from coleen rooney, saying it s in the bag . and the daily star s sunday edition shows a picture of a russian attack dog who was rescued by ukrainian soldiers and trained to work for them instead. so let s begin. well, let s start first of all with the observer, which has the headline, pm to sacrifice a top official over partygate to save himself. if we start with you, jo, first of all. isn t the whole point that if there s any kind of criticism of the partygate shouldn t it be borisjohnson? there s no one else who can really take the fall really than the prime minister himself? ~ , ., ., ~ really than the prime minister himself? ~ , ., ., ~ himself? well you would think so, wouldn t that himself? well you would think so, wouldn t that would himself? well you would think so, wouldn t that would be himself? well you would think so, wouldn t that would be the - himself? well you would think so, wouldn t that would be the same i wouldn t that would be the same anywhere e
Putin is bluffing this war by putting his entire economy onto a war footing in a way that isnt sustainable for russia over the years he would have to continue it for. Its important that the west does not blink. When you see what has happened in kharkiv, the second biggest city in ukraine, it is because, im afraid, the civilised world took their eyes off the ball just for a little while, we saw how long it took to get that package through the us congress because of internal politics there, and this is the actual upshot, this you are blaming the us, then. Im not blaming them but the internal politics meant that the money did not flow in the way that in the uk were giving consistent amounts of money, then we increased it again, added an extra half a billion so we are giving them 3 billion this year, plus different packages. It is important that support is consistent because if you stop these are the problems you see. At the moment it is some villages on the outskirts of kharkiv, and it is
see 5trike5 705 and 805, and we don t very often see strikes that paralyse. i mean, i 5ee strikes that paralyse. i mean, i know in london there was a tube strike earlier this year which brought ab5olute chao5 strike earlier this year which brought ab5olute chaos to the capital, but i think as nigel 5aid capital, but i think as nigel said an hour ago, capital, but i think as nigel said an hourago, if capital, but i think as nigel said an hour ago, if you take away the right to strike, what have working people got left if they can t get anywhere on negotiation? i think although this is a sort of rhetoric that the sunday telegraph, where grant shapp5 has chosen to make it public if you like, that sort of audience that will applaud this, i think there will be quite a lot of people who are thinking, actually, my bills are going up, i m struggling to feed the family, heat the house, keep on top of everything, and my wages aren t going up, so if you take away that sort of union collective act