their work in afghanistan. hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are nigel nelson, who s the political editor of the sunday mirror and sunday people, and the political commentatorjo phillips. belated merry christmas to you both. i ll be with you in a moment. i m just going to take our viewers there if the front pages. the guardian has analysis of train delays on its front page. the paper claims over half ofjourneys from the uk s busiest stations have experienced delay an investigation into energy companies leads the front page of the daily telegraph/ of the daily telegraph. the paper says direct debits are going up even when accounts are in credit. the i leads on a survey from the british medical association, which suggests two thirds ofjunior doctors are trying to leave the nhs. meanwhile, the front page of the daily mail claims fees for agency staff are sucking the nhs dry. it says that the health service is being charg
hi, dodd. not seen you for a while. how have you been, you big giraffe? sally laughs. good morning. with one game to go before the world cup begins, how gareth southgate s future s the spotlight, a year after leading england to the euros final. good morning. we ve currently got some rain in the south east which will clear away and for all of us we are looking at a day of sunshine and showers and a noticeable wind too, and feeling chilly in that wind. i will have all the details about this mornings programme. good morning, everybody. it s monday 26th september. our main story. the pound has fallen to its lowest level against the us dollarfor 50 years. the record slump came after the government unveiled tax cuts funded by huge increases in borrowing. let s talk more to nina about this. how did this all start? a drop to around $1 how did this all start? a drop to around s1that s how did this all start? a drop to around $1 that s the how did this all start? a drop to around $
i apologise for the grief that we have caused and i want you to know we are totally committed to their memory and focus on safety for as long, as long as we are employed by boeing. again, i am sorry. mr calhoun faced a tough grilling from senators who cast the one to great giant of engineering and beacon of american industry as a shell of its former self. subcommittee chair called boeing safety s lapse is a matter of life and death with profound consequences for the economy and travelling public. safety issues, production short cuts and a lack of transparency has been a renewed focus since a door panel blew out of a boeing jet mid flight injanuary. and as regulators reports and whistle blower testimony pointed to wrongdoing on the aeroplane maker s part. also on tuesday, a new whistle blower alleged that boeing used nonconforming parts and lied to regulators about it. well, behind you, you can t see it from behind you, the folks are showing pictures of the people who are the
from the be celebrating christmas. a bit more from the telegraph, this is where energy from the telegraph, this is where energy companies seem to be hoarding our money energy companies seem to be hoarding our money as a way of actually getting our money as a way of actually getting their own funding. so, what they ve getting their own funding. so, what they ve been doing is they ve squirreled away £2 billion in direct debits squirreled away £2 billion in direct debits. unnecessarily charging people debits. unnecessarily charging people while they re already facing massive people while they re already facing massive energy bills. it was £1300 last year massive energy bills. it was £1300 last year. we re now looking at two and a last year. we re now looking at two and a half last year. we re now looking at two and a half thousand pounds a year. what and a half thousand pounds a year. what the and a half thousand pounds a year. what the telegraph accuses them of
measures. let s have a reminder of what they are. typical household energy bills are being capped by the government at £2,500 a year from saturday. before that announcement, the price cap had been due to rise to just over £3,500 a year. the so called energy price guarantee will last two years. but it s important to say your bill depends on how much energy you actually use. if you use more, you pay more. the plan applies to all households in england, scotland and wales. the same level of support will be available in northern ireland. a one off £400 energy bills discount for households will also go ahead from october. but despite all of that, there s been a flurry of complaints about rising direct debits. e.0n customers were among those to raise those complaints last week, with some people tweeting their concerns. 0ne customer tweeted to say they were confused and worried because their energy bill will rise to £323 from october, having been £91 last year. marija tweeted to say