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Another will be a big increase in spending on the n.h.s. Across the United Kingdom that they say will amount to $4000000000.00 pounds extra within 5 years in Scotland alone Donald Trump has been invited to next week's public impeachment hearings in Congress or us to send a lawyer to ask questions on his behalf Democrats say he should either take part in the process or stop complaining about how it works fresh talks will be held later today to try to prevent a strike one of Britain's biggest rail companies members of the are empty union working for South Western Railway edgy to walk out for 27 days in December and a long running dispute about guards on trains new research suggests more than half of parents with children under the age of 5 experienced loneliness at least some of the time the figures from the charity Corum family and child care also show twice as many parents on the lowest incomes often feel isolated Harding is from the charity we know that in large parts of the country best really good activities already available but sometimes that just they just not accessible to pets so sweet example in one more look malaria we found that while there were stay in plays and wine times and knows that he's going on about how the buses will be facing the parents they were just saying they couldn't afford to go to it is to begin deleting accounts that haven't been active for at least 6 months as part of a huge Co The site says it's because users who do no longer and can't agree to it's updated previously policies users have until the 11th of December show has the support Josie Marino's Tottenham produced a thrilling $42.00 victory over Lim p.r. Course in the Champions League in the manager's 1st home game in charge Tottenham were 2 nil down until just before half time that when put them through to the last 16 elsewhere Manchester City drew 11 at home with sharks hard on the outs to qualify as group winners Legion ited needed a Jack Harrison header in the 87th minute to win one Miller reading takes leads back up to the. Top of the championship the England cricket had courage Chris Silverwood will return home after day 2 of the 2nd Test match in New Zealand following a family bereavement assistant coaches Graham Thorpe and Paul Collingwood as well as Test captain Joe Root will take charge for the remainder of the New Zealand tour Bothwell England back on Tony Watson with a knee injury until at least Christmas club captain Charlie Ewell's or who also has a knee problem will be out for a minimum of several weeks as well while in the pro 14 Alan Clarke has lost his job as all sprays head coach follows their poor start to the season this is b.b.c. Radio 5 Live on digital b.b.c. Sound smart. To do on my own but for many of us this show is in some longer spells of rain windy in the south northern Ireland of the 7 Scotland will see the best of any dry weather highs of 9 in Edinburgh and 10 in them am. Well last week in Malta there was no rest very high profile arrest of a businessman in connection with the murder of a journalist the after a car owner got. Killed by a car bomb in 2017 as she researched corruption the country's political establishment Well this week 2 cabinet ministers step down while a prime minister's chief of staff has had to resign both the tourism minister Conrad Mysie and the economy minister Christian Cardona have denied involvement in the death of Muscovites the main chaotic scenes in The Maltese pollens as police investigation gathers pace rival M.P.'s clashed in Parliament on Tuesday an opposition member shouted mafias prime minister Joseph Muska walk 10 Kevin Corley reports the dramatic developments in Malta suggest that the investigation into the murder of Daphne Corona glitzier has taken a step closer to the halls of power she made her name exposing corruption and organized crime in the state and its links to powerful political figures police have now made 5 arrests among them your going Fenech will be businessman with links to members of the government who was detained as he attempted to leave Malta only guilt as a result Keech the chief of staff of the prime minister Joseph most got resigned and has been questioned by police his resignation was 50 followed by that of the tourism minister Conrad Mitzi and the so-called self suspension from office of the economy minister Chris Cardona. Well the anger in Parliament was virtually unprecedented the editor in chief of The Times of Malta Hermann Gretsch says the anger was really remarkable given the Prime Minister's widespread popular support Joseph muskrats is a very popular prime minister he has won successive elections which is slights is an extremely charming you know his in his is very popular with which his supporters what I'm seeing tonight at least. Where people were even throwing eggs at his car I mean this is quite unprecedented full time especially for a country which doesn't really do protests well as Kevin said the whole things even became tof by the arrest of a businessman called the organ Fenech detained by armed officers after his yacht was intercepted we reached Corrine Vella she is the sister of the investigative journalist who was assassinated the afternoon a car gullied Shia and I asked her and if she could bring us up to date on happenings since last week since the Fennec was arrested there have been 2 resignations that the prime minister's chief of staff Keech can bring on his minister to Risen convent Mitzi both men had been named in the Panama papers both name had come both men had companies in Panama which were meant to receive money from a company called $17.00 black and that company is owned by York and Fennec but this company was and was secretly set up in the United Arab Emirates. And the money going through it seems to be have been connected to a big project. Involving a power station which was a key platform for Wisconsin lection in 2013 so what we're looking at is very likely a conspiracy to get into government and turn water into a laundromat for money goodness me it puts a mess pressure on the prime minister doesn't yes it does because he cannot get out of this without you know he can't get out of it on tainted he should go he should have gone years ago he has protected both men while he was in office an hour in this absurd situation where a sitting prime minister has spent the last few years protecting his chief of staff who is now implicated in an assassination investigation and the person who was killed definitely Hermana Gullit Sarah was unsure covering corruption at the heart of government people have asked me many times you know about what should white how did she do this she wasn't covering crime she wasn't covering corruption she was covering politics if you arrive at corruption and crime from covering politics that tells you everything you need to know about why she was killed. How do you view this investigation I mean no it is things really seem to be moving why why do you know why the things are suddenly moving so fast I don't know why things are moving fast and I do realize one thing however that what we're seeing today could and should have happened much sooner I'm only speculating here I don't know for certain because I don't have and mation but it looks very much like it was direct interference in the investigation from an external source. Well given the recent arrests it would have not been an external source necessarily it would have been the very people who have we had we now know are implicated in the murder. We spoke to a journalist last week who was a colleague of yours you have your sister and who has continued investigating after her death and she talked about a climate of fear stock market situation that she herself has faced are you would you would you say that there is a climate of fear in Malta around this investigation. I mean look we once lived in a country with someone could be careless and now we live in a country with someone who has been killed for exposing corruption so anybody following following on from that news work is going to be working in an environment where you we know know for certain you will be killed for exposing corruption so yes of course there is a climate of fear today's resignations haven't have you know are an improvement of what we had before but we are not necessarily living in a safer place we're living in a place where a prime minister retains his position even though his chief of staff is a murder suspect is implicated in a murder investigation. Something is very wrong in the country is that usually not working individuals are quite obviously because investigations will not have come this far if there weren't individuals suing because but institutionally mortar has serious problems and the prime minister is one of them and he has to go. Koren Vella whose sister the journalist after a car on a c.e.o. Was murdered in 2017. Well there is another climate report out as pretty as pretty here Carling stuff calls for deeper and faster cuts in our emissions of go of greenhouse gases and finds that 3 quarters of the world's 20 wealthiest countries have no timeline for a target of Net 0 Emissions the un Environment Program in its annual emissions GAAP Reports says global fossil fuel emissions need to fall by nearly 8 percent a year over the next decade Secretary-General of the un and Tonio good terrace it's absolutely essential to for Will Germany example and to achieve convoluted only if you buy 2050 governments must adopt commitments that are much stronger than those in the Petty's agreements and Climate Action offers long term economic and financial advantages for those that will seize the opportunity while I was on this bike a little bit take a little bit slower and find out what the u.n. Environment Program report actually says about the gap between aspiration and reality and we're joined by Mae Bovey who is the chairman of the Climate Campaign $350.00 or it funded by the traffic journalist Bill McKibben and she joins us from Los Angeles hello mate Hello there well this this u.n. Environment Program report emissions go up report is known its 10th year and a basic level I reports the difference between what we say we want to do and what we do don't do what I do do I say but we got that their own way right and. Completely and we're seeing right now report after report that is making the same statement very clear from scientists that we need rapid transformative change that's going to keep fossil fuels in the ground in order to slow the climate crisis and the question we're asking is how many reports will it take to say what social movements young people organizations like 350 dot org have been saying for years and years and this report is yet another stark reminder of how far we have yet to go what is different this year is we are seeing incredible surging momentum from young people who are so impacted who are seeing their future on the line and who in September rose up in historic numbers to say enough is enough so that has the potential we believe to help turn this around. Talk about China because in China there were a lot of protests by by young people you know a few years ago who were really fed up with the air quality that they were being made to put up with that look as if China was doing some remarkable things but we're now going to report that in all the provinces the construction of coal fired power stations continues virtually unabated not commit more coal fired power stations in China than ever just how much of this is is now if you like out of our control as citizens of Britain or the United States for example. Well it's a really important question because it is absolutely still something that people in the United States and Britain have much much to do about and our country are very much heading in the opposite direction we have in the United States a climate denier in chief in the person of Donald Trump who doesn't even acknowledge the issue is happening and has rolled back countless regulations and opened up the coasts to drilling among many many other things so there's no question that it is a tough competition for which country and the g 20 is doing the work when it comes to the climate crisis and so while there's no question that each country situation is different everyone has to be taking this issue aboard much much differently than we are seeing you know what's happening next week is that the annual u.n. Climate talks will take place in Madrid and this is an opportunity for countries to revise upward what they committed to in the Paris agreement we know that Paris was a 1st step it was a very significant agreement but when you add up all of the pledges that countries made it was not enough to limit warming the low one and a half to Greece Celsius you have this report today saying we're looking at $3.00 degrees Celsius by 2100 which is a completely unmanageable situation so here is another opportunity to see the right kinds of decisions taken with all countries needing to step up their game. So this . This report comes out of a hamster my on a day when when China and. The European Union are in a bit of a row about something called a carbon barter time x. Which is on a guess is a carbon tax on on stuff that crosses international borders. Carbon tax a good way to go I would think from your point of view is it well there's a lot of different things that have to happen but the primary thing we track is is it in line with the science and is it going to make sure that climate change is not going to make existing inequalities worse so we're paying attention to that and any number of different policy measures could get us on that track if they are ambitious enough but without a doubt climate change is back on the global agenda and there's a lot of reasons for that and more and more people are standing up to the vested interests of the fossil fuel industry that is a good thing of course many people are witnessing the devastating impacts of climate breakdown on a daily basis so there there is a lot happening and the current debate about border taxes is evidence of that what is really important for everyone to understand is as we talk about the role of governments in this crisis which is enormous We have to talk about government's role in stopping the expansion of coal oil and gas around the world that's really one of the main themes underscored in these reports that fossil fuel use is on the rise that coal oil and gas are by far the largest contributor to climate change and despite what countries may have said they want to do. They are still permit ing new fracking wells and pipelines and that is inconsistent with what the reports are saying so we can talk about any number of policy measures we might like but as long as fossil fuel expansion and extraction is part of the plan we are not going to limit warming to one and a half to Greece and we're going to continue to see these and packs get worse and I'm just to kind of go back to what you were saying about extinction rebellion and groups like that. That a lot of this is on our main We feel that you know we feel the need to fly less of a tall and and to be very careful by what we burn but but in terms of the relationship between the individual and government. Where does the balance lie I mean where does the power really lie here to change things. It's such an important question because when people start to understand what the climate crisis is about they begin to think well what can I do about this problem this seems so much bigger than me and my individual choices and as long as people think that their own individual actions alone will get us out of this mess people will consistently feel that they cannot do enough and that there is not a part for them in the movement to stop climate change but in fact when we actually think not only as individuals but how are we as individuals representatives of communities who help create the pressure for new laws and new accountability for companies that are causing this problem that's when we're going to start to see the change we need so it's really both things together at an individual level there are a lot of practical steps we can take and I would imagine many people listening are doing those things and should continue we also have the power to take on these systems by particularly looking at where is our money going are we banking with banks that are lending to fossil fuel expansion our pension funds or university endowment funds invested in fossil fuels when we start to ask those questions then we begin to make change at a different scale and climate change is a problem all about scale so we have to be acting at that level. Maybe movie thank you very much for talking to us thank you. A couple from West Sussex who won 105000000 pound euro millions jackpot say they plan to spend their fortune on new homes a family and a pink i Phone for their daughter Mr or Mrs Steve Thomson Steve and link up Thompson live in a 120000 pounds 3 bedroom bungalow in the seaside town of sell say and they bought the ticket on November 19th they become the U.K.'s 9th biggest ever lottery winners life changing its life. Family and a cool yeah and frankly kind of the look at with us. Is too much for us. Well see Thompson says he's had trouble explaining the scale of this wedding to his son I says are kind and way Richard and Harry kind and he's always. So he's Googled how which is Harry Carry and he said Harry kinds are only Westphal you know in a 1000000 simple way double that Jamie. Well how does it change your life or did what difference does it make Susan Crosland from West Yorkshire want to 1000000 on a quarter pones in the National Lottery 11 years ago clearly that is a huge and life changing some I spoke to thought Arlene and she told me all about the moment that changed everything we actually were on the last in July 2000 and I we want to quote I mean I am good for you. And I know there's a great story about it I'm going to ask about but when you did the last did you tick the box that said no publicity I mean I'm guessing you probably didn't know that well obviously at the time I did I don't think there's a big thing about published to that the question was asked of us last year we would . And we made the Chinese style to tell your story yes and are you happy that you did yes avail of because it was quite humble and now we want it really the woman let us know so what happened was that always does a lot to send a will and they have mine and all the prison systems but. You know you have the some of the little bit. Thought Camilla bless him but that's got cancer and he said you know I was in the hospice and they said I think something really and I someone you see me and I'll come back to see you so I'll just sort of liberal. Think of anything not be able to feel. That the custom where pleasant but what made up that I. Slime because it was all not mine I'm a bit of a scientist just this logic that almost is why I went to see a side to school said to me. That said is going to come back and he was a member and I was really caught because I'm a bit skeptical but our little corner of the same was when he died and I said well I haven't seen of him but he said oh you've got help is going to leave your call called a life than I ever thought anything about thanks. To the of my death that when the last line. Chills up your back a bloomin wound is. Not just think you know well I just think it was heaven because I've got brothers and sisters and that's all got really City especially the cat lives a little on the we're all going to split a complete into residential home from the mom died 2 years after me down. The way New Naples for me to have I have a purpose built house still because one of the sisters she's in a wheelchair so now they live with me. And is that the money is really looked after your all has it well you know for me still I keep my dad sent me a big comfort blanket so that I don't have to worry about the malls you just paid because we had to house. Them all and didn't need them all good. It's just it's just cool. But the goodness me you know it's did people talk to the tie and say well what show you don't do a vivid Nicholson to member of Nicholson who won the toss and then 61. I did do it but I guess. I don't know me like I do remember the obviously you know I'm just stuck my head screwed on the little bit and I have been careful bobsleigh not too careful we still have a lovely holiday. That you know I'll want to and I saw how. A lovely cab I can get my sisters will telling me the material side of things I've got everything that's a lot because we're all together there's a family and we're all really happy. Do you ever read about people you know who've won it begun and they're not happy you know you must thank you you know somebody for looking after you I have read. Start is about you know you know what all the people do is up to them and you know some people probably deal with it a little bit better than others. I've been very lucky that I've been able to you know deal i know i know i will you could quite easily spend a little probably very very little can the thought I really look past it so that you look to maybe Susan trust fund from West Yorkshire who won a 1000000 but it's difficult to say 1250000 Potence 2008. And that brings us to just before half past 4. On digital b.b.c. Sound. Is b.b.c. Radio 5 live here with the b.b.c. News is Alice Rosenthal Jeremy Corbyn has come under pressure to apologize for the way Labor has dealt with claims of anti-Semitism in the party but he's refused to say sorry in a b.b.c. Interview he said a Labor government would protect every community against abuse Nicholas Sturgeon's expected to set out how the s.n.p. Could work with Labor after the election when she launches the party's manifesto later she also won Bracks it is nowhere near. Donald Trump as again attack the impeachment inquiry against him calling it a Doraine JKA witch hunt he's been invited to attend the next hearings in Congress by Democrats who say he should take part or stop complaining about the process and research suggests bad dreams may have a positive benefit by helping to control our fears when we're awake teams in Switzerland and the us from the area of the brain which controls fear responses was more effective sport now we showed you Josie Marino's Tottenham produced a thrilling fall to victory over n.p.r. Course in the Champions League in the manager's 1st home game in charge Tottenham were to nail down until just before half time that when put them through to the last 16 elsewhere Manchester City drew 11 at home with shock hard on the outs to qualify as group winners legitimated needed a Jack Harrison header in the 87th minute to win one Miller reading takes leads back up to the top of the championship the England cricket head coach Chris Silverwood will return home after day 2 of the 2nd Test match in New Zealand following a family bereavement assistant coaches Graham Thorpe and Paul Collingwood as well as Test captain Joe Root will take charge for the remainder of the New Zealand tour bath will miss England back Antony Watson with a knee injury until at least Christmas club captain Charlie Ewell's who also has a knee problem will be out for a minimum of several weeks as well while in the pro 14 Alan Clarke has lost his job as Ospreys head coach. Follows their poor start to the season this is b.b.c. Radio 5 Live on digital b.b.c. Sound it's small speak I don't know Marty hello good morning to start the day's full cost in Scotland where it's going to have to take what starts north of the central belt up through Grampians into the highlands of the way towards the Northern Isles this area gradually rotating its way a little bit further north and west through the day such that by mid afternoon it'll be north of the Great Glen and through the northern and western isles at the same time through the central belt it should stay dry for the greater part of the day with increasing amounts of cloud and that will certainly be the way of it towards the eastern borders where later on the afternoon and it's really quite wet and by the early part of the evening we will see some rain getting back into 5 in the sunshine. Far south west through can tie towards Dumfries and Galloway especially also fairly quite nicely temperatures the range of $7.00 to $12.00 for Northern Ireland it should be a dry buffet apprised of star there will be some sunshine variable amounts of cloud throughout the day but the greater part of day guys are should be dry fine with some sunshine as well temperatures responding to the north easterly breezes so paid back despite sunshine at around 8 to 10 degrees and not too bad for the time feel America England and Wales it's going to be a wet start across a good part of eastern England with this area of cloud rain gradually easing his way north of the wash by road by lunchtime but it will be all over the eastern side of the plans for the greater part of the afternoon the rainfall so it was really beginning to mount up western side of the panels by contrast much most tries for the day we've got the sunshine in places for much of the Midlands for Wales it looks as though it's going to be rather cloudy the all passing showers but not particularly windy I think the strongest winds we've had across the southern kinds of England where to be a pretty blustery morning was showery burst right absolute little bit drier coming off the name of the head to Sunshine 7 to 12 should cover it. Privately. Well the politics must be pretty boring yesterday as Tonight Show election cost is all about rap out of flaming picks up the story here's what happened storm's a who is a Jeremy Corbyn supporter criticized Boris Johnson Michael Gove's said that storms he was a better rapper than he was a political analyst to which Labour's Angela Rayner said Michael Gove is crap both to which Michael Gove replied with the storms the lyric I set trends man copy and that the entire Internet took over but it got us thinking is Michael Gove really that bad a rapper here is grime artist razor from Hackney I'm seeing some of the Go stars best quote. The people of this country. With. His past. Life would have been easier for me taking the path of least resistance therefore I think the reason people can always trust me. Always intellectually. In the public trust me to trust them so. I don't think I'm qualified to judge so you'll have to. Anyway here's tonight's episode of election cast election cast election cast from the b.b.c. We are in this election because OPEC said you don't want to be thinking about it in general Next we're going to begin our final mispresent to see if anyone comes up to you and says they know what's going to happen cock an eyebrow smile politely turn your back. At them in Westminster and or in Westminster from Tottenham Ok where it was the Labour's faith and race manifesto lodge it was their shadowed event yes but it ended up being dominated by remarks made by the chief rabbi in a completely unprecedented move by a major religious leader getting involved in an election campaign and yet this was a a letter or a column he wrote the times that we all saw last night before we went to bat for us the service the chief rabbi really quite dramatic language talks about the issues of anti-Semitism in the Labor Party and Jewish racism and all of this while up in opposition he writes What should we expect of the government he asks then he says the claim that the party is doing everything it reasonably can to tackle anti Jewish racism and that is a vested every single case are a mendacious fiction he says and then he says it's a failure of leadership a new poison sanction from the top has taken root in the Labor Party as extremely dramatic language and reflective of how strongly many people in the Jewish community feel about what's happened under Jeremy Corbin's leadership in the Labor Party and also actually candidly have a lot of Labor candidates who are in peace who want to stay on as M.P.'s actually feel about how the party has either gripped or not gripped. This problem obviously Jerricho been has always said he completely oppose any form of racism he's always said we try to do absolutely everything that we can to stamp it out in the party. But many people who just don't believe that they just don't believe that and many people including some in the Labor Party who just don't believe that and is weak. Kind of look back through the you know the mists of time I cannot find an example of anything like this happening for a leader of a major faith in the u.k. In the middle of an election campaign to basically say to the public do not vote for this party and vote with your conscience because he's also trying to address the wider country he's not just talking about the Jewish community here where yeah there Justin Welby the Archbishop of Canterbury tweeted this morning as well that the chief rabbi should be compelled to make such an unprecedented statement at this time or to alert us to the deep sense of insecurity and fear felt by many British Jews and also in the last 10 minutes or so recording we're trying it past 6 on Monday night a letter from the Hindu kind soldiers do not so it is to say yeah sure is to say it's only Tuesday you sure see it because it's very manifest it was on Sunday I'm completely discombobulated I'm always discombobulated by this point in the campaign anyway but in the last few minutes on Tuesday night the Hindu kind soul has released a letter saying Dear Chief Rabbi we're expressing support for the initiative you've taken on a Semitism Labor hasn't become increasingly anti-Semitic and anti Hindu by we I think we might have discussed this before on the White House that labor taking a particular position on Kashmir that many Hindu voters have found very difficult to stomach. And just the fact this is where we are in 2019 in the u.k. Is I think if you wind back from all of this in the Who's more somewhere it's really shocking that we're in a situation where religious leaders are speaking out in this way well let's hear how Jeremy Corbyn address this we've got a couple of clips 1st of all this is him speaking this morning at that event in Tottenham where he's launching the faith and race manifesto you're right I'm just some of his I'm in any form is vile and wrong there it is an evil within our society it's an evil that grew in Europe the 1920s non-words and ultimately led to the Holocaust there is no place whatsoever and just some of his many any shape or form or in any place what so ever in modern Britain under a Labor government it will not be tolerated in any form what so ever I want to make . This issue of course hasn't gone away throughout the day and that if you are was later Andrew Neil during his regular grillings the party leaders that is going to be doing the selection was face to face with Jeremy Corbin and they had this exchange wouldn't you like to take this opportunity tonight to apologize to the British Jewish community for what's happened but I'll say to is this I am determined that our society be safe for people of all faiths I don't want anyone to be feeling insecure in our society and our government will protect every community so you know. Against the abuse they receive on the streets on the trains or in any other juvenile you know other form of life and try one more time not on an Andrew can I explain what we're trying to do you have been you've been given plenty of time to do it I asked you if you want to talk I don't want anyone to go through what anyone has gone through that several times I understand that Mr Coburn I was asking about an apology let's move on to bricks Well again on can I just make it clear racism in our society is a total poison you've said there is over times so you know we get that I'm not arguing about Islamophobia anti semitism or to any Let's I want to be any other form of racism and I want to work with every community to make sure it's eliminate the whole life as you know that clear people will make up their own minds well many members of the Jewish community would say. That they have tried to work with their equipment and he hasn't then followed through on some of the promises that he made to them and I think maybe a bit later you hear from our colleague in the context of had it because this is been a long journey and I think in the context of this election it's not just the sort of drama. Of today and the kind of scent of all of this it's also a competence question because voters in the public will have heard Jericho bit on the news every now and again saying I'm really gripping this issue we're going to get rid of it we're going to crack down I promise you I'm dealing with it and then it comes back again and again so there is an election campaign these questions of competence whatever you think of the claims even if you think that it's all some people do some people think it's all kind of stirred up and it's not real. There's a competence question here to you know have to be personally affected by the issue to come to a view Jeremy Corbin has handled it and of course then the Muslim Council of Britain go involved with a quite punchy statement about the Conservative Party where they say that as a faith community we commonly are threatened by Islamophobia this is an issue that's particularly acute in the Conservative party who approach Islamophobia with denial dismissal and deceit. Yeah so for some time now particular in the last year I think there has been issues of Islamophobia prejudice against Muslim people that has been raised in the Conservative Party comments made by counselors or candidates and that's come up every now and again the prime minister was asked about it today and the Tories say they're going to have a wide ranging inquiry into all forms of abuse and hatred but they are still sort of denying a promise that actually was made to the Tory leadership contest about having a specific inquiry into Islamophobia you know that's all uncomfortable for the for the Tories to I think in terms of the scale of the of the problem and the length that the problem has been hanging around it is different in a different place but it's not to say that this isn't also an issue feel like you cast the election cast from the b.b.c. Let's rewind a bit on this story with our political correspondent and what's a fellow in Colorado why did this become a thing for labor when Jeremy Corbyn became a leader I think that difficulty for labor at that time was that lots of new members joined because some people came in from outside the party perhaps not engaged in politics props involved in the post as a protest and to war movement and so on and on some parties it would usually to the left of labor they were inspired by Gerry Corbin's leadership in the came some of them had a long track record in opposing actions of the Israeli government some of them are very pro palestinian want to see a set of a Palestinian state they're attracted to Jeremy Corbin's passionate views on the Middle East as well but for some liberals stress is a very small minority of less than one percent of their membership but for some there aren't. In Islam became also and the semitism there's been lots of arguments about this on the left they say hang on a minute this is always use been used as a stick with which to beat Jeremy Corbin But certainly I have seen some of the things which were reported to Labor's head office been given through an intermediary some of the complaints they dealt with. And I think there is no question that some of it is just straight forward the anti semitic it was also a dealing with it it was the Community Process resales of the problem is changing profile of the membership I think perhaps created a problem or exacerbated the problem in the 1st place their question then was how did Jerry Corben handle it and he was criticized not just by his political opponents but by people inside the party for not moving swiftly enough to deal with those other gay sions. Those 22 problems I think you had firstly. Just simply have an infrastructure there to deal with it there are more complaints coming in the Buchwald built up over recent times that has been dealt with turn extent the other problem I think Jeremy carbons heard perhaps because of his pro Palestinian views he was absolutely sure that people who are being feel like done for anti-Semitism are not simply being disciplined for having until Israeli auntie's really government views and that meant he was incredibly slow adopting swoosh many peoples party as well as others wanted to adopt which is the International Holocaust remembrance of one's definition of anti Semitism just the meaning of what it says eg Yeah he just want to make sure that in the disciplinary process the people would still be free to criticize the actions Israeli government but that long delay and there is a venture adoption of it made quite a few people question his sincerity in dealing with the much more toxic issue of ultra Semitism itself if you're looking at the case for the defense if you like from from Labor's point of view some people who are very politically close to General Corben nonetheless helping dealt with under the party's procedures so for example the left wing m.p. Chris Williamson was prevented from standing again as a Labor candidate at this election he said that the party given too much grown to the antecedent is an issue the party is disciplinary process has kicked in but some people would say again his critics is he doing enough intelligence of discipline to tell the wider community the Jewish community certainly by the way the voters generally there is some to ensure leadership and get a grip so if you had to do a sort of bullet point said list of all the ways in which this is affected or change the Labor Party or Corpus leadership what would be on the list and I think the difficulty for Jeremy Corbyn isn't so much. Bad as that is in itself offending 300000 Jewish people in Britain potentially it's actually the wider implications so it has been an erosion of trust within the Jewish community beyond that that's also created tensions with many of his own M.P.'s including Jewish M.P.'s such as Margaret Hodge the qs them of antisemitism. More widely than that I think it is a potent inside and outside Liberal Party it's a question not just his leadership abilities in terms of the speed to doing with this but also his judgment was it tough enough quickly enough on this issue but equally just an appeal if we've just been hugely cynical about this did he really recognize the toxicity of this issue to the Labor Party's image and to his own image when he knew he'd be facing an election campaign even before 2017 so for the border you're listening to election just from the baby say Ok some other things that happened today Michael Heseltine Yes all time yes he had. Yeah why's he called that again I think used to be called His hair was like Tarzan and then he ever went maybe he did do that and he was in his pomp kind of before we were doing this job although he's been pumping a lot lately and has a bright exists a nice way of saying that he's old and we're kind of not that old although old I just he said there was no way where he said several phases of his career yes armchair pundit is definitely Grandy Grandy and this is what he had to say from his armchair today I'm a lifelong who served to remember who served partially in this particular context I couldn't vote for my partially with Berkshire to join if you haven't got a independent conservative then I would say there's only one part you can actually secure. Referendum only issue. Is the Lib Dems as was not hugely surprising because during the European Parliament elections he said the same thing that he did but it is another reminder of have sort of all the cross currents in this election a pretty weird So yesterday we had Tony Blair saying don't give a majority as well as don't give Johnson a majority vote for a hung parliament vote for hung parliament and that's essentially what Michael as I'm saying here to the strange thing about this has been they are around in my mind is that people in that kind of position whether it's Tony Blair or Michael has a time. Thanks though for the Lib Dems are an independent conservative because you get another referendum through a hung parliament they then say in the next breath as Michael has said this morning that Jeremy Corbyn won't be prime minister and he said to a colleague on the same program you know that I know that that well actually no no one knows that number one no one knows that a number 2 I've been asking people who want this outcome in the last few days how do you get to your 2nd referendum and somehow magically remove Jeremy cooking as prime minister or stop him becoming prime minister and I'm not advocating that is a good or a bad course of action but they can then tell you to this rather not to sort of wishful thinking that the morning after if the Tories don't get a majority the morning after an election if we end up in that place somehow the labor any c. And the labor membership and every member of a new p.l.p. Will be more closely aligned Coben will wake up and go I know what we must do to have another referendum as we'll just move like it just seems quite a lot of wishful thinking for those people who want to yes yes I totally get you right. Underneath the 2nd appearance and today's election I mean I don't see much he's doing a lot of interview is I think some of the people he's And if you might think you could have too much. Last night in the 1st installment of his gripping series he interviewed the 1st minister of Scotland and leader of the s.n.p. Nicola Sturgeon this was probably the most argumentative bit more effect we've seen you do in the us and as I was only 2 of your 8 waiting time targets being hit even for a little while you haven't hit the target since 2017 the 2 month towns are car talking young it's 2013 children are dying in a New Glasgow hospital because the water is contaminated I mean like pigeon droppings and you multi-million pound every hospital should have opened in 2012 is still on the open you can't even get the ventilation system to work you've got the worst drug addiction problem in Europe you cut drug treatment budgets by 50000000 you come home to your last health minister. You're under pressure not just. I mean you've called for legislation to protect the n.h.s. From Donald Trump maybe they need legislation to protect it from the. Well obviously I don't think that's the case because we're focused on addressing you've put forward a number of legitimate issues that you know that all challenges from Solich but health services of me we have challenges we are not immune from that but I believe that we are doing the things that are required to fix those challenges and to make sure that we have the health service that people expect and patient satisfaction ratings for any chest Scotland remain extremely high you know heartening to to well make good on many of these things you're talking about what we're doing in Scotland is we beyond what any other part of the u.k. Is doing. Obviously I don't think that's the case when he says the n.h.s. Need to be protected from. You know the I think actually but both of them I think these interviews obviously I would say this by the under does a brilliant job in those interviews and I think actually the politicians maybe do enjoy it but they're proper full on serious grilling half an hour and I think at the end of that I think because there's an actually a funny kind of almost like she enjoyed it I don't know how to mask but they sound like a buying experience Yeah I suppose but also you know important as well because the s.n.p. Is also often. Seen in the sort of headline u.k. White media as well their impact is on Westminster politics and it's very important as under was doing it also that there's scrutiny on their domestic record on the things that they're in charge of $100.00 Yeah and their manifesto is coming out tomorrow which maybe today by the time you're listening to this momentous day. Is already demonstrated the days that really matter anymore I mentally let stains go on for time or seconds because Boris Johnson was there today I'm very My head is true. And he's launching the Scottish Conservative manifesto Pfeiffer's very very foggy Yes and very interesting because what was on the backdrop not get it done not cost of korban but no to any ref to it was No 2 in the raf to see what they did there to using 2020 and the thing is that the Tories I think where pretty cocky Jeremy Corbyn is spent so much time in Scotland getting slightly different messages about if and when he would allow another intense referendum and the kind of chat from all of the parties really is that it does appear in quite a lot of ways the election in Scotland is turning in again to the constitutional question not of and of course it's part of the mix but whether or not the shell are going to jail the question a question about whether or not there should be another independent friend coming here what he was on about do we want another referendum really would that's why there's not opposed to it so aptly so aptly that we don't want another referendum on school that we don't and we really tried because we why because we don't want to destroy the most successful political partnership of the last 300 years right now let's take a look at a particular election battleground and we're going to head to the south west is the somebody there in the southwest there is. Martineau political editor for the b.b.c. In the region Ok I suppose that because the southwest is a massive region are you in the car the whole time. I have. Been over the last couple of weeks I sort of imagine as well you have like a cream tea at multiple times per day and that's a very good view of the Southwest those in it does we were summery thing I think actually yeah good point so that yes over having a summer election that would be different but a hot pasty. Tire nation is smack in its lips now right now paint a picture for us about what this region is politically and why it's so important to the political map of the whole country well I mean historically very much. Recently liberal and conservative battleground go right back into the 19th century So there are 2 little labor islands and Plymouth a very unusual place the largest city in the region and that tends to swing between the Conservatives and Labor to the 2 city seats there are also some where you get got quite a lot of traction and in fact one of the 2 places where the breaks about extending this time and then east of that 2nd city exit a slightly different kettle of fish there because by one brief time in the ninety's sixty's when going to Dunwoody held it for labor that was a Tory seat so it's a bit of a monument I tend to see it in the new Labor government really because of taken by Labor in $97.00 is now pretty safe seat for labor massive labor majority on the council but those with respect footnotes to the big conservative battle Why is it important I think it came to huge prominence really over this last decade because we've obviously had a series of very very close elections and I think certainly in 2015 the largely unforseen result in the southwest which was all of those he's. Being taken out by conservatives I think a lot of people would say it was the South West what won it fairly Cameron Yeah I think it took everybody including the conservatives by surprise. So Joe Swinson leader of the Liberal Democrats is in your patch today I mean what the Liberal Democrats doing to try and win the place back and what the chances Well the obvious challenge for them is they now have this very aggressively pro remain revocation pledge something which at least one of their prominent local has taken a huge issue with and continue to do so through the campaign and they're doing that in a predominantly leave voting region there's also of course the the legacy of the coalition which they're rather be reminded of previously they very much taken the approach that the 2 big parties are very interested in the southwest it's a long way away not many people living there and they would doubtfully fight it it's corner but of course they now had a spell in government and in government with their traditional mortal enemy enemies in the Southwest conservatives yet my spies tell me that several of their big names are going to be heading your way or that what the others up to is interesting that we haven't so far seeing Boris Johnson he came down here a couple of times very quickly when he won the conservative party leadership but it's certainly not like the sage was willing that we got from David Cameron in the 2015 election obviously a very good investment My hunch is that the sense from the conservative machine is that they need to be focusing on those seats in the middle of the north and in the in the West of England which they they want to win or possibly we would have seen some big hitters down in sooner they brought similar story really in the last election down here was really interesting you're actually seeing labor chalking up 2nd places in rural places in the Southwest something that had never happened before the big question is whether the. Something that can be built on or was it something entirely due to the peculiar alchemy in that election and of course particularly was this down to remain voters in the region deciding at that point in time that Labor was the best bet now remember at the start of the campaign there was this idea of working to man somebody in Cumbria who the Tories have to target if they want to get a majority we've been trying to broaden that out and make it much more geographically reflective Is there a sort of southwest equivalent of that the Southwest is a fantastic place to live in. But it's not necessarily the easiest place to work in and make a good living there's a huge dependence on seasonal jobs tourism is immensely important to the region I think that explains For instance the gap between the house prices the highest in the Survive seat that must have a great deal to do I think by the reliance of the tourism industry so it's probably somebody. Young ish who can't afford to buy a house wants to stay living in the region listen Ives Guys guys guys and gals and gal fabs and I've guys and girls Ok look out for the guys and gals Martino's thank you very much as you and that's it for another jam packed election cast as we said tomorrow there is the s.n.p. Manifesto launch which we will be covering and and a special guest appearance by the receipts there that podcast where they give you really really candid advice about your relationship dilemma's send us your election related relationship and the receipts might just solve them it's election cast b.b.c. Doc u.k. Election cast b.b.c. Dakota u.k. Or use the hash tag election cast and maybe the receipts can save your relationship . Or prevent your relationship from being ruined by the election cast election cast selection cast in the b.b.c. Thanks for listening to the B.B.C.'s election cast if you'd like what you've heard to subscribe and listen on b.b.c. Sounds glad that you still. Want to be a like Chris from your actual action that summarizes the Smalling in Selsey and West Sussex at. A. It's 5 o'clock this is morning reports on 5 Live I'm. The top story this morning the s.n.p. Will launch its manifesto they said with a demand that the Labor government spends an extra 4000000000 pounds on the n.h.s. In Scotland in return for its support the party's leader Nicholas sturgeon will also warn Boris Johnson's Breck's that policy means the u.k. Is likely to leave the e.u. Next year without a trade Dale Scotland correspondent James short reports the s. And P's top priorities are trying to stop Bracks it and getting the right to hold a 2nd independence referendum at a time of their choosing Nicholas sturgeon will warn that Boris Johnson will not find it easy to get Bracks it done she'll say that if the Conservatives win the election and the u.k. Leaves the European Union at the end of January there is unlikely to be enough time to do a trade deal before the end of the year all of which means the s.n.p. Will be willing to support a minority Labor governor. And but only at a price $1.00 part of that price will be an independence referendum another will be a big increase in spending on the n.h.s. Across the United Kingdom that they say will amount to $4000000000.00 pounds extra within 5 years in Scotland alone the labor leaders refused to apologize to the u.k. Jewish community about how his party deals with anti-Semitism and a b.b.c. Interview Jeremy Corbyn said his government would protect every community against the abuse they receive He also admitted people on low incomes could pay more tax under a Labor government the leader was challenge over his party's plans to scrap the marriage tax allowance on reform dividend taxes and Political Correspondent Labor has promised that if it wins power all of those earning more than $80000.00 page a year would be forced to pay more tax but the party is all Szell planning to scrap the marriage tax allowance is a tax speak of up to 250 pounds a year to some married couples who are in well under 80000 pounds speaking to Andrew Neil last night in the latest of his leaders' interviews Mr Corben did acknowledge that some loitering couples would door longer benefit from the break they won't get the advantage he said but the all sure argued they would benefit from other Labor policies like a real living wage of 10 pounds an hour figures seen by 5 lives Investigations Unit show there's been more than 2600 drink spiking incidents since 2015 there's no specific crime for drink spiking incidents often fall into different categories 22 local police forces responded to a Freedom of Information request including the British Transport Police patches a student who was spiked excited to go out with my friend and spend some time with her people said that I went from having the best of my life to then releasing consciousness and setting really say.

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