18 in glasgow. Rain later on in the evening, by then it is not a great deal of that and then clear skies following on behind. The crowd increasing in Northern Ireland, western scotland, some showers later in the night and a cooler night everywhere, much more comfortable for it sleeping. Temperatures quite a few degrees lower across the south east. Tomorrow starts dry and sunny for england and wales. Some early showers out to the west but the wind picking up in the north west summer show is blowing into Northern Ireland and increasingly across scotland. 17 degrees to the central belt of scotland. An area of low pressure close to the north west bring in that wetter and windy weather. And this front provides a Conveyor Belt of wet weather affecting Northern Ireland overnight and into friday and through much of scotland, crossing over into north east england and perhaps wales. Quite warm in the sunshine across the south west but the rain merely adding up during and into saturday. We still have rain on saturday, it should clear away from Northern Ireland in the morning. Pushing east across scotland into western parts of england and wales. And temperatures still around 23, 20 4 degrees quite a difference further north and west across the uk. A weather front on the scene bringing that rain and marking the boundary begun between the last of any warmth that we have with this cooler wind. And temperatures dropping significantly for the second half of the weekend. A reminder of our top story. The government says it will suspend parliament ahead of a queens speech on 0ctober14th. Thats all from the bbc news at one so its goodbye from me and on bbc one we nowjoin the bbcs news teams where you are. Good afternoon. Its 1. 30pm and heres your latest sports news. Insurmountable financial challenges that have led to a dark day in football. The reaction is rolling in from bury fcs expulsion from the Football League late last night. The first team to drop out of the efl in 27 years. League one will now continue with 23 teams and only three will be relegated. 0ur correspondent Katie Gornall is at gigg lane for us. Emotional scenes last night and imagine they this morning . You are right, sarah. The weather here in bury sums up the mood. A dark day for the football club. A lot of people in shock still. Yesterday, they had been some hope that perhaps Bury Football Club could be saved. Fans Bury Football Club could be saved. Fa ns eve n Bury Football Club could be saved. Fans even turned up here in the morning to clean the stadium, get it ready for their scheduled match at the weekend. In the end, those effo rts the weekend. In the end, those efforts were in vain. We learnt that about one hour and are half before the deadline that the efl had set, the deadline that the efl had set, the leading company in the takeover had pulled out of the deal saying the financial problems of the club we re the financial problems of the club were insurmountable. Then it was a waiting game, really, for the fans after that. There were reports of other bids going in with proof of funds. Ultimately, the efl decided at 11 in funds. Ultimately, the efl decided atiiina funds. Ultimately, the efl decided at 11 in a statement that time had run out for Bury Football Club. They werent prepared to suspend any more matches. Bury havent played a game this season. They were thrown out of the Football League, the first team since maidstone united in 1992. After that decision emerged, there was anger and upset. Anger directed at the current owner, steve dale, for not being able to sell the club. Anger also at the efl. A lot of people here today saying the english Football League should have done more notjust to perform checks on the type of people who own football clu bs, the type of people who own football clubs, but also they should have done more to try and help bury avoid this situation in the first place. That is something we put to the chair of the efl today. This is what she had to say about how this might be avoided in the future. One thing that i have said and people have often said to me, cut the player wages . I do think player wages need to be considered without question. If your revenue as something and your outgoings whatever that number may be, clearly any long term that is not going to be sustainable. If the point that you are making as you need to take back, consider what has gone on, i completely agree with you. Yes, lessons indeed. And also another club in the north west and a similar position. Thats right. Just a few miles down the road is built and bolton fans will have been looking at what happened here to bury and looking at how devastated they are fans wear, knowing their fate is in the balance as well. Yesterday, they were given a 14 day notice of withdrawal from the Football League. What that means is because they were not able to get a deal over the line in time, they have now been given 14 days to either complete a deal or show proof of funds, otherwise they too will be thrown out of the Football League. There is a bit of hope around Bolton Wanderers because they were deep in talks last night to try and get the deal over the line. Staff have been told by the administrator that the process of liquidation has been put on hold while the talks continue. There is hope that Bolton Wanderers can get this concluded. That is the clu b can get this concluded. That is the club on the brink also. Thank you very much. 0ur correspondence and ca ke very much. 0ur correspondence and cake lane with the news on bury and bolton. That is all the support for now. That is the bbc sport website. There is lots of tennis news there. Dan airvents there is lots of tennis news there. Dan air vents through to the second round. All the latest news on the website. Dan evans. We will be back soon. Thank you, sarah. Thank you. We will continue of our coverage of a dramatic day at westminster. You will know by now the queen is to be asked by the government to suspend Parliament Days after mps returned to work. And a matter of weeks before the brexit deadline. Lets ta ke before the brexit deadline. Lets take a look at the time line. Parliament will return from recess on the 3rd of september, but it could be prorogued, suspended in other words, just one week later on the tenth. That is expected to make way of the new administration to hold a queens speech, laying out the governments future plans. The queens speech expected, as you see there, on the 14th of october. That means mps are unlikely to have time to pass any laws that could stop the Prime Minister taking the uk out of the eu without a deal. That deadline they are, of october. The speaker of the commons has branded this movie constitutional outrage. He says it is to stop mps debating brexit. The Prime Minister says it will not stop mps playing a role in the brexit process. Lets hear from the mps playing a role in the brexit process. Lets hearfrom the labour leaderjeremy corbyn. We have only had his official reaction in the last half an hour or so. This is what he had to say. I protest in the strongest possible terms on behalf of my party, and i believe the other opposition parties, and simply saying that suspending parliament is not acceptable, it is not on. What the Prime Minister is doing is a smash and grab on our democracy in order to force through a no deal brexit from the European Union. What is he so afraid of that he needs to suspend parliament . When parliament does meet on his timetable very briefly next week, the first thing we will do is attempt legislation to prevent what he is doing. Secondly, to challenge him on a motion of no confidence at some point. Would you go as farto confidence at some point. Would you go as far to say that this is a constitutional outrage . It is. This is an attempt by the Prime Minister who is elected by a very small number of people in the country, conservative party membership, to ride roughshod over parliament and prevent ride roughshod over parliament and p reve nt a ny ride roughshod over parliament and prevent any legislation or debate that would stop this country leaving this European Union without a deal. He wants to write head long into the arms of donald trump. With more determination than i have seen anyone else before. This is extraordinary. He needs to be held to account by parliament, not by shutting down parliament, but by attending parliament and answering the questions. The government will say this is about the new domestic agenda, they are a new government and are they not right to do that, with a queens speech . They can of course bring forward a new legislative programme at the proper time. The proper time isnt as a way of avoiding what he knows will be a big parliamentary majority against leaving the eu with no deal. The government has been twice defeated on no deal brexit under theresa may, and were defeated more emphatically by parliament. Boris johnson and were defeated more emphatically by parliament. Borisjohnson needs to be held to account by parliament, while he is doing is running away from parliament. Jeremy corbyn in the last half an hour or so. The Prime Minister has written a letter to mp5. In that letter he says, i intend to bring forward a new and vicious legislative agenda. In new legislative agenda. Asi as i sat on the steps of downing street, we are not going to wait until october the 31st before getting on with our plans to take this country forward and this is a new government with a very exciting agenda to make our streets safer, bring Violent Crime down, we need to invest in our fantastic nhs, level of Education Funding across the country, invest in infrastructure thatis country, invest in infrastructure that is going to take this country forward for decades. We need to deal with the cost of living, moving to a high wage, high productivity economy, which is what i think this country needs to be. And to do that, we need new legislation, we have got to be bringing forward new and important bills and that is why we are going to have the queens speech and we are going to do that on october the 14th. We have got to move ahead now with a new legislative programme. Prime minister, to do that queens speech, you will need to Prorogue Parliament for several days. Your critics will say this is an insult to democracy, denying the mps the time they need to debate and possibly vote on brexit. No, well, that is completely untrue. If you look at what were doing, we are bringing forward a new legislative programme on crime, on hospitals, and making sure we have the Education Funding we need. And there will be ample time on both sides of that crucial october 17 summit, ample time, in parliament for mps to debate the eu, to debate brexit, and all of the other issues. Ample time. Prime minister, you seem to have an ambitious domestic agenda. Your government does not have a majority. Even with the dup, it only barely has a majority. Should we take from this that you are planning a general election before the end of this year . No, what i want you to take from this, we are doing exactly what i said on the steps of downing street, which is we must get on now with our legislative domestic agenda. People will expect it, we need to get on with the stuff that Parliament Needs to approve, on tackling crime, on building the infrastructure we need, on technology, on levelling up our education, and reducing the cost of living. That is why we need a queens speech, and were going to get on with it. You may not even know by the 14th of october whether youre going to get a deal, and the outlook could be quite different whether you do or whether you dont. So what have you got to say to the public who might be concerned about the economic outcome . Well, we need to get on with our domestic agenda, and thats why we are announcing a queens speech for october 14th. Scotlands first minister Nicola Sturgeon urged mps to come together to stop the prorogation or, she said. today would go down as a dark day for uk democracy. It is outrageous. Shutting down parliament against the wishes of mps, parliament against the wishes of mp5, is not democracy, it is dictatorship. If mps do not come together next week to stop Boris Johnson in his tracks, i think today will go down in history as the day uk democracy died. This simply cant be allowed to happen. Nicola sturgeon they are. Mo hussein was special advisor to amber rudd when she was home secretary hes in westminster. Do you agree with that, a dark day for democracy . Yes, i think it is. It isa for democracy . Yes, i think it is. It is a dark day. Speaking to people and government this morning, the government is very keen to point out that this has been the longer session for nearly 400 years and this is a new government trying to break free from the shackles and the legacy of the theresa may government, with new ideas and wanting to highlight investment into the nhs, education, policing. And it is quite usualfor the nhs, education, policing. And it is quite usual for there to be prorogation of parliament before a queens speech. All of these things are true, but we have to look at the wider context, the crisis facing the country and the key thing on peoples mines, which is brexit, which does raise questions around white to a queens speech now . Why Prorogue Parliament at this time . Raise questions around white to a queens speech now. Do you think pure and simple this is about getting through a no deal brexit . |j think you cant escape the fact that there is a connection there. By squeezing the amount of days that mps will now have to try and pull together some kind of mechanism are together some kind of mechanism are to try and pull together a plan to avoid a no deal brexit. There is a link there. The correlation has also been from number ten that the remaining alliance or the anti no deal group are fragmented and they will start from different positions. Some people want a second referendum, some people want to get on with brexit but they want to avoid a no deal brexit. The starter point is not the same. On the governments site, you have a strictly controlled messaging machine, a sense of purpose and you have people who have very wholeheartedly adopted a do or die mantra. It is putting mps into quite a challenging position. That is interesting about that calculation about the remaining mps. What would they do now . If you were advising them . Yesterday, we saw some of the players on the remain side getting together and agreeing a strategy. Players on the remain side getting together and agreeing a strategym is interesting the government is talking about prorogue in parliament today, earlier. That is the way forward in terms of using parliamentary devices whatever they might be to try and find a way forward. The government has also pointed out to the fact there will be time, in their view, to debate this further. Looking ahead to the european council, which will be very crucial now and all of this, towards the middle of october. Yes, but nothing is going to change from the eu standpoint. Unless the backstop is resolved, nothing is going to change, and surely the argument goes, and plenty are making the argument, we had to october the 31st of no deal. That is exactly where i think this is now going. I think that you are very interested. What they are not interested in is arcane parliamentary procedure. What they are parliamentary procedure. What they a re interested parliamentary procedure. What they are interested is in the will of parliament and what will command a majority. We have seen this before with the theresa may deal which was government to eu countries, and that did not get through parliaments. I dont think that you want to be in that position again. And not having any parliamentary activity until theyre quite crucial any parliamentary activity until they re quite crucial summit, any parliamentary activity until theyre quite crucial summit, the eu have nothing to go on. I dont think we can expect much to happen at that summit that will necessarily change the situation as it is now. That pits mps any difficult position because the Prime Minister could come back and say and this is the deal and they will be a deal in ten yea rs, deal and they will be a deal in ten years, so deal and they will be a deal in ten years, so the onus is back on the mps and the Prime Minister get to show that he tries. I think that is the calculation. The other thing we have to watch is, as you say, the backstop has been identified as a key thing. For many people the brexit side, the backstop is not the only thing that is a problem. There are other issues they have the Withdrawal Agreement and it would be interesting to see how the government respond to that and how they deal with those concerns. Just by dealing with the backstop, which i think is a tile art, i do think it was far enough to persuade other people who voted against the deal three times, including some people who are now in to really change their minds on this. Ok, final thaw, are we heading for a general election . I think we are. I think we certainly are. With a majority of one that the Prime Minister currently has, and this is a big, bold dramatic use, does show a lack of trust between the executive and parliament. You have to remember that we have a parliamentary democracy. For the government to do anything, the need mps to vote with them and if you havent got that if you havent got the numbers, the logical thing to do is to change the numbers. Therefore, call an election. Everything we are seeing, Spending Review next week, Big Government announcements, they are paving the way for that. Thank you very much for that. A special adviser to amber rudd when she was home secretary. Lets find out how the market and business is responding to a tumultuous day. The pound has fallen. I will say only relatively modestly so. I could see it was 1 21 and three quarters cents. That is about 0. 7 lower on the day. But keep in mind at various other points in recent history, back when investors were fretting more about the prospect of a no deal brexit, went down to 120. Investors will be thinking does this raise the chances of no deal actually happening . Or might indeed strengthen the hand of borisjohnson and his negotiations with brussels . Thejury and his negotiations with brussels . The jury still out and his negotiations with brussels . Thejury still out on and his negotiations with brussels . The jury still out on that. At one point today, the ftse 100 the jury still out on that. At one point today, the ftse100 actually gained. That is when the pound went we weaker. The 100 biggest countries are treated on the index, the ftse most of the profits are generated overseas. There is an inverse relationship with those. The much broaderfit see relationship with those. The much broader fit see 250 ftse 50. That isa broader fit see 250 ftse 50. That is a way to gauge of how the economy is a way to gauge of how the economy is on the whole. When you consider how investors are very easily spooked, it is interesting. They are reading this is one potentially smart milestone in what is going to bea smart milestone in what is going to be a very long and turbulentjourney over the next couple of months. We we re over the next couple of months. We were just hearing of the prospects ofa were just hearing of the prospects of a general election. Businesses like certain day, as they always say. This could be the preamble to all of that. You do pick up on an interesting point. The business groups we have been speaking to today, they are loath groups we have been speaking to today, they are [oath to get involved in the politics of it all they are continuing express their objective to avoid a no deal brexit, to have a deal. They are looking at this as a political milestone any longer journey. They this as a political milestone any longerjourney. They also want clarity about what on earth is going to happen. This has been dragging on for three years now. We do not know what the relationship is going to be and we do not know when the new relationship is going to happen. They want to know. A lot of people in the country would like to know that ex mac thank you very much. We will see later on. Lets talk about something that is not are brexit. Its one of the biggest hoards ever discovered in the uk more than two and a half thousand coins, the first of which were found by a couple out metal detecting in somerset. It turned out the coins date back to the aftermath of the battle of hastings, a find which experts say is hugely significant. Jon kay reports. Just look at those. Some of the two and half thousand silver coins found buried in the somerset ground by lisa and adam. Congratulations. Thank you. What a day this is for you. Take us back to january, what happened, what did you see and hear . Ourfriend found happened, what did you see and hear . Our friend found the first one and he held it up in his hand and we looked at it and said, it is a william the conqueror kind. These are extremely rare. To find one of these in 30 years, that is what it would take. 30 years of metal detecting to find one. You found. . We detecting to find one. You found. . We found 2000 odd of them. Detecting to find one. You found. . We found 2000 odd of themm detecting to find one. You found. . We found 2000 odd of them. It has been described as a highly significant horde. I can imagine what it was like when it kept coming out of the ground. It was unbelievable, really. Like lisa said, to find one. To find one would be exceptional, once we found the second one, to find two unrelated coins would be almost impossible. When there were more beeps, went from two to ten, 250, to 100. How many are there . And then it was crazy. That is a lot of beeps. I bet you are saying quite a lot of beeps, as it happened. There was a lot of swearing. Cant really be used on daytime television language. We believe that. They come from either side of 1066, king believe that. They come from either side of1066, king harald believe that. They come from either side of 1066, king harald the second and william the conqueror. They are going to be valued and if it is treasure, you guys could be in line for a windfall. Any line for how much . We would be in line for a portion of the reward. In the papers and independent coin expert thought three to 5 million. Until the catalogue is available to study what each coin is, because some of the coin, this coin here is in good condition, you may be £4000 for this one coin. Some of the william coins, this one is bent, might be as little asa this one is bent, might be as little as a few hundred pounds. It is a mixed bag. We know there are 1200 ha rrows. Mixed bag. We know there are 1200 harrows. I will have the one that is only worth a few hundred. What are you going to do with the money if it comes . Maybe buy a house. May be more than one. Congratulations. Thank you very much. Maybe more than one. Brilliant. That wasjohn kay with the couple from somerset. Remarkable. Lets pause and look at the weather. Today and tomorrow it is like flipping a coin in terms of how the weather goes, where the showers are going to be and where will they strike. A mixed bag and a mixed bag through today and into tomorrow. Overall tomorrow, it is looking brighter across the uk. If we look at the atlantic, it is certainly a red duck in kia. This is the jet stream that is pushing the weather fronts in our direction. Where we see this dip, that is a sign that fresh air has arrived from the north atlantic and it has pushed away the warmth into scandinavia and we re away the warmth into scandinavia and were central parts of europe where the heatwave continues. Here, the heatwave has come to an end, at least where it has been across the eastern areas of the uk. Showers through this afternoon and evening. Clear skies for the majority of the uk. Turning quite nippy with the colder air from uk. Turning quite nippy with the colder airfrom the north uk. Turning quite nippy with the colder air from the north atlantic. In eastern scotland, down to six celsius in rural areas. Tomorrow, despite low pressure heading our way. We know the pressure quite often way. We know the pressure quite ofte n m ea ns way. We know the pressure quite often means the weather going downhill. Despite it approaching the north west, the weather is going to improve in south west of the country. It will break up the wind. In scotland and Northern Ireland, i think it is a case of blustery showers and those winds and the rain will actually, if anything, showers and those winds and the rain willactually, ifanything, racked up willactually, ifanything, racked upa willactually, ifanything, racked up a notch as we go through the course of the week. It is a chain of a weather front housing in the direction of the north of britain here. It looks like Northern Ireland and scotland will get its fair share of rain. Dumfries and galloway here through friday and into saturday, we could see as much as in some spots, 100 millimetres of rain. Rather a lot in the way. In the south, much drier weather. I think the rain is going to be more transient. Transient meaning it will last for very long across western parts of the uk. The least amount of rainfall through friday, saturday and sunday and even less across eastern and south eastern parts of the country. Only 20 in london. That is a sign that the fresh air has arrived. 24 on saturday. 20 in london and the mid teens across the north west of the uk. Ill change, or change. We will wave goodbye to heatwave we will wave goodbye to heatwave we will had in the east. Maybe it will warm up later in the summer. Hello. Youre watching afternoon live. Im simon mccoy at westminster. Today at 2pm. A constitutional row over government plans to suspend parliament ahead of the brexit deadline. There will be ample time on both sides of that crucial october 17th summit, ample time in parliament for mps to debate the eu, to debate brexit, and all the other issues. It reduces the time mps have to pass laws to stop a no deal brexit, but the Prime Minister insists it will not prevent them playing their role in the process. Suspending parliament, what the Prime Minister is doing is a sort of smash and grab on our democracy in order to force through a no deal exit from the European Union