the sunny weather, temperatures will lift to 27, 20 eight celsius in eastern scotland, 27 may be across northern ireland again. going to be cooler around the eastern coasts with the breeze coming in off the sea but we could see temperatures 36 celsius towards parts of the south west midlands in the afternoon and it will be hotter as we go into friday and indeed saturday. the potentially something cooler next week. thanks matt. and that s bbc news at ten on wednesday the 10th of august. there s more analysis of the day s main stories on newsnight with kirsty wark, which isjust getting under way on bbc two. the news continues here on bbc one, as now it s time to join our colleagues across the nations and regions for the news where you are. but from the ten team, it s goodnight. hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are sam lister, political editor of the daily express and kevin schofield, political editor of huffpost uk. to
raymond briggs has died at the age of 88. he was best known for his 1978 classic, the snowman. his family say he ll be deeply missed. hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are sam lister, political editor of the daily express and kevin schofield, political editor of huffpost uk. tomorrow s front pages, starting with, rocketing energy bills lead many front pages the i says energy firms are being threatened with higher taxes if they don t investment more in renewables and north sea gas. former prime minister gordon brown has told the guardian energy companies that can t offer lower bills should be temporarily taken in to public ownership, to tackle the cost of living crisis. meanwhile the daily star reports comments from consumer expert martin lewis, who told the bbc that what he called a zombie government must provide more help. the daily telegraph claims one spark could cause destruction , with the met office war
is already facing winter pressures with people being told to avoid a&e. the i leads on the tory leadership campaign truss blow: voters want hand outs, not tax cuts its headline. in the guardian, nhs cannot be put on a pedestal quoting after prime ministerial candidate liz truss, who the paper says called for cuts. the daily mail tomorrow has an attack on nhs, accusing the health service of spending £1 million on woke groups for their staff. on the front page of the mirror, fergie s case for the defence after former manchester united manager sir alex ferguson testified in the ryan giggs trial. the express says the migrant crisis to last at least five more years. and finally, the financial times weekend pages carry a warning about a market rally from the bankers of wall street. do you want to kick us off with the front page of the times? michael gove bows out with a potshot of liz truss. it gove bows out with a potshot of liz truss. , . , ., truss. it is a
which isjust getting underway on bbc two. the news continues here on bbc one, as now it s time to join our colleagues across the nations and regions for the news where you are, but from the ten team, it s goodnight. hello, and welcome to our look ahead to what the papers will be 6bringing us tomorrow. with me are sian griffiths, who s the education editor at the sunday times, and the broadcaster and journalist james lewer. good evening to both of you, let me bring you the front pages, if you re watching us at home. let s start with the i, that says liz truss is to be told by the office for budget responsibility that she has billions of pounds less than she thought to fund her promised tax cuts. the ft has another story about the frontrunner to be the next prime minister, saying she has city of london s top regulators in her sights with an immediate review if she wins. now to results day as the daily telegraph have a picture ofjoyful students celebrating with the headline th
through tax cuts. now, this is coming from sustained criticism in recent weeks, the proposal because giving support for people with the cost of through tax cuts doesn t target the hardest because low paid parents, pensioners do not pay the kind of taxes that she s talking about cutting. it is very ill conceived idea of counterproposals made which are all about how you target this money on those most affected by energy bills and it really is people and low salaryjobs, pensioners who really need this extra support and for thoseis need this extra support and for those is going to be existential. but the story from the guardian adds another dimension into the criticism and proposals, which original analysis by the guardian suggests actually, the tax cut sheets promising the be around £30 billion, £50 billion and it is a huge amount of money and it s not going to age the staff if you re interested in economic growth, makes more sense to give support to the least affluent househo