i am going to break the number one rule of making news. not a huge amount has happened today, but that in itself is news. it is certainly a change. my feeling on day three of the rishi sunak era is thatjust, the thing is that we re talking about feel much more normal already, like classic politics. and i think they will look far as mission, not accomplished, but the start of the project is how they want it to be, which is, to use the line from michael gove, the new levelling secretary, boring is back. and just thinking of it in news terms, we have spent, those of us here at westminster, running around like mad things for quite a while, and today, i was on the radio briefly this morning but that was it because there has not really been any news here. and it has gone from gale force to the most gentle of breezes. and yet there are still things happening. so, today, the suella braverman reappointment controversy rumbles on. with the opposition parties trying to keep that alive.
and the british fashion designer vivienne westwood a key figure in the rebellious punk movement of the 1970s has died in london. she was 81 years old hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are aubrey allegretti, who s political correspondent at the guardian and asa bennett, who s a former number 10 speechwriter. the financial times leads with the breaking news of football legend pele s death as they bid him farewell on their front page. the real goat reads the front page of the star as they highlight the legacy of pele, the man they ve dubbed the greatest footballer ever to lace up a pair of boots . the independent has gone with the picture posted on pele s instagram page, liked now over seven million times. and the express sums up the news with the headline pele, king of the beautiful game dies aged 82 . they also highlight the ongoing strikes with comment from the defence secretary, ben wallace, who says th
that that the right time. pele knew very well that that 1970 world cup was his last chance to win the world cup, to cement last chance to win the world cup, to cement brazil s name as the football nation cement brazil s name as the football nation and cement brazil s name as the football nation and to barely enter the pantheon of the gods. so as many of his team mates told me, he was really his team mates told me, he was really a his team mates told me, he was really a dead set on winning that world really a dead set on winning that world cup, and as you know, brazil, pele world cup, and as you know, brazil, pete did world cup, and as you know, brazil, pete did it world cup, and as you know, brazil, pete did it in world cup, and as you know, brazil, pele did it in such wonderful style. three pele did it in such wonderful style. three delirious weeks in mexico, defeating italy 4 1. your description of him being careful of his energy when he burst into games
covid. i knowi meet again and we did. covid. i know i speak for other prime ministers, ex prime ministers, she comforted us and guided us as well as the nation because she had the patient s and sense of history to see troubles come and go and that disasters are seldom as bad as they seem and it was that indomitable ability, that humour, that were cathy and that sense of history that made her elizabeth the great. work ethic. i should add one final quality, which was her humility, hersingle humility, her single bioelectric fire humility, hersingle bioelectric fire tupperware using refusal to be grand and, unlike us politicians, without convoys, as a direct eyewitness account tell you that she drove herself, in her own car, with no detect lives or bodyguards, at alarming speeds over the scottish landscape, to the total amazement of the tourists we encountered and it is that indomitable spirit with which she created the modern constitutional monarchy, an institution so str
welcome to westminster, where people continue to queue to pay their respects to her majesty the queen. the queue is now officially closed and no more people are now allowed to join the end of the queue, so the people who are now filing past me are some of the last who will have that moment in westminster hall in that historic building, nearly 1000 years old, that has witnessed so much history, witnessing it once again, these are some of the last people to be able to file past her majesty the queen, the late queen who has been lying in state for nearly four and a half days. that will then end at 6:30am many of these people behind me, they have started at 4pm and they continue to file past and this is we are right in the middle of the snake, that moment where people have do zigzag very compressed in order to facilitate so many people, thousands of people, tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands, hundreds of thousands of people. we believe at least half a million people will ma