the british prime minister has sacked the chairman of his party, nadhim zahawi, following an investigation into his tax affairs. mr zahawi says he ll continue to support the prime minister from the backbenches and criticised journalists for the way they reported his tax affairs. here s our political correspondent chris mason. nadhim zahawi arrived in the uk as a child, unable to speak english. he became a multimillionaire and rose to be chancellor of the exchequer. but tonight, his political career and reputation is in tatters. in a 2,000 word letter to the prime minister, the government s ethics adviser is devastating in his criticism of mr zahawi. sir laurie magnus says. minutes after the prime minister had sacked his party chairman for what he called a serious breach of the ministerial code, the questions began. for a start, why hadn t he got rid of him days ago? as a general rule, i think it is important when allegations are raised that they re investigated promptly. but
mr zahawi had to pay a penalty to settle a multi million pound tax dispute, an investigation ordered by rushi sunakfound he had broken the ministerial code. mr zahawi says he ll continue to support the prime minister from the backbenches, and criticised journalists for the way they reported his tax affairs. our political editor chris mason reports. nadhim zahawi arrived in the uk as a child, unable to speak english. he became a multimillionaire and rose to be chancellor of the exchequer. but tonight, his political career and reputation is in tatters. in a 2,000 word letter to the prime minister, the government s ethics adviser is devastating in his criticism of mr zahawi. sir laurie magnus says. minutes after the prime minister had sacked his party chairman for what he called a serious breach of the ministerial code, the questions began. for a start, why hadn t he got rid of him days ago? as a general rule, i think it is important when allegations are raised that they re inve
in buildings that don t qualify for help and protection. they don t qualify for government support and funding. so there will still be, despite this announcement, people who will still live in unsafe buildings. although it is a huge step forward and it is some that we have welcomed for a long time, we have welcomed for a long time, we have known about the developer contracts, it has been a pledge until now, it sounds like it will be a binding contract about which will be great, but it remains to be seen whether this will be the getting of the end of the building safety crisis. ~ . , ~ ., crisis. what is it like living in a buildinu crisis. what is it like living in a building that is crisis. what is it like living in a building that is unsafe? - crisis. what is it like living in a building that is unsafe? for i crisis. what is it like living in a i building that is unsafe? for me, crisis. what is it like living in a - building that is unsafe? for me, it has been a building that is
we ve known about the developer contracts, it s been a pledge until now, it sounds like it will be a legally binding contract now, which is great it remains to be seen whether this will be the beginning of the end of the building safety crisis. coming up, we have got sportsday, followed by click. but first let s get the weather with tomasz. hello. a little bit of rain around this evening and it remains very windy in parts of scotland. that will continue through this evening and overnight. how about tomorrow? well, across the majority of the uk, it s actually going to be a pretty decent day. bright or sunny spells, even sunshine, clear blue skies for one or two. so let s have a look at the satellite picture a conveyor belt of clouds streaming off the atlantic, this jet stream pushing weather systems in our direction. one weather system has already swept through. in fact, not much rain on it at all. this is the weather front, the cold front, that will reach