government s in panic. the country will pay a lasting price for putting is through this ideological experiment and will pay a lasting price through economic instability and rising mortgage rates for some time to come. and in other news. the head of the metropolitan police says hundreds of his officers should have been sacked for gross misconduct. civilians rescued in the ukrainian capital after an attack by russian kamikaze drones. scotland s first minister nicola sturgeon has set out her economic argument for leaving the uk, including plans move to a scottish currency when the time is right . the new chancellor, jeremy hunt, has scrapped almost all of the key measures in last month s controversial mini budget, in the latest in a series of government u turns. in an emergency statement, he abandoned indefinitely the planned 1p cut in the basic rate of income tax, that had been due to come in next year. help with energy bills will now only last until next april instead of for
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ensure there is trust and confidence in our national finances. that means decisions of eye watering difficulty. as her plans unravelled, liz truss kept a low profile in westminster leaving a cabinet colleague to step in. the prime minister is not under a desk. she. laughter. after a day in which the prime minister was barely seen and not heard, tonight she speaks exclusively to me for this programme. also on the programme. russian forces launch waves of drone attacks on the ukrainian capital kyiv. hundreds of metropolitan police are getting away with law breaking and misconduct says a new report. iamat i am at the roundhouse in london where the winner of the booker stay with us here on the bbc news channel 4 continuing coverage and analysis from our team of correspondents in the uk and around the world. good evening and welcome to the bbc news at ten. the prime minister liz truss has said she is sorry and accepts repsonsibility for mistakes in her economic plan as the maj
aggressive direction and it follows the opening of the ruling party congress in beijing where he addressed the issue of taiwan, which china claims as part of its territory. hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are rachel cunliffe who s the senior associate editor at the new statesman, and eleanor langford, the political reporter for politics home. tomorrow s front pages, starting with. all of tomorrow s papers focus on the biggest u turn in british political history, let s start with, the ft focuses on one of the biggest u turns in recent british history and says truss fights for survival as business chiefs and plotters pile on pressure. the government faces decisions of eye watering difficulty as he speaks economic stability. the guardian features a photo of us smiling chancellor after the paper calls and astounding you on tax. the times features a grim looking front bench with the headline, £5,000 fuel bills. humil