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we will have time to connect the pskov state television and radio broadcasting company tatiana borisova tatianaevening. erness good evening, a large-scale restoration is underway in the pskov-pechersk monastery , six monuments of the architectural ensemble will be transformed, one of the oldest is the church of the annunciation. it was built in the middle of the 16th century. under the abbot, the old masonry was rooted, the restorers replace the destroyed stones, waterproofing, it is required by the passage and the galleries that the temple is connected to retail and sretensky church to strengthen the walls. the twins use a special method with hundreds of holes, through special tubes a reinforcing composition is supplied that will fill the voids . the task of the restorers is not to violate the authenticity and preserve ancient monuments for centuries. thank you tatyana, and so we continue the big news with the audience in moscow and the region. see you in a few seconds. at these moments , the grand opening of the forty-fifth moscow international film festival is taking place in the center of t
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my name is svetlana and you are tatiana tatiana is very nice. i am the director of the palace of culture neftyanik . well, it is clear that you are such a dancing, singing choreographer in your first education. yes , it happens to me for the first time, i am here , not everyone is dedicated, you know, this is the main museum of the company, belarus is not, the motto of our company from the well to the gas station, here on the diagram is a mock-up of the main objects depicted, reflecting the production cycle of our company. yes rod depth pump yes oil treatment unit. she reacts to your voice is the vibration of the belarusian gas processing plant. yes, and a photovoltaic plant with almost 218.000 panels, it was put into operation in 2017. yes, this neighborhood is an oil depot. and a gas station. the closed loop from the well to the gas station is amazing. can everyone visit this museum for everyone, of course, we start with schoolchildren who study the history of belarus oil, learning about our company, being initiated into the belarusian oil ind
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on ukrainian supplies turned out to be belatedly following the european agrarian crisis , tatiana belova tatianaalled corridors of solidarity narrowed vadim's europe, as soon as it came to money and profit, the entire graduation solidarity immediately disappeared. ukraine ceases to be interesting to europe as part of a grain deal. although the kiev regime tried very hard to please its masters and almost handed over to the west. those grain reserves as a result of the export of ultra-cheap wheat corn sunflower oil and vegetables brought down the incomes of eastern european farmers, although they were able to achieve an embargo on ukrainian supplies from their governments, but by this time they were already on the verge of ruin in the european agrarian crisis - this is a story about serious mistakes and miscalculations of the european commission, back in 2014, when the european union was signed with ukraine , trade with independent european business was limited by quotas. i could safely carry goods there. but ukrainian exports were strictly limited for the same grain products, all annual quotas we
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tatiana . you're thank you, tatiana . you're watching you, tatiana. you're watching nnooo— you, tatiana. ur tv now, on thursday, the- it's on your tv now, on thursday, the 4th of may, much of hho— thursday, the 4th of may, much of hho oounhho— thursday, the 4th of may, much of the country will— thursday, the 4th of may, much of the country will be going to the of the country will be going to hho poiis— of the country will be going to hho poiis ion— of the country will be going to the polls for the _ of the country will be going to the polls for the local elections.— the polls for the local elections. join us now to discuss— elections. join us now to discuss-is- elections. join us now to discuss is professor sir discuss this is professor sir iohn— discuss this is professor sir john-professor- discuss this is professor sir john professor of john curtice, professor of poiihios— john curtice, professor of poiihios oh— john curtice, professor of politics at the- john curtice, professor of politics at the university of snohhoiooo.— politics at the university of strathclyde. - alli strathclyde.
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tatiana . back to. emily- thank you, tatiana . so toot to. tntty— thank you, tatiana . so our big thank you, tatiana. sed today to introduce a raft of changes to tackle the housing shortage . ridge joining me now shortage. ridge joining me now to discuss this is gb news deputy political editor tom harwood tom, we've got a policy proposal from keir starmer . yes proposal from keir starmer. yes it's a turn up for the books, of course. keir it's a turn up for the books, of course . keir starmer has been course. keir starmer has been entered— course. keir starmer has been entteteet tn— course. keir starmer has been criticised in recent— rttitr. keir starmer has been criticised in recent years for being— criticised in recent years for tetng rotner— criticised in recent years for being rather a— criticised in recent years for being rather a bland, blank ttonenonee— being rather a bland, blank blancmange when it comes to potty— blancmange when it comes to oottey offering— blancmange when it comes to policy offering not being ponteutorty— policy offering not being particularly forthcoming on much of particula
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tatiana . emily, thank tatiana sanchez. emily, thank you very— tatiana sanchez.
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tatiana now it's back to. mark. - my thanks to tatiana, my thanks to tatiana, who's back - my thanks to tatiana, who's back-hourng. this week, the telegraph— isn't working. this week, the telegraph report— isn't working. this week, the telegraph report that jp morgan told telegraph report that jp morgan tow smor— telegraph report that jp morgan told senior bankers globally moo— told senior bankers globally that they— told senior bankers globally that they need— told senior bankers globally that they need to work from the office— that they need to work from the office from — that they need to work from the office from now— that they need to work from the office from now on, and the bank is joining— office from now on, and the bank is joining goldman— office from now on, and the bank is joining goldman sachs, which announced last— is joining goldman sachs, which announced last year that it wowo— announced last year that it would be— announced last year that it would be banning so—called myomo— would be banning so—called hybrid working— would be banning so—called hybrid working altogether , hybrid working altogether
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tatiana . emily, thank tatiana sanchez. emily, thank you very— tatiana sanchez. nk you very much. this- tatiana sanchez. emily, thank you very much. this is- f emily, thank you very much. this is the toteet— you very much. this is the latest from _ you very much. this is the latest from the _ you very much. this is the latest from the gb newsroom meteeyette— latest from the gb newsroom merseyside police says 118 peoote— merseyside police says 118 peopte tute— merseyside police says 118 people have now been arrested tottoutug— people have now been arrested following disruption caused at the grout— following disruption caused at the grand national . protesters the grand national. protesters eoeeet— the grand national. protesters eoeeet tte— the grand national. protesters crossed the track— the grand national. protesters crossed the track at aintree, tueoettue — crossed the track at aintree, breaching security fences with at teoet— breaching security fences with at teoet two — breaching security fences with at least two glueing themselves to o— at least two glueing t
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tatiana now it's back to. mark. - my thanks to tatiana, my thanks to tatiana, who's back - my thanks to tatiana, who's hast-hourpope's— about as surprising as the pope's catholicism and a bears propohstty— pope's catholicism and a bears prohohstty to— pope's catholicism and a bears propensity to relieve himself in the propensity to relieve himself in tho woost— propensity to relieve himself in the woods, working from home tsh-t— the woods, working from home tsh-t woathg— the woods, working from home isn't working. this— the woods, working from home isn't working. this week, the totogtahh— isn't working. this week, the telegraph report— isn't working. this week, the telegraph report that jp morgan told telegraph report that jp morgan tott soho— telegraph report that jp morgan told senior bankers globally that— told senior bankers globally that thoy— told senior bankers globally that they need— told senior bankers globally that they need to work from the otttoo— that they need to work from the otttoo ttom — that they need to work from the office from now— that they need to work from the office from now on, and th
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sohchcz .— important headlines with tatiana sohchcz . — important headlines with tatiana sanchez . jacob,— important headlines with tatiana declare the small boat crisis a national emergency. the move comes in response to a high court challenge tomorrow aimed at halting government plans to house asylum seekers on an old raf base in essex . braintree. raf base in essex. braintree. council will attempt to secure an injunction preventing the transfer of 1700 migrants to the wethersfield airbase. the declaration of a national emergency would give the home office powers to ignore local authority objections if the plans relate to crown owned property. while this all comes as the latest figures show more than 5000 people have crossed the english channel. so far this year. the english channel. so far this year . the snp the english channel. so far this year. the snp treasurer has been arrested by police investigating the party's finances. colin beattie is the second person to be questioned by detectives who are trying to establish how more than £600,000 in donations set aside for an independence referendum had been used earlier t
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tatiana good morning tatiana good morning. tell how earth day. e will be conducted by employees of the nature protection department. what events are planned for mother earth day? this is indeed a very peculiar call for all of us to take action on environmental protection and respect. it is very symbolic for our natural resource that this year the republican subbotnik coincided with the day mother earth, of course, will be held throughout the country with the participation of all territorial bodies of the ministry of natural resources. uh, subbotniks are and, uh, gardening, that is, planting trees and shrubs. this is the improvement of the territory - this is the cleaning of sections of water bodies and much, much more. e, ministry of natural resources central office. e, will also take a very active part e we will land. eh, willows. uh, along the ecological path in the central area near the rpc. mother and child, but it is very important that everyone come to the republican subbotnik with a good mood did a good job and pleased for their work. well, a lot of people in this one belong to well, i won't say many. well, some are quite formal. therefore saturday. well, what is there, supposedly to sprinkle, some kind of tree land and that's it. but when you actually see the fruits of your labors. here, marianna vasilievna and i can watch you here, the christmas trees that we once planted near the white dash of the radio company, but this is so pleasing, but you see the real result at the level of the ministry. here are such subbotniks, of course, uh, the central office takes part in various places every year. well, if you see in your results, then literally last year we were engaged in landscaping, planting ornamental shrubs near our administrative building. uh, they supplemented , transplanted, planted new types of plants and already only in a year in one year. we see how everything smells. and all from what is right. uh, landed, they came in a good mood and they did it. well, for themselves and for the people talked. tell me, or just need to take a good mood with you to saturday may need to grab a shovel or other equipment. well, as a rule, the organizers think through everything to the smallest detail, and if you need to take something with you, then this is reported in advance. that's how we know that except for subbotniks. you are holding different promotions last year, the promotion was called, but the tree of the hero. it was dedicated to the year of historical memory. tell me what you managed to do and what action is planned for this year. e a year historical wash. last year. uh, the hero tree had an action, both in autumn and in spring, throughout m-m of the year. uh, a lot has really been done , over 590,000 trees have been planted. and more than 500 thirty thousand shrubs. well, i would say not in quantity. eh, it is very important to properly plant certain plants, e.g. , to form, maybe even a composition, so that it is not only a health-improving and recreational one. it’s also aesthetic, so that our settlements, cities , and yard territories are decorated, and i really want to thank the population for their active participation in our actions. e this year. uh, literally on march 1, the republican action was announced. uh, peaceful creative work for the good, and clean and green belarus and now for the duration of this time. a lot of work has been done to restore order on earth and on april 20, 20 republican subbotnik - this will be, as it were, the logical conclusion of work to restore order on earth. and uh, creating something new. yes, that is again a call. come, our dear belarusians, and take part in making our land even more beautiful, but not only saturday will be on april 22. and in general homesteading begins all sorts of work and our people, no matter how much we say they don't care, but they continue to burn dry grass. say it is useful or not useful once again loudly and you can directly into the camera when they say that it is useful for the fertility of the earth, then with precision. yes, on the contrary, it is not useful at all. it only harms, harms fertility, because, with ash, evil, the general substances that it contains are washed out very quickly by surface water and groundwater and there is no benefit, but what harm is done, harm to insect larvae insects in april, as a rule, nesting birds, and we love to enjoy all the birds singing, so you need to remember to think about it. well, very uh, i want to say that often this uh, there is also a not very bad situation when cool yes leads to fires to damage to the destruction of household buildings, and sometimes people die, how many times do we hear that we set grass on fire, but burned everything that surrounds, and the punishment is provided, of course provided. well, first of all i want to say the legislation on the plant world burning dry vegetation is prohibited. eh, administrative responsibility is provided for e from 10 to 30 basic increases, as if unpleasantly unpleasant, but even more responsibility in the plan. e value. uh, this is uh, if the causes of the causes of harm to the environment, here already. uh, completely different values up to 500 base units. uh, one hectare. if the liver and it harm my friends later, that is, it is better not to do this, and everyone should also remember that people around you are surrounded by people who are in the same population. those someone uh ventilates the household someone went out for a walk and breathe and not just impossible, therefore, you do not need to do this. today there are plenty of opportunities, where we can dry foliage. uh, vegetation is used for composting back nature and our uh, trees and shrubs will only be grateful. that's where the benefit is. that is, even these leaves that clean them do not need to be set on fire. they can be reused in parking lots, e composting, and then returned to this environment, my friends. here you see how, firstly we remember once and for all everyone who watches us no grass has fallen. for this, it happens and is not very pleasant. then it can even hurt because of the fines. well, in the end, it's better to do something good useful plant a tree. uh, i don't know, clean up in your area. do it in a more civilized way and we remind you that our guest was tatiana, head of the main directorate of environmental policy for international cooperation and science of the ministry of natural resources and environmental protection, thank you for coming. well and further. we will continue our conversation about nature conservation using the example of the harm caused by plastic flowers. so let's watch the story. microplastics found in human blood is just such news. recently , marty was stunned by the disappointing press, the data in their research was published by scientists from amsterdam in 2019, the world community was talking about microplastics. in drinking water, its presence in the placenta was indicated. he definitely has a human lung with air, microplastics. already even got to antarctica and proved that in a week in different ways in the human body, it turns out about five grams of microplastics. well, to visualize this is such a card, and plastic, if stickiness to the wall to the alveolus to the wall of the lung. you won't refuse him. it will
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tatiana sanchez . mark, with tatiana sanchez. mark, urani— with tatiana sanchez. sanchez. mark, thank you very much. ' r: g: thank you very much. and good evening. — thank you very much. and good evening. this is the latest from the gb newsroom, the health secretary has urged the royal college of nursing to reconsider planned industrial action at the end of the month. in a letter to the unions leader this morning, steve barclay said the recent pay steve barclay said the recent pay offer is fair and reasonable and the decision to stage a 48 hour strike will put patients at risk. the chs general secretary, pat cullen has criticised the government for refusing to budge on its offer of a 5% pay rise. our members neither think it's reasonable or fair. it's a short term approach iioi— fair. it's a short term approach rirur piugo— fair. it's a short term approach rirur piugo o— fair. it's a short term approach that plugs a gap— fair. it's a short term approach that plugs a gap by— ” it's a short term approach that plugs a gap by giving them a that plugs a gap by giving th
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tatiana sanchez . the news. the tatiana sanchez. iiienoei— the news. the tatiana sanchez. michael thank— the news. and good morning. it's— michael thank you very much and good morning. c “ 0:2 " good morning. it's 11:02. this is the latest good morning. it's11:02. this is the latest from the newsroom the final evacuation flight carrying british nationals has departed khartoum. deputy prime minister oliver dowden has said rescue operations ended following a significant decline in the number of british nationals coming forward to flee nearly 1900 people on 21 flights have been evacuated . however, have been evacuated. however, there are still thousands of british citizens stuck amid fighting robert fox , the defence fighting robert fox, the defence editor for the evening standard , has said the government has a responsibility to all british nationals. i responsibility to all british nationals . i think we've got to nationals. i think we've got to be nationals. i think we've got to te neon— nationals. i think we've got to be much clearer— i think we've got to be much clearer about obligations— be much
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tatiana sanchez. michael, thank you very much. and good afternoon, it's 1230. i'm tatianaervices overnight to try to clear a backlog, which has passengers delayed for up to 14 hours. it declared a critical incident yesterday as traffic built up from the easter holiday getaway. the port says extra bookings had impacted operations as well as bad weather and hold—ups at french border control . the home french border control. the home secretary is to introduce new measures to tackle child sexual writing in the mail on sunday. suella braverman has announced those working with children will have a legal duty to report or suspicions of sexual abuse. it follows an independent inquiry last year which described sexual abuse of children as an epidemic . three british men are being held in taliban custody in afghanistan . they include the afghanistan. they include the so—called danger tourist, myles routledge, who had to be rescued from kabul by british forces less than two years ago. a humanitaire three network assisting the two men says it believes in good health and to believes in
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tatiana sanchez . mark, with tatiana sanchez. mark, urani— with tatiana sanchez. sanchez. mark, thank you very much. ' r: g: thank you very much. and good evening. — thank you very much. and good evening. this is the latest from the gb newsroom, the health secretary has urged the royal college of nursing to reconsider planned industrial action at the end of the month. in a letter to the unions leader this morning, steve barclay said the recent pay steve barclay said the recent pay offer is fair and reasonable and the decision to stage a 48 hour strike will put patients at risk. the chs general secretary, pat cullen has criticised the government for refusing to budge on its offer of a 5% pay rise. our members neither think it's reasonable or fair. it's a short term approach iioi— fair. it's a short term approach rirur piugo— fair. it's a short term approach rirur piugo o— fair. it's a short term approach that plugs a gap— fair. it's a short term approach that plugs a gap by— ” it's a short term approach that plugs a gap by giving them a that plugs a gap by giving th
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sanenez .— important headlines with tatiana sanenez . — important headlines with tatiana sanchez . jacob,— important headlines with tatiana
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but first, let's get the news with tatiana sanchez . news with tatiana sanchez. ttget— news with tatianahank you. this- news with tatiana sanchez. nigel, thank you. this is- news with tatiana sanchez. nigel, thank you. this is the latest from the gb newsroom rishi sunak is under investigation by parliament. s ethics watchdog over a possible failure to declare an interest. downing street says the inquiry is over claims he failed to tell mps his wife might benefit from a major measure announced in last month's budget . she holds last month's budget. she holds shares in crooked , a child care shares in crooked, a child care agency likely to gain financially from a drive to recruit more childminders . as recruit more childminders. as number 10, says the prime minister will clarify how it was declared as a ministerial interest rather than to than to the commons as meanwhile, mr sunak has accepted the uk doesn't have enough teachers to deliver on his ambition to improve children's numeracy skills. he says an anti maths mindset is costing the uk economy tens of billions of pounds every year and
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but first, let's get the news with tatiana sanchez . news with tatiana sanchez. nigel.— news with tatianal, thank— news with tatiana sanchez. nigel, thank you. _ news with tatiana sanchez. nigel, thank you. this- news with tatiana sanchez. nigel, thank you. this is- news with tatiana sanchez. nigel, thank you. this is the latest from the gb newsroom rishi sunak is under investigation by parliament. s ethics watchdog over a possible failure to declare an interest. downing street says the inquiry is over claims he failed to tell mps his wife might benefit from a major measure announced in last month's budget . she holds last month's budget. she holds shares in crooked , a child care shares in crooked, a child care agency likely to gain financially from a drive to recruit more childminders . as recruit more childminders. as number 10, says the prime minister will clarify how it was declared as a ministerial interest rather than to than to the commons as meanwhile, mr sunak has accepted the uk doesn't have enough teachers to deliver on his ambition to improve children's numeracy skills. he sa
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tatiana . mark thank you with tatiana. mark thank you verv— with tatiana. political renoner— let's speak now to our political reporter catherine _ let's speak now to our political reporter catherine forster, who-s— reporter catherine forster, who-sioining— reporter catherine forster, who's joining us in the studio. ihe— who's joining us in the studio. ihe eoson— who's joining us in the studio. the reason being,— who's joining us in the studio. the reason being, catherine, inev— the reason being, catherine, ihev hosheo— the reason being, catherine, they hacked by— the reason being, catherine, they hacked by law, have to renni— they hacked by law, have to return these _ they hacked by law, have to return these audit reports , return these audit reports, ihese— return these audit reports, these financial— return these audit reports, these financial reports to the eiesioroi— these financial reports to the electoral commission . i/rts electoral commission. yes. ihevive— electoral commission. yes. ihevive goi— electoral commission. yes. they've got till— electora
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there and there anna and i remember exactly that nicholas ii, in my opinion, was definitely tatiana and tatiana to you, i'll ask you options to hit. hit what you wanted to add. i decided that nicholas ii would not name his daughters after any minor or third power characters. well, that's why i chose eugene onegin there were two girls tatyana and larisa and they, let's just say in the fathers and sons there in the main roles were mostly. ah, the male characters. uh, anna karenina, as far as i know, of the main female important there is only anna, so eugene onegin thank you for the correct answer to this question. this is an option. and evgeny onegin the seventh question has potential energy, and a stretched bowstring b running cat c a moving car time dmitry but i answered the option, and since the runner is confirmed by kinetic energy, and not potential energy, therefore the answer is option quite rightly, they reasoned the correct answer to this question. this is a variant and strained ethics eighth question. what is the radius of a circle circumscribed about a right triangle whose sides are 9
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tatiana. esther and phillip. - . thanks, tatiana. and esther and phillip. - - thanks, tatiana. and i'm tettthtet— . thanks, tatiana. people, lots— moment i can never sleep here. lots of people, lots of- moment i can never sleep here. lots of people, lots of people getting in touch. champion the wonder horse. everything everyone's got. it seems to have an opinion on serious business mind you, that was serious business. well, everybody liked thtt— business. well, everybody liked thtt-teth— business. well, everybody liked that-yeah. matthew- well, everybody liked that yeah. matthew should that one. yeah. matthew should we to— that one. yeah. matthew should we to to— that one. yeah. matthew should we to to yout— that one. yeah. matthew should we go to you? yeah, absolutely. so, we go to you? yeah, absolutely. set—how- so, i mean, i'm not sure how serious it but i think serious it is, but i think it is very so after very important. so after complaints, amazon has given in and making changes because complaints, amazon has given in and isiaking changes because complaints, amazon has given in and is t001g changes because c
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tatiana . emily, thank tatiana sanchez. emily, thank you tatiana sanchez. you very much. this is- f emily, thank you very much. this is the neon— you very much. this is the latest from _ you very much. this is the latest from the _ you very much. this is the latest from the gb newsroom iieneeyeiie— latest from the gb newsroom merseyside police says 118 oeooie— merseyside police says 118 people nove— merseyside police says 118 people have now been arrested ioiioning— people have now been arrested following disruption caused at the following disruption caused at one onene— following disruption caused at the grand national . protesters the grand national. protesters enoeeei— the grand national. protesters enoeeei ine— the grand national. protesters crossed the track— the grand national. protesters crossed the track at aintree, ineoening — crossed the track at aintree, breaching security fences with at breaching security fences with an ieoei— breaching security fences with an ieoei ino — breaching security fences with at least two glueing themselves to at least
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tatiana. it's back to. martin— and thank you, tatiana. welcome teet— and thank you, tatiana. e seaside or going away to see temttw— seaside or going away to see family somewhere else in the uk, it's family somewhere else in the uk, tt-e rot— family somewhere else in the uk, tt-e rot r-uet— family somewhere else in the uk, tt-e rot tuet huew— family somewhere else in the uk, it's not just busy roads, though.— it's not just busy roads, though. there's also going to be tutte— though. there's also going to be tutte e— though. there's also going to be tutte e tew— though. there's also going to be quite a few delays— though. there's also going to be quite a few delays on the on the rettwewe. — quite a few delays on the on the railways. that's— quite a few delays on the on the railways. that's because network tet— railways. that's because network tett hee— railways. that's because network rail has planned— railways. that's because network rail has planned 600 different eerte— rail has planned 600 different events, different— rail has planned 600 different events, different maintenanc
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but first, let's get the news with tatiana sanchez . news with tatiana sanchez. niger.— news with tatiana
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tatiana . shortly? first, all the- headlines with tatiana . mark, headlines with tatiana. vote on whether to give tne un— will today vote on whether to give the uk powers to ignore the strasteurg— give the uk powers to ignore the strasbourg court's— give the uk powers to ignore the strasbourg court's rulings and if strasbourg court's rulings and it tne— strasbourg court's rulings and if the government's illegal nigratien— if the government's illegal migration bill— if the government's illegal migration bill is successful. sueiia— migration bill is successful. suella braverman said they would not suella braverman said they would net eut— suella braverman said they would net put a— suella braverman said they would net put a unit— suella braverman said they would not put a limit to— suella braverman said they would not put a limit to the number of migrants— not put a limit to the number of migrants tney— not put a limit to the number of migrants they could deport to itvvanda— migrants they could deport to itvanda. ine— migrants they could deport to rwanda. the mps debating on
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sanchez— update on the latest news from tatiana sanchez .— update on the latest news from tatiana sanchez . _ update on the latest news from tatiana
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tatiana— up. but before that, here's the news with tatiana sanchez . news with tatiana sanchez. calvin— news with n, thank— news with tatiana sanchez. calvin, thank you. .; calvin, thank you. this is the latest— calvin, thank you. this is the latest from the gb newsroom. merseyside police says 23 arrests were made after animal rights activists crossed the track at the grand national . track at the grand national. protesters breached security fences with at least two glueing themselves to a jump. the animal rising group says the event is cruel, with 60 horses dying at the aintree festival over the past 23 years. the disruption caused a 12 minute delay to the start of the race, which was eventually won by karim khan rambler . the eventually won by karim khan rambler. the government is under pressure to prevent the most extreme nurses strike. yet after the latest pay offer was rejected, members from the rcn voted against the 5% pay rise, meaning nhs nurses in emergency department, intensive care and cancer wards will take industrial action for the first time. the 48 hour walkout will start on the 30t
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tatiana from now on, the peanut butter cake, cat loving. tatiana isn't going to call her. anyway, it's been a busy news week. and to help us reflect on some of the stories, we're delighted to be joined in the studio by former labour mp simon dann chuck, a member of the assembly. the london assembly. shaun bailey. , both of bailey. welcome back, both of you. simon in the first hour, we spoke to michael about kiss dom, a blocking jeremy corbyn from standing at the next general election as a candidate. as a former labour mp, i was just interested to know what your take was on that . keir starmer take was on that. keir starmer has made a political calculus thatis has made a political calculus that is better off without corbyn as a labour candidate. labour mp . but i actually think labour mp. but i actually think it's a risky strategy more than he might realise. obviously he might. corbyn might set up a left leaning party and, take votes away from labour . it's votes away from labour. it's unlikely, but he might do . more unlikely, but he might do. more interestingly, might stand for mayor of london, and that would depnve mayor of london, and that would deprive sadiq khan from the seat. but let me just make the final point. the riskiest bits of is if the public of the strategy is if the public see keir starmer is being deceitful. keir starmer has been is a friend of corbyn, has been close to him for a very long time, wanted to make him prime minister, defended him over antisemitism and now he stabbed him in the back and it sort of looks a little bit like that relationship between ed miliband and david miliband when ed stabbed the back and stabbed david in the back and that used to get a lot of traction on the doorstep. and so this negative aspect to it where starmer is stabbed his friend in the might actually turn the back might actually turn somewhat people . forgets somewhat for people. forgets about don't they. you've about that, don't they. you've to have a happy set of employees behind because those are the behind you because those are the ones who can start causing trouble. when asked the trouble. and when i asked the journalist , trouble. and when i asked the journalist, did he he'd go journalist, did he think he'd go independent, did will take independent, did he will take a stand for mayor of london and cause troubles that he smiled. but he no. he but but he said no. he but i thought, i bet you it's not so fix that people. but given how unpopular jeremy corbyn clearly was at the last general election , is this not a sensible calculation from keir starmer that if he to show that the labour party's changed since the last election, what better way of showing the labour party's change then? actually jeremy corbyn is now no longer even a labour mp. is that is that not a sensible political. well that's the calculation he's made but but if the public see it as though starmer stabbed his old friend in the back, they won't like that either. and i think just like they didn't like ed miliband the dirty miliband having done the dirty on miliband and that used on david miliband and that used to out on the doorstep time to come out on the doorstep time and again. and irrespective of whether , you know, whether corbyn's, you know, popular it's popular or not, it's a reflection on starmer's character. well our viewers are thinking , character. well our viewers are thinking, you're right, that andy says, look, i detest constant jeremy corbyn, but in a democracy, he has every right to stand in a general election for parties been with for, you know, 40 years, being thrown out like this is not right and says the same thing. i disagree with corbyn, but i defend his right to stand and put himself forward, to stand for the labour party so that in a cord with you that's how they're viewing it on the i mean is i mean the street. i mean it is i mean it would always be unfortunate, wouldn't it, sean, if people with the minority opinions in a political longer. political party were no longer. longen political party were no longer. longer. mean , i wouldn't be longer. i mean, i wouldn't be very very twitter, but it would be a shame . political parties be a shame. political parties are a coalition aren't they? and, you know, surely it's a good thing that there's range of views within those political parties. i mean, there's two ways to look at it. first, it's anti—democratic and it's actually a shame an entire labour party, that it's even possible to this because jeremy corbyn his local corbyn is elected his local people and if they want rid of him can get rid of and him they can get rid of and should be allowed to. i don't think leader party think the leader of the party should be dependent, arbitrary decision the decision like this. that's the first piece. the second piece is jeremy still a jeremy corbyn still retains a serious amount popularity . serious amount of popularity. he's with but he's not popular with me, but i bet you he stands as an bet you if he stands as an independent, he wins that seat and he might and the rumours that he might run mayor of london, run for mayor of london, he would make significant then would make a significant then i someone knows about running would make a significant then i son mayor knows about running would make a significant then i sonmayor of knows about running would make a significant then i sonmayor of london. about running would make a significant then i son mayor of london. a wouldinning for mayor of london. i would suggest a very serious suggest he'd be a very serious candidate. the real real candidate. but the real the real situation is this just like ken livingstone is livingstone, what is an independent against dobson independent against frank dobson 7 independent against frank dobson ? exactly. what ? exactly. and that's what i said. was getting the old said. he was getting the old band together. band back together. ken livingstone part the band, livingstone is part of the band, is back together the is getting back together the left. could could be. left. he could well could be. you a senate colleagues are you have a senate colleagues are not as popular as he used to be and have a jeremy corbyn who and you have a jeremy corbyn who could make quite a dent. but the real issue the real issue is this when people look at keir starmer that remember but you were the man who first ardently pushed this man to the top of the pile. you talked about supporting him left, right and centre , and now abandoned centre, and now you've abandoned him suits you. this him because it suits you. this says about who you says something about who you are, i'm not sure i will let are, and i'm not sure i will let you put it. this person running the i also have to the show. and i also have to ask, did leader of the ask, why did the leader of the labour party dirty his hands? why is he known as the one who blocked it? because that blocked it? because then that means that absolutely wanted means that he absolutely wanted people usually if people to know that usually if you're the party, you're a leader of the party, you'd be far more discreet and other people would because other people would have because maybe want other people would have because mt do e want other people would have because m'do well. want other people would have because m'do well. that's want other people would have because m'do well. that's what want other people would have because m'do well. that's what i'mnant to do well. that's what i'm saying. that's what i'm guessing. but i mean, simon, as a as a former labour mp, who would be if jeremy corbyn does stand as an independent needs to north which all the indications that may well do that . who that he may well do that. who would temper be on into as would your temper be on into as to within that. see whatever the official labour party candidate or jeremy singing or would it be jeremy singing jeremy corbyn would have a good chance winning that. chance of winning that. but i think starmer's making a number of strategic errors that we saw with sue gray you make the point quite rightly, why did he dirty is why didn't get somebody else within nsc to move this within the nsc to move this proposal. and the biggest problem is they got rid of him on the basis of not being electorally popular , not because electorally popular, not because of antisemitism , but that that of antisemitism, but that that just looks like opportunism. we're going to get rid of you because you're going to lose his votes. and that just looks like opportune ism and doesn't play well with the electorate. sure. what's your that want what's your story that you want to want to talk about to write? i want to talk about stealth tax. so rishi sunak changed where you get your your tax charge to you and it's been set for four years. and it was said that it would only cost the pubuc said that it would only cost the public 9 billion. it now looks likely to cost significantly more. but my real thing for bringing we talk bringing this up is we talk about cost of living crisis about our cost of living crisis tax one the biggest tax is one of the biggest outgoings that you have. if we really to support people. really want to support people. it's always been about letting them the money they earn . them keep the money they earn. and what's important about and what's most important about that would i be employed? that is why would i be employed? so if you've got all these 50 somethings who are leaving, they're leaving for taxes use. what these younger people who can't issues. can't for tax issues. and i think as a as a country, as a government, we need to have a look at what taxes. we charge be much more open about it. if you look the rowntree trusts look at what the rowntree trusts are about tax, our tax are saying about tax, our tax bill has up significantly bill has been up significantly and about it. and nobody's talking about it. and importantly, have and most importantly, we have a general coming and the general election coming and the labour constantly talking labour party constantly talking about austerity. it'd be really interesting to see where they're going to get all this extra money from considering we have the biggest tax burden had the biggest tax burden we've had for 70 odd years. mean, sure, for 70 odd years. i mean, sure, sure point, doesn't sure makes a good point, doesn't he, the burden he, simon, about the tax burden and how damaging that could be for conservative party at for the conservative party at the election. i've the next election. i've i've seen a concert effort by seen a concert with effort by the party to say, you the labour party to say, you know, you you better know, are you do you you better off you were at the last off than you were at the last general election are general election or are you worse in that ronald worse off in a way that ronald reagan did when he stood for president the first time? and i asked that very same question to the american people, you the american people, are you better of worse and he better of a worse off? and he he the on the the presidential election on the back i that could be back of it. i mean that could be quite strategy for quite successful strategy for labour couldn't they just asking that question to people. yeah, absolutely. say absolutely. and what they say is, you better off than you is, are you better off than you were it is a smart were 13 years ago? it is a smart that a smart strategy in that that is a smart strategy in terms of campaign. i think terms of campaign. and i think the concern voters need to do something about it and it is about stealth it's about about stealth taxes. it's about , as we said earlier, the tax burdens being frozen. so more is being from people and being taken away from people and they just feel and are worse off. the taxes are and i understand why they call stealth taxes, but they're not really only because at the end of the month, when you get your pay at the of then you know the end of it, then you know what? you don't know what you get in compared to what you will get. and so not very get. and so it's not very stealth i think this is stealth you. i think this is where senate in. yeah. where the senate comes in. yeah. the that the has the fact that the tax rate has been frozen four years, been frozen for four years, normally a government would move those bans response those bans as response to inflation. we've had inflation. and we've had inflation. and we've had inflation recently. you think inflation recently. so you think , 0h, inflation recently. so you think , oh, the government is going to raise done raise it as they've done judiciously. we're in judiciously. now we're stuck in a position. the state the a position. i'm the state the way because obviously and phil and i interviewed the chancellor and i interviewed the chancellor and to and obviously we've spoken to rishi and they were sort of allude to they would drop the taxes closer to the general election well , whether they election but well, whether they do do my concern is that do or do now, my concern is that leaving it too late, people will have said, i felt the pain for too long. but they say no. people are myopic now and people are so myopic now and remembering you know, life remembering well, you know, life so busy would remembering so busy it would be remembering what is it a what happened today is it a mistake? they done mistake? should they have done it could they get it this budget or could they get away it next budget? people away with it next budget? people feel better. i think they are leaving it and picking leaving it late and just picking upon point about stealth upon the point about stealth taxes because chancellor taxes because the chancellor isn't announcing the freezing of the buttons is announcing the tax buttons is announcing everything and being everything else and not being explicit with the public. and that raises concerns. but i think think the conservatives think i think the conservatives are it late in are leaving it very late in terms of winning back people, back over this issue. and so back over on this issue. and so we're to several we're going to have several months doing the months of labour doing the campaign describe campaign that you describe described you fight described them. you can't fight the on market as the on market day, as they always say now on a completely different note, i was it's april fool's the thing fool's day today. and the thing is, the news is that mad at the moment is been unable to moment is i've been unable to spot any which the april spot in any which was the april fools story which were the true stories because it's very difficult choose the difficult to choose between the two. apparently there is in two. apparently there is one in the sun today. page 21 of the sold game of moans about harry and meghan set to pile more misery on the family by misery on the royal family by launching own video game launching their own video game ahead coronation. ahead of the king's coronation. apparently april apparently there is an april fool's story , but could it be fool's story, but could it be true? i read the internet over the years. it sounds about right. well, the in the right. well, the story in the sun that caught my eye page sun that caught my eye was page 37. like a to 37. i'll do like a go to headline, this naughty winks, headline, this is naughty winks, right ? apparently couples sleep right? apparently couples sleep better if they have sex. a study found this was based on a 159 people filling out questionnaires and two week diaries about their love lives and sleep habits. an apparently if they had sex first, they had a better night's sleep. then if they didn't and the point i'm going to leave you on here that i'm going to say at this point all i'm going to say at this point is my sleep is terrible . point is my sleep is terrible. my point is my sleep is terrible. my sleep is absolutely fabulous . like that information . asking . like that information. asking people to draw. i'm just saying but can i oversharing is the what thank you the most important thing happening today it's my mom's birthday. happy birthday, mom. what you're doing is you should be off alone with too busy to see me. i'll tell you what it is. mum likes saying son. could be that a birth i've got to go a totally different story hold on a minute. what about this story? okay i've glossed over that. i know that this is a market research . not this is a market research. not having studied this subject, i to say it's a very small sample size under 59. but from my limited experience, i do agree with by god, i do agree that you sleep better after sex. i mean , sleep better after sex. i mean, these things. so this is what i would have thought down as a scientific fact that you gave simon some time had done sugar says this is a totally different story coming on the back of that story coming on the back of that story and i to say and the trial this week of thomas cashman whom murdered olivia corbell i want to say it was a story for me as i watched the court case of one murderer. and i will say three women. so there was the mum of olivia, the was the ex of thomas cashman who basically made sure that he got convicted . and there that he got convicted. and there was also the girlfriend who attended court every day dressed up like some sort of gangster's moll , all dressed up and what moll, all dressed up and what have you . and i have to say, have you. and i have to say, there was something i found deeply disturbing about it. maybe she never thought about it as she posed like a ham shank in as she posed like a ham shank in a pink outfit there. when that was the colour of the daughter, it was the colour of the olivia's coffin . it was what the olivia's coffin. it was what the family were doing as the colour of the doors and. i just thought deeply distasteful . i wish no deeply distasteful. i wish no newspaper had printed a photo of her because she's thinking it's like a catwalk and she's going in and out of prison. and i'm just thinking , i'm hoping just thinking, i'm hoping all the people were as deeply distressed by media, but i thought it was three very different women, the mum the different women, the mum of the child. how just controlled. she's been, how wonderful she's been.the she's been, how wonderful she's been. the ex girl friend who made sure this guy went to prison. but the girlfriend who i guess was living off all the money, the drugs money was money, all the drugs money was posing. yeah i agree with you. and you know, the world of celebrity has evolved tremendously the last few tremendously over the last few years , hasn't social years, hasn't it, with social media everything else. but media and everything else. but the that kelly sweeney, the the idea that kelly sweeney, the girlfriend promoting herself , girlfriend promoting herself, you know, dressed, dressing to the nines to go and see the situation play out , i think the nines to go and see the situation play out, i think is vulgar and i think she'll come to regret it. i think she'll get a lot of kickback from that. i think it's absolutely awful if . think it's absolutely awful if. it shows you nowadays it doesn't matter famous. just matter why you're famous. just just famous . because in my just be famous. because in my day, she have hidden. she should she hidden sean. yeah, she should have. she would have been ashamed. association but when you about free as you talk about free women as someone dealt with a lot someone who's dealt with a lot of a lot of of knife crime and a lot of unfortunately who's lost unfortunately parents who's lost their children, we focus on the actual fact. but there's a there's a ripple effect that eternal there is someone that has lost baby that pain has lost their baby that pain will go away and is will never go away and is someone who has had to step out and who is an underworld and someone who is an underworld character feel character who for now ever feel nervous . and fact that those nervous. and the fact that those two women have have a push case and made sure the right and be made sure the right person was convicted is a huge step, a bravery real break step. sean thank you very much indeed. simon you very much simon thank you very much indeed. it's a liverpool phrase by the way, posing like a hammer showing . yeah. grandma used to showing. yeah. grandma used to use i don't know where it comes from, but my grandma used to use that so if anybody knows what it comes email is comes on, please email is gbviews@gbnews.uk . coming up, gbviews@gbnews.uk. coming up, could the government plans to give landlords the power to evict rowdy tenants ineffective in cracking down on anti—social behaviour ? we'll be speaking to behaviour? we'll be speaking to a property expert next to who will tell us what he thinks. we've got the weather next. stay with us. hello there. i'm jonathan vautrey here for the latest update from the met office as we head into a new month. there are also signs that we are leaving the door on rather wet conditions of march behind high pressure is trying to build its way in and that will eventually arrive as we head sunday for the of head towards sunday for the of april day. we are still left with this low pressure system, relatively charge and this relatively in charge and this lingering difference has lingering accru difference has some conditions some fairly damp conditions across northern ireland into parts of southwest england. wales will wales this morning and will gradually ease its way off throughout the afternoon as well. pushing its way well. some rain pushing its way into eastern districts into eastern coastal districts as but few bright spots as well, but few bright spots for the part north of scotland as as maybe western coast as well as maybe western coast of later on it's the of wales later on it's the south—west where we'll see some of those higher temperatures throughout highs of 13, throughout today. highs of 13, 14 degrees celsius. but within that breeze that bit cooler in the breeze across eastern coastal across those eastern coastal areas, higher than seven areas, no higher than the seven or we move into or eight as we move into saturday the cloud saturday evening, the cloud remains with us for the most part. but the rain continuing to fade out , part. but the rain continuing to fade out, pushing more fade its way out, pushing more now mainland areas of now into mainland areas of scotland easing off across scotland and easing off across northern ireland. come the early hours morning, we hours of tomorrow morning, we will to the cloud will start to see the cloud breaking up bit more across breaking up a bit more across the coast scotland the eastern coast of scotland and england. that and north—east england. that will to fall will allow temperatures to fall away bit more head and low away of a bit more head and low single figures. but elsewhere on to for six degrees to brown for five or six degrees celsius into sunday, we start to see that cloud continuing to break even more and break up even more and particularly seven particularly across seven scotland, eastern areas particularly across seven sc england eastern areas particularly across seven sc england . eastern areas particularly across seven sc england . it's eastern areas particularly across seven sc england . it's looking areas particularly across seven sc england . it's looking likeas particularly across seven sc england . it's looking like a of england. it's looking like a much brighter and sunnier day for many . much brighter and sunnier day for many. still much brighter and sunnier day for many . still a much brighter and sunnier day for many. still a bit of cloud across southwest england, wales, up ireland and up into northern ireland and scotland's. but even here, seeing highs of 10 to 11 degrees celsius. so really not bad a day at all. we'll continue to see those clear as we move throughout sunday night. those clear as we move throughout sunday night . and throughout sunday night. and thatis throughout sunday night. and that is just going to allow temperatures to fall off more widely as we head into the night time. so a widespread frost time. so a more widespread frost developing and a cold start developing here and a cold start to morning. but to monday morning. but otherwise, head into the otherwise, as we head into the easter holidays, looking easter holidays, it's looking fine bright for many us. fine and bright for many of us. western and northern areas, though, just seeing a little rain we head towards the rain as we head towards the middle week . hello. welcome back to . saturday hello. welcome back to. saturday morning with esther and phil. this week, the government published their plans crack down on anti—social behaviour. several policies were listed, including how landlords will be given powers to more quickly eject tenants misbehave eject tenants who misbehave called the antisocial behaviour plan. it includes a promise that ministers plan to change laws and all landlords with the tools to ensure that antisocial tenants face the consequences of their actions . we're joined now their actions. we're joined now by the ceo of property, mark nathan amerson. so do you think this fast tracking eviction will kerb and stop antisocial behaviour . i kerb and stop antisocial behaviour. i think it's very fair to say the prime minister has drawn a line in the sand on antisocial behaviour and i think that should certainly , before that should certainly, before i ask that question, be rattling because it is obviously something which affects every single one of us. and certainly from a from a community aspect. and i think that's the heart of, of where this goes to and the changes that are being proposed are to actually enable antisocial behaviour to be more recognised and for landlords to be able to enforce and eviction in a slightly different method than is there at this moment in time. so at this moment in time , many landlords will rely on what's called a section 21, which a default notice to which is a default notice to basically if that if they if they are getting to the stage of they are getting to the stage of the tenant, they are frustrated with, they will serve a normal section 21 which enables that tenant to be asked to leave at the end of the tenancy or two months notice period . and months notice period. and section 21 is being repealed through the renters reform act . through the renters reform act. and the mechanism that landlords will now use is effectively what's called a sanctuary . a what's called a sanctuary. a section eight is a slightly different tool and it has prescribed reasons that you can ask for an eviction, but that does need to go to a court. and at the moment, the threshold is that people have to be able to go to demonstrate anti—social behaviour is very, very difficult because is the neighbours at the suffering. it's the people in the community that are suffering and they won't always necessarily want to come forward to do that . come forward to do that. landlords obviously are directly feeling that effect because they're not living in that property so that they are wanting to do something about it, but they need the support of neighbours, they need the support of the police and so it's great that we're addressing it's great that we're addressing it , but what got to it, but what we've got to understand is what the understand is what is the threshold this to be threshold enables this to be triggered and once section 21 is repealed and section 21 does cover a whole range of things, it will mean more cases going to court. and so again, we need to ensure that we're tackling the issue . we're also putting the issue. we're also putting the provision in from a court point of view because if you're serving notice on a tenant, it could take six, eight, nine months to actually get court together . resolutions have them together. resolutions have them removed. so those people are still in that property at that time. i'm very well taking. still in that property at that time. i'm very well taking . i'll time. i'm very well taking. i'll tell you. i'll take you there, nathan, that you're quite cynical about this idea that they're going to be removed two weeks. do you think that's an unrealistic expectation that the prime minister is setting ? prime minister is setting? absolutely not. i think it's great that they're aiming for that. what i'm trying to work out is how we can actually make the changes that will enable this to happen . and the current this to happen. and the current proposal still follow a court system . and that's the bit we system. and that's the bit we need to break down because it is the community that suffers from from nathan. i'm going to bring back your point. how do you what do you do if you got to rely on neighbours coming forward to say yes, they're creating the antisocial behaviour, but if these the worst people these are the worst people you're to next door, will you're living to next door, will you're living to next door, will you want to be the person who comes forward and says, i'm living to nightmare living next door to nightmare neighbours ? i think that is an neighbours? i think that is an absurd loopy fine point and what we do find at this moment in time is the neighbours will often be the people that move. so if they're neighbours in rented accommodation they'll often move if they own their home houses they will often sell because of antisocial behaviour. so i think it's great that the prime minister is tackling it. i think we do need to ensure that he's not the people in the community that lose out. it's not the are losing out if not the that are losing out if tenants are causing issue and bad behaviour and drugs and all of the things that we in society there needs to be the mechanism there needs to be the mechanism there to get them and i champion . what the prime minister has donei . what the prime minister has done i think is absolutely superb and i think every single property person would want support that. nathan just, just if you can, i mean the policy over recent, it seems to have been focussed on the idea that landlords are baddies and tenants are goodies and the latter to protected latter needs to be protected from former . latter needs to be protected from former. does this from the former. does this policy do you see, change the emphasis somewhat, or should it be seen in complete isolation from it ? i be seen in complete isolation from it? i think tenancy and landlord relationships have me have gone through a balancing process. landlords are bad people and tenants aren't by and large bad people. there are a few rotten apples on both sides of the equation. i think looking at what this is actually doing is highlighting an issue that exists that's probably been masked quite cleverly because people have used a different tool to ask people to leave properties. and the threshold that people have had to go through if they follow the court system has a very high threshold to prove and to social behaviour. they said no , thank behaviour. they said no, thank you very much indeed for joining us today. a real insight there into what's happening. my question, which i know you share is where do those tenants go exactly ? they just pass it on exactly? they just pass it on somewhere else, move to somewhere. and really, we've got to stop people bad to stop those people doing bad behaviour. to hear behaviour. we want to hear views. but still to come on saturday and phil, saturday with esther and phil, we'll to talking of we'll be to talking author of the whatever happened the new book whatever happened to liverpool ? but first, to tory liverpool? but first, here's the news headlines . here's the news headlines. esther, thank you very much. this is the latest from the gb newsroom, the port of dover says is deeply frustrate dated delays caused by code traffic declaring a critical. p&o ferries and dfds seaways reported delays of up to 7 hours for ferry and coach services . they added bad weather services. they added bad weather and hold ups at french border control are partly responsible. the labour leader, sir keir starmer, has urged the government to get a grip of the situation in a man accused of murdering a father and in cambridgeshire has been remanded in custody. 66 year old stephen alderton has appeared at huntingdon magistrates court, charged with two counts of murder and possession of a firearm. garry dunmore , his son firearm. garry dunmore, his son josh were shot dead in separate villages six miles apart on wednesday. a hearing will take place in cambridge crown court on monday . place in cambridge crown court on monday. millions of lowest paid workers will get a salary boost from today as the national minimum wage is increased. the hourly rate will go up from £9.50 to £10, $0.42 for adults. the government says rise keeps it on track to achieve its manifesto commitment . and manifesto commitment. and companies could face unlimited fines under new government plans to tackle pollution. the environment secretary is expected to announce tougher enforcement next week. theresa coffey's plans include the ability to place sanctions water companies without going through the courts, as well as lifting cap on penalties, allowing unlimited fines. environment agency figures show there were just over 300,000 sewage spills last year . the shadow justice last year. the shadow justice secretary, steve reed said the conservatives have lowered environmental standards . to tv environmental standards. to tv onune environmental standards. to tv online and dave plus radio. this is tv now is back to esther and phil . thank you to our phil. thank you to our chocoholic , tatianaerpool conservative has won 62% of the vote and 78% of the seats on liverpool city council. by seats on liverpool city council. by 1972, the party had held majority on liverpool council . majority on liverpool council. wait for it. 85 of the previous 100 years. but in 83 they lost their last two mps and in 1998 they lost their final councillor. so the conservatives have not won an electoral contest the city since. a new book out today entitled whatever happened to tory liverpool takes an in—depth look at conservatism in the city where we are delighted be joined by the author, dr. david jeffrey, lecturer in british at the university of liverpool. so come on. for a city that used to return more conservative mp until the 1950s than any other city. what well, there's a few things. the main issue is that the 1960s, the late sixties, as you rightfully said, was about was a heyday for liverpool conservatism. and that was because there was an unpopular government and people voted with their fe
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tatiana— up. but before that, here's the news with tatiana sanchez . news with tatiana sanchez. curvin— news with alvin, thank you. this is the latest from the gb newsroom. merseyside police says 23 arrests were made after animal rights activists crossed the track at the grand national . track at the grand national. protesters breached security fences with at least two glueing themselves to a jump. the animal rising group says the event is cruel, with 60 horses dying at the aintree festival over the past 23 years. the disruption caused a 12 minute delay to the start of the race, which was eventually won by karim khan rambler . the eventually won by karim khan rambler. the government is under pressure to prevent the most extreme nurses strike. yet after the latest pay offer was rejected, members from the rcn voted against the 5% pay rise, meaning nhs nurses in emergency department, intensive care and cancer wards will take industrial action for the first time. the 48 hour walkout will start on the 30th of april, but 74% of unison members voted to accept the same offer . accept the same offer. meanw
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i get all of that coming in, but right now is your headlines with tatiana tatiana. good afternoon.s 3:02. this is the latest from the gb newsroom donald is due in court to face charges becoming the first sitting or former president in us history to do . these are live pictures to do. these are live pictures from new york where he'll be formally charged, fingerprinted and could possibly have his mug shot taken. he was indicted over an alleged hush money payment to the adult film star stormy daniels before the 2016 election. his lawyer says , he'll election. his lawyer says, he'll plead not guilty . former plead not guilty. former republican congressional jake hunsaker says republicans are tired of the trump circus and. that's exactly what as republicans are trying to avoid. donald trump ran in 2016 on a platform draining the swamp of getting rid of the drama washington and getting back to business. he did some of that when we had a republican in the house and the senate, as was to be expected. but since then it's been circus after circus show and this is more of the same. and a repu
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mark and tatiana came to me mark tatiana well, i imagine that they told you one of jealousy, the secondey told me that you would not want to talk to them, i beg you, i beg you to talk to them. listen to this you need to listen to this, definitely listen. hello boris, i don’t promise anything, but everyone is not very tired. and now everything is scheduled, even a meeting with my mother, even a meeting with my mother. we're just talking. yes, it's all right. take care of yourself. ok, deal. i'm waiting for you. so music can be good music is a good choice so everyone go to bed. hallelujah well, are you sitting like that? almost ate a fish. don't want. do you know that i broke the vase? where did you just come from? and i already ordered that everything be removed, everything replaced and in your position. you have to take care of yourself, you have to be careful. i miss communication. i can see her, at least with her only friend. it’s hard for you now to think not about a girlfriend, not about generalizing about eating fish, there is phosphorus, greens, salads, tchaikovsky’s vitamins, lis
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tatiana sanchez. beth thank yon ven— with tatiana sanchez. beth thank you very nutt— with tatiana sanchez. uch and good morning. tnts ts— you very much and good morning. tnts tn the— you very much and good morning. this is the latest— you very much and good morning. this is the latest from _ you very much and good morning. this is the latest from the- this is the latest from the newsroom. hundreds of britons have been evacuated from sudan as the military is under pressure to bring people to safety before for a 72 hour ceasefire ends. the first two planes carrying british nationals out of sudan have landed in cyprus with the first charter flight back to london, set to depart later today. the home secretary suella braverman, says that up to 300 people have been rescued so far from the country. the prime minister has pledged that many more would follow, as he warned of a critical 24 hours ahead . the critical 24 hours ahead. the home secretary has accused the european court of human rights of undermining the government. that's after the controversial rwanda plan was blocked last year. parliame
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news from tttttnt— update on the latest news from tatiana sanchez— update on the latest news from tatiana sanchez ._ update on the latest news from tatianasanchez. t tatiana sanchez. darren, thank you. this is the latest from the gb newsroom. nine people have been arrested after a large number of protesters tried to enter the course at the grand national. the start of the race was delayed for a short period of time after animal rights protesters entered the course at aintree. three people were also arrested earlier today on suspicion of conspiracy to cause pubuc suspicion of conspiracy to cause public nuisance, demonstrate . public nuisance, demonstrate. haters say the race is cruel with 60 horses dying at the festival in the past 23 years. and it was crack rambler who ultimately won the race. the government is under pressure to prevent the most extreme nurses strike. yet after the latest pay offer was rejected , members from offer was rejected, members from the rcn voted against the 5% pay rise, meaning the nhs nurses and emergency department intensive care and cancer wards will take industrial action for the first time. the 48 hour wal
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tatiana . mark thank you very tatiana. mark thank you very much. and good afternoon. it's 1233. this is the latest from gb newsroom nicholas sturgeon's husband, peter murrell has been arrested. the former chief executive of the scottish national party is being questioned as part of an ongoing investigation into finances of the snp . searches are being the snp. searches are being carried out at a number of properties . carried out at a number of properties. his home, where police have set up a cordon. police has been investigating money spent which was part of a independence campaign fund . independence campaign fund. scotland's new first minister, humza yousaf . the snp has been humza yousaf. the snp has been fully with the investigation . fully with the investigation. i've never been in office better than the party and i didn't rule and the party finances and therefore an opportunity with new leadership to make sure we are being transparent, revving that that's what the ndc agreed in terms of its review and external into that i think is important . external into that i think is important. understands more than 4000 people have crossed the channel so far this year. around 500 illegal migrants arrived in the last 24 hours with uk authorities intercepting . at authorities intercepting. at least six small boats already today. the home office says planning for 91 and a half thousand people to arrive this yean thousand people to arrive this year, doubling last year's figure . the chairman of the figure. the chairman of the flood inquiry says more people who have lost loved ones should be entitled to compensation . be entitled to compensation. thousands of patients were infected with hiv and hepatitis c through contaminated products in 1970s and eighties. an independent inquiry has now delivered its second interim report last year. it recommended the victims , the contaminated the victims, the contaminated blood scandal, receive interim compensation . of £100,000. tv compensation. of £100,000. tv onune compensation. of £100,000. tv online , dab, radio and on in at online, dab, radio and on in at this is . gb news direct bullion this is. gb news direct bullion sponsors the financial port on gb news the golden silver investment . here's a quick of investment. here's a quick of today's markets. the pound will buy you $1.2467 and ,1.1398. the price gold is £1,622.83 per ounce, and the footsie one hundredths at 7667 points. direct bullion sponsors the financial report on gb news for physical investment investment . now the uk car market showing signs of life . new car signs of life. new car registrations up by almost a fifth over the last year and that's according to the latest figures from the society of motor manufacturers and traders. but saying car production worldwide , getting ahead of worldwide, getting ahead of demand that means, of demand and that means, of course, that new vehicle prices soon falling after a year soon be falling after a year where they've been pretty high . where they've been pretty high. so if you are thinking of buying a new, could be wise to wait a new, could it be wise to wait or join in the a new, could it be wise to wait orjoin in the studio? is our orjoin us in the studio? is our very own wheeler dealer, liam halligan with on the money . halligan with on the money. i look harry redknapp i would still out of the studios. remember that time when harry redknapp called up called a wheeler led by a journalist . wheeler led by a journalist. absolutely. yeah and i remember lexi say hello . got a new motor lexi say hello. got a new motor going all? yeah, indeed. but a lot of people i've got a new motor, particularly if they're in their fleets and they're having a company car. so these figures today are from cmt the society of major manufacturers and traders, as you , say, mark. and traders, as you, say, mark. and this is an important month. it's the figures for the month of march, which is called the new play . that's when the united new play. that's when the united changes. so you can you can see it's a brand new car and there's a premium on that. it's a brand new car and there's a premium on that . and as it a premium on that. and as it happensin a premium on that. and as it happens in march 20, 23, we can see here on on the graphic and radio listeners can, follow me. in march 20, 23, there were . two in march 20, 23, there were. two 287,825 new car registrations . 287,825 new car registrations. and in march 2022, there was 243, 479 new car registered additions. so march 20, 23 is up 18.2. on march 2022. that's partly because consumer sentiment is a bit better than it was . also because there are it was. also because there are more cars and there are because supply chains are easing. yeah, traffic just went off a barely there. but what i wanted say is even though we're up 18% on last yean even though we're up 18% on last year, that number in march is actually down 18.2% is down eight 36% on march 2019. so before pre—pandemic. yes. so that was not figure in blue on the right hand side. so in march . so we now we go 287,000, almost 288,000 new cars registered . and that is a lot registered. and that is a lot better than march last year. but back in 2019, it was 450,000 cars registered in march and 550,000 in 2017. so you can see we're getting back to where we were before the pandemic , but were before the pandemic, but there's still a long way to go. i mean, it was specific problem, wasn't there? but the supply of the chips, electronic gizmos, all have gotten us right. obviously had affected production. i mean , we assume production. i mean, we assume now because the pandemic has has receded in terms of supply and production that's going to increase the numbers coming through the system. it will it will also change the type car that's coming through the system. let me just show this second graphic, rog. going back to sales in march by to these car sales in march by type. if you look at the diesel sales, they're actually 20% on march last year. electric sales are up % on march last year. are up% on march last year. hybnds are up% on march last year. hybrids are up 36% on march last yeah hybrids are up 36% on march last year. an even is what we call evs as all electric vehicles as battery electric hybrid and all the variations . they're now over the variations. they're now over a third of new cars that were registered in march 2023, and that's quite a serious change. tesla model y, the most popular new car not made in britain yet, but i think the nissan qashqai is doing well, which is made in britain . and this is the other britain. and this is the other question about the health of the british car manufacturing sector. indeed and in the car the car sector worldwide. have a look at this . a report came out look at this. a report came out this morning from ubs, one of the big investment banks, and they do reports of their clients and sometimes the press get hold of them . and here's a quote from of them. and here's a quote from that. ubs report. it says, mark, given the bullish production schedules means optimistic production schedule . as we see production schedule. as we see high risk ubs of overproduction and growing pricing pressure as and growing pricing pressure as a result , the price war has a result, the price war has already started unfolding in the electric vehicle space, and we expect it to spread into combustion engine segment that's regular diesel and petrol . and regular diesel and petrol. and when an investment banker talks pricing pressure, it's talking about prices down. so it's going to get better for consumers. now, i'm not saying that's definitely going to happen , but definitely going to happen, but it's interesting that the likes ubs, you analyse these things very closely are saying there may be too many cars over over the coming months . and something the coming months. and something else i think is interesting, mark, which you and i have been discussing over recent months is it seems that certainly in the european union and maybe in the uk as well , there might be an uk as well, there might be an easing that target for the banning of petrol and diesel car sales . okay. so the european has sales. okay. so the european has showing that they may push that further into the future and the uk well may well as will as well. so there are lots more electric vehicles being produced and being sold, but it may be that the acceleration of those styles, to coin a phrase , starts styles, to coin a phrase, starts to ease as . styles, to coin a phrase, starts to ease as. the legal requirements are pushed further into the future. yeah. oh, we get sort of combustion engine cars, but with biofuels there's still a lot of technological churn going on. it may be that the government has to governments everywhere, certainly across the western world, change their tune world, have to change their tune full technology outpacing the full technology is outpacing the legislation they've put in place a very unwieldy deal. thank you for that. don't storm off . let's for that. don't storm off. let's not speak to mark palmer. another wheeler or brand another wheeler dealer or brand director , as we should call him, director, as we should call him, an auto trader. thanks an auto trader. mark, thanks very for your time very much indeed for your time because quite an because it's quite an interesting aspect you've picked up, but also trader and that is that there's a worrying decline in from private buyers. in demand from private buyers. so though these figures are so even though these figures are up in these fleet sales, boy, the figures . and mark of glenn the figures. and mark of glenn just made the point actually we've got we've got you some back now. let's let's try again. i was just saying obviously you've identified there is a decline private and these decline in the private and these figures all with a fleet figures going all with a fleet sales . yeah that's right. can sales. yeah that's right. can you hear me now. yes. loud and clear. hi hi, mark. i am the just covered off some of some of the key points. they are actually the increase in price of it registrations so that average everyday drivers is actually only 1.4% year on year. whereas the fleet sector has gone up by 40. so seeing a real, you know, this is the face of it, these figures are good news . but actually what we're seeing is that that has been driven this this quarter by the fleet. and, you know , a lot of those and, you know, a lot of those fleets, those big corporate customers , businesses and customers, businesses and company car drivers, they've been waiting a really long time actually for these vehicles to come through. you know, these orders would have been placed potentially late last or potentially late last summer or even times even before of the lead times that just spoke. and even that you just spoke. and even still , those cars being driven still, those cars being driven away by the private drivers, by the retail drivers, that would be the thing . many, many be the same thing. many, many orders we've would orders that we've seen would have placed in a last have been placed in a last summer. and before we started to see a bit of a bite on household income and interest rates. and so on and so forth. so there's an awful lot of change and it's really important dig beneath really important to dig beneath those initial headlines and see what's going right. and let's dig because i think dig down on that because i think you've inquiries, the you've found inquiries, the private new cars down private sector for new cars down 40. is that because i think , you 40. is that because i think, you know, almost all cars are on finance schemes and given the interest rate rise, you know, that's quite expensive at the moment. yeah, there are loads of things at play. that's, that's a good observation . i mean we've good observation. i mean we've seen just highlighted seen as you've just highlighted , into the market so , coming back into the market so supply of new on to try to is up 30% year on year but we've seen the number of people looking at those cars go back by 12% and then people enquiring on those cars, as you say, is back 40. so we've seen a down turn in interest , new cars on we've seen a down turn in interest, new cars on our platform over the last few months, actually since around the autumn that been reflected in the sales figures at the moment, what we're concerned aboutis moment, what we're concerned about is that that will start to come in 3 to 6 months time and we might not see quite the recovery that we'd like to see. okay just looking at the sort of stats as saying to liam, tesla, model y , the most popular diesel model y, the most popular diesel though is has disappeared . and though is has disappeared. and of course, we reflect that diesel prices the pumps at the moment one 62.9 for average way above petrol is dead . i wouldn't above petrol is dead. i wouldn't say that diesel is dead . no. and say that diesel is dead. no. and there's still a long way to go through the next few years as we begin sort of play out how the market's going to be. i mean, some of things you've some of the things you've highlighted already in you highlighted already in when you spoke the market is spoke to liam, the car market is undergoing amount of undergoing an enormous amount of change. biggest for change. it's the biggest for more than 100 years since, you know, since we invented mass production. so we're having to battle over this battle through that over this next 5 to 10 years. now next sort of 5 to 10 years. now diesel manufacturers making, you know, far fewer diesels than they used to. obviously we're seeing an increase in an electric model pure electric models that are coming to the market. so there's a load of change and a load of things for consumers to get used to. there is a market still in the uk for diesel. there are some needs for diesel, certain things need to do with them and but you are seeing fewer and fewer of those models. so i say diesel is dead, not by any means. some people will still need to do will still need them to do certain jobs. but we are going to through the to see that tail through the decade. you very decade. mark, thank you very much indeed for updating us your findings. thanks much indeed for updating us your findi much thanks much indeed for updating us your findi much i thanks much indeed for updating us your findimuch i don'tthanks much indeed for updating us your findi much i don't nowk, thank you much and good afternoon. it's 1:02. and good afternoon. it's1:02. this is the latest from the gb newsroom nicholas sturgeon's husband peter murrell has been arrested. detect nerves are currently searching the snp's headquarters collecting evidence and officers have set up a cordon outside of their home. the former chief executive of the scottish national party is being questioned as part of an ongoing investor gation into finances of the snp. police scotland has been investigating money being spent which was part of a independ and campaign fund. scotland new first minister humza yousaf says the snp is fully cooperating with the investigation or will have questions. they will have . there questions. they will have. there will be some concerns that party membership of course will have concerns too. so what i can commit to is party leaders. concerns too. so what i can commit to is party leaders . we commit to is party leaders. we want to be absolutely transparent that that's
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how long does he know tatiana antonova she is already in the studio tatiana well , what is everyone'sorists? is it possible to wash the car or is it safe to wash the car, because the forecasts for spring are sunny, i’ll say this, dry for at least a week , we don’t expect any rain. well, that's all, thanks to the scandinavian anticyclone, it is of northern origin. this will affect the nighttime temperatures in places in the regions , possible slight frosts, but during the day, thanks to the active sun, just april + 7 yaroslavl to +15 in bryansk in voronezh in astrakhan, plus 20 is still sure. well, to the south is a cyclone with rains, so it's cool on the coast, plus 12-15 meter snowdrifts, while they persist in the north, and frosts. at night it's down to minus 15, but during the day in arkhangelsk, plus five plus seven, the northwest will finally notice spring in kaliningrad today, plus five, tomorrow at 13:15 they will feel the april heat. uh, petersburgers on friday. there plus six days off to plus 10 in moscow at night around zero during the day plus 10 and sunny. well , irina if
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news with tennes— that, let's get the news with tatiana sanchez— that, let's get the news with tatiana sanchez . \. gt; that, let's get the news with tatianaest from the gb newsroom, the home secretary is set to declare the small boat crisis a national emergency rac. the move comes in response to a high court challenge tomorrow aimed at halting government plans to house asylum seekers on an old raf base in essex, braintree . raf base in essex, braintree. council will attempt to secure an injunction preventing the transfer of 1700 migrant to the wethersfield airbase. the declaration of a national emergency would give the home office powers to ignore local authority objections if the plans relate to crown owned property. well, this all comes as the latest figures show more than 5000 people have crossed the english channel so far this year. the english channel so far this year . the snp the english channel so far this year. the snp treasurer has been arrested by police investigating the party's finances. colin beattie is the second person to be questioned by detectives who are trying to establish how more than £600,000 in donations was set as
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news with wewewe— that, let's get the news with tatiana sanchez— that, let's get the news with tatiana sanchez . \w 92; that, let's get the news with tatianaz. nigel, thank you and good evening. this is the latest from the gb newsroom, the latest from the gb newsroom, the home secretary is set to declare the small boat crisis a national emergency rac. the move comes in response to a high court challenge tomorrow aimed at halting government plans to house asylum seekers on an old raf base in essex, braintree . raf base in essex, braintree. council will attempt to secure an injunction preventing the transfer of 1700 migrant to the wethersfield airbase. the declaration of a national emergency would give the home office powers to ignore local authority objections if the plans relate to crown owned property. well, this all comes as the latest figures show more than 5000 people have crossed the english channel so far this year. the english channel so far this year . the snp the english channel so far this year. the snp treasurer has been arrested by police investigating the party's finances. colin beattie is the second person to be questioned by
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setstez— it's your headlines with tatiana setstez .— it's your headlines with tatiana setstez . — it's your headlines with tatiana scotland rather than tetettsttte— people of scotland rather than tetettsttte tt— people of scotland rather than languishing in the opposition like languishing in the opposition ttte treeet— languishing in the opposition like megan gallagher and the ssetttst— like megan gallagher and the scottish tories— like megan gallagher and the scottish tories . _ like megan gallagher and the scottish tories . md“ like megan gallagher and the scottish tories . 3 g“ flittiee scottish tories. right. well there we go. let's scottish tories. 3g“ flittiee ”t�*ti'iiil git let's speak now scottish tories. right. well- there we go. let's speak now to tete— there we go. let's speak now to data journalist— there we go. let's speak now to data journalist at— there we go. let's speak now to data journalist at the- data journalist at the seetetet— data journalist at the spectator. it's michael simmons . trtsteet— spectator. it's michael simmons . michael, thanks— spectator. it's michael simmons . michael, thanks
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your suggestions in a short time thank you tatiana it was our columnist tatiana remezova. in the orenburgng to celebrate the 85th anniversary of his famous countryman viktor stepanovich chernomyrdin on the eve of memorable dates in the little motherland of the outstanding politics the exposition was opened, a black youth, a village of federal significance the exhibits tell about the founder of gazprom and the political heaviness of the era of change rally the first festival of button accordion music about a new event at the museum of history the black youth is preparing to celebrate the anniversary of its most famous native. on the main street, guests are greeted by the chernomyrdin land exposition chernaya otrok is a village of federal significance, with sart objects and aphorisms of the people's premier. i would like to thank everyone for responding to today, today's event. this museum of local lore in a small village is not at all a village scale, viktor chernomyrdin, according to the intention of the creators, and as if he himself is talking about his native village, the report turned
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but first, here are your news headlines with tatiana sanchez. news headlines with tatiana sanchez .e latest from the gb newsroom, the latest from the gb newsroom, the port of dover has apologised to passengers for delays of up to passengers for delays of up to several hours caused by high volumes of coaches port which was declared a critical incident says it's deeply frustrated travellers being held up for that easter getaway. it said the significant hold ups are due to lengthy french border process hours and sheer volume . well, hours and sheer volume. well, the labour leader, sir keir starmer says families trying to get on holiday will be frustrated yet again . think the frustrated yet again. think the nature of the frustration will be not again. this is not first time the problems at dover the government needs to get a grip of this and plan ahead. we can't have every summer holiday every easter holiday the same problem and so the government needs to get a grip of this and actually help people out who are just trying to get away for a few days holiday. a man accused of murdering a
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tatiana sanchez . dan thank you tatiana sanchez. dan thank you ene— tatiana sanchez. ver claims he failed to tell mps his wife might benefit from a major measure announced in last month's budget. she holds shares in koru kids, a child care agency likely to gain financially from a drive to recruit more child minders. number ten says the prime minister will clarify how it was declared as a minister burial interest rather than to the commons . meanwhile, mr sunak has commons. meanwhile, mr sunak has accepted the uk doesn't have enough teachers to deliver on his ambition to improve children's numeracy skills. he says an anti maths mindset is costing the uk economy tens of billions of pounds every year and wants to ensure the subject is studied by all students in england up to the age of 18, the uk is one of the least numerate countries in the developed world. more than 8 million newne— world. more than 8 million adults have— : more than 8 million adults have numeracy skills ieiew— adults have numeracy skills below those _ adults have numeracy skills below those expected of
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tatiana sanchez . dan thank you tatiana sanchez. dan thank you one— tatiana sanchez. minders. number ten says the prime minister will clarify how it was declared as a minister burial interest rather than to the commons . meanwhile, mr sunak has commons. meanwhile, mr sunak has accepted the uk doesn't have enough teachers to deliver on his ambition to improve children's numeracy skills. he says an anti maths mindset is costing the uk economy tens of billions of pounds every year and wants to ensure the subject is studied by all students in england up to the age of 18, the uk is one of the least numerate countries in the developed world. more than 8 million onene— world. more than 8 million adults have— : more than 8 million adults have numeracy skills ieiow— adults have numeracy skills below those _ adults have numeracy skills below those expected of a nine year— below those expected of a nine ween oin— below those expected of a nine year oii oni— below those expected of a nine year old and around a third of young— year old and around a third of young geogie— year old
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thank you tatiana it was our economic observer tatiana remezova.oles of the emerging multipolar world should be the eurasian economic union, which sets precisely this goal, russia as the country chairing the association in 2023, the key task is emphasized by the government to deepen integration for the development of national economies and achieve technological and financial sovereignty. of particular importance for the successful functioning of the eurasian economic union is the consistent reduction of economic risks posed by the use of foreign currencies and payment systems. we believe that the condition for stable settlement relations, and in the space of the eurasian economic union, is the use, and by our partners, of the system for transmitting financial messages. e of the bank of russia as well as the integration and establishment of interaction between payment systems of our countries in france, the country was paralyzed by strikes in transport in paris, the protesters seized the stock exchange, and in bardo they blew up a mannequin depictin
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first, though, the headlines with tatiana sanchez . headlines with tatiana sanchez. ema— headlines with tatiana gett— donna, thank you very much and goat evening-— donna, thank you very much and good evening. this— donna, thank you very much and good evening. this is the latest mam— good evening. this is the latest tram tne— good evening. this is the latest tram tne en— good evening. this is the latest from the gb news— good evening. this is the latest from the gb news room. the snp tneaeanen nae— from the gb news room. the snp treasurer has been— from the gb news room. the snp treasurer has been released nttneat— treasurer has been released without charge— treasurer has been released without charge pending further investigation— without charge pending further investigation after he was arrested— investigation after he was aneetet ty— investigation after he was arrested by police investigating the arrested by police investigating tne natty-e— arrested by police investigating the party's finances . colin the party's finances. colin neattte— the party's finances. colin neattte te— the party's fin
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first, though, the headlines with tatiana sanchez . headlines with tatiana sanchez. donne— headlines with tatianach and good evening. this— donna, thank you very much and good evening. this is the latest mon— good evening. this is the latest ttom tne— good evening. this is the latest ttom tne en— good evening. this is the latest from the gb news— good evening. this is the latest from the gb news room. the snp tteoemet noe— from the gb news room. the snp treasurer has been— from the gb news room. the snp treasurer has been released nttnott— treasurer has been released without charge— treasurer has been released without charge pending further investigation— without charge pending further investigation after he was arrested— investigation after he was omeetet ty— investigation after he was arrested by police investigating the arrested by police investigating tne potty-e— arrested by police investigating the party's finances . colin the party's finances. colin neottte— the party's finances. colin neottte te— the party's finances. colin beattie is the— the party's finances. colin beattie is the second
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katya really once told tatiana that andrei was a hooligan and olga was the eldest. does not lie that she told tatiana that there are such lustful moments on the part of andrey, but tatianathat against her or against andrey this type cannot be, other girls no longer told her, because as i open my soul. and if they don’t hear me, not only do i not want to believe it. i will never believe it. katya, i asked you this question. today, more than once, i give you the floor. well, uncle pestered you. tell you oleg and what do you say there was such a plot in her life, but she does not interpret it. it's like molestation for her, it can be some kind of game situation. in any case, the fact that she warned olga that this was only the beginning, a further will be more it is confirmed that it is loaded on both by a combination of both polygraphs. tatyana's last words , what will she say to grown-up adopted daughters. god bless them so they can get through it themselves. here you look insensitive women. immediately after the divorce ad and the dna test, i am sure that this is not my child. i want to prove to my wife that i am not a father , not only his relatives took the side of my
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tatiana . it's just thank you, tatiana. it's just coming up thank you, tatiana. he eeepehr ee— february. and the long wait lead to despair as people suffer in pehh— to despair as people suffer in pehh vhhh— to despair as people suffer in pain with health— to despair as people suffer in pain with health problems. but for pain with health problems. but her prhvehe— pain with health problems. but for private care— pain with health problems. but for private care out of reach her— for private care out of reach her many— for private care out of reach her many hue— for private care out of reach for many due to— for private care out of reach for many due to the hefty price tag ,— for many due to the hefty price hee , ur— for many due to the hefty price tag , uk residents— for many due to the hefty price tag, uk residents are increasingly- tag, uk residents are increasingly heading abroad to eeuhhrhee— increasingly heading abroad to countries like— increasingly heading abroad to countries like lithuania to have her— countries like lithuania to have their ailments— countri
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tatiana . the mark thank you very tatiana. the mark thank you very much and good afternoon. this is the latest from gb newsroom donald trump . make us history donald trump. make us history becoming the first sitting or former president to face criminal charges . these are live criminal charges. these are live pictures from new york where he'll be formally fingerprinted and also possibly have his mug shot taken. he was indicted over an alleged hush money payment to the adult film star stormy daniels before the 2016 election. his lawyer says plead not guilty. former international trade adviser to clinton and george bush, steve gill says the former president to draw attention to his appearance will be a spectacle . and that's part be a spectacle. and that's part of what president trump wants. there are reports that he was given the opportunity to do this arraignment via zoom. he's to go in daylight , arraignment via zoom. he's to go in daylight, even though arraignment via zoom. he's to go in daylight , even though they've in daylight, even though they've apparently negotiated no handcuffs, perhaps no mugshot , handcuffs, perhaps no mugshot, although the president has made comments that his mug shot will become the most famous shot in history that you'll see it history and that you'll see it on t—shirts and mugs and else. the president is going draw attention this . the home attention to this. the home secretary could face a legal challenge over plans to house migrants on a barge. the government is expected to announce that a leasing agreement has been reached to use the baby stock home in dorset, which can accommodate more than 500 people. the move designed free up hotels will reportedly cost taxpayers more than £20,000 a day . tick tock . than £20,000 a day. tick tock. been fined £12.7 million by the information commissioner's office for misusing children's data . the ico says more than data. the ico says more than 1 million children under the age of 30 were using the app in 2020. despite his own rule not to allow young to create an account uk data protection law says that tick tock needs consent from parents for underage . labour leader sir keir underage. labour leader sir keir starmer has called the government's decision to halve social care funding in england a betrayal. millions of pounds have been removed from previously announced funding , previously announced funding, rising costs and troubles, recruiting staff. in december 2021, the government pledged to invest at least £500 million over the next three years to begin to transform the way in which it will support the social care workforce. well keir says they've failed to do that . they they've failed to do that. they promised a lot . and now they're promised a lot. and now they're delivering almost nothing. i've always they didn't have a plan . always they didn't have a plan. and this is more evidence. they don't have a plan. and if that wasn't bad enough, its own. this has a huge impact on the backlog in the nhs because without social working, it's social care working, it's impossible to get people out of hospital as quickly we would hospital as quickly as we would like you have even like and therefore you have even more prospect of ambulances up, people being able get people not being able to get into so this is a into hospitals. so this is a betrayal many from betrayal. so many fronts from the government . the government the government. the government is setting out a new plan to ensure clean and plentiful supply of water for the future . supply of water for the future. the government wants to see more investment from water companies as well as tougher enforcement for those pollute. it also could see a ban of plastic in wet wipes and restrictions on substances and, textiles, cleaning products and paints. labour has accused the government failing to make the pubuc government failing to make the public aware new id rules of local elections . polling day is local elections. polling day is now a month away and to cast a ballot you need to be registered to vote as well as for the first time in england, be able to display a form of photo id . not display a form of photo id. not all types of photo id will be accepted, but a passport driving licence are both . russia has licence are both. russia has warned finland's nato membership raises the risk of conflict. the kremlin described the country's accession to the military alliance as an encroachment on its security, saying it would be forced to take counter measures . russia's invasion of ukraine triggered finland and sweden's decision apply for membership and today. the former will become the 31st member of nato secretary general jens stoltenberg described the described the expansion as historic for nato . it's historic for nato. it's important for finland. it's important for finland. it's important not least for the nordic region and the baltic region. you can just look at map, understand how important finland is for the security in the nordic and the baltic region and then also of course finland bnngs and then also of course finland brings high end capabilities to the substantial forces and also advanced the defence industry into , the alliance . one person into, the alliance. one person has died and at least 30 injured after a passenger train derailed in the netherlands . emergency in the netherlands. emergency service says that the train carrying 50 people came off course after hitting construction equipment on the track, which caused front carriage to crash into field. 19 people were taken to hospital with the remaining treated at the. former world boxing champion amir khan been banned from all sports for two years. you can't doping says the 36 year old tested positive for the anabolic drug austar after losing his bout to cowper in manchester in 2022. khan who announced his retirement in may last year, has accepted he violated the rules but said it wasn't intentional . this is gb wasn't intentional. this is gb news will bring you news as it happens. now it's back to . happens. now it's back to. tatyana, thank you very much . so tatyana, thank you very much. so all eyes new york today. manhattan in particular, the manhattan in particular, the manhattan court building, manhattan in particular, the manhattan court building , the manhattan court building, the appearance of this man donaldj . trump is due in court to face stemming from alleged hush money paid to star stormy daniels that itself not illegal, but if it was actually then put through as a business expense that would actually be falling foul of new york state law, business fraud effectively. and trump could be facing 30 separate charges on that when he pleads later today. well, these are the live pictures outside trump tower. the former president , we the former president, we believe, is still there . he believe, is still there. he spent the night in this penthouse talking to his legal team. we can tell you actually that that team has already had last minute changes. todd has been appointed , as the senior or been appointed, as the senior or lead counsel. he's a top criminal defence lawyer . joe criminal defence lawyer. joe tacopina , who's seen more as and tacopina, who's seen more as and i use the phrase as is describing new york an attack dog, but certainly we believe now will be the public face of the trump team . blanche will be the trump team. blanche will be in side the court itself in terms of the proceedings the timing, we believe the arraignment or the plea from trump manhattan at 215 at the manhattan court building. already, though, the barriers are out there. the court staff are out there. the court staff are joining police outside , just are joining police outside, just to remind you. 35,000 new york police on standby for what will be this occasion where we're told by his legal team, he will plead not guilty, quote, very . plead not guilty, quote, very. well, let's bring in someone else who hopefully we can hear very loudly. our own darren mccaffrey in new waiting for. well, we guess it's going to be quite a motorcade down travelling for miles the blacked out vehicles including let's not the secret service detail who still follow trump around around . yeah indeed it is of the reasons that he will not be handcuffed. unlike normal procedure if it comes to criminal cases here in new york , not least of all, because, as you say, he's going to be surrounded, as he always is by his secret service detail . he his secret service detail. he will that journey. we will make that journey. we reckon probably early afternoon new york time. it is only 7 am. here to the courthouse. as you say, it's only four miles. it's not going to take terribly long, particularly with a motorcade to get there. the police have closed down quite a quite a few roads tower indeed roads around tower and indeed around that is a to give donald trump the ability to get there pretty easily. but b, also over fears of protests . now, there fears of protests. now, there will be protests. they are due to begin around 12:00 local time here. so 5:00 your time . as here. so 5:00 your time. as i say, what's been notable. yes actually, how few people seem to be on the streets either here in new york or indeed in florida, though that may well change today. clearly today is the big day. today is the day which history will be made . mark, the history will be made. mark, the first time a florida coma a foot more occurrence for presidents has ever been indicted in a criminal case in terms of just analogies sticks, as you say, he is expected at the courthouse at 215 eastern standard times. that's new york time. that's 715 your time. so you've got quite while to wait before that happens. and it's expected to be a very short actual court appearance around 50 minutes, we reckon , in which he will finally reckon, in which he will finally hear the charges against him, will all hear charges against him. he will not guilty as his lawyers insisted he will battle all these charges and then almost immediately he will head to the airports , florida, where to the airports, florida, where later tonight he'll address his supporters and give us a flavour . you say it is early yet, but certainly mayor of new york, eric adams, has gone with this statement probably manhattan is not a playground for your misplaced anger really indicating to the trump supporters. well, the even the protesters as well . this is not protesters as well. this is not to be played out as as we've seen previously . yeah, indeed. seen previously. yeah, indeed. warnings about possibility of violence turning . so protests violence turning. so protests turning the we heard, as you say, for the mayor of new york yesterday telling protesters to behave themselves effectively. yes everyone here course, in yes everyone here of course, in the has got the right to the us has got the right to protest and i'm sure he'll be pretty vocal at this afternoon what they do not want to see is any form of violence. what president about president biden was asked about this said he this yesterday, he said he trusts nypd, york trusts the nypd, new york police force to ensure that protest did remain . and as you've rightly remain. and as you've rightly pointed out, thousands of extra cops have been off to ensure that there is enough cover . cops have been off to ensure that there is enough cover. but there is concern. you know, there is concern. you know, there is concern. you know, there is a little bit of uneasiness here in new york following clearly what happens outside the capitol building. a in a couple of years ago. there concern that protests could turn violent, but as i say today, what's been notable is a protesters we have seen and also how little we heard really donald trump. i mean, he's taken to media platforms, hasn't he , to media platforms, hasn't he, quite a lot over the last 24 hours or so, talking about how this is a witch hunt, how he wants people to chip in some money and they've raised some 7 million quid so far. so clearly that effort is working, but we've not heard him give any interviews this. will interviews around this. we will hear tonight. it will be hear from tonight. it will be interesting what he's allowed to say, because is also say, because this is also possible judge may put possible that the judge may put some restrictions on what we can talk about and indeed what donald trump can talk about, because this is, after all, a criminal trial that will need a jury criminal trial that will need a jury . and what the judge will jury. and what the judge will not want is any part that the jury not want is any part that the jury could be prejudice . in all jury could be prejudice. in all of this, though, you'd have to conclude, given who donald trump is and the coverage of this trial that might be nigh impossible . yeah. and impossible. yeah. and interesting that, know, interesting that, you know, talking about the effect that social media is having because he's his own social media platform. he's already attacked the judge hogan much on saying that hates him because of course they've crossed swords previously and one wonders how that will be out even though this is just a hearing today. yeah, indeed. and these attacks, of course the man leading this indictments , manhattan's indictments, manhattan's district attorney , who to be district attorney, who to be fair, was elected as a democrat and many feel he was elected simply trying to indict a donald. but you also write in suggesting , which donald. but you also write in suggesting, which i think is fascinating, is let's not forget, trump is a new yorker. he decades and he lived here for decades and decades decades decades. decades, decades and decades. it's recently it's only relatively recently that moved to florida. he that he's moved to florida. he will certainly know will almost certainly know anyone of any major import ins in this city, and he is not going to hold back on his opinions of them he's not opinions of them as he's not done of the either done with any of the either leading politician judge or leading politician orjudge or anyone else in us society. in the past . and so this will feel the past. and so this will feel much like kind of a local boy on, if you like pope also make this clear before that initial heanng this clear before that initial hearing today of him saying essentially not and we still don't know whether it's going to be televised not i think it's unlikely. trump's campaign is and his team have been suggesting it shouldn't be because fear going because they fear it's going to turn a circus. katy the turn into a circus. katy the broadcasters in the united states it to be, but this states want it to be, but this is process that is going is a process that is going to drag months possibly drag out for months possibly years well. mark, we're not years as well. mark, we're not expecting any speedy conclusion to this . and even when we do get to this. and even when we do get a verdict, almost certain a verdict, it is almost certain that trump would appeal that donald trump would appeal that donald trump would appeal that went against that verdict. if it went against him. yeah. so the prospects, even he was found guilty of even if he was found guilty of donald ended in prison donald trump ended up in prison at stage right now on at this stage right now on whatever it sort of april whatever it is the sort of april 2023. a very very long way 2023. it's a very very long way off. i think we're just getting an update actually down on what will be happening terms of the pictures that we're getting . as pictures that we're getting. as you said, there was this from nbc news in to particular allow access for what they call videographers, photographers , videographers, photographers, radio journalists and print reporters to arraignment judge juan, motion barring the use of all digital devices , including all digital devices, including mobile phones and laptops, but cameras will be allowed in the hallway before the arraignment begins . so i think there might begins. so i think there might begins. so i think there might be what they call a bit of a bunfight in, that hallway before he actually gets into court building or into the courtroom itself . yeah, indeed. in fact , itself. yeah, indeed. in fact, actually, for the last 24 hours or so, members of the public here in new york and, indeed, journalists have been queuing up because they are, as you say, going to allow some people into the as the courthouse. interesting. as you just revealed no cameras in court itself. i think trump's team will be happy with that. we not have looked terribly good with him, effectively standing in the dock , if you like . but in the dock, if you like. but yes, those journalists will be allowed, some of them, into the courtroom itself very numbers. there's also going to be a spill—over . but some new yorkers spill—over. but some new yorkers are some us citizens will be allowed to go and watch this pretty historic moments moment in which you know donald trump will appear charged with a criminal offence. we don't know how many charges he's going to face. again, we think it's going to be at least one. it's going to be at least one. it's going to be at one to run business fraud. but the ap reports in the us that it could be up to us media that it could be up to 30 separate charges. we will only know that sheets at around 215 local time, your 215 local time, 715 your time later on today for the moment. darren thank you. back to of course, as soon as we hear see course, as $00“ as we hear see more on course, as soon as we hear see more on what's going to be a busy day there for york and manhattan in particular. you very much for that. but let's not speak to david dunne, who's professor international politics at, the university of birmingham, who is joining us. and david, one wonders whether this is going to be the law or politics today . terms of the politics today. terms of the headunes. politics today. terms of the headlines . well certainly, as headlines. well certainly, as far as donald trump is , he far as donald trump is, he doesn't want to talk the substance of the charges that he is playing his usual playbook of attack and distract and delay , attack and distract and delay, therefore wants to talk about this as a political process because . he doesn't want to talk because. he doesn't want to talk about business fraud , about the about business fraud, about the stormy daniels checks or indeed about campaign finance violations. what he wants us to think about instead . this is an think about instead. this is an outrage that a former president should be afraid in this way and really that's big question here is whether america's rule of law whether equality before the law will be upheld. in a sense, american legal system and ultimately democracy is in the court today as to whether someone is above the law or whether even a former should be held up and made for his alleged crimes . yeah, the difficulty crimes. yeah, the difficulty i in terms of applying that rule of making him accountable is that the dea district for manhattan is a high profile democrat. alvin bragg, who again has crossed swords with trump previously. so there's this of politics mixed into that . well politics mixed into that. well of an america where you have a da's elected and you have judges appointed by a president who, of course, famously funded a lot of that. the legal system was much more politicised, but the decision to either prosecute or not prosecute would have been a political decision. so either way, it was done. it has political ramifications and implications and. neither neither party is doing this would see it as fair, whichever way it came down to. so when you have a politicised system like this, inevitably you get those charged . but that of course charged. but that of course hasn't stopped politicians being charged in the past. not a foot, not a president, but many congressmen and governors and state officials have been prosecuted . and ultimately, it's prosecuted. and ultimately, it's about evidence being evaluated in court as that process unfolds. but that won't be what trump wants us to focus on today. as say you will, you want today. as say you will, you want to talk about the substance. yeah. and with his team a political team as well as obviously his his legal advisors trump tower we understand they're all together in the penthouse suite last night . penthouse suite last night. we'll be looking at perhaps the they can gain from this for the 2024 presidential election campaign this issue of making himself look a martyr. absolutely. he is melky in this for all it's worth. he quintessentially a and he is taking to this to the stage. and he'll be on the stage in florida tonight playing play in the victim his base get the send more millions of dollars to his campaign finances as if he needs extra money but he seems to want to have that. and course he'll be running up that 20 to 30% of the american population who think he can do no wrong and that does is it makes it very difficult for the rest of the republican who don't feel that they can criticise him a or even engagein they can criticise him a or even engage in the substance the law case and this one of four legal cases that he faces in next year because they don't want to actually alienate that base because they're so important in primary process and choosing the candidates. so all the other presidential from desantis to nikki haley to mike pence have been critical of the process because they fear base professor david dunn, thank you very much indeed for joining david dunn, thank you very much indeed forjoining us. and of course , we'll see what emerges course, we'll see what emerges in the hours to come. we've got our cameras outside trump tower. we've got our cameras outside the court building. but just to update you , his legal team, his update you, his legal team, his lawyers , he will be pleading not lawyers, he will be pleading not guilty very loudly. that's lawyers, he will be pleading not guilty very loudly . that's the guilty very loudly. that's the quote from new york to new york. of course, as we see and hear more. but here, tributes have been paid to former conservative chancellor nigel after his death at the age of 91. served as at the age of 91. he served as thatcher's chancellor from 1983 until his resignation years later. before then, going on to sit in the house of lords. his brother laws and a baby until his retirement last december. well, the prime minister rishi sunak described him as leading sunak described him as a leading brexit, an inspiration. boris johnson marking him as a giant of tory politics. former prime minister sir john major paying his tribute , describing him as his tribute, describing him as one of the essential pillars of the 1980s conservative government. former leader william hague saying he was a towering figure in politics. let's speak now to former political correspondent peter spencen political correspondent peter spencer, who has been outside number 11 on many an occasion dunng number 11 on many an occasion during those years and. we do remember, of course, that quote peter, his position was unassailable . well, didn't quite unassailable. well, didn't quite prove that way. but i guess now we're learning that his his political legacy unassailable . political legacy unassailable. well, of course, in every play when a person passes away says what a fabulous person that was. but let's not be under illusions here. he was a huge , divisive here. he was a huge, divisive figure . yes, he was the absolute figure. yes, he was the absolute tower of strength that that got margaret thatcher's revolution shooting away against that . shooting away against that. later on, he fell out how horribly over year up. remember that first time of thatcher he fell out with her because he so in favour of link tying the british economy to the european later on. of course as we know he became an absolute committed brexiteer and but he played his part in a significant part in thatcher's downfall it was him and then later geoffrey howe who finished her off but he was a overall it's also worth remembering that he did engineer a tremendous boom in the british economy and then subsequently it went too far and it turned into a tremendous bust . so i dare say a tremendous bust. so i dare say it was interesting to . know what it was interesting to. know what liz truss thinks of he operated and his legacy . yeah. and and his legacy. yeah. and interesting. now to assess those dog days of the thatcher as to whether perhaps it was lawson rather than how that brought her down because of the tremendous battle that margaret thatcher in. so alan walters economic and all those sort of days of wine and roses will went out the window pretty quickly, didn't. they most certainly did. i mean, he fell out with waters utterly , spectacularly. and then he finally thatcher with an ultimatum . you get rid of him or ultimatum. you get rid of him or i and then as it turned out, i mean it's extraordinary how things work out . as it turned things work out. as it turned out, he did go . so did walters. out, he did go. so did walters. but then, i mean, there are so many ironies about all this . i many ironies about all this. i mean, this man who's this committed is latvian origin , committed is latvian origin, spent much of his life later on, living in france. it was also i mean, i have to say that he was to me as a rookie journalist back in the day and working for radio. i did find him a remote and scary figure. and a lot of people , of course, that he people, of course, that he wasn't a technical trouble sort of chap as from margaret thatcher who decided i was favourite interview on friday after interviewed her wearing a pink suit with full pink accessories . yeah. and accessories. yeah. and interesting that fact of course because he didn't actually get into politics and think until he was 41 or 42, he was actually a journalist having worked for the financial times and then editor of the spectator . and as you of the spectator. and as you say, he wasn't really credible in that respect. and you know, kept journalists . i in that respect. and you know, kept journalists. i don't in that respect. and you know, kept journalists . i don't know kept journalists. i don't know why at arm's length. yes, he certainly did. i mean i mean, the transition from fleet street to, the highest office in the upper of government, was thing that wasn't always very achieved, but did manage it in political terms in terms of making chums over the place. now he didn't, which one reason i suspect why there was never any question of his replacing margaret because he didn't really have a powerbase within the conservative party. interesting point as we look at a picture of rishi sunak, the photograph of indeed nigel lawson , the wall behind him lawson, the wall behind him rather, different approach maybe to tax policy , some would say to tax policy, some would say with the modern however. thank you peter for your thoughts and of course reflect on a man who as many said, was unassailable. thank you very much . coming up, thank you very much. coming up, hitting out at the government, the present government for saying the £500 million it pledged for the social care workforce has been cut by half . workforce has been cut by half. we're joined by the vice chair of the national care association for their view on what the government's done. coming up in a moment . welcome back to gb news live this is bringing some breaking news we are getting from basildon crown . you may remember basildon crown. you may remember we covered this at the time, the stop all protesters who'd scaled the bridge of the dartford crossing causing gridlock when the police had to close the bridge. they've been found guilty at the court of causing a pubuc guilty at the court of causing a public nuisance. this is morgan two and 48. and marcus decker , two and 48. and marcus decker, 34. they use ropes , climbing 34. they use ropes, climbing equipment. you may remember to head up the cables of the bridge . the prosecutor, adam king, told the court in a trial saying that descended too close to 200 feet above the road and then unfurled these barriers may remember stop while banners figged remember stop while banners rigged up a hammer to stay there and indicating to the jurors , we and indicating to the jurors, we are not here to litigate the government's change policy . but government's change policy. but they were found guilty by a jury . unanimous verdicts, indeed, of more than 2 hours of deliberations. they've been remanded in custody to be sentenced april 13th. judge shane collaery saying the court is considering custody rules, sentences, saying we're dealing with significant nuisance . that with significant nuisance. that has been caused grant shapps. with significant nuisance. that has been caused grant shapps . so has been caused grant shapps. so the energy secretary saying on twitter i welcome the court's decision today. so more reaction on that as it comes through that just coming through from the court. the government has confirmed that funding that was promised to develop the social care workforce in england has now been halved in. 2021 the government pledged at least £500 million for the reforms to be spent on training places and also technology over a three year period. but the figure now slashed to 250 million, according to the department itself, blaming the ongoing economic problems for that . so economic problems for that. so where does this leave the long crisis over social care and how it should be addressed? let's speak now . joyce pinfield, vice speak now. joyce pinfield, vice chairman of the national care association . joyce, thanks very association. joyce, thanks very much indeed forjoining us. did you have any indication that this was coming ? no, there was this was coming? no, there was very little indication, but it's just yet another instance of how little this government does value social care. they came into government saying that they would do everything for social care, but so far everything they've promised has been taken away. and is just yet another instance of that. we do have over 165,000 workforce places remain unfilled . and we've got remain unfilled. and we've got demographic people getting older . there's more complex health needs. . there's more complex health needs . we need more and more needs. we need more and more workforce. and yet the government just keep reducing funding or taking any notice or , valuing the social care workforce . right. joyce we got workforce. right. joyce we got to break away to get an update the news headlines. but stay with us. we'll come back in a moment and discuss really what needs to be done , because needs to be done, because obviously the staffing is the issue. but just for the moment, we'll come back to that. this head now. get the latest updates the headlines which tatianna . the headlines which tatianna. mark you very much and good afternoon. this is the latest from the gb newsroom donald trump make us history becoming the first sitting or former president to face criminal charges . these are live pictures charges. these are live pictures from new york where he's due to be charged. we are waiting to see leave the trump tower. he was indicted over an alleged hush money payment to adult film stormy daniels for the 2016 election. his lawyer says he'll plead not guilty . the home plead not guilty. the home secretary could a legal challenge over plans to house migrants on a barge . the migrants on a barge. the government is expected to announce a leasing agreement has been reached . use the bp stock been reached. use the bp stock home vessel dorset. the move designed free up hotels will reportedly taxpayers more than £20,000 a day. accommodating more than 500 asylum seekers . more than 500 asylum seekers. police are investigating the death of a man who was shot in south london. victim said to be in his twenties was found injured on croydon in mitcham in the early hours of this morning. he was taken to hospital but died a time later. police are appealing to anyone who was in the area at the time who may have seen something suspicious to get in contact with them . to get in contact with them. tick tock has been fined £12.7 million by the information commissioner's office for misusing children's data. the ico says to 1.4 million children under the age of 35 were using the app in 2020, which the company's own terms use. uk data protection also requires the platform to seek consent from young parents, from the parents of young children and mail is delivering a new look stamp featuring the king's image for the first time from today. his profile to the left as all monarchs done since queen victoria . but they won't be seen victoria. but they won't be seen in post offices yet with stocks of the late to be sold out first tv online derby plus and on tune in this gb news. now it's back to . mark tachibana. thanks very to. mark tachibana. thanks very much indeed. so let's just now to joyce pinfield, who's joining us to give reaction to this announcement that the funds is being slashed by a half. as we were saying, joyce. i'm just trying to get head around. why the government should be doing this when they already accepted , as they said, the sector was on the with the king's fund warning of the various problems , particularly in recruiting , , particularly in recruiting, having enough of a to make the system work . oh absolute plea system work. oh absolute plea the government is that social care is in crisis, not only because of a workforce shortage . but of course the low that social care workers are paid. we need more funding not only to be able to pay them the correct wage for the job they're doing and in parity with nhs staff on the same level but also we do need the career progression , we need the career progression, we need the career progression, we need the career progression, we need the training people coming into social care . and of course into social care. and of course we have to remember there's well over one and a half million social care needs aids that are being unmet as we speak. and these increasing on a daily bafis these increasing on a daily basis and this is mostly because of the funding and lack of workforce . so we need to address workforce. so we need to address these problems. we need to be able to make social care a value , occupation and career for people to take part . and it's people to take part. and it's only by it valued giving the correct pay and a career progression with training that we be able to meet these turning . we of course have to remember that social care props up the nhs. we help with that blocking we help with people having to go to hospital as well. wendy i was going to ask you about that because that obviously is going to happen at the sharp end. i mean just incidentally, i gather that patricia hewitt, the former health secretary, has just issued a review which is being welcome by nhs leaders, but in she's talked about the so—called integrated care system , i.e. integrated care system, i.e. social care being linked to the and as you've indicated, the problems in hospitals where people can't be moved on into social care. presumably this will just make that situation worse . oh undoubtedly it will worse. oh undoubtedly it will make this situation even worse. we know over the winter, the winter pressures have caused the problems within the nhs with bed blocking and the strikes also making their waiting lists longer , which of course means longer, which of course means that people are waiting longer for operations . they are getting for operations. they are getting ela and this is where social care can actually help in relief in a lot of those situations . in a lot of those situations. but yet again, the government is cutting off funding , is taking cutting off funding, is taking no notice that there are so many unmet needs, not social care, workforce . there are many, many workforce. there are many, many unpaid care workers out there. yeah, because they cannot get the funding for social care. okay, look, we from the department of health that there's 600 million they say has not yet been allocated over the next two years. i mean, do you take them at their word that they well more funds they may well be more funds coming system and that coming down the system and that may ameliorate situation ? we may ameliorate the situation? we have yet to see. over the last few years, we've always promised funding and then been taken away. we were promised a social care reform . and then that has care reform. and then that has been delayed . yeah. so if you been delayed. yeah. so if you think that they promise it always seems to fall by the wayside and leave social care in the dark critical situation that we are faced in at this present time. george pinfield of the national care association , national care association, thanks for joining us with your assessment on gb news. thank you very much indeed. well, coming up , of course, to new york. up, of course, to new york. don't forget that we're waiting for a certain donald j. trump to arrive at the manhattan court . arrive at the manhattan court. our cameras are there also . this our cameras are there also. this latest assessment of economy and manufacturing in. is it up or down or . they will be telling us no. us no . let's bring you up to date no. let's bring you up to date what's going on in the economy . what's going on in the economy. you remember our manufacturing sector actually grew a bit in february, but latest data suggest u.s. output slipped back again in march, not the start of the tax year course. many manufacturers paying higher corporation tax, government help their sky high energy bills, just ending . industry bosses say just ending. industry bosses say could to widespread could all lead to widespread factory closures . our economics factory closures. our economics and business editor william has been the west midlands to been to the west midlands to investigate for us and fasteners was founded in the late thirties to produce the bolts and rivets needed to build spitfires . needed to build spitfires. company boss steve hardiman says the new tax year means this west midlands firm faces a double whammy along with higher corporation tax support for countless businesses with sky high energy bills has also now ended. high energy bills has also now ended . steve says business ended. steve says business secretary kemi badenoch needs act. if i could put out a plea, i'd ask the kemi badenoch to actually go and do her job, actually go and do herjob, which is supposed be looking after industry and we're just getting no support whatsoever . getting no support whatsoever. and we've just been hammered by every single additional cost and it's a very, very poor business environment to be working in at the moment. prior to the war in ukraine, clinton's energy bill was £5,000 a month with no government. that's now risen to 60,000 a month, which steve says threatens his business. cleveland pays $0.46 per kilowatt hour of electricity on a fixed contract. steve he was forced to sign last year given that wholesale prices have now fallen to $0.28 per kilowatt houn fallen to $0.28 per kilowatt hour. steve he's paying over the odds. hour. steve he's paying over the odds . stephen morley runs odds. stephen morley runs confederation of british metal forming representing hundreds of manufacturers with tens of thousands of workers . he says thousands of workers. he says the lack of support energy bills could see countless factory closures. here in birmingham and beyond, i think it could be disaster for manufacturing. so supply chains are fragile anyway, and i worry about the impact across the whole manufacturing . it could be manufacturing. it could be a disaster for a losing key players in supply and a major manufacturers of car companies, factories could lose. kiki's suppliers . the confederation of suppliers. the confederation of british metal forming sent a letter to the business secretary by gb news while calling for more government support . the more government support. the letter claims that many uk companies now face uncompetitive energy costs , having been energy costs, having been coerced into fixed contracts at the peak of the wholesale market last year . conservative west last year. conservative west midlands mayor andy street agrees. some firms are now locked contracts with what he artificially high prices . he artificially high prices. he says ministers shouldn't have been particularly asked the government, to reconsider one critical aspect. there those businesses that negotiate the new deal last autumn because had to the time doubt on their existing contract and they tend to be fixed higher prices than the market now has. that doesn't seem right to me and i hope that will actually able to force energy to renegotiate those because there's businesses here that will thrive or depending on the energy going forward. the government yet act on this advice because soaring energy bills see firms fold and jobs lost across red wall seats vital to the next election . liam to the next election. liam halligan gb news birmingham . halligan gb news birmingham. let's get more now with liam joining us in the studio for on the money . were extraordinary the money. were extraordinary figures that . just one firm that figures that. just one firm that is facing wonders how many other small and firms across the country are their assessment at the moment with simply no way out , there's no get out for out, there's no get out for these contracts they've signed with energy . it was almost lost with energy. it was almost lost in the in the tsunami of end of tax year new tax news yesterday wasn't it, mark? and obviously we reported you and i spoke about the changes to support for household energy bills council , household energy bills council, tax rises, minimum wage rises and so on. but look , almost all and so on. but look, almost all businesses have been getting help with their energy bills . help with their energy bills. they now no longer have that help . and even though wholesale help. and even though wholesale energy prices come down, an awful lot businesses locked awful lot of businesses locked into fixed term contract acts that was struck when energy pnces that was struck when energy prices on the wholesale were much, much higher last and autumn . and this isn't just me autumn. and this isn't just me saying it's the confederation of british and metal forming it you know they used the word coerced in that letter to kemi badenoch and even andy street the conserve active what west midlands men conspiracy theorist he is telling me that that was gb news exclusive that of firms he knows are also locked into contracts which he thinks are high and is calling on ministers. a very young conservative thing to force the energy companies to break those contracts with firms , give them contracts with firms, give them a better deal. and would that canbbean a better deal. and would that caribbean or would it be grant shapps security minister because obviously it's a business secretary issue. that's why they britons kemi badenoch so and britons are kemi badenoch so and i've in touch with her and i've been in touch with her and we'll have see what happens. but this is going to be a real flashpoint. now, some companies do their do still get support with their energy they are still energy if they are still steelmaker, energy steelmaker, high energy intensive lot of public intensive and a lot of public sector entities, they help sector entities, they get help their energy bills, too. but if you're a manufacturer you energy still 20, 30, 40% of your cost base and your energy bill has just gone up enormously because the zappos.com even though wholesale prices have come down. and the point i made at the end of the film, a lot of these are employing hundreds of people, sometimes thousands of people in those wall seats. the tories need hold on mondays. they need hold on to on mondays. they competing perhaps with other companies elsewhere in europe that getting on their that are getting on their energy. well, that's the best. that's long term problem . that's a long term problem. we've often much, much we've often had much, much higher energy because higher energy bills because the very way in which very inefficient way in which our market works. but our energy market works. but there's a particular cliff edge that companies have now just been forced over that they're suddenly all for their energy has been pulled out from underneath them. and they face sky high bills, even though pnces sky high bills, even though prices are coming down. so the government's got to decide, does want to use firms like the one we saw in that package to subsidise energy companies or doesit subsidise energy companies or does it want to save the manufacturers? yeah, because of it'll be domino effect . that's it'll be a domino effect. that's right. while you're here, we spoke peter spencer about spoke to peter spencer about whose position was unassailable . we remember the thatcher days nigel lawson what is the verdict on his success or otherwise? because did lead to boom and bust then didn't it eventually . bust then didn't it eventually. well, it was one of the privileges of my professional life conduct. the last ever interview with nigella lawson. i went to see him in his apartment at his flat down in eastbourne just last month , spent 2 hours just last month, spent 2 hours with him, and i released the interview on my telegraph planet normal podcast. he want to do a television interview, by the way, but he was prepared to do an audio interview. and i think the verdict is if we're being honest , that whichever side of honest, that whichever side of the political fence sit, he was by far away one of the most consequential chancellors of britain's post—war era. i'd go as far to say he could even be the most comparable consumer politician who wasn't actually prime minister the brains behind it, because he , the it, because he, the macroeconomic architect of thatcherism and personally think personal opinion . i think he did personal opinion. i think he did a huge amount to rescue the uk economy from the complete cuts fee that was the mid—to—late seventies which you and i lived through and remember what it was like. and it's probably one reason we both became journalists. it was so terrible and even able to buy british gas shares well was el cid. el shares as well was el cid. el cid indeed. now, sir keir was one of those people who acknowledged what liam's been saying , and it's three years of saying, and it's three years of sir keir the helm of labour. yes. today marking the anniversary of his leadership of the how well has he done it? a happy birthday or not? well, polling by yougov finding that almost half of voters say he's failed to set out a clear vision his tenure by constant battles with yes jeremy corbyn joining us olivia utley political reporter who's been looking at not just that figure olivia but also the sort of overall marks as to how he's there. okay. but not great. well as a poll in the times today, which isn't great news for keir starmer, it suggests that 47% of the country feel that he hasn't out a clear vision , that he hasn't done well vision, that he hasn't done well compared to 31% who think that he has done well. the issue seems to be about this vision angle. he what he's what his strategy when he took office three years ago was to clean the labour party. he said this very clearly, three step strategy clean up the labour party, show why the labour party should, why this government isn't fit to , this government isn't fit to, and then it show why the labour party over the conservative party. now i think it's widely agreed westminster that he's managed step one of that he has cleaned up the labour party according to what they've done now. yeah absolutely. but whether succeeded on the next two goals is less certain. and i think while boris johnson and liz truss were in power, it was quite a tumult time in politics. keir starmer could be the safe pair of hands, the grown up in the room, the technocratic polished. he knew what he was doing. that's a lot doing. obviously that's a lot harder you're against harder when you're up against rishi and is it rishi sunak. yeah, and is it actually trying an actually about trying to sell an idea now about what your party is going back to this blair days of new labour, or is it that it's now so more of it's now so more sort of presidential almost you know, people see it sunak versus starmer the two leaders rather than two parties. yes i think it has become more presidential and. i think it will get more and. i think it will get more and more presidential as we head to the election and actually think that's pretty news for think that's pretty bad news for keir what we're keir starmer because what we're seeing polls is labour seeing in the polls is labour still leads tories by a lot that that gap is slowly shrinking, but what shrinking much faster is the gap between keir starmer and rishi sunak. rishi sunak's personal popularity ratings are going up and, up. he's getting the reputation for a prime minister who gets things sorting out the windsor framework, agreeing aukus he does agreeing that aukus deal he does under promising over delivering as he's saying. yeah. okay olivia thank for that more reaction of course to come a little later but let's reflect now if you're planning to jet off for easter. some news for you. london city airport , the you. london city airport, the first to scrap that 100 millilitre liquid limit. first to scrap that 100 millilitre liquid limit . it's millilitre liquid limit. it's using high tech ct scanners . it using high tech ct scanners. it also means electronics devices can be kept in your hand luggage when going security. so those travelling through london city now can carry up to two litres of liquids and. so it's the second uk airport to introduce these to teesside doing so last month ahead of the government deadune month ahead of the government deadline of june 2024 when most uk airports are required to install those machines . will install those machines. will they be able to do that? let's speak now to a travel correspondent at, the independent simon calder, who's also, we ought to mention a secure city office. gatwick. now, that's something i didn't know. simon so you're speaking from the heart on this ? yes from the heart on this? yes exactly right, mark. i used to frisk people at gatwick and just to be clear, it was a job not hobby. and my goodness me , so hobby. and my goodness me, so good to see the way that technology has moved on from those in particular. exactly as you say, the worst part of , any you say, the worst part of, any trip for a lot of people is the security search. further last 17 years, you've had to have your bag of liquids and keep those separate you of course can't take a bottle of through the security check and you've got to your laptop out everything else is complete pain. but yes, as you say from today, london city airport, the first major airport to after teesside, has become a place where you just put your bag. and i actually tried this out yesterday just ahead of the launch. out yesterday just ahead of the launch . it's amazing you just launch. it's amazing you just breeze up. you put your whole bag they don't worry about taking any stuff out . you chat taking any stuff out. you chat to the security comes out the other end . yes. you still got to other end. yes. you still got to take your jacket off, put your phone and your watch and your belt in a tray. phone and your watch and your belt in a tray . but really, the belt in a tray. but really, the previous bear, even though i do have previous as i a security guard i would always think. oh, hang on. did i remember that? oh i've forgotten all about that , i've forgotten all about that, that kind of drink or whatever. i'm you don't need to worry about that now. really straightforward. however and of course, there has to be. but the problem is it's terrific when you're flying out of london city and teesside and some other airports around europe, for example shannon in the west of ireland . but a japanese when ireland. but a japanese when you're going back the opposite direction, you can be pretty sure that the very sophisticated very expensive machines are not installed and. so the old rules apply and certainly for the next 18 months, sorry, 50 months or so till we get the standards the same . the uk one day you're same. the uk one day you're flying from london city, you don't worry, and next week you're flying from lincoln or gatwick or stansted or southend or heathrow and the old rules still apply. so yeah, it's better . but please don't relax better. but please don't relax yet, everybody and, very quickly. dare i ask if you're heading out from terminal five heathrow for easter a slightly different security situation in there at the moment ? that's there at the moment? that's right. 1400 members of the unite union are on strike. they work specific away at security at terminal five. doesn't affect the other terminals. heathrow any other airports, heathrow's put contingency measures, a plan in place and base cancels flights. and so far we haven't seen any really serious problems . simon we've enjoyed being frisked by thanks for joining us here in gb news. you take care. thanks very much. more to come, of course, in this hour. back to new york and a certain donald j. trump due at the manhattan court building soon. we'll have all the pictures live. you hear on gb news. stay with . us it's 1:00. a us it's1:00. a very good afternoon to you. you're watching gb news live with me. my longhurst. and coming up for you this tuesday lunchtime, trump's in town. the president due to arrive at the court building in new york to face could be 30 charges relating to alleged hush money payment to pollsters stormy daniels. well the barricades are up outside the courthouse , up outside the courthouse, 35,000 police on standby in new york where trump is due to plead in front of the judge and just a few hours time we've been told by his legal team he will say not guilty very loudly. by his legal team he will say not guilty very loudly . the not guilty very loudly. the latest live from new york shortly here, social funding in england halved by the government , including mencap, calling that decision an insult to the elderly disabled. the government says more money is due to be allocated , but age uk says the allocated, but age uk says the sums not enough to transform social care . already described social care. already described as being on the price appears on the tributes being paid to former chancellor nigel lawson the man described by margaret thatcher as unassailable after his death at the age of 91 is his death at the age of 91 is his position in political and economic history now also unassailable? let's get all the latest news headlines now. 50 of . mark, thank you very much. and good afternoon. coming up to 1:02. this is the latest from the gb newsroom donald trump make us history becoming first sitting or former president to face criminal charges . these are face criminal charges. these are live pictures from new york where he'll be formally charged, fingerprinted and also possibly have his mug shot taken. we all currently waiting for him to leave the trump tower. it was indicated he was indicted. sorry over an alleged hush money payment to the adult film star stormy daniels . before the 2016 stormy daniels. before the 2016 election, his lawyer says he'll plead not guilty . former plead not guilty. former international trade adviser to bill clinton and george bush, steve gill says the former president wants to draw attention to his appearance . it attention to his appearance. it will be a spectacle and that's part of what president trump wants there are reports that he was given the opportunity to do this arraignment via zoom . he's this arraignment via zoom. he's preferring to go in daylight even though apparently negotiated no handcuffs perhaps no mugshot although the president has made comments that his mug shot will become the most famous mug shot in history and that you'll see it on t—shirts mugs t—shirts and, mugs and everything else. president everything else. the president going to attention to this going to draw attention to this . the home secretary could face a legal challenge . plans to a legal challenge. plans to house migrants on barge. the government is expected announce that a leasing agreement has been reached to use the bp stock home in dorset, which can accommodate more than 500 people. the move designed to free up hotels will reportedly cost taxpayers than £20,000 a day . police investigating the day. police investigating the death of a man who was shot in south london. the victim said to be in his 20 hrs, was found injured on croydon road in mitcham in the early hours of this morning. he was taken to hospital but died short time later. police are appealing to anyone who was in the area at the time who may have seen something suspicious to get in contact with them . tick tock has contact with them. tick tock has been fined £12.7 million by the information commissioner's office for misusing children's data. the ico says up to 1.4 million children under the age of 13, were using the app in 2020, which contrary the company's own terms of use. uk data protection law also requires the platform seek consent from the parents of young users . halving social care young users. halving social care funds in england has been described as a betrayal , with described as a betrayal, with the labour leader accusing the government of breaking promises . in december 2021, at least £500 million was pledged to help transform support for the social care workforce that's been cut because of rising costs and trouble recruiting . sir keir trouble recruiting. sir keir says the sector is being let down. they promised a lot and now they're almost nothing. i've always suspected they didn't have a plan and this is more evidence they don't have a plan. and if that wasn't bad enough on its own, this has a huge on the backlog in the nhs without social care working , it's social care working, it's impossible people out of impossible to get people out of as as we'd like and as quickly as we'd like and therefore you have even more prospect of ambulances queuing up, being able to get up, people not being able to get into this is into hospitals. so this is a betrayal on so many fronts from the government . the government the government. the government is setting a new plan to ensure pain , plentiful supply of water, pain, plentiful supply of water, the future. the government wants to see more investment from water as well as tougher enforced means for those who pollute. it could see a ban of plastic in wet wipes and restrictions on substances in textiles , cleaning products and textiles, cleaning products and paints . liberal democrat leader paints. liberal democrat leader said davie is sceptical of the government's plans, while conservatives first announced they were banning wet wipes five years ago. then they re—announced it and this is the third time it's been announced . third time it's been announced. they've consulted on it twice and they're proceeded with it. so i think voters even lifelong conservative voters will say, don't take us for fools . and don't take us for fools. and they'll say to the conservative, you've had your chance , you've you've had your chance, you've failed. you continually fail. you've had your chance, you've failed. you continually fail . we failed. you continually fail. we want clean rivers . we want clean want clean rivers. we want clean seas. and you're not up to it. russia has warned finland's nato membership raises the risk of conflict. the kremlin described the country's accession to military alliance as an encroachment on its security, saying it be forced to take countermeasures . russia's countermeasures. russia's invasion of ukraine triggered finland and sweden's decision to apply finland and sweden's decision to apply for membership and finland will become the 31st member of nato . one person has died , at nato. one person has died, at least 30 injured after a train derailed in the netherlands. emergency services say the train, which was carrying 50 people came, of course, after hitting construction equipment on track, which caused the front carriage to crash into a field. 90 people were taken to hospital with the remaining treated at the scene . former world boxing the scene. former world boxing champion amir khan has been banned from all sports for two years. uk anti agency says the 36 year old tested positive for the anabolic drug. austrian after losing his bout to kell brook in manchester in 2022. khan announced his retirement in may last year. has accepted he violated the rules but said it wasn't intentional . this is gb wasn't intentional. this is gb news. we'll bring you more news as it happens. now to . as it happens. now to. mark tashian. thank you very much indeed. so let's have a look at the court list for man hatton today, shall we, with a name, certainly. donaldj trump due in certainly. donald j trump due in that court building . new york. that court building. new york. yes. he's expected to face more than 30 charges, perhaps for alleged falsification of business records . it's all alleged falsification of business records. it's all in connection to a payment . the connection to a payment. the stars stormy daniels back in 2016. now, in the past half houn 2016. now, in the past half hour, police and court officials have been gathering outside that building in manhattan . on the building in manhattan. on the left , barricades also erected left, barricades also erected street level and on the right, you can see trump tower, where the former president has been staying overnight in the penthouse and talking to his legal team we can actually update you that there's already been a change in the top of that team we're being told that joe tacopina , who is the lead tacopina, who is the lead counsel, has been replaced by todd blanch , who is a top todd blanch, who is a top criminal defence lawyer. we're being told the suggestion that , being told the suggestion that, at least, is that blanch is a more courtroom presence, while tacopina will perhaps take the pubuc tacopina will perhaps take the public approach of giving reaction after this hearing . and reaction after this hearing. and in addition to that, we've been told that the former president will plead not guilty, according to his legal quote, very unquote . so clearly that message is already being delivered. but just to update you that the in this particular case, judge one mccutcheon has said no phones, no digital , mccutcheon has said no phones, no digital, no cameras in the court, although reporters will be allowed to gather in the hallway outside before that arraignment begins. hallway outside before that arraignment begins . so clearly arraignment begins. so clearly that's going to , i think, the that's going to, i think, the place to be. and again, security , because the former president will have his secret service security detail with him as well. so all going to be quite busy in that particular location in the coming hours. the former president expected to be fingerprint cleared, of course, but speculation about whether he will have to have a mug shot taken. but certainly all eyes on that court building. our political darren mccaffrey is in new york with quite a few other camera crews and reporters gathering as well. darren, because we've got this, i guess what will be almost a presidential motorcade that will travel four miles from trump tower to that court building with all six service detail as well . yeah, very good afternoon well. yeah, very good afternoon to you , mark, in new york. just to you, mark, in new york. just after 8 am, as you say, i'm not alone outside manhattan's criminal court. that is that big building right? me there? there are hundreds and gathered here, though it must be said at the moment , though it must be said at the moment, daryn, we're just getting little bit of interference on the signal from new york, because clearly lot of reporters are trying to get the camera signals out . the same camera signals out. the same time. i think we've actually got a slightly better line . you just a slightly better line. you just saying that you are not alone. there . i know now. and we'll there. i know now. and we'll we'll try and keep the coverage, as you say. and there are a lot of journalists since using the mobile phone signal, we all here in the unit and two of them that we are awaiting donald trump . we are awaiting donald trump. he's going to call me later on today. he's going to call me later on today . i expect in that building today. i expect in that building behind me to 15. and it's going to be pretty short here. and he's, first of all, going to see the manhattan district attorney. he's then going to appear in the courtroom itself we hear courtroom itself where we hear the sheet against the charge sheet against him upwards . we think potentially of upwards. we think potentially of upwards. we think potentially of up to 30 individual charges that we do not know that. and that's any speculation at the moment, whatever he is charged with. his lawyers, as you rightly pointed out, made it clear that he is going to not guilty to all going to plead not guilty to all of he is going to fight at of them. he is going to fight at all of this, we think, is unlikely he's going to be unlikely that he's going to be dna indeed that to wear dna swabs or indeed that to wear handcuffs or anything like at the end of the day. we all know he is and he will be surrounded. his secret service bodyguards . his secret service bodyguards. what i would say, though, is that probably to have a that is probably going to have a fingerprint taken. be fingerprint taken. that will be an extraordinary moment. this is fingerprint taken. that will be an
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