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Signed by nearly 6000000 people has shown how Sussex is split on the issue in Brighton the villian constituency for example a quarter of residents have put their name down as the 2nd highest number in the country in bulk not the number is just 5 percent dogma voted out Oh if I could ouch because I've had enough of the euro bureaucrats telling us what today bricks it's just a waste of time is wasted every star in the European ideal might not be perfect but has brought us I have rights years of pay 70 think about how long we've had since World War 2 counterterrorism officials say far right extremists in Britain are accessing jihadi materials to research methods of attack neo nazis and similar groups have been studying methods of attack shared online by the Islamic state group a warehouse worker who killed a stranger in a random attack outside a children's playground in cruelly in broad daylight is to be sentenced today in the middle of his murder trial 23 year old Lottie May even off pleaded guilty in November to the manslaughter of 61 year old Glynn REUSS The case was adjourned so that even off could be assessed by professionals there are more and more attempts being made to smuggle people into the country house according to the charity unseen which raises awareness of people trafficking and modern slavery yesterday a lorry driver who smuggled 21 Vietnamese migrants into New Haven many of them children was jailed for a 6 he is they were crushed into small holes amongst pallets of sparkling water Well Andrew Wallace the chief executive of unseen says that's just the tip of the ice but really difficult to quantify I think the iceberg is a surprise a once the power of the figure if you it's it in the last 2 years we've seen 84 percent increase in the number of potential victims of trafficking or into the government's National mechanisms to support so that tells you that to get to that we're on. 17 construction workers have been detained on a raid in a housing development meant in Worthing the Home Office said that 11 of the men it entered the country illegally 6 of outstay their visas Albion defend the Shane death they played a full 90 minutes for the Republic of Ireland in their one nil home win over Georgia he had been a doubt with an ankle injury and the R.F.U. Says it won't be announcing a successor to Eddie Jones this year even though he might well quit after the World Cup in autumn interim chief executive Nigel Malleville says they'll monitor the situation and keep options open the weather dry with some sunshine and variable amounts of cloud today some longer spells of sunshine may develop the soft and in the BE highs of 12 Celsius 50 for fire in height and dry tonight with clear Perry it's and some patchy cloud B.B.C. Sussex it's $90.00 full B.B.C. Sussex travel you trolls. If you found on the A $26.00 and lowest it's still partially blocked there's a broken down Vaiko at the age 27 significant still fairly slow classed at the saying it now through back so goes and he's still on the $85.00 non US towards the week chief in and sit through a New Haven also slow towards the swing bridge and if you having owned to the A $27.00 steel key ring is found just awards at the hope that turn off and London right now the $8.00 to $73.00 the Aston temper likes to have the staying power and cross roads it's causing on a $5.00 to $6.00 Mickey and so very busy it through Crawley towards the Horsham road junction 3 wake eastbound 8590 that's like towards the wake roundabouts I feel found a 24 towards the Washington run about that still hearing Alyse very slow towards the Great Flood roundabout eastbound a 27 no delays only trying to American Phillips B.B.C. Sussex travel cold with your travel updates 080-232-1045 B.B.C. Sussex travel do you trust. Talking fostering in a 2nd so if you have fostered children if you a. Story plays tell us what that is like 1333 Start your message with a word radio before we head to civil Slade. For many years and force it around $500.00 children of course. They were living in his house to hear what that was like in just a moment if you have a fostering story to tell his 102321045 Also coming up in 30 minutes. The leader of the Liberal Democrats talking to me on what he'd like to see go through Parliament today. Essentially. 50 with Vince let me know 1333 in the text start your message of the word radio and new tourism numbers out from the leading visitor attractions. In the. People at the Capitol. Any thoughts on that 1333. These B.B.C. Sussex. County. She's You know what I have loved that record for 40 years and it's my love of it never diminishes and never go off it never dislike it I always like to hear it was a great record at the junction from squeeze so it's put in a good mood is Tony pike here with you through Tommy De hope you can stick around we're going talk in a little while which might test me somewhat but it's been torn out for a long time are we any closer some kind of agreements where we'll get the view of surveillance cable in 30 minutes time on what's happening in Parliament today in his view on the opportunity maybe to revoke Article 50 lot of people against that obviously so we'll hear what he thinks a bit later on and if you're confused about what's going to happen in parliament is amazing is that a week ago there was one deal and one day a lonely on the table and here we are with a whole variety that we discussed and then voted for in Parliament today one of the choices that our M.P.'s face later on our political correspondent Paul Rowley who again has been watching these things in Parliament for long and that's where his records been around so give us his view on that and tell us what's coming up a bit later on in the program but 1st of all today we're going to pay tribute to an inspirational woman for me Sporn Her name is Sibyl Slade she died last week at the age of $81.00 and what makes Sibyl special is the fact that over the last 40 years for life she fostered more than 500 children now her son Mark contacted us as he felt we might get to help him reach some of the people who have passed through Sibyl's home over the years so I spoke to market a bit earlier this morning to talk about his mom who seemed like she was an incredible woman. Who did a lot for a lot of people so it was the wasted life it was a very full and fulfilling life so yes. You know what drove her to give so much care to so many young people a time when they really needed it talking to mom she has children all her life even as a small child she loved caring for babies she was just a natural mother and she was never happier than if she had like a clucking hen child under each wing she was just to really contend with children but if she's having all those children come and stay in the family home that has an impact on you and you have brothers and sisters as well we do yes. Because think about what after childhood was like with all these people coming in and out and it was like the Waltons to be honest it was a big full family house warmth love big food on the table all the time it was just a lovely big family home big and hard as well as size it was it was great Did you ever feel like. Maybe maybe in the early days hang on the other kids who are my brothers and sisters are a kind of taking time that I could spend with my mom. I don't know how she managed it Danny but we never lost on Monk love it was there was so much to go around I mean I always had my own room and we never let lack detention for Mom it was just all inclusive really she had so much love and care to give that there was plenty for everybody and what's it like because obviously you're having to kind of form relationships or friendships with the foster children who may come and go sometimes one days or weeks at a time or may be with you for longer than that yeah a visit is everything from Sometimes a few hours because sometimes social services just need to get a child out of the situation to assess it and so it go to someone like my mom and dad who would take care for them until the safe go back and another time we had people come into our family 845 and they stayed with us until they finished university went off and got married so it was a complete mixture of time period we'll see the the ones who are with us for longer are in fact family now that they've they're coming to mom to him and things like that so how many would you say of the children that were fostered by a parents feel like family to you Could you put a number on that oh no not all of them I mean Mom foster mom and dad together actually there were teams very easy to talk about member of the that was involved as well but you not a few years ago they fostered well in excess of 500 children not say probably 15 or 20 of those with classes family because they're with us for a long period of time. And you know when they talk about the situations they come from sort of seen as it's a serious move being removed from your original family home isn't it yes yes. They're going to be telling on these things but yet some of them were tragic circumstances and a lot of repairing to be done and what Mom and Dad were had a unique gift of being able to do was just provide a firm secure home you know you'd whenever you walked into the house there was always warmth and these children come in and they'd be given a warm bed and safe sanctuary and a chance to put down roots again because no child comes into care on the happy circumstances that is an amazing thing to do to open up your home to hundreds of other people but one amazing contribution that both your parents made over the years and I mean did they have a fine time for themselves to kind of be a couple and go out was or was this their life really it was it was their life but there was a publican and in addition to being forced apparently ran a pub and so he would have 1st days off and I remember Thursdays and about summer holidays months trademark was a big old Volvo estate and it was in the days before safety you know child seats everything would all pile into the car and drive up its wrist and forest rational forest with a picnic and it would be a whole family day so that was how they they spend their time off they didn't go on holidays or such but we just had big family days and mommy died last week so obviously this is still very raw for you come how you feel in the moment and how you reflect on her life. We gave them everything she wanted right up to the end for life we were able to do that with great help from hospital to hospital had to say and so there's no regrets in that and also my she cheated she cheated the cancer a few years ago and so we got those extra few years that we weren't expecting So although we miss her dearly none of us feel cheated we had a full time with her she was you know a great mom. And there will be lots of people around today that hopefully will hear this that may have been touched in their lives by her so your appeal to them MARK Well I'm sure is next Thursday down at least one credits Auriemma to 30 I can't get in touch with everybody that went through mom's life I just don't know half of them because of the I grew up and moved away myself even know that carried on for string but just anybody that knew my mom and she was known by everybody is on to civil even even family here isn't civil because that was a chosen name fits like so everybody had dealings with my mom and civil would love to see down of the critter room it's a celebration of mom's life it's not black and morning we want everybody to wear bright colors and have a humanist service so you know anybody would like to come be more than welcome and it be great to see some old faces I'm sure that's 230 a week tomorrow at Expo on Kramatorsk Mark Slade speaking to me earlier about his mom Auntie Sibyl as she's known in the town has a lovely text from a fellow Foster this is Kerry who says civil was my best friend we spoke most days and we enjoyed meals out together I fostered for over 10 years and her supporting current was invaluable she has had a successful fostering support group and kept us all well fed and watered I'll miss her so very much says KERRY Well thank you for sending us that note today let's talk now to Mary Lewis is she sorry county council's cabinet member for children Mary hello morning to you good morning well just give me a break and she was well give me a thought about what symbols given to many young people over the years well thank you 1st what I'd like to send my condolences to Mark Slade and the rest of simple Slade's family on her death because he said that she was a great mom and she certainly been a great foster carer and the way he described the experience of the children that came into her care he said she was big in heart and that's what foster care is are they doing. Tested trope of transforming the lives of children so we're always looking out for more people to open up their homes to some of the most vulnerable children in the county of c Sorry and in the case I'm talking about that simple was doing the same work in Sussex just what about that number 500 MY obviously you know the longer you foster for the the higher your number's going to go is 500 extraordinary in your experience I'd say it's on the extreme and right my number but having said that it's more a night I'm going to be with our director of children services that are sorry for the carers annual dinner and we will be giving out long service awards a number of our foster carers have worked for sorry County Council for 40 years and so I expect they'll be telling me about the numbers of children that have come through their doors but the important thing is however many however few experiences the individual child finding what done what you call saved safe sanctuary and we we're also in addition to the impact on the children the foster carers themselves find incredibly rewarding and as you've heard from Mark oversee the other children in the family also get some benefit from it he seemed to have had a fantastic childhood Yeah yeah I mean this is one where definitely quality not quantity really counts at the end and I put in his attributes on the symbol that you know she was doing it for so long she'd not stop 500 young people to talk to us a bit if you would maybe just so we clear about the circumstances in which a young person needs to be fostered and what that means obviously that varies from case to case but the main reason that a child be taken into the care of the council would be to safeguard them and know that it's a catch all phrase but in some way the parenting in their family has broken down and their risk of neglect you. Really it's neglect of a C. We hear a lot about the extreme cases of abuse but neglect is very pernicious it has a huge impact on the child and. You know we don't want to leave children to that we don't want children to been neglected to but we certainly don't want to leave them alone and neglect because they fail to thrive and what we're looking for is more foster carers who can help us to ensure that children get the best start in life and actually we've currently got 13 new foster care is going through the recruitment process and we're looking to get at least another 50 of them over the current year there are 340 foster carers already in Surrey and I would imagine in suffix a similar number and so there are a lot of people doing this as you've heard from Mark. And from Kerry who wrote texted you foster carers support each other they have fantastic needs will support groups and they also get comprehensive support and advice and training from the county council Yeah I want to talk more about the work of force reason why they do it and what they get out of it all then a 2nd but but that decision to take a child into care to take them away from their parents is obviously a huge one that you don't make lightly but also if you talk about Nick Clegg's that might not be difficult to spot how would you notice this is that a child you know one of your kid's friends who comes around your house you see my little bit more disheveled than they should is it really subtle signs sometimes yes neglect can take all kinds of forms of a scene that can be emotional neglect which is very very damaging but also as you say outward physical signs it's a child has been neglected I want to make it clear I'm not a professional social worker and I'm an elected member county councillor but I think I was also on on your news item earlier on on the news I was talking about how we're trying to really improve children's services in Surrey and this is because professional social workers and we need really high caliber ones. We're keen to get more of those as well. Professional social workers take great care in assessing exactly when a child needs to come into care on you. Mobile which is part for improvement program is called Family resilience and it's about helping families early on so that they can keep their children in the family that they can safeguard their own children with support from the County Council it's not our ambition to bring more and more children into care it's our ambition to work hard to support families so that they can bring up their children safely and that children can thrive in their own families unfortunately there are some cases when that will never happen and this is a very fine judgment that goes through social workers and courts you know everything has to go before the court said there's a lot of professionals involved before a child ever taken into care and family safeguarding is about supporting families to be good enough parents but when they can't they that's when we need of foster care is to transform the lives of those children OK so what would you say to somebody who's gone oh well what simple day it seems pretty impressive Some seem to benefit from the experience maybe I'll find out some more and that doesn't commit you to absolutely anything that's sold as a what was the 1st step somebody should take. That's pretty good question because I think we've got evidence that shows that people take a long time thinking about it but it isn't as complicated as you might think you don't have to own your own home you just need to have a spare room a spare room is essential you don't have to be a parent already you can foster children without having children of your own and if you get in touch with the fostering Creedence this I can give you the phone number or email if you would like me yeah a number be great please thanks as a that's 809-696-2689 extension 0 . 6966 or you can email and you can even find very frustrating service on Twitter if you'd like to hear about it that way and they do a lot of events around the county saying that you can go and meet someone from the service and have that face to face chat but if even if you phone in obviously that arrange to meet you and talk you through it OK many thanks. Sorry county council's cabinet member for children and if you want to find out more about fostering in East Sussex who talk about East born a few months ago you can look at the Sussex website or I won 32346412901323464129 so about to hear about your experience with fostering whether you were caring for children if you were cared for yourself but also if you know want to say boy if you knew Auntie civil around the spawn area perhaps you were forced to buy her for some period of time love to talk to you to day as well here is my phone number to B.B.C. So 60802 want to. Do. With. It. The BE. To. Be an. Elite. It would. Be a. Fluke. If you. Want. To. Be a. Problem . 6. Slots. Little Mix and black magic here on B.B.C. Sussex and B.B.C. Sorry with Johnny pike just approaching 930 Ethel in Chichester has been our morning Ethel says My auntie fostered 80 children and many of them became part of the family and were adopted I'm still in regular contact with her foster sibling and they go on holiday together it's lovely to hear this program this morning and I think a lot of people look down on people who are fostered. Wow that's amazing because I tell you what if you're fostered that is no fault of your own is it so if we could stop that kind of behavior that would be helpful Ethel thanks for that 1333 Start your message with the word radio if you have a fostering story to tell I love to hear that as well if you knew Sibyl any spawn who looked after all those kids over all those years like to talk to you as well today here's mine I was 802321 full 5. Wherever you're going this spring time taking a look at the road traveling east take the stress out of your journey. Whether it's along the coast 27 is a little bit like countryside retrain reports of cows on the road getting you to the airport on time still looking good on the M 23 north and southbound avoid delays with Stephen brake 1st his or securing up to watch 6 famous traffic lights and he the latest with Sylvia drive time with a volume of traffic with that accident if you've got some way to bathe a spring here travel news you can trust before you can see the same speed sensors travel you trust from B.B.C. Sussex but more on brakes it cyclists another big day in Parliament would parliament taking control of the process that are going to hear from servants cable the leader of the Liberal Democrats in a few minutes time what he has made of the last couple of weeks and also what he thinks might happen today and I don't know how you're feeling today about the various options that might be put before parliament today maybe as many as 16 some kind of customs union a 2nd referendum or No Deal stopping bricks it's some kind of free trade agreement with the European Union how you feel about any of those options or none of them right 1333 on the tech start your message with the word radio and we'll stay you through exactly what will be happening today with our press corps correspondent Paul Rowley as well all that. Is keeping up to date with that process and I weather sunny spells are consistent this is next Saturday rather cloudy but staying largely dry and more of the same on Sunday dry but cloudy B.B.C. Sussex trampoline trusts. Got to tell you about on the M 23 now his details on that and the rest to travel with James Wally STANLEY Yeah the northbound M 23 partly blocks away the crash just before the M 25 I'm just looking at all McCown rows and I think just one lane is open on the north bank carriageway heading up through the road works looks like a lorry and a couple of other vehicles involved so the right lane is open past the scene of the queue in traffic not surprisingly as you head up the M 23 away from Gatwick up to the and 25 movie in 25 itself still quite slow in patches including from junctions tend towards 11. I'd also heading up towards the end for a little slow 13 and 3 southbound on the south Texas with a junction 3 bike shop that's broken down Van not really calling soo much for problem that I actually had the A 320 S. Also a short long delays in both directions with these road works so the McLaren roundabout so temper lights causing queues southbound from Central to short northbound and a slow moving from well before the McLaren not roundabout looking at the speed sensors and keep an eye on the lane at Cranley that is probably blocks of the crash at Edge feel close up to Hampson the A 3 whites and CT right those temperatures afterlife by the bell in causing queues as you had alongside the river queues westbound from cycle policy spot from Camp support racecourse if you are heading to the races it comes apart later on the softening watch out for delays through various road works and it's really slow towards Kingston Bridge as well across Hampton Court park that's because of works just before Kingston Bridge a quick check now on the road works on the 87 through has 6 slow moving with a temper lots of the same problems cross roads 27 Chichester by Pasco very slow by the way and on the trains Southern say 15 minutes later he scorns a red hill and came from because of cycling problems after a pony on James will leave the B.B.C. Travel sense of cold with you will travel updates 0800 change what cities want to pay for fine B.B.C. Sussex travel you trust God. What you. Like is. Your size. It's. Horrible. Was. Told it was. Was. Illo. Her. Goal. It's 19 minutes to 10 and so back to parliament on Breck's it what's happening today more votes taking place at 7 o'clock this evening the formats many different this time instead of walking through the division lobbies M.P.'s to be given a ballot paper setting out a range of alternatives to treason maze withdrawal plan which has twice been thrown out of the commons they then tick a box voting yes or no to each option division lobbies and bits of paper that's high tech isn't it anyway it's a process and then we go through that so it's a bit of paper and box ticking today but will they reach a conclusion so what we're doing a couple of minutes we'll hear from our political correspondent Paul Rowley who's been watching parliament for many years and he'll talk us through how the day will unfold in the decisions that M.P.'s may have to take a bit later on so we'll explain they're all very clearly for us in a moment but 1st of all one of those people who's going to fill in is bit of paper today's events cable the leader of the Lib Dems I spoke to him earlier and 1st of all started asking what he's made of this whole situation over the last few weeks Well it is at least the outside of a very chaotic and mystifying situation but I mean I think the essence of it is that the government has had 2 years over 2 years to sort this problem out has singularly failed to come up with something which satisfies the majority of M.P.'s of the public and so a problem and is having to assume control of the legislative agenda this is a very unprecedented situation some people call it revolutionary we're doing something that just happened in the 16 forties and today is the 1st practical application of the outer idea we'll be discussing some of the different possibilities that could emerge from it and then next Monday hopefully come to a decisive conclusion to put to the government. And is there an option that may be on the table today that you would prefer that you would definitely behind well I will continue to argue the Liberal Democrats have argued this but think that many many others that we have now to go back to the people and ask the views about whether they want the government's deal or another Rex deal versus the option of remaining and outs are favored. Arguments we will argue and vote for revoking Article 50 because the moment there is still the option of no deal a catastrophic crushing or with seen consequences many people still say to me will go for no deal and try our luck what would you say to them Well I'm not sure they've thought through the implications of the government clearly house because they published reports over the last year pointing out the potentially alarming consequence is there are a few people in there because a lot of people who say Well to hell with it we don't care if you know someone else gets hurt that's not our problem but I think we have to take a while didn't actually interest into concern and no deal is just a fundamentally unacceptable option and that has been the overwhelming view of Parliament's expressed on 2 occasions so revoking Article 50 What does that mean so now we can do it you know actually we can make a decision as a country that we're going to revoke Article 50 and you know we just carry on as normal but. That dishonors then the result of the referendum that's what people would argue against it well it potentially does it's much less democratic than going back to the public and saying well you know do you really want the back seat deal that you're being offered or would you rather stay so that's why revocation removes the immediate threat of a no deal but it then opens the way to having a referendum in the next few months there would be time to organize it there would be the time for the government to go back to the European Union and negotiate a Bracks agreement that reaches some form of compromise but it wouldn't be under time pressure with all these threats hanging over us. But the people who voted for breaks it 1st time around aren't getting what they voted for and that was the majority view so why would they believe that anything would then progress having had their say already well they're not getting what they voted for and it's very clear the best deal the government could negotiate is on is not satisfactory to the BRACKS It hurts us any more than to remain a virgin as we're not in a good place and we've got to find a way out of it I mean I think within the last few weeks 6000000 people have sent in a message demanding revocation the number is growing by hundreds of thousands but in fairness that's all it is a message on the wrong kind of form release is not binding vote it's a you know it well if you reach under a 1000 signatures you might just get it discussed in Parliament so it's not really the crux it isn't the correct tool but it is sending a significant message but that's why we have to follow it up by going back to the people and saying look there is a Bracks deal available the government's negotiated or maybe there is a variance of that is this what you voted for this is what you really want or would you rather stay but you won't be given more than just 2 options if you were going for another referendum so surely you know do you want to resume a steel Do you want to stay in the European Union do you want to no deal should we give be given those up. Those options now that they're kind of firm options Well that's the no deal isn't a firm option it's not talk clear what it means but yes I have no objection in principle it's our having a ballot paper that has more than one question on it that would be for the Parliament to decide when the referendum bill is constructed and of course we don't have to go to the electoral commission which tries to ensure that whatever happens is fair and balanced So no I have no fundamental objection to that if somebody can formulate what no deal actually means and you know from your vantage point in the House of Commons could you give us a view on how you think the prime minister has handled this whole process and how we end up essentially 3 days before we were supposed to leave being very unsure about what the future is well it's being terribly mishandled and I don't blame her entirely Personally I'm and she is she does have some very good qualities and she has some not so good ones are very inflexible and lacking in imagination but. The problem goes back 2 years that having failed to get a majority in the House of Commons or having called this early election she then plowed ahead on the assumption that there was an enormous conservative majority in parliament which they were sometimes and the negotiations were conducted entirely on the assumption that this was a conservative party rather than reaching out to the opposition parties had she done so we might well now have a form of soft direct which could accommodate the concerns of both remain as. It is but she didn't go down that route it's lead to confrontation it's led to a an outcome which very few people are happy with and some afraid she does have personal responsibility of being got us into this mess and you mentioned confrontation there and there's been a bit of that in the Liberal Democrats you know essentially you're about the same size in parliament now as the newly formed independent group and you lost Stephen Lloyd the. Born M.P. From the party during the BRICS it process here is there any chance of turning that back and Stephen Lloyd rejoining the Liberal Democrats. For him oh yes very much I mean he is a good man he's a very good M.P. Who just happened to disagree with us on this issue I think he will rejoin the convoy very soon and we're in a different territory from where he parted company with us and I know I look forward to him coming back in our history Well we'll see if that happens in due course of its cable leader of the Liberal Democrats speaking to me earlier So what's going to happen in Parliament today here's our political correspondent Paul Rowley this his historic downy nothing like this has ever taken place in such a way in the history of parliament then again no one's ever left the European Union before so this really is unprecedented So tonight M.P.'s will be given a pink ballot paper why pink I'm not entirely sure maybe politically it's seen as a neutral color but it will set out a series of options on the way forward how many will be determined by the common Speaker John Bercow I'm told the opposition parties and individual M.P.'s have Table 16 suggestions among them Peter Peter Carl the Labor M.P. For Hove who wants confirmation of a referendum versus to reason May's deal so that's a possibility some of these options clearly overlap so the feelings are ultimately it's going to be narrowed down to maybe around 7 or 8 I did magine include keeping the U.K. In a customs union and the single market as we do at the moment having a free trade deal with the European Union on a permanent basis having another referendum which maybe there's a kind of overlap there with Peter Carr's motion so maybe one of those could fall leaving without a deal or even start Bracks it which is what I've written for so it's green shouting there I mean I thankfully not that I do the telly anymore but that would really poor. Me off without blow started shouting and the other side just to balance it so it's a kind of breaks it being a really Danny eyes down at 7 o'clock when the bigger holes usually open about that time we should know the result about $9.00 to 0 this afternoon they begin to debate on the whole matter and it's going to be led not by the prime minister because for the afternoon she's not in charge of the commons is in charge of the whole matter will be led by a former Conservative cabinet minister in Sir Oliver Letwin this is his idea after all he forced a government defeat on this on Monday and he's already been given a new nickname the other prime minister by some of his more mischievous colleagues All right so 7 o'clock tonight then we'll get some motions which the M.P.'s have to vote for and how does that work I mean is it one at a time and they get knocked out as they go is it a Big Brother style exit from the house what happened not as such I mean effectively I don't mean somebody going to have a larger percentage than any other but I don't think this could be an outright winner in a don't think anybody's going to go beyond 50 percent Such are the divisions inside parliament let alone inside the conservative party and they are indicative votes as they call them down and so they're not legally binding so frankly even though the government will say they'll listen to the outcome theoretically really they could ignore it. They don't have to at all to go to give you another kind of we paid lots of attention to the day that it could be another waste of time in the in the end of work that has been the case for most of the last 6 months that high drama in the morning being predicted and nothing changes at the end but to reason may may say look at Olivia and it happened to me as well we can't reach a compromise and maybe that was going to be an opportunity down a for the prime minister to stand up and say OK I'm going to resubmit my brakes that plan to you even though it's been defeated twice by historic margins and the hope is that she can get it through this time it may even come before the Commons tomorrow because it seems some of the more prominent euro skeptics light. Jacob Reese mom may be ready to support it even Boris Johnson although I suspect his motivation isn't because he wants her job but if the Democratic Unionists the largest party in Northern Ireland which notionally at least a propping up this government so far they've held out against backing the idea but if they were to abstain for example and mauled Labor M.P.'s in leave voting areas come on board the prime is to May just get this over the line with the U.P.A. Even if they were withheld their 10 motes it would only take 10 votes from other parties or groups to get it through no Yet that's the thinking and the Democratic unity would say if there's a problem well we didn't support it you notice and so that might be enough it certainly will narrow the margin you would have thought if not though there's an option the M.P.'s could come back this coming Monday and this is written into the motion that went through the Commons the other night having whittled down the options to say let's the best 2 or 3 for example they could be put before the Commons on the kind of alternative vote system so you know whichever falls out gets a vote you know the redistribute the votes that's that that's the thought and so today might just be the semi final as it were and the final is going to be next week or maybe not because you know the end as you know is the only final confuse of the Brighton semifinal that's where we absolutely that's going to be fantastic because I'm old enough to remember $983.00 and Jimmy dancing on the pitch at Wembley or dance or dancing in the semifinal which in those days wasn't held at Wembley finally a thought about the Prime Minister you said she'd be a kind of bystander today any other news on her while at 5 o'clock tonight she just happens to be addressing the Conservative backbenchers just before the vote and there is speculation she may just announced a timetable for her departure that she'll go at the end of the back seat process or at least this stage of the BRICS it process they have got a name for it by the way Danny Sure Rex it to resist exit and if that were to happen maybe some of them are good more vocal critics could then come on side get her withdrawal plan. 3 parliament successor would then presumably would be in a euro skeptic the thinking is a fresh face would seek a better trade deal with the European Union but maybe that new prime minister may want a fresh mandate and we could mean dare I say another general election not another one as Brenda from Bristol might say and so this never end I'm Danny just continuous Rody there hope that was helpful and clear for you about that point that Vince Cable was making about no deal people who I said to him people Texas call are saying no deal if that was an option I'd go for it he said that they thought the people who say that haven't. Thought it through he said they would have alarming consequences give you some example the. Radio station earlier said I voted leaving I still want to leave without a deal Brenda T. Says let's get out now and run a country and. The problem for a main is is global warming international trade means pollution travel trucks and shipping real trouble the effect says Len even if we do without a deal they'll still be plenty of all those things going on anyway. With radio. Cool. The tail. And the word Tel now the new series of line of duty in the true law on the extent of police corruption has been covered up there's no secrets in a season starts next Sunday night at 9 on B.B.C. One Don't forget if you want to comment on this morning here's my number 802-3210 full 5 do get in touch we're talking toll resume after the news Association of leading visit to a tractions with their numbers are H.S. Wisley does well in there I ask you how we get people out of London to add tourist attractions locally. On F.M. Digital radio and T.V. On line. B.B.C. Sussex C.B.C. Sussex. County Jail Break odds Good morning M.P.'s will try to end the stalemate over bricks it today with a series of votes on alternative courses of action to to reason why his plan they hope to be able to gauge support for various options and to see which would command a majority of the Government's made it clear it won't necessarily be bound by the results one of those ideas M.P.'s will consider has been put forward by the House of N.P.P. To Kyle and would require a public.

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