Who by fellow Englishman David Gilbert's in Snick a Scottish Open quarter finals Mark Selby will be the semifinal opponent as he came from behind to be Ronnie O'Sullivan in the final frame decide on teenage ski is that we are keen as can should Britain's faced wilt Cup Hoth pipe title in 5 years the 16 year old battled blizzard conditions to take victory in Colorado this is b.b.c. Radio 5 Live on digital b.b.c. Salus and the so look at the weather forecast Saturday will start windy with showers across the north and west of the u.k. However the southeast should remain largely dry later on in the day outbreaks of rain will push into the far south west highs today of knowing for Cardiff 8 for London and 5 for Belfast and Edinburgh this is b.b.c. Radio 5 Live available on the b.b.c. Sounds. Right Attaboy. Coming up in the next hour of the night after the night before lots to talk about with regard to the election so we've got what you could call the post mortem. Labor where wrong him where the conservatives went right and also of course we'll talk about the impact still have on the politics going forward the preview of what's to come with this government of the challenges that they face and the long view of what it all means for this United Kingdom I was aware of a scholar will be a part of the conversation or not we're talking about the u.s. And China who have reached a provisional do trade road deal this is between the 2 countries that represent the largest. Economies in the entire planet that will get our week's news from Kenya as we generally do we will talk about the Green Deal the new green Do we need to be greener and do remember to now start would open up the phone lines for world football phone emits Europe and South America this morning and of course as every Is players from over there playing in. Our lives. So let the healing begin That's the message from Bros Johnson after the conservative election victory the prime minister says he hopes to win the win the war bring closure to the brakes and debate and unite the country speaking in Downing Street he said his government would work around the clock to repay the voters trust in Him We've also heard in the past day from Labor leader Jeremy Corbin who insists that he's done everything he could to get the party into power labor suffered its worst election result for more than 80 years losing $59.00 seats to get a total of just over $200.00 seats earlier I spoke to Kate Ironside who's a former political journalist who's now a senior lecturer in journalism at the University of North Empson and also the Guardian columnist and former political editor of The Observer Gaby Hinsliff I asked Gaby has will is she surprised by the election results Yeah I was shocked I mean I was expecting the Tories to win but I thought it would be a much smaller majority and this witness was probably at the top. Of where some of the projections were a little bit over the top and that that wasn't you know where. Most people were expecting it to be it was almost like it once it once it happened once that will break down it will it will come down in Iraq you know and suddenly it was a flood of the victory so yeah the exit polls were real a bit of a jaw dropping my image that's the point we saw Ok things really have changed I mean it was interesting I think I mean this the size of the majority certainly surprising obviously you had to factor in the margin of error in any set of opinion polls and you look at the trend of over the election campaign pointing at least to a majority but not as substantial as this maybe think that actually what might have been going on was something that we saw a bit in 1000 back in 1902. People weren't necessarily fessing up to being conservative supporters. Politics has got so polarized these days that sometimes people prefer to stay quiet in the middle or force of don't know why to open to the wire and I think you know quite a few people were making a final decision in the privacy of the ballot box and my goodness it came down in Boris Johnson's favor so what extent was this a Briggs it election though if you like it another referendum Briggs's And so once there was a referendum on Germany cool been. There's no getting away from you know the fabrics it causes enormous shadow over the whole thing but I think what made the election so complicated and also what made it hard for many people to decide how they want and it made the whole trend piece to get a feel for what's happening on the ground was that people were struggling to mak their preference which might take me in one direction. Against their you know their their preferences and all the rest of the domestic stuff and kind of not being able to make them stick together so that a lot of people thinking I can't cope with my new all try so but I don't feel it if you're succeeds leaked to got some. So so what am I going to do it was a kind of election where bricks it collided quite on comfortably with all the other things that are not about bricks and coping very much so we could have been very clear that he wants to argue that the treaty is you know we're down to breakfast and you know you get one if it wasn't for breakfast I honestly don't think that holds you know getting ready to carry. Your fact yes you know I mean you look at the feedback from. Labor M.P.'s who survived last night and those who lost the seat and there's been some an interesting polling about the number of columns called in was mentioned as an issue on the doorstep and you look at the scale of the collapse in those labor Hartman's in the Midlands and the north it wasn't people bricks it by a long true. And it's actually jaw dropping looking at the disconnect between what it presents as the most radical left version of all the labor policy that we have had for decades that purports to represent the working man and woman and yet the working man and woman weren't voting for them on Thursday and that for labor is a real challenge. But beyond that I think breaks it wards the fundamental issue. And the simple slogans of the conservatives get bricks it done it can't be true and it can't through very very effectively played into that into the hands with out that message I do not think they would have been as we mostly successful in knocking down the labor was the only thing the Tories had going for them that to be honest I mean I think you know get breaks it down. Was obviously wheels of moxie at the time because it because course doesn't say anything else you know I thought this was pretty effective and it turns out you know now that there is no I mean if you look at I think the Tories were also doing well they look at the numbers they must of hacks and Tory remain a staying with them for fear of Corbin and I think we all you know obviously did our dramatic change is in those those norms and post industrial towns you know that it's a shock to say turn Tory but you know Labor lost badly across Scotland. Remain lost in some southern marginals you know places like Stroud which is incredibly remaining you know very green and very gaunt and raging and you know so you to say that that is just about bricks it doesn't explain why labor was losing in remains as well the latest was down. And it remains the source it was worse than. That in remaining states and I think the Tories did make use the only other thing partials never said to call them get it done was don't let Jeremy cope in and places I was where. They were indeed I did think it was interesting that if you drill down into some of the results in labor hold the if you put where the bricks party stood if you put the brakes it Party vote together with the conservatives if Nigel for pulled out not fielding his candidate in the seat it is conceivable that Labor would have lost even more seats because that was the job to see if you combine the conservative vote with the BRICs party that would comfortably be Labor. Nigel for our did in a seat or split the brakes and let Labor through which of course was. The Tory message and see a scary thing for labor I think it's not necessarily. This is not necessarily its flaw you know there are now a bunch of seats that used to be safe and didn't go this time but now have quite small margins of 9 you can imagine muzzle cataclysmic performance it would have to put into his eyes as well but you know it's not necessarily as low as it can go. And actually if you break I mean for example one seat Ashfield in North not in I'm sure all I don't remember when I used to many many moons ago was a lobby correspondent and not a new meaning to host Ashfield m.p. At the time Frank Kane x. Miner he could weigh his way the label whereas I was asked I went to a field this time and it was transferred over to the Labor candidate she would. Play and she was a great actor and I thought it was really interesting likely candidate who was really you know. Guts out for that seat and it's behind the Tories and an independent you know I know I'm coming 3rd in Ashfield it just shows the mountain that Labor has to climb now. And you know looking forward it could take you know more than one parliament for labor to pick itself back up off the ground here you know this is a really bad defeat for them if you want to be optimistic and you know I'm sort of . Where that people are looking for cheering up. There isn't as. Dire and disasters and awful and normally you wouldn't bounce back from this kind of thing so you know like practically there is an argument that says if the main problem and we know slim opinion polling out today that I promise Cohen what he's going to next problem with Bracks Well Ok you know at some point Bracks is going to be dumb. We all know that we will eventually enter a post bricks it phrase where it's happened so whether or not. I suppose it is not only a question if you said there is an argument a set of politics is so little now things can turn really fast maybe you know do you can people can come out of declines quicker than they used to be able to Paul I am saying as a very optimistic scenario I'm not. Going to say what is a lot of there is an argument to say yes I mean other interesting thing is I mean obviously some of the noise this is Boris Johnson's day. He made the same gamble the reason why did he won the whereas she spectacularly lost. You know he has every reason to be feeling. You know credibly pleased with the conservative performance but that was actually the easy bit now it's going to get really tough yes he has a hefty majority in the House of Commons but the challenges ahead. Immense negotiating the long term deal with the European Union he set himself an arbitrary deadline of the you know the end of 2020 a deal not scale has never been negotiated with such speed with the e.u. Before he says he can get it done we will have to see but there is still a real danger that we might crash out without a deal and then the backlash from that the impact on the economy could be whale any over he's one nation aspirations. To deal with the public services it was interesting he was stressing the Conservative Party had to meet the concerns of those in Labor voters. Who put the cross in the poor the bolts had to also to them on public services but if you get a very honed Brix it or No Deal books it he wouldn't have the economic leeway to bring. And the money for that and that even before you start asking the question of right Mr Johnson what ease your great plan to deal with the crises adult social care which any men and party government of the government has dumped this issue it wasn't in a manifesto but he can't go down in the manifesto he committed to finding a cross party solution we're miles you know option but I think it's particularly there's a problem with this time which is you know I would say goodwill between the parties is in pretty short supply the moment is not what's left of the Liberal Democrats now either they have a leader at the moment because she lost her seat if Jeremy Corbyn stays around as he's suggesting that he might next spring or whatever other than the Labor Party is not going to have an active need for a long time either so even if one wanted to get together with a hasty solution social There is not going to be a leadership that will agree to no such thing oh yes but the problem is the crisis is getting worse and worse and worse and people of really suffering I need to take that building up along with the brakes in negotiations not disappearing as some people think in a puff aside we got it done and now we can forget about it is going to drag on and on and on we get a harbor exit and if public service is also struggling and getting worse Boris Johnson will have some tough questions to. Answer from those Labor voters that have given him a. Really about public service is I'm more optimistic than you about it because I think a bigger majority does create the conditions where that the most likely scenario in which Boris would be pushed to a no deal bricks it which I think we now know he doesn't want because he has won at the last minute the last common the conditions which was not to be pushed that are small minority with they are dying a sales and saying you have to leave you high. Well you know if you have a. Majority of 80 you are not quite as in hock to the head down a tad so you know you have the flexibility I think and confidence that point if you leave at the end of January and you get to the end of the year in a trade deal is not that's right. And you know I think he has the flexibility then to say Look out you know we cling to my We're never going back it's just going to take a bit longer to deal with it you know I think he has a certain amount flexibility for that I think if the problems are as you say public service is about the bourses never been very clear about what it was he's Detroit except what we need is a grand vision I understand that there's a problem with those new seats I mean you can win those seats but if you want to win them again at some point. You need in the meantime to represent them and there are very different people look bunch of constituents perhaps in the next have to be representing conservative party is no longer now a sort of comfortable southern middle class party or it's no longer really that it's representing people with a whole different set of concerns and it's got to think about whole range of policy areas not been its expertise for you know it's got to think about solutions post-industrial areas where you know coal and steel is gone and they're not anything to replace them since I've been a big problem when you're used to representing knowledge about sorry you know it's going to think about EFI rather than higher education it's got to think up our services rather than could be to rail it's got to think about small you know it's got to think about representing a bunch of people who have different concerns to sort of crack the Tory base at the same time as. The Tory base that it's still got hold together and holding together the coalition of seats I think it's going to quite hard I don't think thought about . Just one second I just wonder if people before we. Got to G.'s of the government the government will have to face. Conversation with them we should note. I will carry on long after this conversation this evening I wonder whether the end is tied to the practicalities of what the government will be able to do going forward I wonder if you would conclude existentially that this election this was our democracy is concerned was a election which reflected the will of the people or whether it's actually about the will of the political strategists the will of the media. If you know what I mean by that I wonder if we can sort of extrapolate from the result last night one way or another Kate 1st I will be reminded to say the the we're 'd all the people I think. There is a great deal of disenchantment. A lot of people are very very thread with an awful lot of activity in the Westminster bubble and you know social media campaigns by the political strategy I think they're just reflecting a plea we heard in our get bricks it done. We don't trust cool when it blows from the party that we didn't like in the 1st place. Either you can argue that under the 1st possible system. Pretty 2 percent voted to remain parties is 48 percent going to leave parties but this is the system we have. And I you know I think it just does represent the country really accurately. I think yeah I think if it had been close I think there would have been a real danger that people would have contested the result would have had a really hard to contest except the result you know that a lot of well hang on portions not Tuesday throughout the campaign you know how do we know that people really knew what they were voting on it would put a lot of small focus on this of dirty tricks during the campaign and so what if it had been really tight but when is this overwhelming I don't you can look to and say I want to turn to this really represents what people saw I think I think I think you're getting all South to say it doesn't and you know within that of course it will always be said that you know the major is harder on left wing latest than it is on right wing leaders because the media bribing press is more dominant but I think you know that is the whether you've learned to navigate that or you don't label it as you learn to navigate successfully when labor leaders who don't and that may not be fabulous how is in which case they can say conservatively that actually they have paid similar prices. In the past bios I think it's worth flagging up we very much focused on the labor. Conservative battle the story in Scotland and Northern Ireland is so important because we had different campaigns going on and I actually think this election is a potential real turning point the conservatives now have a clear route to bricks it brought in Scotland you had a terrific result for the Scottish who are committed to Scottish independence in Northern Ireland for the 1st time you now have more nationalist m.p. Than unionist and he. Says there is a real danger that we are you know within 10 maybe 15 years at the outset this country will no longer be United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland it will be the United Kingdom of England Wales and Scotland will go on and Northern Ireland will have joined Republican all and Kate are inside their form of political journalists is now a senior lecturer in journalism in the new issue Northampton also from Guardian columnist and former political editor of The Observer Gaby Hinsliff And as you before he might have said once upon a time there's a mouse in my studio what am I gonna do let's leave that for now with my return and have a conversation about that later on but one story that probably has gone under the radar that would move if it hadn't been the day of a general election is that the u.s. And China every to provisionally deal aimed at easing the trade war between the world's 2 largest economies Washington said China as agreed to by more u.s. And we cultural products as part of the agreement Samir he's saying is sorry yes Samir Hussein is our business reporter in New York and she told me what we know about the deal what we see or what we have heard from both the United States and Chinese officials is that in exchange for the u.s. To roll back some of the. That it has imposed on Chinese imports coming into the u.s. It has got China to agree to purchasing a significant amount of American agricultural goods so we're talking about things like soybeans and pull tree and for the 2 sides they're both taking this as a when China has always wanted the United States to roll back some of these tariffs and in fact get rid of them altogether and the United States has always wanted China to really increase how much it buys from