Transcripts For BBCNEWS Breakfast 20240716

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The week across the country, but get prepared because there is some pretty windy weather to come this week. I will have all the details right here on breakfast. It is monday 17 september. Our top story the Prime Minister has told the bbc that the uk faces a choice between the brexit deal she negotiates with brussels or no deal at all. In an interview with panorama, theresa may also criticises proposals for the irish border which have been put forward by some brexiteers. But the former foreign secretary Boris Johnson claims that failing to resolve the border issue could lead to a total write off of brexit, as our Political Correspondent chris mason explains. You know how it is. Your call is important to us, and all that guff. And then you are kept waiting. Thank you. Hold music plays. Hello, jean claude. Hello. Im very well thank you. I hope you manage to have a good summer break. The brexit negotiations as youve never seen the brexit negotiations as youve never seen them before. The Prime Minister talking to the president of the european commission, jean claude juncker, panorama given a glimpse behind the scenes, before being shooed out. In an interview with nick robinson, the Prime Minister says mps will face a simple choice. Her plan or nothing. I want to be clear whether you are saying, i think you are, my deal or no deal. The deal. As i say, i believe well get a good deal. Well bring them back from the eu negotiations and put that to parliament. I think that the alternative to that will be not having a deal, because i dont think there will be. A, i dont think there will be. A, i dont think the negotiations will have that deal, and b, we are living on 21 march 2019. Last deal, and b, we are living on 21 march 20 19. Last week, deal, and b, we are living on 21 march 2019. Last week, conservative brexiteers opposed to the Prime Ministers so called called chequers plan set out their own ideas, including using technology to avoid checks here at the border between Northern Ireland and the republic. But, mrs may argues, they are a nonstarter. The only proposal thats been put forward that delivers on not having that hard border and ensures that we dont carve up the United Kingdom is the chequers plan. The only proposal, so these are the plans that we saw this week, they dont do it . No, because what many of these other plans are based on is moving the border. You dont solve theissue moving the border. You dont solve the issue of no hard border by having a hard border 20 kilometres inside Northern Ireland or 20 kilometres inside ireland. It is still a hard border. But, in his weekly newspaper column which doubles as a stage where his alternative outlook, the former foreign secretary borisjohnson argues that it is the governments approach to the irish border that leaves the uk, as he puts it, hitting full throttle for the ditch with a total write off of brexit. It was already noisy, and it is getting louder. And you can see more of that interview with theresa may on tonights panorama, at 8 30pm on bbc one. A new report has warned that the government is running out of time to implement a successful brexit. Downing street says its planning is far advanced, but the institute for government says no deal preparations have been left too late. It also says, if a deal is agreed, the 21 month transition period might not be long enough. The timetable was always incredibly demanding, and what has happened recently has made it much easier, the fact that we are much behind schedule. Normally if you are doing a project like this you would allow ten yea rs a project like this you would allow ten years to the legislation and implementation, and you would actually know what you are doing at each stage. So you would have closed off your options. The government is still running three and trying to do it all in two years, or maybe maximum 3. 5. That is pretty demanding. South china is being hit by typhoon mangkhut, with winds of up to 100 mph and torrential rain. Chinese state media says two people have been killed. In a moment we will speak to Howard Johnson about the devastation left behind in the philippines. But first, lets go to our china correspondent robin brant, who is in hong kong. Robin, good to see you. And hong kong has felt the effect is of typhoon mangkhut. Yes, it did, very severely. Lets quickly look at the mainland. Ithink severely. Lets quickly look at the mainland. I think the chinese authorities managed to see off what could have been a far more devastating storm. They moved more than 2. 5 Million People away from the path of the storm are the death toll is very low. Just two people have been killed as a result of typhoon mangkhut. Here in hong kong, it is now make safe and clean up operation. This is a playground by the South China Sea side. We were here last night, trees, benches and debris everywhere. Foreign and plastic bottles brought up by the storm surge, and we are 30 metres from where the sea lion is, so it shows you how powerful it is. Amazing that no one lost their life sealine. This is a place very used to dealing with these tycoons but when the signal went up to ten, thatis but when the signal went up to ten, that is the maximum on the sale doormat scale, people knew how serious mangkhut was going to be. Most people stayed indoors. The big problem now is clearing up the debris, the shattered glass, dealing with the trees that have fallen down. But it is back to business, really. Schools are closed today but people are trying to get to work, some clambering over trees on the pavement. I think the most serious impact, though, is not here. It is actually in the philippines. Thank you for bringing us up to date. That is the picture in hong kong. Howard johnson is in the philippines. What damage has typhoon mangkhut caused there . Yes, iam yes, i am here yes, iam here in yes, i am here in one of the worst hit provinces. Yesterday we took to the road to head to the coastal town, and on the way we saw fields telephone posts, electricity cables down, forests ripped to shreds, buildings flattened. When we got here, we met a gentleman we had spoken two days before the storm had hit. He said he was going to take shelter in a nearby Emergency Shelter in a nearby Emergency Shelter and pray to god that his house wasnt hit. When we went back to see him, his house had been flattened. 750 houses in the town revisited had been flattened. Today details are emerging elsewhere of a Mining Community that has been badly hit. At least 3a miners confirmed dead at the moment and that number is expected to rise. Around 30 people still missing. A search and rescue effort is going in this province in the north of the country. We heard a landslide came down from the mountain and hit a refuge, upper house which had been converted to travel. Lots of people got swe pt converted to travel. Lots of people got swept away from this landslide, and the president will fly there later to help out converted to a chapel. Thank you very much for that. We will have the very latest on that throughout the morning. North carolinas governor has warned that the risk to life is rising in the state after storm florence dropped record amounts of rain. Residents are being told to stay off the roads as the risk from flash floods remains high. At least 16 people have been killed. Thousands remain in Emergency Shelters or are without power. Wiltshire police have called off a Major Incident in salisbury, where two people fell ill at an italian restaurant. Roads were cordoned off and paramedics in protective suits were deployed in case it was linked to the recent novichok attack in the city. Police in wiltshire say they took all precautions after the pair fell ill last night. A new way of measuring poverty in the uk is being proposed, to include the unavoidable costs that some people face. Factors such as childcare or the impact of disability should be taken into account, according to the social Metrics Commission. There has been a severe squeeze on the budgets of further education colleges in england, according to a new report. The institute for fiscal studies says that money for 16 18 year old students has dropped in real terms by 8 since 2010. The government says it is protecting funding in cash terms for the next two years. Motorists are being issued fresh warnings about the danger of driving too close to the car in front. Highways england is launching a campaign to highlight that tailgating is the cause of one in eight road serious injuries or deaths. According to road safety research, tailgating can also lead to more trafficjams, caused by the Ripple Effect of drivers braking sharply to avoid a collision. Game of thrones could match its own record tonight for the most wins at the Us Television awards, the emmys. The ceremony celebrates its 70th anniversary tonight. British hopes include nominations for thandie newton, Benedict Cumberbatch and vanessa kirby. Sandra oh is the first woman of asian descent to be nominated for best actress, for her role in killing eve. Iam i am really looking forward to that. It is quite hard for me, because i ama it is quite hard for me, because i am a big greys anatomy fan, and she was one of the main characters in g reys was one of the main characters in greys anatomy. Have you watched it . Not yet. I still havent watched the bodyguard you are into it at havent seen last nights. Bodyguard you are into it at havent seen last nightslj bodyguard you are into it at havent seen last nights. I had extra information. Stop do not do it. Do you know, ive only seen one 01 it. Do you know, ive only seen one or two of game of thrones. It. Do you know, ive only seen one or two of game of throneslj it. Do you know, ive only seen one or two of game of thrones. I have seen one or two of game of thrones. I have seen one episode and there was so much violence, i stopped. Talking of thrones. That is the reason i am here. I am thrones. That is the reason i am here. Iam here thrones. That is the reason i am here. I am here to do a job. Simon yates wins the vuelta a espana. Three british cyclists won the seasons grand tours. It is the first time that has happened. Yates rode into madrid alongside his team mates and his twin brother, adam. Hejoins chris froome and Geraint Thomas as 2018s champions. Lewis hamilton cruised to victory in the Singapore Grand Prix, to strengthen his hold on this years formula one drivers championship. With six races to go, he is a0 points clear of Sebastian Vettel, who finished third. Manuel pellegrini gets the perfect 65th birthday present. His west ham side deliver a First League Win of the season, beating everton to move off the bottom of the table. And proof that it is never too late. American Angela Stanford cries tears ofjoy as she wins the evian championship, in her 76th major appearance. I would just like to say, she is only a0. Not that old. I would just like to say, she is only 40. Not that old. But you look at lots of sports people and it is considered old, but it is positively youthful. She has got years ahead of her to keep on winning, like us all. But mac when we get to the papers in a little bit, i can tell you britains oldest person is 112. I will save the secret. What is the secret to old age according to grace . Known to have friends as amazing grace. Here is carol with a look at this mornings weather. Amazing matt. The secret to old age is not 3am alarm calls, i will tell you that. A new week begins. Not a bad start weatherwise for much of the uk. That is the change. We will not see the Severe Weather we have seen not see the Severe Weather we have seenin not see the Severe Weather we have seen in other parts of the world, but probably the windiest spell of autumn so faras but probably the windiest spell of autumn so far 3s we see but probably the windiest spell of autumn so far as we see a but probably the windiest spell of autumn so far as we see a couple of deep and intensive low pressure system is heading our way. The first will come later today, linked into what was a hurricane, hurricane helene, the cloud from it has been revolving around the atlantic for the past few days, slowly creeping towards us. It will gradually work its way in as we go into the night and on the southern flank of it we will see some of the strongest winds. Already extending into cloud in the uk, so a great start to your monday morning, but most places dry. 17 or 18 monday morning, but most places dry. 17 or18 in monday morning, but most places dry. 17 or 18 in the south but a few splashes of rain developing in the northern rush hour for Northern Ireland in western and northern parts of scotland. Most will stay dry, a few showers in the north west england through the middle part of the day, where the breeze will be steadily picking up. Nothing too u ntowa rd steadily picking up. Nothing too untoward by this stage, persistent rain in the highlands and islands of scotland, 0rkney and shetland as well. Temperatures 17 or 18 degrees inafew well. Temperatures 17 or 18 degrees in a few spots. Many parts of scotla nd in a few spots. Many parts of scotland remaining dry. Still some hazy sunshine towards the east and across england and wales, the odd isolated shower in the west and most places will be dry. In the midlands, east anglia and southern england, after a grey starts on monday, blue skies this afternoon. Temperatures could hit 22 to 25 degrees. Nothing too untoward in the wind at this stage, but they will pick up. Storm helene pushing its way in, squeezing its way up the west, so looking at wind gusts through the night. Covered by a net Office Warning where we are marked in yellow, we could see winds of 60 mph, maybe a little bit more. Gales in the south and east, lighter winds in scotland but more persistent rain overnight and turning west around irish sea coast is as we see the stronger winds gradually pushing their way northwards overnight and into the morning. Temperatures tonight, a very mild night indeed. 13 to 18 degrees to take it into tomorrow morning. A wet and windy start across the far north of england, Northern England and through scotland. Rainey in the south, sunshine and a few showers but a blustery day across the country, and staying on the warm side. Temperatures in the high teens, low to mid 20s. 25 or 26 possible across east anglia and the south east. A quick heads up through into wednesday, is a potent area of low pressure works its way in. The exact position is uncertain but across scotland, Northern Ireland and Northern England, wind gusts in excess of 60 or 70 mph. 0f Northern England, wind gusts in excess of 60 or 70 mph. Of course, i will keep you updated. It is definitely autumnal weather, isnt it . Very much so. Lets take a look at todays papers. The former foreign secretary and current Daily Telegraph columnist borisjohnson has repeated his criticism of theresa mays plan to resolve the irish border problem post brexit. Victoria beckham is on the front pages of some of the papers as well. The guardian has a picture that really illustrates the power of typhoon mangkhut, and also reports that councils are developing computer based algorithms to predict young people at risk of child abuse. To predict which young people are at risk of child abuse. The reason Victoria Beckham is on the front pages is that she is at London Fashion week for the first time in about ten years. Her clothing label has been losing about £a000 a day at currently. Apparently. The daily express reports on a major study that suggests elderly people in good health should not take an aspirin a day. And the sun is reporting that zoe ball has been offered chris evans slot on the radio 2 breakfast show, but Nothing Official has been announced yet. Iama big i am a big fan of zoe ball and i would love it if this was true. She is apparently in advanced negotiations. Kylie at glastonbury yes and yesterday, the scottish conservative leader Ruth Davidson gave a very honest newspaper interview about her struggles with depression and self harm and shes been on twitter since, saying how much it helps to talk about Mental Health. Many people think shes been brave to admit to these problems, and well be talking more about self harm later on the show. Lets take a look at the inside of todays papers. I have got this brilliant picture from inside the times today and we will be talking about him quite a bit this morning because he has an incredible achievement at the berlin marathon, breaking the world marathon, breaking the world marathon record. His aim, and it has been to the last few years, to run a marathon under two hours. You know how ambitious sporting people are, trying to run and it a marathon in under three, he was so close in berlin, at the break he raced was fantastic, it was with a series of pacemakers who kept him going up into the last kind of five minute as one ally 55 he looked as though he was going to do it and about point he went faster 1 hour 55. Can you imagine running at that pace and then going faster . He ended up with just one minute over. He won the marathon last year, three years ago, sorry, and he ran so fast his trainers fell apart. He finished the race with the insoles of both of his shoes flapping around his ankles. He literally burned his own shoes off you were talking about this amazing grace. 112, she says the secret is, for the last 60 years, she has had a dram of whiskey every single day, thatis dram of whiskey every single day, that is the past six days, and her friends put her long life down to having a night of famous grouse. 0ther having a night of famous grouse. Other versions are allowed, of course. She was born on september 16, 1906, five years after the death of queen victoria. Fabulous. Still going strong. Across bbc news this week, were marking six months to go until the uk leaves the European Union. One of the things were doing here on breakfast is looking at some of the most common questions, including will brexit make the uk better or worse off . Stephs at the university of salford to explain. Good morning. Warning to you. Look at this setup, we have it going on, some wonderful guests too. Good morning. Warning just beyond one of our buildings were you guys are this morning, we have gathered people from all different walks of life morning will find out what they think about how wrecks it is going. We have got some of the students here and i should warn you it is freshers week so these guys have come back to university and ryan, it is your first day . How is it, tell me what is happening with brexit, you are studying politics, iview . |j ama you are studying politics, iview . |j am a leaver but i think it has been handled very badly and there is no real plan from either of the main parties and nobody can agree with each other. You think we should leave . Each other. You think we should leave . I still think we should, i just think it has been handled badly and it has to end. But you didnt vote, because you are not old enough . Nora. Nora, i didnt. But if you could vote now, he would leave . If you could vote now, he would leave . I would leave. He if you could vote now, he would leave . Iwould leave. He also if you could vote now, he would leave . I would leave. He also did not leave . I was old enough to vote so not leave . I was old enough to vote so if not leave . I was old enough to vote so if i was to vote again, if a second referendum came, i would read up second referendum came, i would read up about it as much as i could and get educated but i think at the minute, you have to get behind the government and let them do theirjob and get the best deal you can get, there is nothing more you can do. And you wanted to leave too . |j there is nothing more you can do. And you wanted to leave too . I did but i would have the chance to change my mind i would, because i would vote to leaver if we had i would vote to leaver if we had i would vote to remain. Interesting, thank you very much, enjoy the week. There are so many different questions to answer and many people scratching their heads trying to work out what it means that the country and what it means for our finances, how much money have already spent on brexit as well . Chris mason has been using a bit of Virtual Reality to try and explain it to us. Since the referendum the government has allocated an extra £3. 7 billion 01 so has allocated an extra £3. 7 billion or so to prepare for brexit. 0f that, the largest sum to date, £a55 million, has gone to the home 0ffice, million, has gone to the home office, the department with the job of creating a new immigration system. The department of the environment, food and Rural Affairs has been given £377 million, that is to replace the used policies of things like fishing and farming. Also the cost of two brand spanking new departments, they gobble up nearly £a81 million. Yes, the result of paperwork to do and someone has to do it. Then, there is that brexit divorce bill for the uks show of eu commitment bay before it decided to leave, that would be up to £39 billion. So, splitting up is pricey. But those in favour of leaving savers cost is a relatively small compare to the money that could be saved when the uk goes its own way. And that is where this bus comes in. During the referendum campaigns some brexit supporters claimed the uk spent 300 and £50 million a week to brussels, the equivalent of about £18 billion a year. But once you ta ke £18 billion a year. But once you take into account the rebate, the uks discount to its eus membership fee and money spent to brussels brackets pa rcelled up fee and money spent to brussels brackets parcelled up and sent back to peifer things in the uk, the figure is more like £9 billion, a more realistic estimate of the cash that could theoretically be saved and spent on schools or the nhs. But with six months to go, there is still pitfalls of unknowns. What will our future relationship with the eu look like bucketfulls. While we stick close to its rules or not at what deals will be done around the world, and while the Withdrawal Agreement is signed up to in the next few months and with it a transition period were not a lot changes for the best part of two yea rs changes for the best part of two years after brexit in march next year. Given this sizeable collection of questions and not many answers, one of the hardest things to predict is what will happen to the economy after march 29 next you . Any disruption could wipe out the money saved from eu membership. Back in 2016, the office for budget responsibility predicted that borrowing would increase by £15 billion by 2021 as a result of leaving, that is partly down to predicted lower productivity growth and also reduced migration. The uk walks away with next to nothing agreed, and no deal brexit in the jargon, but will throb even more questions about what our future might hold. That will throw up. Chris masons thought and another chris masons thought and another chris is here, chris morris. It has been yourjob is part of the bbc wills reality check to work out what it met is going on morris. Do you think we are at a chance at a stage where people understand what is happening . When we had the referendum certainly no one in the country, journalists, politicians, anyone, understood hercog located this would be and now i think people are quite confused because of the complexity. There are so because of the complexity. There are so many Different Things happening, the negotiation and legislation going through parliament and where are we going, where will we get to, and no one can give clear answers it is an incredibly confusing process. This report we have from the institute of government, which is, today, calls it the biggest implementation of government and generations. It does not say so but realistically probably since World War Two this is the biggest overall project the government has had to try to push through and it is having to do incredible quickly. And given that, the point that is made by the institute report, it feels like we are not ready. Time is running out. It is the problem. If there was to be no deal, no deal and a Withdrawal Agreement, this report looks at ten broad areas of policy and has a traffic light system, nine of them it reckons will not be ready and businesses have not been given enough time to prepare for brexit. Behind the scenes, of the big businesses have had nondisclosure agreements with government and have been discussing things behind the scenes but if you are a Small Business you dont have the money to put into it, to prepare for what might happen, we dont know what might happen, we dont know what it is but lets spend money anyway, Small Businesses cannot do that and were i have been around the country people said the big problem has been the uncertainty where people do not know what is happening and if we do not know what is happening then how can we planned route . It isnt the people feel it may be a good or bad thing, the fact is that the moment we dont know. And you have your students that voted leave, the problem as it is being handled badly and it has been handled so collocated to do, i mean, people have an analogy of trying to boil an egg. It people have an analogy of trying to boilan egg. It has people have an analogy of trying to boil an egg. It has been so complicated. 40 plus years of legislation that we are trying to pick apart quickly and it is difficult. Chris, the gifford joining us, families arejoining us as well who we will go to through the morning and we will get all of their points we will get discussions of whether it will be good to leave 01 of whether it will be good to leave or not. Thank you forjoining us. Lets get to the news and weather wherever you are this morning. Good morning, im asad ahmad. The number of people in prison for far right terror offences has gone up nearly fivefold injust two years. Well, one of those in prison is darren osborne, serving life for ploughing into muslim worshippers in Finsbury Park last year. He killed one man and injured several others after being radicalised online. Figures also show that, for the first time in a decade, the number of white people arrested on suspicion of terror offences outnumbers asian suspects. As a new charity, berkshire Deaf Childrens Society launches, theres concern about the provision given to children with hearing difficulties in our schools. Figures show that nearly eight out of ten deaf children attend schools where theres no specialist provisions for them at all, which may explain why many of them fail to achieve less than five gcses. Well, the department for education says it wants to ensure deaf children continue to get the support thats right for them, and it is for local authorities to deploy appropriate staff. You may think a tree is, like, a tree. But there are some that have a special story or history attached to them, and so it makes them a bit special, which is why three trees in london and the Home Counties have made the shortlist for tree of the year. This one is the verdun horse chestnut in st albans. Its the last tree standing on the battlefield of verdun from the first world war. This is a a50 year old oak in tottenham. And this is a twisting ancient mulberry from john keats garden in hampstead. The Woodland Trust want the public to vote for a winner. The winning tree gets £1,000. Lets have a look at the travel situation now. Theres a good service on the tubes this morning and on the roads, at highbury corner, there are lane restrictions in place due to gas works. And beckenham high street is closed westbound for works between kelsey park road and village way. Lets have a check on the weather now with kate. Morning. Quite a cloudy but mild start out there this morning, temperatures overnight did not drop much below the high teens celsius so it is quite warm and it will remain warm through the day. Later on we start to see some brighter skies but it remains rather breezy and in fact the breeze will continue to strengthen as we had through the course of the day and the cloud from this morning will be robbery northwards, plenty of sunshine later, the wind switches, a drier aircoming infrom later, the wind switches, a drier air coming in from the south meaning the temperature will get warmer, 25 celsius the maximum and overnight the wind will continue to strengthen, it will be a very windy night, starting off clear than morkel after the second part of the night, staying dry and mild, the minimum temperature between 15 and 18 celsius so a cloudy and windy start tomorrow morning, quite a gusty wind through the course of tuesday, it doesnt drop through because of the day either, temperatures still impressive in the low 20s in the wind starts to fall lighter as we have through wednesday but it is still breezy and remaining warm. Im back with the latest from the bbc london newsroom in half an hour. Dont forget vanessa on the brea kfast dont forget vanessa on the Breakfast Programme on the radio, talks about brexit. Hello, this is breakfast, with dan walker and naga munchetty. The Prime Minister has told the bbc that the uk faces a choice between the brexit deal she negotiates with brussels, or no deal at all. In an interview with panorama, theresa may also criticises proposals for the irish border which have been put forward by some brexiteers. The former foreign secretary borisjohnson claims this morning that failing to resolve the border issue could lead to a total write off of brexit. But mrs may says the choice is simple her deal or no deal. I believe well get a good deal. Well bring that back from the eu negotiations and put that to parliament. I think that the alternative to that will be not having a deal, a new report has warned that the government is running out of time to implement a successful brexit. The institute for government says no deal preparations have been left too late, and the proposed transition period might not be long enough to finalise a future trading relationship. Here is the bbcs reality check correspondent chris morris. South china is being hit by typhoon mangkhut, with winds of up to 100 mph and torrential rain. About 2. 5 Million People have been evacuated from their homes in guangdong province. Chinese state media says two people have been killed. Wiltshire police have called off a Major Incident in salisbury, where two people fell ill at an italian restaurant. Roads were cordoned off and paramedics in protective suits were deployed, in case it was linked to the recent novichok attack in the city. Police in wiltshire say they took all precautions after the pair fell ill last night. There has been a severe squeeze on the budgets of further education colleges in england, according to a new report. The institute for fiscal studies says that money for 16 18 year old students has dropped in real terms by 8 since 2010. The government says it is protecting funding in cash terms for the next two years. A baby giraffe from one of the worlds rarest species has taken his first steps in bedfordshire. No moving pictures . That would have been so. A wobbly giraffe is exactly what you need on a monday morning. It appears happy and healthy, we have been told. It is thought there are only 1600 of the species living in the wild, making them one of the rarest mammals in them one of the rarest mammals in the world. The calf is thought to be female, and she is six foot tall already. Unit she has not yet been given a name. Dont you just love spindly legged creatures when they are babies . And they are all wobbly like bambi. One time we were staying on the edge of a reserve, and we arrive there, and the guy looking after us said i know you one near a nature reserve, but please dont expect to see any animals, because it is very rare, and as he was talking, six giraffes came wandering, including a little spindly one. One of those life moments, a bit like simon yates yesterday. Now, that is a life moment. Cycling history made. And such a lovely moment for him. Simon yates won vuelta a espana. British riders have taken all three grand tours this season. He rode into madrid alongside his Mitchelton Scott team mates, including his twin brother, adam. It was a three week race, and in the closing stages he extended his lead to more than a minute. But he says he still never felt this day would come. Even in the final day there in andorra, i didnt believe that we could pull it off. I have been. Not only in grand tours but in smaller week long race as i have been second many times, just missing out on a whim. So we were really focused, just across the finish line, really complete the job well, and it is just line, really complete the job well, and it isjust a line, really complete the job well, and it is just a really unbelievable journey, really. So it has been an unprecedented yearfor britain. Lets have a look at why 2018 has been so special. Chris froome beat yates to win the giro ditalia back in may, after a spectacular stage in the final week. Who could forget Geraint Thomas winning the Tour De France then, injuly . But yates is the first briton from outside team sky to win one of cyclings three week marathons. Lewis hamilton says he still feels he needs to win every race, despite extending his lead in the f1 drivers championship to a0 points. He won the Singapore Grand Prix ahead of max verstappen, with Sebastian Vettel third. With six races to go he will be hard to catch, and he says he plans to spend a few days off, on a beach, doing yoga, and training hard. We had a great start. The team has just never given up faith and belief in me and in valterri, and it was a real blessing. It was a long race. Isnt that what we are all doing an hour days off . In ourdreams. Manuel pellegrinis 65th birthday present was a First Premier League win of the season for west ham, as they won 3 1 away to everton. One of their big summer signings, andriy yarmolenko, scored twice on his first start in west ham colours, as they moved off the bottom of the table and it is burnley who replace them there. They still havent won a league game this season. They went down 1 0 at wolves, rauljimenez the scorer. Cameron norrie said a message from rugby greatjonny wilkinson inspired him to victory in the davis cup in glasgow. Norrie had blown a two set lead and wasted match point in his previous match, and wilkinson sent him a video telling him to come out with a clean slate and prove he could get it done. He did, beating Sanjar Fayziev, to give Great Britain a 3 1win over uzbekistan. When did he get the video . It must have been overnight. It is davis cup, isnt it . That is a good message to get. Have you ever had a message to get. Have you ever had a message like that . Surely you have, come on, keep going that would make a big difference. At the age of ao, the american Angela Stanford has won her first golf major. She took the evian championship in france, in what was her 76th attempt. She was completely overwhelmed, saying she had always been a fighter, and in golf, you play by faith and just hope it works out. I have no idea whatjust happened. I am. I i have no idea whatjust happened. I am. Iam i have no idea whatjust happened. I am. I am grateful. I have no idea whatjust happened. I am. Iam grateful. I i have no idea whatjust happened. I am. I am grateful. I am so happy for everybody at home, everybody thats always cheered for me. Just. They never gave up on me. I think it meant a lot to her. I think it meant a lot to herlj love it and we have some great stats coming up for you. Kenyas Eliud Kipchoge smashed the marathon world record in berlin. The olympic champion is widely seen as the greatest marathon runner of the modern era, and he finished in two hours, one minute and 39 seconds. That took one minute 18 seconds off the record, the biggestjump in a marathon record since 1967. So quite an achievement for kenyas Eliud Kipchoge, who edges the marathon world record closer to the magical two hour mark. Will we one day see somebody run the distance in under two hours . To put yesterdays achievement into some context, here are the kind of times kipchoge would have clocked at the pace he was running in berlin. He would have run 100 metres in 17. 3 seconds. Running at a pace of1 km injust shy of three minutes meant he would run a 5 km injust 1a minutes and 2a seconds, or 10 km in 28 minutes a9 seconds. He does that for two hours, and he had pace setters all the way through until right at the end, and when he lost the runners who were running with him to make and go faster, he went faster. Can you do me a favour . It will be stout taste. If people are on a treadmill, find out what pace you would have to put at. Stat based favour. For two hours and one minute. We are focusing on six months to go before supposedly brexit. Lets get back to steph, who is at the university of salford, looking at some of the issues the uk faces with six months to go until we leave the eu. Steph, a new survey for bbc 5 live suggests that nearly two thirds of us think travel and holidays will become more difficult. Good morning to you, good morning, everyone. It is all going on at salford university. It is not normally this busy at this time, especially not on freshers week. But we have gathered people from all walks of life, sean and rachel, and lots of different people to find out what they think about brexit. 0ne lots of different people to find out what they think about brexit. One of the things we have done is survey of 1000 people to ask them their thoughts on a whole range of Different Things to do with brexit, and one of the questions in particular is to do with whether they think it will be more difficult to travel around the eu when the uk leads the eu. 6a agree, 29 disagree. That doesnt mean to say that eve ryo ne that doesnt mean to say that everyone thinks this. It is a survey of 1000 people so there are lots of caveats to this, and it doesnt necessarily mean it will be more difficult, this isjust what necessarily mean it will be more difficult, this is just what people think at the minute. A person who will definitely no more about this as my guest. Joining me now is charlie cornish, chief executive of Manchester Airport group. Within your group you have three airports iran, and 60 of people saying they think it will be more difficult to travel around the eu. What is the reality, will would you say . We are confident travel will carry on as normal. As you can imagine we are in regular conversation about new arrangement and the brexit agreement, and at this point things will carry on. There will be changes in administrative arrangements but at this moment in time i would say people should not be worried. When you say they will be changes, what will people notice . If i come to one of the airports after we have left, how will it feel different to me . As you travel through the airport, you will do so in quite a seamless way so will do so in quite a seamless way so you really wont see the difference. There will be small issues such as different different types of audit checks, but nothing major. It will still be a seamless journey and it shouldnt disrupt travel at all. You mentioned talking to the government, what have you been talking about and how often are you having these conversations . Clearly airlines and airports are interested in flying across europe, it isa interested in flying across europe, it is a market that has added Enormous Economic value to the uk over the last ten or 20 years. We expect that to continue so we need flying rights to be in place and we are confident they will be. Equally, having a good exit agreement is a step forward for travellers because it will keep the economic value and it will keep the economic value and it will keep the economic value and it will encourage people to travel. So we talk a lot, as well, around uncertainty at the moment. When i talk to businesses they say that is the biggest concern for them. What would you say are the uncertainties for you at the moment, given that we still dont know exactly what is going to happen . While we dont know, we are confident the uk government will get an agreement. It is imperative they actually do. Across the group we are investing £1. 5 billion in new infrastructure, andi £1. 5 billion in new infrastructure, and i think that is a sign of confidence in the future, and i think if you look across the airlines they are the same. They are still putting on new routes, new flights, and the expectation that there will be a seamless transfer. Do you think things will get better . Al expectation is things will carry on as normal. But at the same time we continue to look at new opportunities our expectation. We have introduced new flights to china and hong kong and we are flying thousands of people into china in the last few years. There is a world outside of brexit at having a good agreement with the eu, and connecting further afield, will be the right answer to the uk. Thank you for your time this morning. We will be here throughout the morning talking to lots of different people. We have families here on both sides of the camp, one family who think we should definitely leave, one thinks we should stay. So we will be talking to them a little bit later. First lets get the weather. Good morning, windy spells in the week ahead and the first one comes tonight. This zone of cloud was hurricane aleem at it has weakened somewhat and became a Tropical Storm and now it is an area of low pressure helene. It could bring us some Stormy Weather so it has been labelled storm helene. Throwing a veil across northern and western parts, the brain to start that we go for some rain to start the day. Mostly dry, a mild start in the south was 17 or 18 and warm and later on. Through the day, cloud will increase and the breeze picks up, nothing too untoward. The southerly wind will help to boost the temperatures across scotland are afairamount of the temperatures across scotland are a fair amount of cloud, and we could see highs around 17 or 18 but in the highlands and islands, the rain is persistent, which to the west of Northern Ireland, a few showers through the day, hazy sunshine in the east. All that and western parts of england and wales could see the odd shower, most places will stay dry and increasingly sunny towards the south with temperatures around 25. The winds will pick up tonight as storm helene pushes its way in and the strongest of the winds started the south west and will work north through the night. This is how strong we will see it, 60 miles an hour and this yellow zone is where we have the met Office Warnings, like the winds from northern scotla nd like the winds from northern scotland but the wet weather to take us through the night. Eventually with a stronger winds we will see the rain spread through the irish sea towards Northern Ireland, parts of North West Wales, and north west england as we go into tomorrow morning. The winds will come in from the south, tropical air mixed in, so a double figure temperatures start. Mild but wet in Northern England, Northern Ireland, wet across scotla nd Northern Ireland, wet across scotland and once the winds eases, a blustery day, glaring to sunshine and showers as we go into the afternoon, mainly across Western Areas. Blustery but not a bad one with temperatures into the high teens, low to mid 20s for some. 0n wednesday, and even windier spell of weather could swing its way off the atlantic. This area of low pressure will target further north so scotland, Northern Ireland, Northern England at the moment are prone to strong may be damaging winds for some, 60 70 miles an hour or more. Fabrics of rain across the north, some showers south but dry and bright to the vast majority. Outbreaks of rain. I will keep you updated on breakfast but for now, back to steph. Thank you, matt. Welcome back to the university of salford. We have got it all going on. Were marking six months until the uk leaves the European Union. We are talking about how the nation is feeling. Still so much we do not know so, as part of our research we have done a survey. 1000 people were asked their sport is about lots of Different Things that may affect their lives so i mentioned a couple of minutes ago the big ask questions about travels about one is while travelling across the eu on holiday be more difficult their thoughts. 6a agree. We also asked about the impact ofa 6a agree. We also asked about the impact of a brexit on the uk. A1 agree. 50 disagree. And what households still better off or not . Would your household be better off . So you can see lots of a split and it is important to point out it isnt the view of the entire nation, it is the 1000 people we spoke to, but it gives us a sense. We have some families here on both sides of the, we have the hughes and the chalkers. We have got some breakfast for you. We also have catherine who isa for you. We also have catherine who is a professor of law at cambridge. Do you know what . I feel like is a professor of law at cambridge. Do you know what . Ifeel like i is a professor of law at cambridge. Do you know what . I feel like i am on family fortune with the two families and i carry a buzzer with me wherever i go said this could be an opportune moment. Catherine, do you want one . I do not know how we will use them but, you know . That is exa rd a re will use them but, you know . That is exard are not family fortunes, it shows you how young our production tea m shows you how young our Production Team is. Butties x factor. We talked about the survey and what different people think and i know you guys, the chalkers, you think that we should leave the European Union. What do you think about the trouble issue there and the sense of do you think it will be easier or more difficult to travel . |j do you think it will be easier or more difficult to travel . I dont think it will be any different, my wife is actually polish sir im not fussing about a problem at all and quite frankly my attitude is if the eu make it more difficult for us to trouble than i will go on holiday somewhere else. Im not bothered by it at all. Are you bothered about anything else then . Nothing, im an optimist. I think we have to have great faith in ourselves and the future. So it doesnt worry me in the slightest. That is what kiran thinks. Catherine, what is the reality . It depends on what kind of deal we get, and the right to on the table. 0ne deal we get, and the right to on the table. One for march 29, 2019 which is the divorce or the Withdrawal Agreement, and if that is agreed that it leads to a period of transition and it will be exactly the same to the general public as it is at the moment. Then the taxes to december 2020 and then, if we have negotiated a future deal, not so clear it will have happened by then, and that will dictate what sort of movement, of restrictions, there will be on the British Public and we dont know what the future will be we dont know if the future deal will Say Something about that there should be access to tourists, to the eu holiday destinations, crucially without tvs, we dont know yet, crucially we dont no if the magic cards, free of emergency healthcare, we dont know whether, because the eu is introducing a new scheme like the schemes are going to the United States where you have to fill out a form and pay for it in advance without visa. We do not know whether that will apply to british citizens after the end of 2020. It is talked to the Hughes Family s who are remainers. I think we are going to struggle. I think there was a lot of concern about food prices going up because we dont produce enough food for our country at the moment, we importa for our country at the moment, we import a lot. There is a lot of concern about businesses and getting access to more later. Skills. Yes, skills, our nhs is already got loads of vacancies. You know, we cannot fill them. There is a concern about getting labour in from other parts of europe and the world and i think we are going to struggle. Ryan, would you say you worry about that because you voted to leave but do you think we would be all right with skills and getting the right people in thejob . Skills and getting the right people in the job . If we can go back to the victorian ethos where nothing was a challenge to them and they overcame it all when we were actually Great Britain, spelt great instead of grate. We will come out of this with a smile eventually. How do you think we will fill the gaps of people left behind those were not coming here anymore . The big problem we have is we are overpopulated and cannot take any more people. We dont need all these new homes, thousands of homes built, we are bursting at the seams. I know a lot of polish workers have gone back because they were frightened of the results of the brexit which is a shame because they are very hard working people. They fill positions that our own people wont feel because they dont want to or they cannot. So i am ranting now. That is why we have usually are. Dont worry about it catherine, on that then, listening to both sides of this, what do you think might give us a context. Looking at what will happen, about migration, the answer is we dont know because we will have a better idea shortly because there will be a migration paper published this week from the Migration Advisory Committee of saying, talking on that issue, about how much we depend on skills from overseas workers, from eu workers, and then the question is what will we do about a future immigration policy . Are we going to say that eu nationals continue to have preferential access to a Labour Market or, as the theresa may seems to be suggesting now, no preferential access to eu nationals, they are treated in the same way as indian, pakistani, american citizens who want to work here. That meant a visa scheme which is expensive and bureaucratic for employers and it will be a deterrent. 0f bureaucratic for employers and it will be a deterrent. Of course, it means opportunities for british workers but we need a lot of skills training and there will be an period of time where you are short of skilled british workers and eu Migrant Workers are going back. We see it already in the nhs. Moving on to look at what it may mean for households. Judas, what are your thoughts on how it may affect your household in the future when they leave judas. Household in the future when they leave judas. I cannot see it being any better for my household but as an older person, i rather afraid of the security judith. That is my main worry. Being of the older generation and having spent my youthin older generation and having spent my youth in a wartime situation, and even after the war was over, there was still a lot of unrest and i do honestly feel a lot safer in europe andl honestly feel a lot safer in europe and i think we should keep our ties with europe and we should keep close to europe. And work with, without allies. Nick, i know we will talk to you more later. So much to talk about and it is a fascinating thing and we could sit here for hours with our allies. I do not know how many viewers would have by the end of it thank you, we will talk to you a little bit later on but first, lets get the news, travel and weather wherever you are this morning. Good morning from bbc london news. The number of people in prison for far right terror offences has gone up nearly fivefold injust two years. Well, one of those in prison is darren osborne, serving life for ploughing into muslim worshippers in a van in Finsbury Park last year. He killed one man and injured several others after being radicalised online. Figures also show that for the first time in a decade, the number of white people arrested on suspicion of terror offences outnumbers asian suspects. As a new charity, berkshire Deaf Childrens Society, launches, theres concern about the provision given to children with hearing difficulties in schools. Figures show that nearly eight out of ten deaf children attend schools where theres no specialist provisions for them at all, which may explain why many of them fail to achieve less that five gcses. Well, the department for education says it wants to ensure deaf children continue to get the support thats right for them, and it is for local authorities to deploy appropriate staff. The harrow Half Marathon took place yesterday and it was a first when it came to doing whats good for the environment. This is what normally happens. 750,000 plastic bottles were thrown away during the London Marathon this year, so water in seaweed sachets were used instead, which can also be eaten afterwards and just so you know, Matthew Robertson from herne hill harriers was fastest in the Half Marathon with a time of1 hour and 16 minutes. Well done lets have a look at the travel situation now. Theres a good service on the tubes this morning. 0n the roads at highbury corner, there are lane restrictions in place due to gas works. Seven sisters road is partly blocked northbound at Finsbury Park station due to an investigation where Emergency Services are blocking a lane. And beckenham high street is closed westbound for works between kelsey park road and village way. Lets have a check on the weather now with kate. Good morning. Its quite a cloudy but mild start out there this morning. Temperatures overnight didnt drop much below the high teens celsius so it is quite warm and it will remain warm through the day. Later on, well start to see some brighter skies but it remains rather breezy. In fact, the breeze will continue to strengthen as we head through the course of the day. Now, the cloud from this morning will clear away northwards. Plenty of sunshine later. The wind switches, a drier air coming up from the south means the temperature getting much warmer, 25 celsius the maximum. Now, overnight, the wind will continue to strengthen. It is going to be a very windy night. Starting off clear, then more cloud through after the second part of the night. Staying dry, though, and staying mild the minimum temperature between 15 and 18 celsius. So another cloudy and very windy start tomorrow morning. Quite a gusty wind through the course of tuesday. It doesnt really drop through the course of the day, either. Temperatures still impressive, in the low 20s. Wind starts to fall a little bit lighter as we head through wednesday but it is still breezy and still remaining warm. It is going to be warm today. Vanessa feltz is on bbc radio london in a couple of minutes with her breakfast show. And shes about to speak to motoring guru Quentin Wilson about a new safety campaign, telling motorists not to tailgate. I will be back in 30 minutes. Goodbye for now. Good morning. Welcome to breakfast, with dan walker and naga munchetty. 0ur headlines today my deal or no deal. The prime minster defends her plan to take the uk out of the eu. I believe well get a good deal. Well bring that back from the european from the eu negotiations, and put that to parliament. I think that the alternative to that will be not having a deal. That is what the Prime Minister thinks, but what do people think across the country . With just six months to go until brexit, im here at the university of salford, where i will be speaking to a whole range of people from different walks of life and different generations, as well as some eminent experts, to find out how they think it is all going. More than 2. 5 Million People are moved from their homes in china, as typhoon mangut lashes the countrys most heavily populated province, guangdong. Not just an annoyance, tailgating is causing deaths and serious injures. In sports, it is astonishing, says simon yates, as he wins the vuelta a espana simon yates, as he wins the vuelta a es pa na to simon yates, as he wins the vuelta a espa na to complete simon yates, as he wins the vuelta a espana to complete a british clean sweep of cyclings grand tours. And details on the weather in 15 minutes. It is monday 17th september. Our top story the Prime Minister has told the bbc that the uk faces a choice between the brexit deal she negotiates with brussels, or no deal at all. In an interview with panorama, theresa may also criticises proposals for the irish border which have been put forward by some brexiteers. Former foreign secretary Boris Johnson claims that failing to resolve the border issue could lead to a total write off of brexit, as our Political Correspondent chris mason explains. You know how it is your call is important to us, and all that guff, and then you are kept waiting. Thank you. Hold music plays. Hello, jean claude. Hello. Im very well, thank you. I hope you managed to have a good summer break. The brexit negotiations as youve never seen them before. The Prime Minister talking to the president of the european commission, jean claude juncker, panorama given a glimpse behind the scenes, before being shooed out. In an interview with nick robinson, the Prime Minister says mps will face a simple choice her plan or nothing. I want to be clear whether you are saying, i think you are, my deal or no deal. The deal as i say, i believe well get a good deal. Well bring that back from the european from the eu negotiations and put that to parliament. I think that the alternative to that will be not having a deal, because i dont think there will be a, i dont think the negotiations will have that deal, and b, were leaving on 29 march 2019. Last week, conservative brexiteers opposed to the Prime Ministers so called chequers plan set out their own ideas, including using technology to avoid checks here at the border between Northern Ireland and the republic. But mrs may argues they are a nonstarter. The only proposal thats been put forward that delivers on them not having a hard border and ensures that we dont carve up the United Kingdom is the chequers plan. The only proposal. So these other plans, that we saw this week, they dont do it . No, because what many of these other plans are based on is moving the border. You dont solve the issue of no hard border by having a hard border 20 km inside Northern Ireland or 20 km inside ireland. Its still a hard border. But in his weekly newspaper column, which doubles as a stage for his alternative outlook, the former foreign secretary borisjohnson argues that it is the governments approach to the irish border that leaves the uk, as he puts it, hitting full throttle for the ditch with a total write off of brexit. It was already noisy, and it is getting louder. Chris mason, bbc news. And you can see more of that interview with theresa may on tonights panorama at 8 30pm on bbc one. A new report has warned that the government is running out of time to implement a successful brexit. The institute for government says no deal preparations have been left too late, and the proposed transition period might not be long enough to finalise a future trading relationship. Here is the bbcs reality check correspondent chris morris. Busy times in westminster. Brexit, says the institute for government, is the biggest implementation challenge the government has faced in generations. Thousands of extra Civil Servants are being hired, but time is running short. In the event of no deal with the eu, ministers insist their planning is far advanced, but this new report doesnt agree. It has used a traffic light system to assess progress. 0nly light system to assess progress. Only one policy area, eu programmes and funds, is green. Nine others are given a red light, suggesting the government wont be able to avoid major negative impacts of no deal next year. Even if a deal is reached and we leave in march with a 21 month transition period, the ifg says 1a1 businesses will struggle to deal with changes at you will uk borders and getting a trade deal in time will be totally unfeasible. The report analyses previous peak uk government projects. The automatic pension Enrolment Programme and preparations for the london olympics both took more than a decade. Digitising tax to five years. Implementing brexit in 21 months will be extremely tight. Time will be tight your parliament, as well, as will the voting. If a deal on the Withdrawal Agreement with the eu is reached this autumn, say in november, there would be only 70 sitting days in parliament to put the deal into uk law and pass all the deal into uk law and pass all the other legislation for the significant changes that brexit will bring. The timetable was always incredibly demanding, and what has happened recently hasnt made it much easier. The fact that we are quite behind schedule. Normally, if youre doing a project like this, youd allow ten years to do the legislation and implementation, and you would actually know what youre doing at each stage, so you would have closed off your options. The government is still running three scenarios, and trying to do it all in two years, or maybe maximum 3. 5. Thats pretty demanding. The department for exiting the European Union said in a statement we are confident in implementing a good deal that parliament will want to support. The ifg acknowledges that progress has been made. There are plenty of green traffic lights for the negotiation, with 80 of the horse trading done. At the trickiest areas remain, like avoiding a hard border in ireland. And that is still flashing red. South china is being hit by typhoon mangkhut, with winds of up to 100 mph and torrential rain. Chinese state media says two people have been killed. In a moment we will speak to Howard Johnson about the devastation left behind in the philippines. But first lets go to our china correspondent robin brant, who is in hong kong. Good to see you. At the moment we know there is a lot of devastation. We can see just behind you, know there is a lot of devastation. We can seejust behind you, in hong kong, after the cyclone, the typhoon, i should say, has passed through. They are all the same thing depending on the region. Let us know what has been happening. Well, lets talk about Mainland China first. I think the authorities there have moved over 2 Million People who were in the path of typhoon mangkhut, and they will think that they have averted what could have been a far more deadly storm. As you say, just to make people recorded dead there at the moment. So a Mass Evacuation plan, and that appears to have worked. Here in hong kong, this is what is left after yesterday. We had about two hours in all of severe winds. It was difficult to stand up. We are here in this childrens park, close to the shoreline. That is the South China Sea over there. It is not supposed to be covered in sand and rouble, trees fallen down, there are benches and plastic bottles which have been washed up this far, even further behind a camera, and thatis even further behind a camera, and that is a sign, i think, of the power and the size of the surge that came late last night. Now, what we have got in hong kong, basically, is an operation to clean up and to make an operation to clean up and to make a living safe. Dozens of trees have fallen across the island and there is lots of shattered glass and debris around. But to be honest, it is business back to normal. People are back to work today, the schools are back to work today, the schools are closed, but that is mainly about making those areas safe. Thank you very much, very scary, the thought of being amongst that. Howard johnson is in the philippines. Tell us exactly what you have seen there in the last few days. Yes, i am outside the provincial government headquarters. I am afraid we have lost power there. He was telling us, if you were watching earlier on, he was telling us about some mining issues, all sorts of problems in the philippines. The storm has now moved on. And you are right, cyclone, hurricane, typhoon, depending on where you are in the world, exactly the same. We will get back to howard later on. A new way of measuring poverty in the uk is being proposed, to include the unavoidable costs that some people face. Factors such as childcare or the impact of disability should be taken into account, according to the social Metrics Commission. The government says its policies are lifting people out of poverty. Motorists are being issued fresh warnings about the danger of driving too close to the car in front. Highways england is launching a campaign to highlight that tailgating is the cause of one in eight serious injuries or deaths. According to road safety research, tailgating can also lead to more trafficjams, caused by the Ripple Effect of drivers braking sharply to avoid a collision. Game of thrones could match its own record tonight for the most wins at the Us Television awards, the emmys. The ceremony celebrates its 70th anniversary tonight. British hopes include nominations for thandie newton, Benedict Cumberbatch and vanessa kirby. Sandra oh is the first woman of asian descent to be nominated for best actress, for her role in killing eve. I was watching that at the weekend and it was very good. As we have been hearing this morning, the government is being warned it is running out of time to implement a successful brexit. The clock is ticking, and there are just six months to go. Steph is at the university of salford, looking at all of this for us, and the numbers associated with brexit. Given it is six months until the uk leads the eu, we thought it would be a good chance to bring people together from all walks of life to find out how they are feeling about it. We are looking at everything from how it might impact holidays to what it might mean forjobs, for households, and 5 live are with us, and rachel is chatting live on 5 live, they are doing quite a lot on 5 live about this as well. We are in the university of salford, and i have managed to gather some of the stu d e nts have managed to gather some of the students here. Thank you for getting up students here. Thank you for getting up early on freshers week. What are your thoughts . I think there should bea your thoughts . I think there should be a second referendum. I think many people who voted leave, there wants are not going to be met by the deal voted in march. I think there should be another referendum to decide on the terms that are currently being botched by parliament. Sorry, melanie, i could be rebecca earlier, you are melanie. You are quite strong in that. I did vote remain, i think the economy is very uncertain, and in business, ourworry think the economy is very uncertain, and in business, our worry is actually leaving the eu. And do you genuinely worry about this . Are you genuinely worry about this . Are you genuinely worried . When i was your age, i will be honest, i did not worry about things like that. Or you are . I am worried, because i think how it came about, a lot of people we re how it came about, a lot of people were voting for immigration, and i understand why people dont want to come together. The eu was designed to bring together countries and i dont understand why anyone would not want that. And what do you think about this . You are actually the other side of this. I am actually the other side. I think we pay a lot of money to the eu every year, around £20 billion, and i think it would be better spent on our economy on things like universities, helping University Tuition fees go down, and stuff like that. So you are someone who thinks we should leave. You think we should remain, but you . Yes, i dont like all the uncertainty of all the plans that are going on, it is all a bit scary andi are going on, it is all a bit scary and i dont understand what is going to happen, i dont think most people do. You are not alone there. Heres our Political Correspondent chris mason with the story so far. Since the referendum, the government has allocated an extra £3. 7 billion or so to prepare for brexit. Of that, the largest sum to date, £455 million, has gone to the home office, the department with the job of creating a new immigration system. The department for the environment, food and Rural Affairs has been given £377 million. That is to look at replacing the eus policies on things like fishing and farming. There is also the cost of two brand spanking new departments. They gobble up nearly £a81 million. Yep, theres a lot of paperwork to do, and someones got to do it. Then, theres that brexit divorce bill for the uks share of eu commitments made before it decided to leave. That will be up to £39 billion. So splitting up is pricey. But those in favour of leaving say those costs are relatively small compared to the money that could be saved when the uk goes its own way. And that is where this bus comes in. During the referendum campaign, some brexit supporters claimed the uk sends £350 million a week to brussels. Thats the equivalent of about £18 billion a year. But once you take into account the rebate, thats the uks discount to its eu membership fee, and money sent to brussels that gets parcelled up and sent back to pay for stuff here in the uk, the figure is more like £9 billion. Thats a more realistic estimate of the cash that could theoretically be saved and spent on schools or the nhs. But, with six months to go, there are still bucketfuls of unknowns. What will our future relationship with the eu look like . Will we stick pretty close to its rules, or not . And what deals will be done around the world . And will a Withdrawal Agreement be signed up to in the next few months, and with it a transition period, where not a lot changes for the best part of two years after brexit, in march next year . Given this sizeable collection of questions and, uh. Not many answers, one of the hardest things to predict is what will happen to the economy after 29 march next year . Any disruption could wipe out the money saved from eu membership. Back in 2016, the office for budget responsibility predicted that borrowing would increase by £15 billion by 2021 as a result of leaving. That is partly down to predicted slower productivity growth and reduced migration. If the uk walks away with next to nothing agreed, a no deal brexit, in the jargon, then that will throw up even more questions about what our future might hold. The number big numbers there. Lots of opinion as well. Our audience are not shy in telling us what you think. We have professorjohn curtis with us this morning. Morning to you. We hear so much about people s opinions on brexit, the latest survey we have done asking 1000 people, there are various opinions on things like holidays abroad, the impact on household things. How do you think, as a person who is regularly trying to get views, how do you feel . Two things to say. We are relatively pessimistic about the consequences of brexit, but we are perhaps inclined to blame the politicians for our pessimism, rather than serially thinking that whatever choice we make was the one choice. For example, the poll indicates that over half of us think brexit is going to be bad for our household finances, but the truth has long been the case that we have been pessimistic about the consequences. 0ne been pessimistic about the consequences. One interesting thing is that we think you will be more difficult to get across the European Union. But in a sense, what we need to realise is that as a society we are divided on the subject. This is classically illustrated by the question in the poll about whether or not you think brexit will have a positive or negative impact. The a nswer positive or negative impact. The answer is that half of us think half will be a negative impact and the other half is that it will be good all we are not sure. But underneath that art major divisions of. Younger people are inclined to think it is going to be negative. 0lder people are inclined to think it is going to be negative. Older people are more inclined to say it will be positive and equally, middle class folk in white collarjobs are much more pessimistic than those in more routine working class jobs. More pessimistic than those in more routine working classjobs. That fits a pattern that we know because all the way back to the brexit referendum. We are as a country, deeply divided. It is interesting because these are people s thoughts. The reality could go anywhere and does it to what people think . There are two things. The first is that at the end of the day do they think brexit has cornwell or badly . 0f do they think brexit has cornwell or badly . Of the research i have done indicates that if we begin to be doubtful about the economic consequences of brexit and we voted leave, nothing else is likely to persuade us to change our minds, but conversely, if we voted to remain and decided it would be not bad, it we would snitch back. We have to bearin we would snitch back. We have to bear in mind that the it all depends on who we blame. The fascinating thing is that nearly 80 of us think that the government is handling things badly and those are numbers that have gotten worse and worse and worse in the wake of the chequers agreement in the summer. Equally, around two thirds of us also think the eu is doing badly. We have had the eu is doing badly. We have had the choice is as to who we blame for what is your do happen, maybe at the end of the day if we think things are going to go badly, we dont necessarily think that brexit is a bad idea. So much to go through. You can email us at bbcbrea kfast bbc. Co. Uk, or share your thoughts with other viewers on our facebook page. Let me hand it back now. Thank you. I noticed on her twitter screen, the latest tweet about the weather. Not a bad week, 17 25 degrees. That looks quite nice. Shall we hear from the man himself . I have done it. Have a good day some fairly warm weather on the way for the first pa rt weather on the way for the first part of this week, but it comes at a price of. Autumn is definitely with us, we have windy spells of whether. The first one will come later into tonight, this is the one responsible. This is the harry kane has weakened, but it has been creeping towards us steadily over the past few days and we will see some strong and gusty wind that will ta ke some strong and gusty wind that will take us into tonight. Already spreading cloud across the north and west, rain this morning into the north west of scotland, for most of us, the commute will be dry, warm in the south, a few more spots of rain in the west through the day but predominantly dry day for many. The big exception will be to the highlands and ireland. A closer look into the afternoon, the rain turning have the and persistent. Southern and eastern parts of scotland, other than one or two isolated showers should stay dry. We will see after the odd shower little bit of hazy sunshine in Northern Ireland where there will be wet weather to the west. One or two isolated showers Northern England but most will have a dry day and will be increasingly sunny. That warm air is being pushed up sunny. That warm air is being pushed up ahead of storm hellene, which works its way into tonight and that will bring some gusts of wind. Mainly hills and coast around these irish sea areas into Northern England and southern scotland, but away from that, plus three to the south east, staying dry, to the north of it, light winds in northern scotla nd north of it, light winds in northern scotland and further outbreaks of rain through the night. The strong wind will come later that night, associated with this area of rain in the irish east of the many eastern areas of staying dry and look at the temperatures through the night. A mild and breezy start to your tuesday morning. Wet at times it. Sunshine and showers, outbreaks of rain spreading across scotland and the wind picking up compared to tonight and while it will be a blustery day, some afternoon sunshine it will feel warm once again. Tablature is quite the high teens, low to mid 20s. A quick heads up towards wednesday, could and even windier spell of weather coming with this area of low pressure. Scotland, Northern Ireland, northern with wind in excess of 70 mph. We will keep you updated. It was so worth listening to that, i am so glad you promised he would give us all of the weather. Hgppy he would give us all of the weather. Happy to help. Awardwinning. Thanks matt. And we have got the tweet, the best of both worlds. Is 20 minutes past seven. 23 minutes past seven. Past seven. 23 minutes past seven. You are watching the bbc, a brexit special. Lets take a look at todays papers. The former foreign secretary and current Daily Telegraph columnist borisjohnson has repeated his criticism of theresa mays plan to resolve the irish border problem post brexit. The guardian has a picture that really illustrates the power of typhoon mangkhut, and also reports that councils are developing computer based algorithms to predict young people at risk of child abuse. The daily express has Victoria Beckham on the front page of. It reports on a major study that suggests elderly people in good health should not take an aspirin a day. And the sun is reporting that zoe ball has been offered chris evanss slot on the radio two breakfast show, but Nothing Official has been announced yet. Delighted by that news. We will show the front page of the daily mirror because gary speeds widow has been talking exclusively to them about various issues about the death of her husband back in 2011 and actually, she goes into more detail inside and she posts a letter that gary wrote to her when he was 17. He says, dear louise, i dont know what to say, i am so depressed, i am going to sleep now and i hope i never wake up. I love you so much, i will always love you. A real heartbreaking read and she says, looking back and are looking at that letter, some of the problems he had in later life. For me, the final programme he ever did was focus with us and then he committed suicide later that day. He was talking about plans for the future, being manager of wales and what he hoped and drink it would come to and then a few hours later we had a phone call. She is detailing some of the problems and torment he went through throughout his life. One of the things she will be highlighting is the need to talk. We are all much more where of Mental Health problems now. On a lighter note, Kylie Minogue had to pull out of glastonbury because she was fighting cancer 1a years ago and now, the sun is saying that she has secretly signed up for the 2019 legends slot at the start of the year, which will put her on the pyramid stage on the sunday afternoon. That will be entertaining. And a cheeky plug for my game show that starts today. 2 15pm on bbc one the. It is time to get the news, travel and weather wherever you are. Good morning, im asad ahmad. The number of people in prison for far right terror offences has gone up nearly 5 fold injust 2 years. Well, one of those in prison is darren osbourne, serving life for ploughing into muslim worshippers in a van in Finsbury Park last year. He killed one man and injured several others after being radicalised online. Figures also show that, for the first time in a decade, the number of white people arrested on suspicion of terror offences outnumbers asian suspects. As a new charity, berkshire Deaf Childrens Society launches, theres concern about the provision given to children with hearing difficulties in our schools. Figures show that nearly eight out of ten deaf children attend schools where theres no specialist provisions for them at all, which may explain why many of them fail to achieve less than five gcses. Well, the department for education says it wants to ensure deaf children continue to get the support thats right for them, and it is for local authorities to deploy appropriate staff. You may think a tree is, like, a tree. But there are some that have a special story or history attached to them, and so it makes them a bit special, which is why three trees in london and the Home Counties have made the shortlist for tree of the year. This one is the verdun horse chestnut in st albans. Its the last tree standing on the battlefield of verdun from the first world war. This is a a50 year old oak in tottenham. And this is a twisting ancient mulberry from john keats garden in hampstead. The Woodland Trust want the public to vote for a winner. The winning tree gets £1,000. Lets have a look at the travel situation now. And on the roads, at highbury corner, there are lane restrictions in place due to gas works. And beckenham high street is closed westbound for works between kelsey park road and village way. In west london in use lee, falling lane is partly blocked between trout road and column lane because of a burst water main, causing acute problems in the area. Lets have a check on the weather now with kate. Good morning. Its quite a cloudy but mild start out there this morning. Temperatures overnight didnt drop much below the high teens celsius so it is quite warm and it will remain warm through the day. Later on, well start to see some brighter skies but it remains rather breezy. In fact, the breeze will continue to strengthen as we head through the course of the day. Now, the cloud from this morning will clear away northwards. Plenty of sunshine later. The wind switches, a drier air coming up from the south means the temperature getting much warmer, 25 celsius the maximum. Now, overnight, the wind will continue to strengthen. It is going to be a very windy night. Starting off clear, then more cloud through after the second part of the night. Staying dry, though, and staying mild the minimum temperature between 15 and 18 celsius. So another cloudy and very windy start tomorrow morning. Quite a gusty wind through the course of tuesday. It doesnt really drop through the course of the day, either. Temperatures still impressive, in the low 20s. Wind starts to fall a little bit lighter as we head through wednesday but it is still breezy and still remaining warm. Va nessa Vanessa Feltz is on bbc radio london with her practice show and tell ten. I will be back here in half an hour. Hello, this is breakfast, with dan walker and naga munchetty. The Prime Minister has told the bbc that the uk faces a choice between the brexit deal she negotiates with brussels, or no deal at all. In an interview with panorama, theresa may also criticises proposals for the irish border which have been put forward by some brexiteers. The former foreign secretary borisjohnson claims this morning that failing to resolve the border issue could lead to a total write off of brexit. But mrs may says the choice is simple her deal or no deal. A new report has warned that the government is running out of time to implement a successful brexit. Downing street says planning is advanced, but the institute for government says no deal preparations have been left too late. It also says that, if a deal is agreed, the 21 month transition period might not be long enough. South china is being hit by typhoon mangkhut, with winds of up to 100 mph and torrential rain. About 2. 5 Million People have been evacuated from their homes in guangdong province. Chinese state media says two people have been killed. pres a new way of measuring poverty in the uk is being proposed, to include the unavoidable costs that some people face. Factors such as childcare or the impact of disability should be taken into account, according to the social Metrics Commission. The government says its policies are lifting people out of poverty. There has been a severe squeeze on the budgets of further education colleges in england, according to a new report. The institute for fiscal studies says that money for 16 18 year old students has dropped in real terms by 8 since 2010. The government says it is protecting funding in cash terms for the next two years. A baby giraffe from one of the worlds rarest species has taken its first steps at woburn safari park in bedfordshire. The rothschilds giraffe is less than a week old, but appears happy and healthy. It is thought there are only 1,600 of the species left living in the wild, making them one of the rarest mammals in the world. The calf, thought to be a female, is six foot tall, but could grow to three times that height. She has not yet been given a name. I think they are in my top three animals, giraffes. They should be high on the list. They are incredible runners, as well. Which documentary was it recently, when the giraffe was getting chased by lions and booted them in the face, do you remember that . It was not blue planet, it was the other one. Cute and tough at the same time. They are quick as well. That 81 is gorgeous. I the way they have those giant ears and no chin whatsoever. 0nly giant ears and no chin whatsoever. Only you would spot that. Iam i am trying to get a link to simon yates, the top of the world. Simon yates won vuelta a espana. He has spoken about how when he grew up, all the famous riders were spanish or french, but for all the kids, the best riders are british. British riders have taken all three grand tours this season. He rode into madrid alongside his Mitchelton Scott team mates, including his twin brother, adam. It was a three week race, and in the closing stages he extended his lead to more than a minute, but he says he still never felt this day would come. Even in the final day there in andorra, i didnt believe that we could pull it off. Ive been not only in grand tours, but in smaller week long races, ive been second many times, just missing out on a win. So we were really focused just to cross the finish line, really complete the job well. And itsjust a really unbelievable journey, really. Lewis hamilton says he still feels he needs to win every race, despite extending his lead in the f1 drivers championship to a0 points. He won the Singapore Grand Prix ahead of max verstappen, with Sebastian Vettel third. With six races to go, he will be hard to catch, and he says he plans to spend a few days off, on a beach, doing yoga and training hard. Manuel pellegrinis 65th birthday present was a First Premier League win of the season for west ham, as they won 3 1 away to everton. One of their big summer signing, andriy yarmolenko, scored twice on his first start in west ham colours, as they moved off the bottom of the table. And it is burnley who replace them there. They still havent won a league game this season. They went down 1 0 at wolves, rauljimenez the scorer. The former england and ipswich defender Kevin Beattie has died at the age of 6a. He is believed to have suffered a heart attack. He was held in great esteem by his fellow professionals. The late sir bobby robson was his manager at ipswich, and described him as second only to george best as a player, and he consistently finished at the top of Club Supporters polls as the best of all time. Cameron norrie said a message from rugby greatjonny wilkinson inspired him to victory in the davis cup in glasgow. Norrie had blown a two set lead and wasted match point in his previous match, and wilkinson sent him a video telling him to come out with a clean slate and prove he could get it done. He did, beating Sanjar Fayziev to give Great Britain a 3 1win over uzbekistan. Someone else who has received words of encouragement over many years in the american golfer Angela Stanford. At the age of 40, she has won herfirst major, the evian championship in france, in what was her 76th attempt. She was completely overwhelmed, saying she had always been a fighter, and in golf, you play by faith and just hope it works out. I have no idea whatjust happened. Im. |m grateful. I am so happy for everybody at home, everybody thats always cheered for me. Just they never gave up on me. Isnt that really it . Lovely, that, isnt it . I dont know how long you spend running on a treadmill. How fast do you think you go . Not as fast do you think you go . Not as fast as this bloke . Kenyas Eliud Kipchoge smashed the marathon world record in berlin. The olympic champion is widely seen as the greatest marathon runner of the modern era, and he finished in two hours, one minute and 39 seconds. That took one minute, 18 seconds off the record, the biggestjump in a marathon record since 1967. So kipchoge edges the marathon world record closer to the magical two hour mark, and here are the kind of times kipchoge would have been running in berlin. He would have run 100 metres in 17. 3 seconds, 5 km injust 1a minutes and 2a seconds, or10 km in 28 minutes a9 seconds. It is mind blowing, really. Most people who exercise would be pretty pleased if they ran five kilometres in that time. I would be delighted 28 minute ten kilometres, you would bejumping 28 minute ten kilometres, you would be jumping for joy. 28 minute ten kilometres, you would be jumping forjoy. We worked out that if you were on the treadmill at the gym, you would want to turn it up the gym, you would want to turn it up to 20. Most dont go that fast. It is dangerous to run out quickly. I told you that three years ago when he ran in berlin, he ran his shoes off. The trainers fell apart under his feet. He is like a cartoon character. 100m in 17 seconds, and keep that up for two hours. And so the distance, i have been doing my research, the distances between leicester and coventry. It is like running from leicester to coventry in two hours, or running the distance of the channel. It is like running the 100m more than 360 times, over and over again. You did get your maths gcse. Thank you for putting that in contacts. Co ntext. A major new Road Safety Campaign is being launched today warning motorists not to drive too close to the car in front, something known as tailgating. Highways england says it is the cause of one in eight deaths or serious injuries on our roads, as breakfastsjohn maguire has been finding out. This is the advert that highways england hopes will encourage tailgaters to change their behaviour. The campaign describes driving too close to the vehicle in front as aggressive, intimidating, and potentially very dangerous, a factor 100 incidents every year where people are killed or seriously injured. Youve got a lot of people who do it are dont realise that they do it. , which obviously is not very good for the driver that has been tailgating, but does it make it worse that the person who is tailgating doesnt realise how dangerously they are driving . tailgating doesnt realise how dangerously they are driving . I am taking part in research which aims to find out what effect aggressive tailgating can have on other road users. Rigged up to a heart monitor and facial recognition software, i set out to drive on motorways near birmingham. The data was analysed andi birmingham. The data was analysed and i was given the results. You have the perception that you were feeling absolutely fine, but the reality was that you were a bit more alert and aware, which is what we would expect you to be on the road. What the research showed was that, although on the surface i felt calm, my although on the surface i felt calm, d although on the surface i felt calm, my body and my subconscious were telling a different story. I was under stress. Highways england says tailgating can cause the driver in front to feel targeted and victimised, distracting them from concentrating properly and possibly causing them to make a mistake. So, in the words of a previous Road Safety Campaign. Only a fool brea ks safety campaign. Only a fool breaks the two second rule. 0nly only a fool will break the two second rule. I remember that from when i did my driving test, around 2000 years ago. Were joined now by Richard Leonard from highways england. You remember it also, richard. |j you remember it also, richard. I do. We have had lots of people getting in touch, and it is notjust cars. 0ne viewer says i was tailgated by cyclists going through a village, i didnt dare turn left for fear of hitting him. It is that stress you feel when someone is right on your bottom, and you try to back off. I do things, i am sure it is illegal, i put my hazard lights on and warned them, because i dont want to break, but it is saying just back off, especially if you cant go anywhere. And that causes more problems. The challenge tom i think, for all drivers is when you are tailgated, it makes you feel anxious. 0ur research has shown if you are stressed, you take it personally. Drive normally, move over to the left or ta ke drive normally, move over to the left or take your time. That is the key thing for us. We know that tailgating, close following, it is a key factor in casualties on the road. Nine in ten of our customers recognise it, but only a quarter admit to doing it. You mean drivers . Drivers, yes. And we were talking about it earlier, and naga says you try to keep that distance, naga says when she leaves a gap, invariably someone when she leaves a gap, invariably someone feels that gap, and i suppose that is where you say that it causes so many incidents, because it causes so many incidents, because it is that knock on effect for your behaviour on other people. And i think what we are trying to do with this campaign is think about the space you need to stop, think about the impact. 0ne space you need to stop, think about the impact. One of the questions we wa nt the impact. One of the questions we want our customers to ask is, if someone want our customers to ask is, if someone stopped in front of you, could you react . Favre and starts doing that i think the roads will be safer and people will understand it. Drive go into the gap by accident. If there was an accident, who is at fault . Legally, if you run into the back of another vehicle, you are at fault, and depending on the circumstances the police can take action against you for dangerous driving, a £100 fine for dangerous driving. Dave says i have thought of just hitting the brakes. Which is irrational, he knows that, he is not going to do. But you see it happen. And that is why i say i put my hazard is on. One point is, right now only thing policing our motorways is speed cameras, it is a free for all. And you say there is a £100 fine, but to actually spot tailgating, you almost have to see it for quite a long time, havent you, to acknowledge it exists. So we are trying to improve education and make people understand around what is stopping distances are, reinforced the two second rule, and there is a rule for enforcement, but at this stage it is encouraging compliance, making sure customers understand stay back, stay safe. And enforcement has a role, especially for those people who are tailgating really closely. Quite a few people responding on social media, saying tailgating is one issue, hogging the middle lane really gets peoples goat. Are they related in any way . We did some work asking customers around tailgating, not signalling, middle lane hogging, because if you are in the middle lane and you are not driving as fast as vehicles behind you, if vehicles have to overta ke behind you, if vehicles have to overtake you, they need that space. You need good lane discipline. Make sure you are in a good lane, because you can be the cause of frustration and tailgating for other customers, other drivers. Then you have got to be aware of how youre driving influences other people. Heres matt with a look at this mornings weather. It is going to be nice over the next couple of days for most of us. Two day . Couple of days for most of us. Twoday . Tomorrow . Some nice weather, some sunny weather, some warm weather. We will get our first taste of autumn, on wednesday with windy weather set to hack our way. Had. Not a windy weather set to hack our way. Had. Nota bad start windy weather set to hack our way. Had. Not a bad start at all. This is what will bring the windiest weather tonight. It is the remnants of hurricane hell and. Head. Helene. It will bring windy weather across the irish coast starlight. It is extending cloud across the north west. A bit grey, misty, but some sunshine across Northern England. There will be a few showers across some Western Areas through this morning and early afternoon but into the afternoon the highlands of scotland, showers in place with some long spells of rain. Southern and eastern scotland, the odd passing shower, it should be dry. 18 or 19 in Northern Ireland hazy sunshine towards the afternoon but there will be one or two showers early on. A few showers in north west england and North West Wales but most of england and wales will be dry and after a cloudy start in the south, very sunny afternoon. 25 the high in st helier. That is because we are bringing up tropical air ahead of the storm, which will work its way into the irish she threw tonight. The other areas were lucy the strongest of the wind, particularly around the hills and coast. To the south and east we may see gales and to the north of it, the strongest wind is attached to this area of rain which will work its way through the irish sea during the second half of the night, eastern areas of staying dry but uk wide it will be particularly warm and muggy. 13 18 degrees will be the minimum. A blustery start, Northern England, Northern Ireland turning windy across the northern half of scotland with outbreaks of rain. Elsewhere, a few showers and while it will remain blustery, still warm wind with averages around 19 25. Heads up into wednesday, a spell of Even Stronger wind and hatched to this low pressure. Scotland, Northern Ireland and Northern England. Well keep you updated. Thanks very much. Is 748. It is 7 a8 a. M. One of the things we often hear during the brexit negotiations is that british businesses want certainty, they want to know where they stand. Notjust not just businesses, it notjust businesses, it is all of us, really. Stephs with some Small Business owners this morning, finding out if theyre brexit ready. Good morning. Steph, its something bbc 5 live are also looking at this morning . Yes. Morning to you. We are in the building a couple long from the one you are in this morning, the university of salford and we have the radio 5 live team. Given it is six months after we leave the eu, we wa nt to six months after we leave the eu, we want to get a sense of people from all walks of life about how they feel about everything that is happening. Particularly we have been chatting to businesses, i will grab rachel as well, one of our presenters and a presenter of radio 5 live. Can i borrow you . Rachel and i will be talking to lots of different businesses at out this. What has everybody been sent to you . It has been fascinating. Some businesses here are confident that they are getting a head of the game, preparing themselves for what may happen post brexit and changing their Business Model and selling Different Things. 0thers their Business Model and selling Different Things. Others are saying that they have absolutely Critical Issues like freedom of movement of staff that will hamper the smooth running of their business if they cannot bring in workers from abroad. A lot of it depends on wider global issues, the value of the pound and consumer confidence. Of the big level dynamics as well. This is something you will be talking about, doing another show after this . We have heard westminster politicians talking about bricks a lot but we wa nt talking about bricks a lot but we want to bring it back to the reality of everyday people s lives, where they will work, where their kids will go to work. From 8. 30 we are asking that people to call in and tell us what they are doing practically to get ready for brexit in six months time and another two years time after that. Hopefully more ants is then questions in the end. As she mentioned, lots of businesses here, lets have a chat to some of them. We have four local Business People here and we have catherine, a professor of law at Cambridge University who will give us some context. 0n the side we have peter and jennifer. You both voted to remain, sir peter, you are in the restau ra nt to remain, sir peter, you are in the restaurant trade, tell me why it is important for the country to stay in the eu . I have three restaurants and delhi is in liverpool and manchester, we get the benefit of the flexible workforce, 80 of our workforce a re the flexible workforce, 80 of our workforce are spanish and european. Bringing goods in at the moment is as simple as doing online supermarket shopping and our big fear is that wont be as simple in the future and any delay reduces shelflife and causes huge problems until, that in terms of lost profit. Is it something you are worried about . Yes. We never planned to be an import. 0ur status was that immediately post referendum, was to mitigate against increase in prices with the exchange rate, importing directly and going directly to hand curacao and cheesemakers. We were able to buy cheaper in going direct but then it introduced a level of complexity to order and stop while. Al worry is that with tariffs and potential delay his, it is a skill that we really dont have and we wa nt that we really dont have and we want to serve food and drink in front of people. I dont want to re move front of people. I dont want to remove expensive staff in an office, having to deal with the administration of food importing. Let me bring in Business People that voted to leave. Ten, you are in the luxury holiday cottages market. You are not worried. We knew run luxury Hotel Cottages and we have seen our best year ever. No concerns about brexit, the state of the pound is helping us because there is a lot of staycations telling. Going. Helping us because there is a lot of staycations telling. Going. You are not worried about the skills . We employ local staff and we help out the local staff a lot and we are not seeing any exit at all. Catherine, what are your thoughts seeming to both sides of this . You can see the difference. For the gentleman who does holiday cottages, of course he wants people to come to the uk with a cheaper pound, good for business. This gentleman here, imports cheap goods and it means goods are more expensive and he is worried about the practicalities of how he will import goods in the future. What we dont know is what the future deal is going to look like. We dont even know if there will be a future deal. We dont even know if there will be a deal on the divorce, the article 50 deal, let alone the future. If there is a deal, i think there probably will be, there will be a transition period until the end of december 2020 and then things might change rapidly. Let me bring in more business starts, jennifer, you decided to start your business after the vote. You are in the shoe trade. What are your thoughts . the vote. You are in the shoe trade. What are your thoughts . I have a specialist ladies shoe business and we dont make high heels in the uk, really, but i had no choice to make them in europe, in portugal. I launched two years ago this month but obviously had been in planning before that, so when i put my first order in brexit happened and suddenly everything got a lot more expensive. Because i am a start up, lam cash expensive. Because i am a start up, i am cash strapped, we dont have much money and i am concerned about the future. If all of a sudden we did leave in a no deal situation it would be disastrous because i have got to try and find 8 customs charges, charges upfront. There is still a lot to be decided. charges, charges upfront. There is still a lot to be decided. I guess you dont know. It is the uncertainty, really. I product is a premium product. When there is customer uncertainty, when there is potential recession on the horizon, thatis potential recession on the horizon, that is the kind of product that gets squeezed first. At me bring in victoria, for you, you are on the catering equipment side of things. You do you dont have the worry is that she has. We have seen a significant impact, our customers are more cautious but from a business perspective, for me, there are loads of opportunities. The weaker pound means we are exploring a lot more of the export market and i think that there are opportunities out there for businesses because of us leading. You want to wrap that up for us in terms of what you are hearing . It is interesting that uncertainty hearing . It is interesting that u ncerta i nty affects hearing . It is interesting that uncertainty affects businesses at these guys voted to leave. It depends on the nature of your business. Uncertainty is bad for business. Uncertainty is bad for business right ross the economy because there is a reluctance to invest at the moment and that is the concern. If you are reluctant to invest in businesses are not going to develop. 0f invest in businesses are not going to develop. Of course, if your business is entirely uk based, lower pound, very attractive to foreigners to come and say hear. Thank you very much for your time. More from us here at the university of salford. Lets get the news, travel and weather wherever you are this morning. Good morning from bbc london news. The number of people in prison forfar right terror offences has gone up nearly 5 fold in just 2 years. Well, one of those in prison is darren osbourne, serving life for ploughing into muslim worshippers in a van in Finsbury Park last year. He killed one man and injured several others after being radicalised online. Figures also show that, for the first time in a decade, the number of white people arrested on suspicion of terror offences outnumbers asian suspects. As a new charity, berkshire Deaf Childrens Society launches, theres concern about the provision given to children with hearing difficulties in schools. Figures show that nearly 8 out of ten deaf children attend schools where theres no specialist provisions for them at all. And over half fail to achieve 5 gcses or more. Well, the department for education says it wants to ensure deaf children continue to get the support thats right for them and it is for local authorities to deploy appropriate staff. The harrow Half Marathon took place yesterday and it was the first full doing good for the environment. This is what normally happens, three quarters of a million bottles thrown a way early this year, so water in seaweed sachets were given out instead, which can be swallowed. Lets have a look at the travel situation now. 0n the tube board, theres been a signal failure at edgware road causing problems. It means minor delays on the circle line. Minor delays on the District Line between High Street Kensington and edgware road and the hammersmith and city line has minor too. 0n the roads, even sisters road is partly blocked northbound at Finsbury Park station due to an investigation where Emergency Services are blocking a lane. Finally, in west london, in yiewsley, falling lane is partly blocked between trout road and colham lane because of a major burst water main causing huge problems in the area. Lets have a check on the weather now with kate. Good morning. Its quite a cloudy but mild start out there this morning. Temperatures overnight didnt drop much below the high teens celsius so it is quite warm and it will remain warm through the day. Later on, well start to see some brighter skies but it remains rather breezy. In fact, the breeze will continue to strengthen as we head through the course of the day. Now, the cloud from this morning will clear away northwards. Plenty of sunshine later. The wind switches, a drier air coming up from the south means the temperature getting much warmer, 25 celsius the maximum. Now, overnight, the wind will continue to strengthen. It is going to be a very windy night. Starting off clear, then more cloud through after the second part of the night. Staying dry, though, and staying mild the minimum temperature between 15 and 18 celsius. So another cloudy and very windy start tomorrow morning. Quite a gusty wind through the course of tuesday. It doesnt really drop through the course of the day, either. Temperatures still impressive, in the low 20s. Wind starts to fall a little bit lighter as we head through wednesday but it is still breezy and still remaining warm. Deal or no deal. That is what va nessa deal or no deal. That is what Vanessa Feltz is talking about with regards to brexit. Ill be back in half an hour. And good morning. Welcome to breakfast with dan walker and naga munchetty. It is monday morning and just gone eight oclock. 0ur headlines today my deal or no deal. The prime minster defends her plan to take the uk out of the eu. I believe well get a good deal. Well bring that back from the eu negotiations and put that to parliament. I think that the alternative to that will be not having a deal. Good morning. That is what the Prime Minister thinks but what about the rest of the country . We have gathered people from all walks of life here to the university of salford to talk to them about how they are feeling with six months to go until we leave the European Union. Rescuers in the philippines are battling to save a group of miners and theirfamilies buried under a landslide triggered by typhoon mangkhut. Not just an annoyance. A new Road Safety Campaign targeting tailgating warns that driving too close is causing deaths and serious injuries. Thank you for all your messages this morning. In sports its astonishing, says simon yates as he wins the vuelta a espana, to complete a british clean sweep of cyclings grand tours. And some sunshine and warmth over the next few days but also the first spells of autumn gales. I will have the details right here on breakfast. Good morning. Its monday 17th september. The Prime Minister has told the bbc that the uk faces a choice between the brexit deal she negotiates with brussels or no deal at all. In an interview with panorama, theresa may also criticises proposals for the irish border which have been put forward by some brexiteers. Former foreign secretary Boris Johnson claims that failing to resolve the border issue could lead to a total write off of brexit, as our Political Correspondent chris mason explains. You know how it is. Your call is important to us, and all that guff, and then you are kept waiting. Thank you. Hold music plays. Hello, jean claude. Hello. Im very well, thank you. I hope you managed to have a good summer break. The brexit negotiations as youve never seen them before. The Prime Minister talking to the president of the european commission, jean claude juncker. Panorama given a glimpse behind the scenes, before being shooed out. In an interview with nick robinson, the Prime Minister says mps will face a simple choice her plan or nothing. I want to be clear whether you are saying, i think you are, my deal or no deal. The deal. As i say, i believe well get a good deal. Well bring that back from the european from the eu negotiations and put that to parliament. I think that the alternative to that will be not having a deal, because i dont think there will be. A, i dont think the negotiations will have that deal, and b, were leaving on 29th march 2019. Last week, conservative brexiteers opposed to the Prime Ministers so called chequers plan set out their own ideas, including using technology to avoid checks here at the border between Northern Ireland and the republic. But mrs may argues they are a nonstarter. The only proposal thats been put forward that delivers on them not having a hard border and ensures that we dont carve up the United Kingdom is the chequers plan. The only proposal . So these other plans, that we saw this week, they dont do it . No, because what many of these other plans are based on is moving the border. You dont solve the issue of no hard border by having a hard border 20 km inside Northern Ireland or 20 km inside ireland. Its still a hard border. But in his weekly newspaper column, which doubles as a stage for his alternative outlook, the former foreign secretary borisjohnson argues that it is the governments approach to the irish border that leaves the uk, as he puts it, heading full throttle for the ditch with a total write off of brexit. It was already noisy, and its getting louder. Chris mason, bbc news, at westminster. And you can see more of that interview with theresa may on tonights panorama at 8. 30 on bbc one. South china is being hit by Tropical Storm mangkhut with winds of up to 100 miles an hour and torrential rain. Chinese state media says two people have been killed. In a moment well speak to the bbcs Howard Johnson about the devastation left behind in the philippines, but first lets go to our china correspondent robin brant whos in hong kong. Good to see you. I can see taped off areas behind you. I can only imagine the devastation there. Yes, this is the devastation there. Yes, this is the aftermath of what is now a Tropical Storm. Mangkhut is moving westerly across china towards the border with vietnam. When it came here last night, we had two hours of extreme, intense winds, and it was difficult to stand up outside, and it brought the beach forward basically. The shoreline is 30 or a0 metres down there. We have boulders, trees uprooted, benches pushed way back behind where the camera is. At my feet we have phone boxes, the re m na nts of my feet we have phone boxes, the remnants of those, plastic bottles, which shows you how far the storm surge was. We now have a clean up operation, trying to make safe the trees that were brought down and the shattered glass and debris everywhere. It is basically back to work here and there are no reported deaths. 360 people injured though. 0n Mainland China, by moving 2. 5 Million People, a large scale movement of people, they think they have averted what could have been a far more disastrous impact from the storm there. They will be pleased by that action that took place in the provinces in the path of mangkhut. Indeed. Thank you. Robin brant in the philippines. We were going to try to go to Howard Johnson. Listening to robert on Mainland China, we hope that things will survive. The storm moved from the philippines to Mainland China, didnt it . Yes, it did. It ripped up this province in particular where we are standing today but there is news emerging from a couple of provinces away from here, where a Mining Community has been devastated by a landslide. In the last 2a hours we have had emerging details of how a3 people have died in a landslide and 39 missing according to the president spokesperson today. A huge search and rescue operation is ongoing and people are trying to find these miners and their families. What happened was these families. What happened was these families took refuge inside a bunkhouse either side of a mountain when the winds and the rain whipped up when the winds and the rain whipped up the land slipped and obliterated the bunkhouse. Environment secretary has ordered a complete shutdown of all mining activities in the area. The philippine president is travelling to the area to offer his condolences to the families of those who died in this terrible incident. Thank you very much, howard. It was worth trying to get back to you to make sure the technical challenge worked. Howard in the philippines for us and before that robert brant in Mainland China. A new way of measuring poverty in the uk is being proposed to include the unavoidable costs that some people face. Factors such as childcare or the impact of disability should be taken into account, according to the social Metrics Commission. Heres our social affairs correspondent, alison holt. Jenny has multiple sclerosis. Shes also a single mum with four children. 0n benefits, she struggles to pay for the extra childcare, transport and heating bills that result from her condition. Todays report says existing poverty measures ignore the unavoidable costs someone like jenny faces. I get some things fortnightly, some things weekly, some things every four weekly, and trying to juggle that with bills that you pay monthly, childrens things that cost weekly, i got myself into such a muddle because of all the medications i take for the pain relief and for the muscle spasms. The poverty measure proposed by the social Metrics Commission sets a persons income and easily accessible assets against inescapable costs like childcare, debt repayments and living with a disability. That leaves the money they have to live on. Under this measure, 14. 2 Million People are in poverty in the uk the same as before but nearly half live in families with a disabled person and there are fewer pensioners below the poverty line. Your savings that you can draw down on, your liquid savings, should be accredited to you. Your debt should be ta ken into account. Your costs of being disabled should, and do, influence whether or not you have spare money to spend on food and housing and likewise childcare. So these are some of the changes we have made along the way. The government says this measure provides insight into the complexity of the issue, but its work is already lifting people out of poverty. Alison holt, bbc news. We are getting loads of messages about this story this morning. Motorists are being issued fresh warnings about the danger of driving too close to the car in front. Highways england is launching a campaign to highlight that tailgating is the cause of one in eight serious injuries or deaths. According to road safety research, tailgating can also lead to more trafficjams, caused by the Ripple Effect of drivers braking sharply to avoid a collision. Game of thrones could match its own record tonight for the most wins at the Us Television awards, the emmys. The ceremony celebrates its 70th anniversary tonight. British hopes include nominations for thandie newton, Benedict Cumberbatch and vanessa kirby. Sandra oh, formerly of greys anatomy, is the first woman of asian descent to be nominated for best actress for her role in killing eve. You say it is very good and it is on my watch list. I was tempted to go full bench because it started on saturday night and everything is now available on bbc iplayer, so i want to watch the whole lot now. It looks you in from episode one, so very good. Good recommendation it is 8 11am. Ruth davidson, the leader of the scottish conservative party, has been praised by her colleagues after saying she never wants to be Prime Minister because she values her family and her Mental Health too much. She revealed to the sunday times that she self harmed and thought about taking her own life when she was younger. Lets talk about this with lucy dimbylow, who first self harmed when she was a teenager, and Bernadka Dubicka from the Royal College of psychiatrists. Good morning to you. Thank you very much for coming in. Lucy, first of all, what was it like when you heard Ruth Davidson talk about this . Was ita Ruth Davidson talk about this . Was it a relief to you to have somebody so it a relief to you to have somebody so high profile speaking about it, and of that age as well . so high profile speaking about it, and of that age as well . I have so much admiration for anybody who can speak openly on Mental Health. To see somebody in that position, such a public position, contemporary of me, the same age, and that is so reassuring. It is a very brave move, i think. The fact that Mental Health is very isolating as well, and more people are speaking openly about it. The reason we are talking to you todayis the reason we are talking to you today is because you can relate so closely. Would you like to share your experiences in terms of Mental Health challenges and self harm . was first diagnosed with depression asa was first diagnosed with depression as a teenager. My experiences of self harm started around the same time as well. It is something that has come and gone through my life as my Mental Health has waxed and waned. It is something that has still been an issue for me as an adult. As i mentioned, there is a lot more openness talking about Mental Health these days. Certainly when i was a teenager it was very much a taboo subject. There are still something that is very hard to speak out about and self harm is still a taboo. Are you still battling . Absolutely. I think it is something i will battle with for the rest of my life. When you say self harm, you think it is teenagers do, which you grow out of. To be here at nearly a0 and still battling with it is not an easy experience. Kudos to you for coming on and talking about it because people need to. It is not easy. How big a problem do you see self harm is being . I am a child psychiatrist and we see a lot of it and tragically over recent years it has been increasing more and more particularly in young women, but as lucy says it can sadly affect people of any lucy says it can sadly affect people ofany age. Lucy says it can sadly affect people of any age. We do see this peak in young people. Interesting that lucy said it is something you grow out of. I just said it is something you grow out of. Ijust wonder. By younger people doing this more because they have seen that it is something that other people do and they see it as a way of getting release, relieving the pressure from the pain they are feeling emotionally or mentally . I just dont know what perpetuates it and what keeps it going. There are couple of important points there. Firstly most people do grow out of it. It is not that simple, is it . It is not that simple. Some people do ita is not that simple. Some people do it a few times and never again. There are other people who do struggle who are very vulnerable and they do find it very difficult to stop. It can become quite an addictive behaviour and your other point about young people copying each other, that is Something Else that we do see. And these days with social media as well, it can be quite unhelpful in that respect. Lucy, when you have spoken to people about it, and you have visible scarring on about it, and you have visible scarring on your arms, about it, and you have visible scarring on your arms, do you think that peoplejudge scarring on your arms, do you think that people judge you or have expectations about the person that you are . Im quite open about it with close friends. I find difficulty with people i dont know. I have never had anyone directly comment on the scarring, but as you say it is noticeable and obvious and people see it. I have had to make a choice that not covering up is something i am going to do. Certainly during this summers heatwave there is no way i could have kept covered up in that weather. It does mean i have got to be prepared for the looks. I am conscious when i go to a coffee shop andi conscious when i go to a coffee shop and i pay for my drink that people are looking at me and in the School Playground people are probably thinking that is not someone i want my child hanging around with. I do feel thejudgment my child hanging around with. I do feel the judgment and the stigma, which is why i want to talk about it. Ruth was interesting in her interview when she said that her scars are visible and nobody has commented on them. There is almost that reverse psychology. You may feel i dont want to show them and pa rents feel i dont want to show them and parents might think i am not a responsible adult, whatever, but people might not want to say what is that . Knowing full well what it is. How should we be learning to deal and approach and conversed with people who have or self harming . And approach and conversed with people who have or self harming . M very much depends on the individual but the most important if you are self harming, you are struggling, do find somebody to talk to. It is really important that those people closest to you can listen without being judgmental. Listening is the best thing that you can do. It is also scary to approach someone. Can do. It is also scary to approach someone. Imagine we were friends and i saw it, where is the education for approaching someone to say do you wa nt to approaching someone to say do you want to talk about it . Is there something going on . There is lots of information available. Royal college of psychiatrists has information about self harm and resources as well. What is the best way for someone well. What is the best way for someone to approach you . M well. What is the best way for someone to approach you . If we are talking about speaking to peers and friends, let the lead come from the person themselves. The people i am co mforta ble person themselves. The people i am comfortable with i can talk about this with them. Passing acquaintances, not so much. It is my information to share when i am ready. But i would back up what she says about getting help. The point made earlier about the addictive nature of self harm is very true and it is very hard to stop once you have started. I would urge any teenagers in the position that i was at 1a or 15, feeling drawn to this, please dont make the first move. Dont do the first one. Please get help. It is not easy. I know what it is like to be on an endless waiting list and to battle for every bit of ca re list and to battle for every bit of care that you need, but i think Early Intervention is a massive deal here. Thank you for coming on and talking to us about it. If youve been affected by any of the issues weve been discussing this morning you can find more information and support at bbc. Co. Uk actionline. It is 8 17am. Lets talk to matt and find out what is happening with the weather. It is a mixed and you say that autumn is definitely on the way. It is but it is a bit of a roller coaster this week. There will be some tropical warmth at times and sunshine but it is all linked into what will be our first bout of autumn gales over the next few days. The first one is in the atlantic at the moment, former hurricane, pushing its way north over the last few days, coming towards us. It is no longer hurricane of course, but as we dragged up that tropical moisture it comes towards us. We have cloud in northern and Western Areas of the uk with splashes of rain here and that drifting north. Dry weather today mostly with the main focus of the showers in the west. Hazy sunshine cant be ruled out even here. The breeze picking up and nothing too untoward at this stage. Showers replaced by long spells of rain. Looking at the details at a oclock in the highlands and islands, the rain becomes heavy and persistent. In eastern and southern parts of scotland, we cant rule out spots of rain but still feeling humid, 16 to 18 degrees. Maybe 20 in Northern Ireland with hazy sunshine possible through the afternoon. Spots of rain across parts of Northern England and wales. Mostly dry with increasing amounts of sunshine in the south midlands and southern england. 25 the high in london and st helier today. That Tropical Weather pushing north ahead of helene, with winds of up north ahead of helene, with winds of up to 65 mph. To the south of that, there will be lighter winds. Tonight will be wet across northern scotland. The winds are tied in with an area of rain that later in the night will work up to the irish sea, bringing in the tropical warmth and temperatures not dropping. 1a to 18 degrees on tuesday morning. A windy start across the uk and wettest in northern parts of england and Northern Ireland first thing and in scotla nd Northern Ireland first thing and in scotland the rain lingers longest in the far north. A blustery day, sunshine and showers. Winds not as strong as through the night but with the sunshine out, it will feel quite warm with high temperatures of 17 to 25 not out off the question. The strongest winds coming on wednesday. Low pressure. Uncertainty about its exact track but Northern England and Northern Ireland could see winds of up Northern Ireland could see winds of up to 70 mph causing disruption and further south widespread gales. Sunshine and showers further south and east with rain in the north and west. A little bit of everything to come and that is just the next three days. Thank you. A bbc 5 live survey which has come out this morning, suggests that older people are more optimistic about brexit than young people. Its one of the issues stephs looking at today, marking six months to go until we leave the eu. Shes at the university of salford. She has been talking to lots of people. Good morning. Good morning to you and good morning to everybody. It is interesting. We talk about brexit a lot but given that it talk about brexit a lot but given thatitis talk about brexit a lot but given that it is six months until the uk leaves the European Union, we want to gather people from all walks of life to chat about it. We are doing it in conjunction with bbc 5 live. All right, love . Sean is working on bbc 5 live this morning. People from different businesses, people really excited about leaving the eu, and people who are not. This survey that you mentioned as well is also interesting. Bbc 5 live survey at 1000 people and asks the various questions about how they feel about brexit. It is not a reflection of what is or isnt going to happen, it is just what people feel about it. We asked if brexit will have a positive impact on the uk and a1 agreed and 50 disagreed. An interesting divide among the people we spoke to. As we mentioned at the top of this, there are generational differences. We have the younger people who are most likely to have voted remain and the older people most likely to have voted leave. We have a couple of them together along with the bbcs chris morris, the reality check expert for the bbc, working out what it means for everybody. Let me chat to you first. You are really heavily involved in this debate because you have been going round the country talking to lots of young people. What do you think and what are they saying to you . And what we have heard and also from the yougov poll that came out this morning, 78 versus 22 believe that we should remain in the eu. That is even higher than during the referendum and 75 of 18 to 2a year olds voted to remain. Why . Young people do not feel this is in their interest. We need two things, stuff to be cheap and job options. Brexit makes things more expensive because we are increasing barriers between us and our closest trade partners. And it makes the uk are less attractive place to create jobs and thejobs less attractive place to create jobs and the jobs that leave, we cant even follow them. This is not good for young people. You totally disagree because you voted to leave the European Union. Why . Why did i vote to leave . Actually it is around arrogance and hypocrisy in terms of how they actually run things. It is about wasting money, moving the parliament up and down 150 million to salvage french pride. It is about them having rules that they dont follow themselves. For example, the tax on multinationals, which is absolutely a good thing, we should tax multinationals, but to set up the trade agreement with amazon in luxembourg . Jean claude juncker. The hypocrisy around there. They interfere unnecessarily in what we do, i think. Interfere unnecessarily in what we do, ithink. We interfere unnecessarily in what we do, i think. We cant take vat of sanitary products because the eu says so. What has it got to do with the eu . There are lots of things that really niggle and annoy. There will be people that disagree with some of what you said, including you. For example, the idea that they interfere and we are not accountable. 0k, it comes down to what is the Single Market . Imagine if you want to sell your product to 28 Different Countries but they have 28 Different Countries but they have 28 Different Countries but they have 28 different rules, you have got to manufacture, market and package it in 20 different ways, which raises costs. The eu makes it similar. This depends on the deal. The current plan is to leave the Single Market, which means will automatically leave the benefit. Being part of the Single Market means if you hadnt made a rule, you just need to meet the agreement of your home country, the agreement of your home country, the uk, and it is legal across the board. That keeps products cheaper. Theresa may is asking to copy the rules of the eu but giving up our assay, which makes us less sovereign than eu members. Right now we have 73 of the 750 members of the european parliament, 10 of voting rights, despite being one of 28 countries, a dominant force but we will become a vassal state. It is difficult to know where to start really democracy, people have had a vote, and we have said that we want to leave, and we. The majority voted for that. The Single Market, i would have wanted to stay in the Single Market but maastricht changed all of that. John major forced through a treaty that nobody got a vote on and we stopped engaging with the Single Market, which is fantastic. It is moving towards a federation, which nobody voted for, and which we dont want. The thing that comes out from both of you is all the different areas that it impacts on. Let me bring in chris as well. It is a very complicated argument to have, whether we should leave or stay. It is. The big argument is to remain or leave but most people are practical questions about what it means for them and we have had questions coming in on social media this morning. Lend on instagram, how will brexit affect british expat living in europe . Under the Withdrawal Agreement being negotiated, they will be able to stay living in the country they live in at the moment if they are there already. I have spoken to quite a few of them and i spoke to a woman who works as a chef in france, living in france, working as a chef in the alps in the winter season and in the alps in the winter season and in the summershe in the alps in the winter season and in the summer she goes to greece. What he doesnt know in the future is if she will be able to work in Different Countries after brexit. There are details that need to be worked out. Bethany on instagram is brexit going to impact our supply of Prescription Medication . These are the practical issues we want to know. Medicines come across borders all the time. We have had a lot of stuff from dover, and the importance of keeping trade flowing through dover. We import 37 million packets of medicine every month and we export 45 million, we export more, so export 45 million, we export more, so they need us as well. Drug companies have said they will keep more stocks for the time around brexit so there is disruption to trade we will have more stocks. We we re trade we will have more stocks. We were discussing this before we came on air. It is in nobodys interest was not to have medicines on either side, so we dont want scare stories, we want the medicines to be available. It is a technicality of getting the trading rules right which is difficult. There is so much that we could discuss. Thank you for chatting to us and we appreciate you coming in to talk to us. More later but first the news, travel and weather where you are this morning. Good spell of windy weather spell of windy weather starting tonight into tomorrow with the remnants of x harry kane lane. You can see it here just to the west of iberia. Its moving northward. That will spread its way in as we go through tonight. I had a flat, a lot of cloud, some rain moving its way into the west and Northern Ireland. A wet day for northern and Western Areas of scotland. Elsewhere, it should be mostly dry. Sunshine this morning. Some sunshine this afternoon across southern areas and thatis afternoon across southern areas and that is where temperatures will get up that is where temperatures will get up to about 25 degrees. Elsewhere, highs in her late teens and low 20s. This is storm helene. Look at the white lines, the isobars. They will squeeze and it will be a windy night, particularly around the irish sea coast. Gusts of 60 to 65 mph as we go through the night and heavy rain spreading its way into wales, north west england, Northern Ireland and scotland. Really quite warm and humid night. Those temperatures no lower than about 1a to 17 degrees. The rain will continue to move its way further north and east woods. As it does so, there will be sunny spells, plenty of dry weather on tuesday afternoon with just a few showers moving in but still a very breezy day. Even during the afternoon. These are the wind gusts, the black arrows, into the 30s and aos must brow. Exposed areas, more than that. Temperatures will get into high values, about 17 to 25, perhaps 26 degrees in the east. Tuesday into wednesday, we have the next weather system that will move its weight gain and the white lines, the isobars, close together. Indicative of another windy day to come during wednesday. Probably a windy day compared to tonight. Stay tuned to the forecast. Goodbye. This is business live from bbc news with ben thompson and sally bundock. The brexit battle. Theresa may says its her deal or no deal as business calls for an end to the uncertainty. Live from london, thats our top story on monday 17th september. The british chambers of commerce cuts its forecasts for economic growth, saying companies are suffering from not knowing what their post brexit future will look like. Also in the programme. Typhoon mangkhut continues to batter china, killing dozens and causing tens of millions of dollars of damage. European

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