long running dispute about parking. wikileaks founder can be sent to the united states after the home secretary approved his deportation. he has 14 days to appeal. it s been the hottest day of the year so far in london in the southeast of england, as heat warnings are issued. and coming up in half an hour, i ll bejoined by the international correspondence panel to discuss rwanda, ukraine and the resignation of lord geidt. hello and a warm welcome to bbc news. borisjohnson is in kyiv on his second visit in a show of support for ukraine in the war against russia. the prime minister met president zelensky and announced a major training programme for ukrainian forces. downing street says it will have potential to train up to 2000 soldier 10,000 soldiers every 120 days. translation: we do not have any doubt that - ukraine s going to prevail, so we are preparing for postwar reconstruction after our victory. i thank you for this. i thank you for your help in terms of reconstructi
by the union leadership. half of britain s rail lines will be closed when workers walk out on tuesday, thursday and saturday. these strikes are not only a bid to derail reforms that are critical to the network s future and designed to inflict damage at the worst possible time. iam in i am in the devon constituency which has been conservative for 100 years. we will hear for the labour candidate where it may not be so certain that it will stay that way. hot and getting even hotter britain s heatwave expected to peak tomorrow with temperatures of 3a degrees celsius. good afternoon. borisjohnson s ethics adviser, who resigned last night, has accused the prime minister of putting him in an impossible and odious position. in his resignation letter, lord geidt said the prime minister had asked him to consider measures, understood to be on a trade issue, which risked a deliberate and purposeful breach of the ministerial code. lord geidt s letter also says he came close to quitting
is where we will see the hot conditions. split fortunes by tomorrow afternoon. this is a closer look. highest temperature in scotland likely to be 21 degrees in aberdeen. quite windy up to the north west as well and northern ireland up to around 18. now we have this band of cloud and patchy rain and to the south of that, aside from dismissed and mark there will be lots of sunshine. east wales, the midlands, the west country mist and murk. tomorrow night will be very warm and muggy in the south. to the south of this front. to the north, a cooler and fresher start to saturday morning. al around the line of the weather front on saturday we could see some heavy thundery rain and for most it will be a cooler day, but heat will cling on in the south east corner. 27 to maybe 29 degrees but it won t cling on for long. all of us cooler and fresher by sunday and by this point there could be some heavy thundery rain in the south. lord geidt. cooler and fresher sounds good to me. h
a breach of the minesterial code. tonight with the context, the spectator s deputy political editor katy balls and the republican strategist doug heye. hello, welcome to the programme. we have lived through an era of record low interest rates. for years, it was cheap to borrow, while the money put away in savings accounts earned us very little in return. but things are changing. today, the us federal reserve set out an increasingly aggressive approach to monetary policy as it confronts the highest inflation in the united states forfour decades. in the last hour, it raised interest rates by 0.75% which is the biggest jump in rates since 1994. and that has implications for all of us. here s the chair of the federal reserve, jerome powell. the current picture it s plain to see. the labour market is extremely tight, and inflation is much too high. against this backdrop, today the federal open market committee raised its interest rate by 0.75% in anticipation of ongoing increases