the cost of living is likely to dominate a full in tray when she becomes prime minister officially tomorrow. we hear from voters about their main concerns. i really think that she needs to sort out this energy crisis. i mean, us low paid workers are having real problems. i think she will do as good a job as she can. i m sure she will, but there s a terrible mess everywhere. i m shaun ley. our other main stories this hour. police in canada launch a manhunt for two suspects, after ten people are stabbed to death and many more injured in a series of attacks. a charity urges the uk government to abandon plans to send asylum seekers to rwanda, as the high court will hear legal challenges today. from today, millions of people in england will be invited for their autumn covid booster vaccine which is already availabe in wales and will be offered in northern ireland in the next two weeks. this comes as health bosses predict a resurgence of covid and flu this winter. good afternoon. w
boss and narrow is yet to concede. tonight with the context, former conservative cabinet minister justine greening and former senior adviser to george w bush ron christie. hello welcome to the programme. the british home secretary made an extroardinary admission today. the uk immigration system is broken, she said, and illegal immigration is out of control. the problem for the conservatives of course, is that they have been in powerfor 12 years. the statement from suella braverman came in response to an urgent question in the house, about the conditions at the manston asylum centre, on the south coast. the facility on a disused airfield was opened earlier this year to take 1500 people and to process them daily, before moving them on. but when the chief inspector of immigration visited last week, he found horrendous overcrowding. some people had been there over a month. and there ve been at least eight cases of diphtheria even a case of mrsa. the home secretary was respond
the former conservative cabinet secretaryjustine greening, the is chief political commentator paul waugh and the republican political analyst doug heye. good evening, welcome to the programme. by the 5th september we will know who is to become the next prime minister of the united kingdom. currently, we have 11 candidates, the hope is that by next week, 11 will become two. in the last hour, the 1922 committee of conservative backbenchers has set out the rules by which they will eliminate candidates. here is the chair of that committee sir graham brady. we tried to find a balance where we are not making it impossibly difficult for serious candidates to enter the contest but we don t want to have a cast of thousands of people who don t really have great prospects of progressing in the election. so the first round will be held on wednesday, by which time candidates will require the support of 20 mps. a second on thursday, in which they will need the support of 30. another round
the company claims it can t restart nordstream 1 because of an oil leak in a turbine, which will have implications for europe s energy supply this winter. good morning. now here on bbc news, look back at boris johnsontime at number ten, from brexit to the coronavirus pandemic, partygate and russia s invasion of ukraine, and a warning, this programme contains flashing images. six weeks ago, a typhoon fighterjet took off six weeks ago, a typhoon fighter jet took off from six weeks ago, a typhoon fighterjet took off from an raf base in lincolnshire. it s co pilotjust announced he was about to become britain s expo minister. after three happy years and that got back after performing some pretty astonishing beats, iam now going to hand over the controls, seamlessly, to someone else. i don t know who. borisjohnson i don t know who. boris johnson believes i don t know who. borisjohnson believes in the great man theory of history. and he thinks he is that great man, like his hero, wi