under your pillow, what are your thoughts? 50 under your pillow, what are your thoughts? under your pillow, what are our thou~hts? ., , your thoughts? so we have been on day two. your thoughts? so we have been on day two, today, your thoughts? so we have been on day two, today, thursday, . your thoughts? so we have been on day two, today, thursday, of| on day two, today, thursday, of the budget. the big picture thing is that some of the think tanks, westminster s brains beyond government have been crunching through it and they have concluded what many a newscaster will know as the kind of bleeding obvious really, but they presented in the spreadsheet and the rest of it, which is that times are really tough people, that wages are squeezed, living standards are squeezed, living standards are squeezed, living standards are squeezed, that household income is squeezed and will be for a while, that the tax burden is the highest it has beenin burden is the highest it has been i
westminsters s brains beyond government have been crunching through its, and they ve concluded what many a newscaster will know, it s the kind of the bleeding obvious, really. they present that times are really tough for people that wages and living standards and housing income are squeezed and will be for while. the tax burden for the highest it has been for a while and will be for a while as well. as we were discussing on the last edition of the podcast. a lot of the budget was quite nerdy and in the weeds. there was a discussion around childcare in england that we talked about. the arguments about pensions for very well. doctors and others to train and encourage them to work and not retire and spend time in the golf course. since then, the political discussion has moved on a bit with the announcement we were talking about with tiktok. what is hope for within government and some of the union resolution to some of the nhs disputes and strikes we ve seen in the last few month
factory in china will significantly affect production of the phones and increase wait times ahead of the busy christmas holiday season. hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are rachel cunliffe, the senior associate editor at the new statesman, and ali miraj, who s a columnist for the article. the metro leads on rishi sunak s debut on the world stage at the climate conference in egypt where he made a short speech, and features a photo of a warm embrace between the prime minister and french president, emmanuel macron. the guardian has a powerful lead story from cop with the prime minister of barbados mia mottley condemning richer countries for failing the developing world. also leading on cop, the i reports on the un and exploitation of resources, now, and refusing to cough up the money or helping those poor countries who feel the effects most or helping those poor countries who feel the effects most directly. also l
the independent lead story is that the home office is targeting places of worship to advise migrants with insecure statuses to return to their countries of origin. the sunday times leads on a global gang who are hacking vip emails, including critics of the qatar world cup. the sunday express leads on the prime minister s announcement that the uk will enjoy an additional bank holiday on may 8th next year to celebrate the coronation of king charles iii. we have the sunday people which leads on matt hancock going on the i m a celebrity. he made the decision to take part because reportedly he knew his government career is over. so let s begin. what about the details of what they are saying in the sunday telegraph? this isjeremy hunt and his huge budget statement which is coming up on the 17th of november. he needs to feel a £50 billion black hole and what the sunday telegraph is saying is that he will do a raid on pension pots to do it. so what this could mean, according to