nathalie tocci, former eu foreign policy advisor. the longtime capitol hill correspondent, and now washington post live anchor, leigh ann caldwell, and christopher steele, formerly head of the russia desk at mi6. hello, welcome to the progamme. the photographs speak for themselves. red tabs, yellow tabs, top secret documents, some of them marked hcs human confidential sources which the us government believe the former president donald trump was attempting to conceal. the fbi seized 33 boxes from mar a lago earlier this month, more than 100 classified documents, three of which were found mixed with other papers in his desk and not in locked storage as where they were supposed to be. in a 36 page filing to a federal judge, prosecutors said that at a june meeting the trump team had certified in writing that all remaining documents were contained in a single sealed envelope that was handed over. but in august and in a matter of hours the fbi had recovered twice as many docum
japanese prime minister, shinzo abe. he was shot dead at a political campaign event last week. hello, and welcome to our look ahead to what the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are the broadcaster david davies and anna mikhailova, who s the deputy political editor of the mail on sunday. welcome to you both. tomorrow s front pages, starting with. starting with the conservative leadership race, the ft says rishi sunak will only cut taxes once inflation is under control. the guardian focuses on the uber whistle blower who leaked thousands of company files to uk politicians to help change transport policy in london. the yorkshire post reports that the former chancellor, rishi sunak, will not make any immediate tax cuts if he becomes prime minister. the mail says foreign secretary liz truss urged mps to back her over rishi sunak. the times says mr sunak has vowed to cut taxes, but only once inflation has fallen. the paper also says support for liz truss is growing am
murder? or accidentally committing a? and he told my mom about dexter. you see the show dexter, this is all modeled after dexter. when you take a step back, you see this is a real man who s been murdered. it was darker than anyone knew. holy mackerel! everyone is on the edge of their seat. an underground parking garage. you re watching a violent attack, caught on tape. who is this? what is happening? or did it happen at all? movies, like that one. are by design deceptive. they blur words. but have you noticed, maybe it s all the technical doodads. the digital cameras. the reality pristine editing. some stories have claimed to be true. are not. anybody can manipulate reality, but sometimes what they say is true, isn t. sometimes fiction turns out to be fact. and then there are stories, just a few, in which fact and fiction hughes. and that s where we re going tonight. a twilight zone world. an illusion. and deception. and deceit. follow the howling wind, no
they re fully immunised against polio because the virus has been found in multiple sewage samples in london. hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are sebastian payne, who s the whitehall editor at the financial times, and martin lipton, the chief sports reporter at the sun. welcome to you both, gentleman. lets her show you a few glimpses of the front pages. industrial action makes the lead in several papers. for the guardian, it s the news that tomorrow s train strike action by the rmt union is going ahead. he times main story is the 7% pay deal for merseyrail workers. it says bosses will face pressure from unions wanting similar settlements. the daily mirror takes a different tack saying that if borisjohnson wants to reduce inflationary pay rises, he should start with that of some industry bosses. the daily express chooses to lead on the chancellor s comments that increasing the state pension won t fuel inflation. th