cinema. we will guide you through some of the new releases including loving. hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are robert fox, who s defence editor at the london evening standard, and the former conservative employment minister, esther mcvey. tomorrow s front pages, starting with the daily telegraph leads on analysis by the health service journal of plans to close a and e units in england in a bid to save money. it reports that up to one in six casualty departments face closure. health is also the focus of the times‘ lead story looking at health tourism. it reports that hospitals will be legally obliged to charge foreign patients before they re allowed access to nhs health care. the express also leads with the crackdown on health tourism writing that the responsibility will lie with hospitals to charge foreign nationals wanting medical treatment. rent revolution that s the headline on the front of the me
need children to be good at if we are to prosper long term as an economy. yes, we are looking very much for the education department to put out a strategy which will encourage people to enter teaching and also to retain teachers. one of the difficulties at the moment is we are not actually recruiting enough, we do not have enough places in initial teacher training we believe to get the number of teachers we need coming into the profession. so we need to look at the modelling to ensure that we are actually providing sufficient places. we also then need to make the roads into teaching and the ways of applying to come into teaching straightforward. why then the shortage in particular in these subjects, things like physics, mathematics and so on? quite simply we have had a shortfall in the subjects for several years and we have never been able to fill up and we have never been able to fill up that shortfall. and in fact, if we recruit every single graduate in physics and maths fo
obscure the larger truth. if the ideological gulf between the president and steve bannon is small. this is not a fight over ideas, it s a fight over who deserves credit for an election win. talk about missing the point. if the legacy of 2016 is not a single person, any person, it s a set of ideas, the ones that reflect the hopes and their needs and the fears and the aspirations of a badly mistreated american middle-clas middle-class. those voters came to the polls because they wanted real borders, higher wages, they were dispirited by the opioid epidemic, why wouldn t they be. they were sick of being lectured by political class of washington that despises them and holds them in contempt. they were the other country, but they had come to recognize that it is hard to make the rest of the world better and very easy to make it worse. above all, they voted for leadership that promised to put americans first above any foreign nation or domestic interest group. that is the real legacy of 20
good evening from our nbc news headquarters here in new york. day 557 of the trump administration, 99 days now until the mid term elections. and this might go down as the day we witnessed a change resulting in the new defense strategy. it is about something rudy giuliani has started to say. in the days after the presidential election donald trump s advisers had a message about contacts between russians and members of the campaign team. in the ensuing months as numerous such communications were revealed the message changed. there was no collusion with russia s effort to disrupt the election. on monday president trump s lawyer rudy giuliani presented a third line of defense, even if mr. trump did collude with the russians he committed no crime. my client didn t do it. even if he did it it is not a
crime. hacking is the crime. the president didn t hack. he didn t pay for the hacking he said on cnn. the article goes on. it is just a word choice, said a criminal law professor at georgeto
A roundtable ensemble discusses and debates the day s news.
it. but by then, it s already taken us back. that s what troubles me with how they re doing this. dana: juan, do you want to weigh in? juan: i would love to. first and foremost, there is no deal. cohen spoke in open court and said what he said. he has no deal with mueller. he has no deal with the southern district of new york s federal prosecutors. he made a plea deal because he understood and said he was guilty of having committed these crimes. and then named the president as someone who had directed him to make these payments. what we have learned today in terms of what american media, the national inquirer has done, that he was involved in an effort to cover up these things, jesse, in advance of the campaign, that these payments were made in cooperation with the media company to protect the president. interesting language in there. they said this was basically a tripwire so that they would learn of anybody who was co