mr speaker, i want to apologise. i ve received a fixed penalty notice from the metropolitan police. above all, i want to thank you, the british public, for the immense privilege that you have given me. thank you all very much. thank you. applause welcome to viewers in the uk, you join us in time for the papers review. hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are annabel denham, who s director of communications at the institute of economics affairs, the free market think tank. also with me is anand menon, the director of uk in a changing europe, which produces independent social science research. i story only as you can imagine. let s start with the ftu which says that boris johnson let s start with the ftu which says that borisjohnson was defiant to the end as he announced his resignation. the evenings leave is the metro headline, they play on the famous brexit tory slogan of course. according to the mirror boris johnson
i believe that point is now. will you be prime minister tomorrow? of course. more westminster hostility from senior mps this afternoon, but through it all the prime minister insists he s here to stay. frankly, mr speaker, the job of a prime minister in difficult circumstances when he has being handed a colossal mandate is to keep going and that s what i m going to do. tonight at the end appears night for borisjohnson, it feels like a question of when, not if he will go. political turmoil in westminster and we will have the latest in a fast moving story. on here, what voters think about all. also tonight. a ukranian mother picks through the remnants of her beloved son s life our special report on russian atrocities and a war crimes investigation. the lionesses training at old trafford. in less than two hours, they ll be on the pitch for real. the women s euros get under way today. stay with us. stay with us for our continuing coverage of the news from our correspondence arou
we are humbled by the experience and we have learned our lesson. that report lays bare the rot that under this prime minister has spread in number ten. and it provides definitive proof of how those within the building treated the sacrifices of the british people with utter contempt. but what happens next, and what is the future of boris johnson s premiership? we will discuss. tonight with the context, guardian columnist sonia sodha, former cabinet minister ed vaizey, the pollster joe twyman and hannah white from the institute of government. also tonight. officials in texas have begun releasing the names of some of the 19 school children and two teachers shot dead yesterday by a teenage gunman. president biden says it is time for congress to face down the us gun lobby. welcome to the programme. so now we have it, the long awaited sue grey report. 37 pages, 1a,000 words and nine pictures that illustrate a drinking culture at the heart of government, in the midst of a national l
billion last month it reached the highest level for february since records began almost 30 years ago. a warning that poor oral health is still a significant problem in england despite being largely preventable. and coming up this hour. a big day forjockey rachael blackmore she s leading the way at the cheltenham festival, and could be the first woman to win the gold cup. our top story, this morning. the prime minister is due to receive the oxford astrazeneca vaccine today and has assured the public it is safe. it s after several leading european countries have confirmed they are to resume the rollout of the jab following a pause over safety concerns. borisjohnson s urged people to get vaccinated and says england s roadmap out of lockdown is on track, despite a drop in vaccine supply. the roll out of the oxford astrazeneca vaccine will resume in some eu countries today, after regulators found no evidence it causes blood clots. the european medicines agency reviewed the
this student s one of them. we tried to do something with our government, but. it s nothing. so, while vladimir putin is in power, there is nothing much that can be done? mm. for russians, coming to finland is an escape from the dangers of life there, but for people on this side of the border, there is realfear that the tensions within russia could boil over and engulf finland itself. john simpson, bbc news, on the finnish border with russia. isaid i said fenlon s president was on the white house on friday in the two leaders also had a call with sweden s president. 0n the other side of the equation, israel s buy