your day? fix. are still standing. what was your day? your day? a little smidgen optimistic your day? a little smidgen optimistic decompression | optimistic decompression between two of the conferences, labour and conservative, and then the s&p tomorrow and there is still the treasury union congress rearranged in the morning a little after that. they were both extraordinary. labour was extraordinary and newsworthy. it was kinda quite serene. it was a party that was upbeat. they weren t buyers breaking out in the corners or political fights that. frankly for labour they have been frequently in the past. for the opposite reason, the conservatives, there were political scraps breaking out very visibly in public. then, that kind of briefing that was going on and private from seniorfigures down was going on and private from senior figures down was also volcanic as well. you have a conservative party to put it at its gentlest is not at ease with itself with a new prime minister
the school district in uvalde has suspended its entire police force responsible for campus security. at ten o clock, reeta chakrabarti will be here with a full round up of the day s news. first, newscast. newscast. newscast from the bbc. hello. it s chris in the streets in south london. james cook, scotland editor, here in the studio. and it s alex forsyth, also in the studio. so, chris, you are currently in a street, but you ve just come back from the labour and conservative conferences. i m amazed you re still standing, albeit in a street. i mean, how were they? what was your take on the whole thing? it s a little smidgeon, alex, of domestic kind of decompression between two of the conferences, labour and conservative, and then the snp, which i m heading to tomorrow. and then there s still the tuc, the trades union congress, rearranged after the mourning period to come, a little after that. how were they? they were both extraordinary and for completely opposite reasons. so,
the chief, excuse me, the permanent secretary of the treasury, tom scholar, again, because he thought he d probably give him advice that he didn t want to hear. they were just so determined to get these tax cuts through. but i would say and this is a sort of sort of slight counterpoint to what beth was saying, that over many years, her opponents have underestimated her. and, you know, i mean, you know, let s be absolutely clear. she did really badly in the first round, for example, of the parliamentary vote. she may have only ended up with about a third of mps supporting her, but she got through to the final round and she basically humiliated rishi sunak within a couple of weeks. but. ijust but all the way along her career, basically, particularly men, have underestimated her and mostly she s seen them all off. so i m not saying, however, that she isn t now in the deepest hole any prime minister has ever been in, because i do think she s basically in the deepest hole any prime minist