Transcripts For BBCNEWS The Papers 20240715

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Settled and slow process so on sunday, quieter process. Viewing chilly because of the wind direction but a good deal of dry weather and just a scattering of showers. Temperatures will be a few degrees, we mightjust temperatures will be a few degrees, we might just scraped temperatures will be a few degrees, we mightjust scraped double digits across central and southern parts of england and wales. Moving out of sunday, high buildings in the west and that again is going to quieten things down. The start of the working week is going to be pretty chilly one with cold air pushing right across the country. Youre going to notice the difference bursting in the morning, cold start but hopefully dry one with some spells of sunshine, not a bad day in prospect. Generally those temperatures will struggle, maybe just peeking into single figures. We mightjust just peeking into single figures. We might just scraped a just peeking into single figures. We mightjust scraped a ten or 11 down to the south west if we are lucky, but hopefully the sunshine will compensate. That area of High Pressure will stay with us as we move into tuesday but it is going to drift its way over into the near continent and that will bring more of the easterly feed across the eastern half of the uk and start to question whether were going to see a change it again. So on tuesday, looks as though the driest and maybe the sunniest of the weather will be out to the east and perhaps the coolest, a little more cloud, indications are something a little more milderfrom the indications are something a little more milder from the west. Indications are something a little more milderfrom the west. This looks likely to be the story as we move further ahead. We had this battle between the easterly feed coming off the near continent and the cooler air and something again a little bit more unsettled at a little bit more unsettled at a little milder coming off the atlantic. We start off the week with a meandering jetstream and that is going to be the influence in the story for the next few days, as we look further ahead, it looks like the jetstream will intensify a little and weather more powerful jets, we lose that undulation. That potentially could dry in wet weather from the atlantic but there is a great deal of uncertaintyjust where the jet is great deal of uncertaintyjust where thejet is going great deal of uncertaintyjust where the jet is going to great deal of uncertaintyjust where thejet is going to be great deal of uncertaintyjust where the jet is going to be sitting. Great deal of uncertaintyjust where thejet is going to be sitting. A little bit further south, we stay in the cold air and it takes unsettled weather over into the near continent. As we go into next week, it will be cold to start but then largely dry. Could potentially turn wet and windy at it is still open to doubt, there is a lot to play for andi doubt, there is a lot to play for and i will have all the details again in the next four hours. 2a hours. Hello. This is bbc news with lukwesa burak. Well be taking a look at tomorrow mornings papers in a moment with tom mctague and rachel cunliffe. First, the headlines. The Prime Minister has attempted to win over mps to back her brexit deal with a compromise, suggesting mps could have the power to choose between the controversial irish backstop or extending the transition period. The mobile phone operator 02 has apologised to millions of customers after a Software Fault left them unable to access the internet all day. The outage has also had knock on effects for bus timetable information and businesses. Britains biggest Gambling Companies have agreed to stop advertising during live sports broadcasts. It follows political pressure about the amount of betting advertising on television. And pete shelley, the lead singer of the buzzcocks, has died suddenly at the age of 63. Its thought he died of a heart attack in estonia, where he was living. Hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. With me are tom mctague, the chief uk Political Correspondent for politico and rachel cunliffe, whos the comment and features editor at cityam. Many of tomorrows front pages are already in. what now Prime Minister . asks the telegraph, as cabinet ministers tell theresa may to come up with an 11th hour plan to get her brexit deal through the commons. The i follows suit, with downing street insisting that Tuesdays Parliament showdown will go ahead, despite the chief whip acknowledging an uphill battle. mobile phone mayhem for 30 million says the daily mail after 02 users were cut off thanks to an internet blackout at britains second biggest mobile network. The ft puts the arrest of huaweis chief Financial Officer in canada on its front page, afterfinancial markets fell amid tension between the us and china. The metro splashes with three terror arrests made over a neo Nazi Hate Campaign that targeted prince harry, labelling him a race traitor. An exclusive from the guardian describes a battle between the government and the head of the nhs over the extra billions theresa may has promised the health service. And the times also features a Health Related story, reporting that five million patients a month are waiting more than three weeks to see their gp. Those are the front pages. Lets have a little chat. We are going to start off with the telegraph, it is brexit we are basically starting off with. The paper asking a question we are all asking. All my friends and family keep asking me what is go to happen . What you tell them . I say i havent a clue. That is the true. When you read this story in the telegraph, incredibly detailed, on a meeting of cabinet ministers today in numberten meeting of cabinet ministers today in number ten where the Prime Minister addressed them about what could come next and they said to her, what is going to happen . She didnt give them an answer. We have a hint of it here, the telegraph talks about the fourth option would be to table an amendment next week to the motion, which is the meaningful vote on the Prime Ministers deal which will come in on tuesday, now that amendment has been laid tonight and what it does is that it asks the Prime Minister to go back to brussels and to seek a political clarification on the eus behalf that this backstop, should it ever come into force, would only last for one year. Are key to this is, bit that is only a political declaration, that is an aspirational statement that they are looking for. It is not a legally binding statement and the dup leader has already said that this is not good enough. So it doesnt appear to change the numbers at all for the pm. What we saw with the official agreement, when we looked at it in legal detail, which i have not personally done more but i have read what lawyers have said about it. When you look at it, there is some language that implies that it would be temporary and there is some language that says the default is, this will be permanent until, unless some other solution can emerge. The point is is that the strong legal language is on the eu side and the language is on the eu side and the language in britains favour is muddy and fudgy and more political in nature, which is exactly what this amendment is. We saw the attorney general comments on the legal implications of the deal, this amendment is in goa to help with that at all and i dont think it will lead to more mps voting with theresa may on her deal on tuesday. If indeed the vote is on tuesday because some of the other options put forward by cabinet ministers we re put forward by cabinet ministers were to delay it by possibly a week because the eu leaders are meeting on thursday and friday next week, or in fact, until january. On thursday and friday next week, or in fact, untiljanuary. I add on thursday and friday next week, or in fact, untiljanuary. Iadd my their optimism, something might happen, something might change, maybe we will get the vote. Eye to see how postponing it will help the Prime Minister. Even to have it postponed she has got to go to parliament to ask. Imagine how embarrassing it would be to say please can i delay the vote and they say no and they say no again after having the vote. And notjust know, possibly looking at 200 vote is, thatis possibly looking at 200 vote is, that is the numbers we are looking at. This is unprecedented, i remember covering tony blair and he would have resigned if he lost a vote on changing education reforms by one vote. We are talking about the Prime Ministers being on a she loses by 100 on the most consequential piece of legislation in decades. I want to put to you very quickly before move on to Jeremy Corbyns take on this. What do you make of the line coming out of brussels, the European Court of justice saying that they are going to put forward a motion, or rather they are going to, i think on monday they are going to, i think on monday they will announce that they are in a position to cancel brexit if it comes to it, they can cancel brexit. Were you following outline . That lie in the we got that earlier on in the week that a country decides to invoke article 50, they can revoke it. Were you following that lie in . Line . It is all stacking up now, if you asked me a month ago if there is a chance of a second referendum, i would say no chance, now it is unpredictable. The more information you have, the harder it is to make a prediction. We cannotjudge what the ecj will rule on monday. This was based on a piece of advice that a country could revoke article 50. It seems common sense that if you can give your intentions to leave you can take that away because nothing in legal terms has happened yet. Why would you not be able to do that . Staying with brexit, but we are fine at finally hearing from jeremy corbyn. What people speaking over the last 12 2a hours, he has been talking in the guardian. What has he been saying . Labour can do it better. I think thats about it. He has repeated something he has said quite a lot, that there would be, a stage process for labour. If they would vote down the governments proposal, the Prime Minister s brexit package, they would seek to force an election. They would do that by calling a vote of no confidence if they think they can win. If they have a majority in the house of commons. That is all you need and that triggers a two Week Programme need and that triggers a two Week Programme process by whichjeremy corbyn were given a chance to form a government. You are looking at a general election. What does that mean for brexit . He is saying if he cannot get an election, give him a chance, he would move them to call for a peoples vote. What he is saying here is if in the chance to negotiate brexit and his plan sounds great, he says i will get Single Market access and stay in the Customs Union, but i will give us a say as well. I was in brussels or the start of this week and they said no chance, absolutely no chance. The interesting thing about his thing in the guardian is that it is all rhetoric and all fuzzy on details, which you can do. He is chastising theresa may and notorious for fighting amongst themselves, pointing out that problems with the deal, we know the problems, that is very accurate. Where it goes into fa nta sy very accurate. Where it goes into fantasy [and is where he talks about labours plan for it. It is fuzzy words, like strong relationship with the eu, here we have a conference in Customs Union plan, which is not the Customs Union plan, which is not the Customs Union, it is a Customs Union. The only concrete says thing he says is a liberal view of migration, not cutting numbers, only eu migrants as the top priority, better for the economy and what a lot of people wanted to stay in the eu want something we dont like the xenophobic, we must strengthen our borders, argument. That is good but the rest of it is totally delusional to think that he could get this kind of Customs Union Single Market plan, but also give britain a say, but also give us control and be to say new trade deals and have brexit. Is to an half years, we know that will not happen. He will match his test. It is not happen. He will match his test. It is to an half years. It is two and a half years. Lets turn to the mail, something that has affected a lot of people, whether you use 02 or couldnt hear from somebody, most of the country would have been affected by the story making the front page. You are both on 02. One saving grace is that people could not read about brexit for about 12 hours, which is fantastic. It was great for me because i was cut off and i could get on with getting on with work and not looking at twitter. I think, seriously, it did have an effect on lots of people, small businesses. I was ina lots of people, small businesses. I was in a taxi earlier today and the taxi driver said that he was facing three or four days, the longer this carried on he was facing real loss of earnings. That is really important. He cannot afford to lose three or £400, so he had to go and buy and use encarta. That is another £50 or so that he shouldnt have to spend and he wont get that money back. You say you have to do work to get on twitter, i cannot do it without it and there was a lovely tweet saying that today we can find out if your friends are in or renew or if they wanted to. There is a serious point, it has affected gps, electronic us timetables, payment systems, however many people who use apple pay or Google Wallet and go to a cashless economy, apparently it will all be done by the internet. 0ur will all be done by the internet. Our economy runs on the internet. If you take that away from people, nothing works. What is also interesting is when you look at who else uses than work, including tesco, sky, and if gas, lyca mobile, this is a network that is used by of Foreign Workers and expatriates. They use that phone and that network to co nta ct they use that phone and that network to Contact People abroad to give them passwords to access the money that they are sending. When you start to think about it, the knock on effects have gone way beyond our borders and affecting, like you say, economies but also other economies. It also hit softbank in japan and other economies. It also hit softbank injapan and it is all down to ericsson, which is sweden. Globalisation. Says the world we live in. Lets turn to the times and is the nhs. What is the story about them . So this is the headline, patients facing a three week wait to see a gp. Iam probably facing a three week wait to see a gp. I am probably one of them, it definitely takes that long to get one in my surgery. There are 1000 fewer Family Doctors now than when ministers plan to recruit 5000 more in 2015, so basically we do not have enough gps and what this is really a story about is where healthcare must also go because we have piled lots and lots of muggy into a e, particularly in the midlands, which is very important, but that takes muqqy is very important, but that takes muggy away from gp services, which actually cheaper to run and then that means people cannot get a gp service, vape put off getting something looked at and then it gets more serious and then they go to accident and emergency and it puts more strain on the healthcare system. Money. 0ne we do not have enough gps, second, we are not managing our resources effectively. Im going to ask you tojump managing our resources effectively. Im going to ask you to jump to the guardian, justin king get to this very quickly. What were talking about here is a row between the nhs chief executive and the government over what he is expected to deliver for the extra money that the government has pledged to commit. We are talking about the huge increase in nhs spending by the government, £20 billion a year. This is described by some people as the biggest fiscal event in history, but i have been looking at statistics actually today of what people noticed and social media, and this huge influence of spending was not picked up by anybody at all. People we re picked up by anybody at all. People were looking at all sorts of pledges coming up in government, so the government has made a massive increase and is getting no political benefit from it yet, and they are now involved in a row with the nhs to say we want to see real improvement here because the stories that you see on the times are costing us votes. 0k. That you see on the times are costing us votes. Ok. We are going to go back to the times and the french tax offices are targeted, what have they done . This is chaos ina what have they done . This is chaos in a story that is not britain for once. It is the process that had been going on the last couple of weeks against the president emmanuel macron. It all started with an increase in fuel tax, that increase in fuel tax now been cancelled today, but the protests are continuing, they have now spread, you have students were rising, you have trade unionists and farmers getting involved, at least three or four people have died, the police have been using teargas and stun grenades against protestors. It has got very, very violent. It is not just about fuel any more. No, it is actually about the government and they are going to close the eiffel tower on sunday because of safety issues. I was actually in paris on sunday and you could hear people talking about it on the streets as you when past. This was described by some people as not as a riot as an insurrection, actually this is a smaller number of protestors here than they were in previous riot the year before. What happened here was it was violent and anarchistic, there was no control, and the president did not have anybody to go negotiate with because this is all done on facebook, this is small groups. Some of these groups are fighting with each other in paris streets, so this is a sort of sign of how social media can quickly cause riots and protests and it is completely out of control. Yeah and we cannot negotiate with anyones even though he has given them what they originally wanted, it is never enough now they have got about 40 demands, which include lowering the pension age and state tax on all kinds of things, i think it is also a sign that maybe he is in over his head because he promised at the age of 41, head because he promised at the age of41,| head because he promised at the age of 41, i think, to come in and fix all of frances problem single handedly and he is up against the same problems at all kinds of previous french leaders have faced and he does not have any answers. This is what we have to look forward to when brexit collapses. That is a cheery thought. At least we do not have cobblestones like they do in paris, yet. They do like to go on a protest though. Dont get any ideas. The next thing is if you want to get a wage, just king. Ok, thank you very much. It has been great fun and it is lovely to have you watching us as well. Dont forget the front pages or online. Are. Bbc. Co. Uk papers and if you miss the programme, you can watch it later on bbc iplayer. A big thank you to my guests this evening, tom mctague and rachel cunliffe. And from all of us, goodbye. Thank you. Good evening. Your latest sports news. The bosses of several britains biggest Gambling Companies have agreed to stop using advertising between kick off in the final whistle of live sports broadcast. The move include some of britains leading bookmakers, including bette b and 65, williams and ladbrokes. Bet 365. If they do not self regulate them regulation will perhaps be thrust upon them. They have looked at the issue of tv advertising, perhaps recognise that there is a degree too much, what are they going to do at that point . Do they tinker around the margins or do they have, what have done in the end is quite a grand gesture in removing tv advertising for a defined period fire, jeering and then after live sport, so the decision from them. It is still to be verified, it will be verified i understand, rubberstamped ata verified i understand, rubberstamped at a meeting of the big five gambling associations, when they meet next week and the idea is that it is introduced in time for the start of the new football season in august of 2019. The coast of southampton says he is not frightened by the challenge of trying to get southampton out of the relegation zone. The saints are third from bottom after only one win so far this season. Speaking at his First Press Conference today, he claims that his goal is to get his name known in the premier league and that the history and philosophy of the club that fits his almost perfectly. It is a big challenge for me but it is a logical next step in my career, it is, it it is my goal to, to get my name known here in the premier league. I have had a few successful yea rs premier league. I have had a few successful years in germany and when i left leipzig in summer i was thinking about my next step. Some of the tackles at last nights match we re the tackles at last nights match were like tenpin bowling, and now it has been confirmed that a player fractured his leg. It could be out for six weeks depending on how he recovers , for six weeks depending on how he recovers, the club said after the game at the referee could have done more to put a stop to such challenges. There have been a couple of surprise exits at the uk snooker championship. The former champion has been knocked out, the world number five came in has been knocked out, the world numberfive came in as one of has been knocked out, the world number five came in as one of the favourites but was beaten byjoe perry six frames to four. Perry will now play tom ford in the quarter finals tomorrow. And on the other table, a two time champion was beaten 6 4 by englishman martin odonnell. He will now face defending champion Ronnie Osullivan in the quarter finals. And world number six Barry Hawkins is also out. He was beaten 6 2 by fellow englishman, wilson. One of the old est englishman, wilson. One of the oldest welsh rugby clubs has had a winding up order dismiss but that is not the new summer supporters wanted. They were once one of the most famous teams in club rugby but have got into debt and a group of fa ns wa nted have got into debt and a group of fans wanted the club to be wound up so that they could take it over, but a judge ruled the paperwork about the case was unclear. Itjust shows you that, the underlying problems with professional rugby, club rugby in wales. It has gone from a fortress, club rugby was a fortress in wales to regional rugby, which has been a transition and a Successful International level, but obviously we need to make sure that grassroots rugby is there for the future generations. And that is all the sport for now. Good night. Hello there. We are looking at a turbulent end to the week with High Pressure racing towards our shores and it is set to bring some very high winds particularly to scotland, where there is the risk of some severe gales. That is not the only place that is going to have some issues, some problems as well across southern wales in South West England on account of the rich living at the moment. A troublemaker is this area of cloud, this deepening area of low pressure that is quite quickly going to continue to push its way eastwards, while continuing to deepen a little further. All in all the fide, overnight tonight we will see the rain picking up and the winners picking up as well. The wettest weather heading across wales, probably South West England as well. It is not going to be cold night though, temperatures staying into double figures across good parts of england and wales as single figures for scotland and northern ireland. It is here that we are going to see the strongest winds come through, particularly for the north west of scotla nd particularly for the north west of scotland with the strongest winds heading ina scotland with the strongest winds heading in a bubbly around the middle part of the day or the early afternoon. It is then that we could getjust afternoon. It is then that we could get just the wind afternoon. It is then that we could getjust the wind around 70 to 80 miles an hour. Heading in around. Further south across england and wales, sunny start to friday with this band pushing eastwards pretty quickly with strong gusty winds. Gusts up to 50 miles an hour. Sunshine to the afternoon the number of showers in the west. Temperature wise, paul m moves in during the day so we are going to feel cooler in the afternoon. It is going to stay pretty windy and blustery with showers or lengthy spells of blustery, showery rain on saturday. Low pressure moves eastward, taking rain into europe and some heavy snowfall for oslo in norway. Further west for us, we get a band of rain coming in quite quickly on saturday, that will break up into showers and it is one of those days when the showers are going to be fairly widespread. Blustery kind of day everywhere, temperatures between nine and 13 degrees as we head into the afternoon. The north west will bring a number of showers in the showers will continue through the day across the isle of man in the north wales in north west england as well, running through the cheshire, greater manchester, merseyside. There will still be sent sunshine into the afternoon that it will feel a little bit fresher with temperatures between seven and 11 celsius. It is a double whammy, we could see it low pressure on account of the strong rain and very heavy winds targeting scotland during the middle part of the day could bring some disruption as well. Thats your weather. This is newsday on the bbc. Im rico hizon, in singapore. The headlines sharp falls in Global Stock Markets as expectations of a new start in the us and china trade war grow. Thats prompted by the arrest of a Top Executive from chinese tech giant huawei on a request from the united states. Canadas pm says its a normal investigation. There was no engagement or involvement in the political level in this decision because we respect the independence of ourjudicial processes. Im kasia madera, in london. Also in the programme thailands former Prime Minister and leader of the democrat party

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