can see only do the research that is a pot of cash where we are world—class of £9 billion i could be retained but also some production, within the system. he said housing problems such as in hamilton scotland, had a social impact. if you have not got a safe, stable and secure home, there is a broader point that affects so many other things in which investment into the whole in your life so i think we need production chain, notjust to be thinking about this and more holistic terms and looking the research, is critical. in may and june, millions of people at the biggest cost to us and putting a value on that.
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will be sitting in public exams let with the plan b and while excepting my honourable friend is doing the right thing in holistic terms? by following the scientific evidence, can i encourage them to do every thing the government needs to think and holistic terms possible to make sure those exams go because what the system needs is long—term, stable secure funding ahead and in the event to create long—term, secure and stable homes. it needs to do that. i have been an ambassador, it is notjust a shelter thing or a homelessness thing, it is an affordability crisis thing and a housing crisis thing. that they have chosen not to that they have clear contingency plans? i have been an ambassador and supporter of shelter for many years and i have just seen the minister said the the problem get worse and worse education department. was working very hard on that. and worse year on year. a number of labour mps were worried and he didn't think getting the private sector to build about the payment of sick pay. affordable housing was working. there will not be entitled to sick i have sat in many, many, pay orjob seekers allowance. the company has said working many meetings, far too many with them that they will offer when i had developer say i have support to their workers who cannot come to work because they have great news, we got rid of the affordable to self—isolate, others have not, housing provision and. what pressure are they putting isn't that fantastic? on these businesses to ensure that business delivering services will be and my heartjust sinks basically. able to self—isolate? i would urge all companies, especially the large companies
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who use an awful lot of self—employed workers to deliver their services, i have been around a number i would urge them all to look of dinner tables where people say great, my house has gone up by 20% of the last year, great at what hermes has done for them, fantastic but then you are leaving a whole generation and recognise it as their part of young people behind. of the national effort to help how would you find this? everybody to make sure that they can it is easy to talk about go home and stay at home the need to find it, which department would you cut, if they need to stay at home to keep would you increase borrowing, would you increase taxation themselves and others safe. on people like myself to find it? another concern was whether parliament would continue to sit. it is about rebalancing parliamentary accountability is absolutely fundamental the books is in it, obviously but we are hearing them you can increase taxation. another option was to review being suspended until september. the right to buy council houses, introduced in 1980. when a house is sold could he absolutely undertake off and ready to buy, that this is not going to be part of those capital receipts go the case and recognise that we can out to treasury so it is taken away play our part as a big organisation from local media and taking away of 650 mps and thousands of staff, from council budget and used we can play our partisan for other things and not organisation in containment without going in its entirety but part of it is. for the nuclear option of closing personally i think this has to stop. down accountability altogether. and those thoughts from i think that parliamentary the architect and tv presenter, george clarke, bring us to the end accountability is incredibly of the programme.
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alicia mccarthy will be back at the same time tomorrow important and i will be doing for tuesday in parliament. all that i can to make sure that but from me, mandy baker, goodbye. parliament stays open through this process. matt hancock. well, several mps used to the opportunity of work and pensions questions to ask about people claiming benefits who may be told to stay at home to contain the spread of the virus. this was the senior conservative, david davis. as it stands at the moment, jobseeker‘s allowance hello there. requires claimants to attend we've got mild air across an interview in person every two weeks, and proof that they're looking for work. the uk at the moment, and claimants as it stands can be sanctioned if they fail to attend the job centre, but as we saw over the winter, turn down a training course mild air means cloud and some rain. or failed to go to an interview. that's certainly the secretary of state says these case this time round. sanctions will not be applied the cloud streaming if they are informed in advance. in from the atlantic is bringing the steadier, heavy rain but the process of going over the hills of wales, through the self isolation may be the hills of western england, and into the south—west shocking to the people involved. of scotland, and it's still wet here come the end of the night. a bit drierfurther east, and generally milder than it was this time yesterday. the heavy rain, the steadier rain, focused over the hills of mid wales again, though. here we've got an amber rain warning it may be disorganising to what may from the met office,
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already be disorganized lives. and by the time the rain eases off, by late morning, the kitchen to the house there could be as much as 100 that there were retain flexibility for people and not be punished mm of rain over the hills, feeding into those swollen for doing what the rivers and likely to lead government recommends. i had to make clear to the house to some more flooding over the days ahead. that people will not be penalised quite a wet start for many for doing the right thing. western parts of the uk, i think it is important that people including all the showers that have that conversation we've got in scotland. with their workforce and as i have but gradually through the day it emphasises that the house, does become drier and brighter they can exercise discretion in scotland, northern ireland, but the important figure northern england, north wales for the ongoing compensation and the midlands, with fewer showers. to be my composition. still some damp weather i do not know will be in terms towards the far south—west of england and south wales. of exercising discretion windy, those winds strong to gale—force, but very mild air. that is so fundamental, even further north, those the government needs to be much more temperatures are in double figures. robust in its advice. but get some sunshine can she tell us when they will publish that advice for those through the midlands, the south—east and east anglia, who have to scrutinise temperatures could be 17 degrees on tuesday. that's because the air what the government is doing. is coming all the way from the azores. that's bringing that warmth. madam deputy speaker, it is somewhat cooler further we're working on a number of different scenarios that are happening north, and in between those two and preparing guidance carefully, we are doing this across government different air masses, and i can assure him that rapid progress is being made you've got a weather front, but we will always be guiding this government by the advice of course. of our chief medical officer that's producing some patchy rain and drizzle across more southern parts of england and wales on tuesday and the chief scientific advisor
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is and that something work instead night, and then another weather front arrives to enhance in instead in particular the showers in the north—west. on the issue of self isolation. the overnight rain heads out the work and pensions into the english channel. secretary, therese coffey. we get those showers coming you're watching monday in parliament with me, mandy baker. don't forget if you want to keep up in, more to scotland with what's happening in parliament on the go there's always our sister and northern ireland, programme today in parliament, then spilling into northern which is available and western parts of england and wales, some snow over the higher ground in scotland. on the bbc sounds app. probably on the dry side for most of the day in the south—east of england, and while it's not as mild, now, when searching the internet can those temperatures are you trust what you see? still above average — could be peaking at 15 degrees. and how do search engines like the colder air is here google try to weed out conspiracy behind this weather front. theories or misinformation? that will tend to enhance those peers have been trying showers during wednesday night to find out from one across the northern half of "the fathers of the internet". of the uk, so some more wet vint cerf is a vice president weather here, and then we start to see the winds picking up of google and holds the title of chief internet evangelist. in the north—west on thursday. lots of showers or longer spells of rain coming in, and probably more wintriness over the high ground as well. some showers coming mr cerf, who wears headphones into england and wales, because he has a hearing impairment, but generally further south was greeted with praise and east across the uk, as the evidence session began. you may miss the showers. i see you very much and those temperatures as the david attenborough are nearer normal, really, for this time of year — of the digital world. around 7—11 degrees. oh my. the winds drop on friday. we see fewer showers, a bit more sunshine around. but then on saturday, we're going to find some cloud, i'm sorry, no pressure, some outbreaks of rain coming in from the west. but i think there are people
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who look to you exactly as they look to david as signifying truth. vint cerf suggested that was not necessarily what computer scientists were seeking. i am not sure we are looking for absolute truth, but we can look for good quality and good sources and so the algorithms that we use try to find what we believe to be good quality content whether it is being google search system or in the youtube videos to offer good quality information, the recipients of that information have the challenge of figuring out >> what to accept and what to reject. could you give us any evidence that this high quality information as you describe it and that you promote is more likely to be this is bbc news — welcome if you're watching here true, more likely to be in the uk, on pbs in america or around the globe. in the category of the earth is not our top stories: flat rather than the category of the earth is flat? all of italy has now been the internet, he said, was made up of billions placed in quarantine. it is the of pages of information. most drastic response so far to we do have about 10,000 people the coronavirus outbreak. as part of our google family that do
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evaluations of websites. translation: the right decision is to stay home at. our future 0nce those evaluations were done... is to stay home at. our future is in our hands. we must be responsible. the world's financial markets take right at the possible economic impact of those web pages become a training the possible economic impact of the virus, though asia has set for the machine learning system, recovered some losses. the which is then applied to all the web pages that we index world health organization in the world wide web. praises china for its response, but inside the country, there is anger at the way the crescent has been handled. a once that application has been done, cry for help, aid agencies want the humanitarian crisis in we use that information to grant yemen is getting order responses that come back from web search. there is a 2—step process, a manual process to establish criteria and good quality and then a machine learning system in order to scale up the size of the world wide web. alongside mr cerf was another senior google executive who explained how a similar process was used for youtube. instead of us pointing you to a video which has been uploaded which has very limited numbers of views and does not affect the scientific consensus,
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again we work with external exports to help us determine what is an authority response and make sure that is prominent and easy to find on the platform. we make sure we reward content which meets the stress —— trusted and informative criteria and the incentives producing more controversial content is not fair. —— isn't there. and then we make sure that not everyone has the opportunity to monetize on youtube, which impacts the likelihood the content would be created. you are positively and some of your examples and negatively and some of our examples have immense power as the mediator and and interested and if you are comfortable with your level of power? i think the wetware app here is more important than anything we could do. as hard as we try and we will continue to try to give good quality information and reduce the visibility of poor quality information by teaching people to think critically about what they see and where did this information come from is there any corroborating evidence? these are the things we should be teaching our children 00:15:58,259 --> 4294966103:13:29,430 and practising ourselves.
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