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Craig. He ended months of speculation after confirming he will be returning to the role of 007. What does it mean for the most successful movie franchise . Hello. Welcome to the programme, were live until am this morning. Health inspectors have criticised an nhs trust being investigated over a number of baby deaths, saying it still has not improved enough. Well be speaking to a father whose daughter died while under the care of shrewsbury and Telford Hospital. Do get in touch on all the stories were talking about this morning use the Hashtag Victoria Live and if you text, you will be charged at the Standard Network rate. Our top story today. The government says it wants to maintain a seamless border between Northern Ireland and the irish republic after the uk leaves the eu so that people and goods can continue to move across freely. A Paper Setting out britains negotiatating position being published today rejects what it calls the Hard Borders Of The Past. Lets get more from our ireland correspondent, chris page. Chris, a very sensitive issue. Tell us more chris, a very sensitive issue. Tell us more about the option that the government says it wants to see happen. Well, joanne, i suppose the Government Proposals do follow the form book. Ministers have said that they want the border between Northern Ireland and the republic, the only land border between the uk and the eu, to remain essentially as invisible as possible. People in Northern Ireland have become very used to being able to drive across the border without Customs Controls are not having to show any papers. That has made it easy for businesses to do trade on either side of the border. It has been an important symbol of the peace process. How do you keep the border essentially open . The uk is outside the European Customs Union and the public of ireland is inside. James broken shy has been speaking on radio 4 this morning. He insisted it is a realistic prospect that the border will remain in its current state. A lot of detail that youll see in the paper today that i think underlines the unique situation we have on the island of ireland and needing to work with our eu partners to find a solution that provides the optimum outcome. What you want and obviously one appreciates this is a Negotiating Position, you want to have their cake and eat it, you want to have a relationship that is very much like membership, continuing membership of the customs union, a Frictionless Irish Border and the freedom to reach new trade deals with other countries. It simply unrealistic, isnt it . I dont accept, i dont accept that it is unrealistic. Why would they agree . Why would brussels conceivably agree with that . Why would the other 27 countries possibly agree to that . I think because of the trade we have in both directions. This is notjust some sort of unilateral, one way issue that im talking about here. When you look at, yes, the trade that the uk has four example with ireland, around 13. 6 billion, but equally the trade from ireland to the uk of around 9. 1 billion. There is that flow of trade that we do see in both directions which is why, actually, this matters for both of us. We get a sense of the complexity of theissue we get a sense of the complexity of the issue was that the government has two ideas about how to maintain the open border. They talk about the possibility of a new Customers Partnership with the eu where tariff essentially remain the same. Secondly they talk about the streamlined customs arrangement, where Business Electronic Monitoring of goods takes place no one is saying it will be simple. It is possibly one of the trickiest brainteasers over brexit talks. Rebecca is in the bbc newsroom with a summary of the rest of the days news. Donald trump has faced criticism by blaming both sides involved in the clashes in virginia last weekend. The us president appeared to distance himself from his own statement a day earlier in which he condemned White Supremacists. Our us correspondent, david willis, reports. He was scheduled to make a statement about infrastructure, only veering wildly off message and referring to his original assessment of the cause of saturdays violence. I think there is blame on both sides. You look at both sides, i think there is blame on both sides and i have no doubt about it, and you dont have any doubt about it either. And, and if you reported it accurately, you would see that. Condemned originally for failing to apportion blame for the violence which left one person dead and more than 30 injured, the president took to the white house on monday to denounce racism and the white supremacist groups that organised the rally. A carefully worded statement which briefly served to cool the embers of outrage, only for the president to reignite them 2a hours later. You had a group on one side that was bad and a group on the other side that was also very violent. Nobody wants to say that, but i will say it. The remarks prompted sweeping condemnation from leaders of his own party. The speaker of the house took to twitter to say a notable source of support came from david duke, the former leader of the ku klux klan. He applauded the president. With Police Forces around the country bracing for similar protests to the one in charlottesville, there is concern the latest remarks might serve to embolden certain elements at those protests. A homeless man hailed as a hero for helping victims of the manchester bomb has been charged in connection with the theft of a bank card in the arena that night. Chris parker ran towards the scene of the attack, which killed 22 people. He is due to appear before magistrates in Greater Manchester later. The number of care home places in england for older people with substantial needs will need to rise by nearly a third within ten years because of increasing life expectancy. Academics at Newcastle University say more than 71,000 extra places will be needed by 2025. The Department Of Health says councils have been given a £2 billion boost over the next three years to put social care on a sustainable footing. Nurses are warning that students are putting themselves at risk of meningitis, if they dont take up the offer to be vaccinated against the disease. People living in england who are aged 17 and 18 are eligible for the free jab. The Royal College of nursing says only a third took up the offer last year. A Hospital Trust at the centre of an inquiry into a number of avoidable deaths among newborn babies, has been criticised forfailing to learn the lessons of past mistakes. A report by the nhs standards watchdog, the Care Quality Commission, found that safety still needs to improve in Maternity Services at The Shrewsbury and Telford Hospital nhs trust. 0ur Health Correspondent Dominic Hughes reports. Come on, then. I am coming to get you come on. For years, Richard Stanton and Rhiannon Davies have been campaigning to save Maternity Services following the avoidable death of their first daughter, kate, just hours after birth. For safe Maternity Services. A review of their case found the trust had failed to investigate kates death properly and now a new report finds eight years on, The Shrewsbury and Telford Trust is failing to learn from past mistakes. It is still failing on the basics to this day. From our point of view, it makes you want to bang your head against the wall. An inspection by the hospital regulator found safety in Maternity Services needs improvement and patients are still not receiving the proper standard of care. We have seen some improvements in some areas but some ongoing areas such as maternity, which is not what we would expect, and weve made it very clear to the trust that we need to see these improvements made in a much more robust manner and in a timely way. The trust says serious incidents are being reported and investigated and a new Management Team is working hard to bring about improvements but a wider nhs investigation into a cluster of deaths among newborn babies at the trust is under way and those parents who lost children are asking why questions are still being raised about safety at the trust. Dominic hughes, bbc news, telford. 0fficials officials in sierra leone say at least 600 people are still missing following a mudslide that swamped hundreds of homes on the outskirts of the capital, freetown, on monday. Rescue workers have so far recovered nearly 400 bodies. The red cross has warned it is now a race against time to find survivors. The United Nations is drawing up plans to deal with any outbreak of diseases like cholera and typhoid. A third woman has accused the film director Roman Polanski of sexually abusing her when she was a teenager. The woman identified only as robin claimed that he had assaulted her five years before he fled the United States in 1978, while awaiting sentence for having sex with a thirteen year old girl, samantha geimer. Robin said shed come forward now because she opposed samantha geimers recent calls for the case to be closed. Commuters travelling in and out of london waterloo are facing a second day of disruption this morning, following yesterdays derailment. The incident happened as the train collided with a barrier train that was in place to separate the current Engineering Works from operational services. South west trains are facing delays of up to 15 minutes and some services have been cancelled. Hms Queen Elizabeth is entering her home port of portsmouth for the first time that the 65,000 tonne ship has been undergoing sea trials since setting self from the shipyard in scotland in june. Since setting self from the shipyard in scotland injune. The ship is 280 metres long and her flight deck is begin upfor metres long and her flight deck is begin up for free but all pictures she is expected to be the navys large ship for the next 50 years. The Actor Daniel Craig has ended years of speculation and confirmed he will return to play james bond one more time. Speaking on a us chat show last night, he also stressed that his fifth appearance as the spy would be his last. The film is due to be released in 2019. Two years ago craig said he would rather slash his wrists than playjames bond again. Thats a summary of the latest bbc news. More at 9. 30am. He has performed a delicate u turn, hasnt he . Sam bridger has tweeted saying, delighted, love him. Tim curtis, not really a fan of daniel craig when it comes to mr bond. Would love to see someone else in the role. Keep your thoughts on that. Daniel craig staying on as james bond. Lets get some sport with reshmi. Good night for liverpool in the Champions League. Absolutely. They took the big step into reaching the group stages after beating hoffenheim in the first leg play off last night. Simon mignolet said a penalty early beforejurgen klopps and took the lead with a belter of a free kick. What a way to announce itself on the big stage its commissioner that was teenager Trent Alexander arnold, the 18 year old with his first goal on his european debut. The second came in the second half. James miller book he had got it before it was awarded as an own goal. The germans made sure they will have their say in the return leg at anfield as their substitute kept hoffenheim in the tie with this goal three minutes from time. Kept hoffenheim in the tie with this goal three minutes from timem kept hoffenheim in the tie with this goal three minutes from time. It was because i told him he has to do it. He was the only one who can shoot free kicks. He can shoot them better than i ever could. I have watched as many and 23 games last year. When he played there he already took the free kicks and the goal is a similar size, by the way. Jurgen klopp full of praise for his teenage star, Trent Alexander arnold. Perhaps it was always destined for greatness will do this tweet from jamie carragher. He posted it before liverpool match several years ago when the young boy was just 11 yea rs. When the young boy was just 11 years. The little boy who was about to step out on to the anfield turf isa to step out on to the anfield turf is a young Trent Alexander arnold. How about that for a Ringing Endorsement on Social Media A liverpool legend Maria Sharapova backin liverpool legend Maria Sharapova back in favour in the tennis world. Yes, she is she will make herfirst appearance ina yes, she is she will make herfirst appearance in a grand slam for 18 months after being given a wild card for the main draw of the us open. Jenny returned to action in april after serving a 15 month doping ban. She was denied a wild card at the french open and then missed the entire grass court season, including wimbledon, with a thigh injury. The us open starts at the end of the month. And cricket, where records have been broken in their womens cricket super league. A bit of history made in derby yesterday. Captain suzie bates stored the First Century in the super league. 190 not out as she led her opponents to victory over loughborough lightning. She also claimed the brilliant catch to re m ove she also claimed the brilliant catch to remove bethany langston. Not a bad days work. That is all the sport for now. Thank you very much. The government insists there will be no reintroduction of border posts between Northern Ireland and ireland after the brexit negotiations. The paperas after the brexit negotiations. The paper as set out how the government wa nts paper as set out how the government wants the border to be managed in the future, the latest in a series of papers covering different aspects of papers covering different aspects of our future relationship with the eu but what will be paper mean to the people it will affect the most on both sides of the border . Ian patterson is a dairy farmer in armagh in Northern Ireland and is concerned what crossing the border will mean for his produce. Charlotte norton is from Northern Ireland and now living in london. Her family and friends are still based in coleraine. What do you fear would be the impact on your business of hard Border Checks . As farms in Northern Ireland, 80 of what we produce is exported so that anything that adds to cost and hassle and expense to oui to cost and hassle and expense to our exporting is a worry. We work on a very fine margin so we would be very sensitive to extra costs being put into the system and we would like to see that our products flowing freely and easily on a daily basis to customers since the exporting part of the business is so crucial. It brings into hundreds of millions to the economy and we would not like to see any disruption on it at all. When you talk about exports in that context, where are you talking about exporting to, notjust ireland . No, two other eu countries and non eu countries. Most of our exports go into the uk to feed the british cities but we depend on it all to keep the economy going. And in terms of their being hard Border Checks between Northern Ireland and ireland, the government is saying it does not want to see that. If they did come into place, would there be a direct impact as a result on your business . Yes, we would not want to see Milk Queueing Up at the border, going into process in the republic, and products we need on the farm queueing up at the border, all that would add extra costs to our system. We are quite cost sensitive because we survive here and are prospering but on a fine margin so any of these things that add extra cost is an immediate worry to us. When the government says what it has said today about wanting to have a sea mless today about wanting to have a seamless border, is that the relief for you . To a degree, yes. A sea mless for you . To a degree, yes. A seamless border sounds nice but what we would really like is a tariff free border with high tech surveillance not being necessary. It would have to work and not be policed, but ideally we would like to see a tariff free, free flowing border that would not hold up our business or at expense to it. And on that, the government is talking about the importance of trade for both the uk and ireland going both ways a cross both the uk and ireland going both ways across the board and said it is prioritising finding a solution that protects businesses ability to access these important markets. Are you confident that the uk government could get a different model for ireland than for the rest of the eu countries . Yes, i would hope the government could bring in a special dealfor the north south border. If Ta Riffs Dealfor the north south border. If tariffs and different costs come in that would ever make smuggling economic, Cross Bordersmuggling inevitably would follow, and you would go back to both sides of the border having to be policed and it raises the wrong sort of character and activity and it is not where we wa nt to and activity and it is not where we want to go at all. If you live in london but have family in Northern Ireland, what is your perspective on the border . I do welcome the fact that it has come out that the government is looking to have a seamless border. What i am worried about is that it does seem to be quite vague. Im not denying that everybody wants there to be a solution that will keep everybody happy and most of the stakeholders who have spoken on the issue have said they want that seamless border. But i dont see any clear position as to how that will happen, and it will be disastrous for trade as we we re will be disastrous for trade as we were talking about, but also for day to day life, people who live on the border and cross every day, people who work in derry and live in donegal, People Living around newry and county down and work in dublin, their everyday life will become so much more difficult if there is not a workable solution found. And the political sensitivities around it, for communities, that is something you understand very well. Yes. My dads family is mostly in a nationalist community, my mums predominantly a Unionist Community and a lot of people know that in Northern Ireland identity is important but im not sure they fully understand how important that is. For those in fully understand how important that is. Forthose in the fully understand how important that is. For those in the nationalist community, the idea of having any form of solid or even seamless but existing border in what they believe is one ireland would be disastrous for them is one ireland would be disastrous forthem in is one ireland would be disastrous for them in terms of identity but the other way round, it has been proposed to have it as a border around the island which for those in the Unionist Community, they will see that as harming or impacting on their identity because it will separate them from the uk which is where they identify. Separate them from the uk which is where they identifylj separate them from the uk which is where they identify. I hear your concerns around whether the deal the government is talking about is deliverable, but it is saying what you want to hear . To be honest, no. It does not sound like an awful lot of thought has gone into it. People have been saying again and again that we want it to be seamless and we want it to work. The policy of the Position Data as far as i can see is repeating that statement. So what would be achievable and workable . In terms of a definitive solution, what would you like to hear being put forward . It is really tricky but all of the stakeholders need to get around the table. Everybody keeps saying this is unprecedented and has not happened before and that is true but it is not true there is no similar situation. For example, poland has special Traffic Deals with their external eu neighbours such as ukraine. Although it is a different situation and things will work out differently, there is a special dispensation that has been allowed by the eu and i cant see anybody talking about that, even if it might not apply perfectly, i dont see anybody being creative and looking at these things and how they might or might not work and how we could move forward. It seems to be putting across opinions rather than solutions. Going back to ian, i said you were in armagh, not 0mar, so apologies for that. How have you been feeling . You have been talking about the border. 0magh. How are you feeling about the future of your business after brexit . For the business after brexit . For the business and quite hopeful. We have good products and good customers and my only worry is that the future. I think for agriculture in Northern Ireland the fear would be that the brexit thing would come in and upset it. Our products are good but they are made quite a fine margin so we dont have room for extra costs, that would end up economically with us that would end up economically with us may be losing different customers or needing to add to the cost of food. And what do you think about the way the government has been handling it . So far, so good, in the right direction, but i think they do need to negotiate hard for a tariff free border between North And South. A seamless solution for people and products between the two parts of Northern Ireland is the safe solution. How much is this something you talk to friends and neighbours and relatives about . you talk to friends and neighbours and relatives about . I would say after the weather, the second biggest Conversation Point as to how it will effect if they let in cheap beef from other countries, if they snarl up our exporting different ta riffs if they snarl up our exporting different tariffs North And South would be a nightmare because of the Smuggling Thing and we dont want to see that i wonder border, the border road thing coming alive again. We wa nt to road thing coming alive again. We want to see a peaceful, free flowing border. And we want them to get it right. What about you . Second after the weather in terms of what youre talking about . Probably a lot more than the weather living in london, a lot of people dont understand and often dont want to understand Northern Ireland sol often dont want to understand Northern Ireland so i have been talking about this for years tried to push it. Thank you very much indeed. We will be talking more about it later in the programme. A crisis hit nhs trust has been told its Maternity Services have safety issues and its main Maternity Unit requires improvement by the health regulator. The bbc uncovered at least nine nine avoidable deaths at shrewsbury and Telford Hospital nhs trust since 2013 and earlier this year the Health Secretary asked for them to be investigated. Todays report, which the Care Quality Commission carried out last year before these deaths were made public, found that safety in Maternity Services needed further improvement and that, learning from Safety Incidents was not always being shared. The trust says its taken immediate actions to improve the situation. We can now speak to Richard Stanton. His daughter kate died in 2009 after delays transferring her from Ludlow Community hospital, which is run by The Shrewsbury and Telford Trust. An inquestjury ruled in 2012 that kates death could have been avoided. Thank you forjoining us. Give us your reaction to this cqc report first ball. Im not surprised. First ball. Im not surprised. First of all. This trust has been in denialfor ten years first of all. This trust has been in denial for ten years about where it needs to be and the care it offers to its patients. This is a trust that has rejected and chosen not to improve its services. For example, in 2007, when the former health care watchdog, the health care commission, looked at this trust, they flagged up issues back in 2007. My they flagged up issues back in 2007. My daughter kate died in 2009 which was an avoidable death and there we re was an avoidable death and there were many issues raised during the inquest which this trust should have acted upon. It was two years after the concerns were raised, kate died in 2009, and here we are, seven, eight years later, ten years, a decade of deaths at this trust and it seems very much to me, we are being told that lessons will be learned but seemingly they are not. This trust has regressed if anything, it is not improving, it has gone backwards. What happens to kate what happened to kate . Rhiannon, my wife, at a seemingly normal pregnancy but in the last two weeks of the pregnancy she suffered multiple episodes of reduced fatal movement. The holistic overall view was not taken that rhiannon was no longer a low risk mother and actually she was a high risk mother. This is another area, and it is mentioned in this report, that this is still not taken place adequately. Rhiannon was not risk assessed properly and she was not upgraded to deliver at a larger Tertiary Hospital under a consultancy care and when she did deliver at a Midwife Led Unit at ludlow, kate was born in need of Immediate Care and help. Had she been born in a larger Tertiary Hospital that care would have been on hand immediately and she could have been saved. Because there was a delay in calling an ambulance and she was later transferred to a hospital in birmingham by airambulance, transferred to a hospital in birmingham by air ambulance, we were not told where she was going because the Midwife Led Unit, they had no operational policy at that time and did not have an operational pussy for the following seven years, it meant that the clinicians did not know what to do and operational policy. There should be a clear care pathway for the patient and there was not in this case and kate suffered a painful and needless, avoidable death, she died six hours later in my arms. How let down do you feel . I feel very let down. Ludlow is a Small Community that 30 miles from the telford and shrewsbury hospital. The largest site is the one in telford. This Community Marched End Mass Last Automatic perceived closure, or the plans to close down the unit and take care from the community. That care is so important to mothers to be and the mothers who wa nt to to mothers to be and the mothers who want to give birth here in the hospital under the safest of care. That is what it has to be. It has to be the safest of care. Rather than invest in these services, this trust make choices is not to invest but to remove make choices is not to invest but to re m ove ca re make choices is not to invest but to remove ca re from make choices is not to invest but to remove care from the community and Ta Ke Remove Care from the community and take it further away. That endangers lives and here we see, from the evidence of this report today, that still work needs to be done. This trust has gone backwards. They were rated as good three years ago and are now in need of improvement. Management and senior management, and the legacy the former head of midwifery has left this trust with is wholly inadequate. If nhs england is wholly inadequate. If nhs england is listening to this, of course they are going to investigate the 15th individual baby deaths you raised earlier this year. If nhs is listening now, this trust has proven time and time again over ten years that it time and time again over ten years thatitis time and time again over ten years that it is incapable of improving itself. It now needs external help to do that. External help should come from other hospitals that are proficient in giving safe, and high quality, care. This trust lacks leadership. It lacks a longer term vision for what its Patients Want and what should be delivered as safe care. You have mentioned there have been various points at which the ca re been various points at which the care being offered in the hospital is being looked down. You mention concerns first raised in 2007. An nhs england led review last year referred to you, by saying about your tenacity in seeking the truth, vital lessons would not have been learned. The trust should work in partnership with kates is to establish a fitting acknowledgement of the contribution they have made to the safety and quality of Maternity Services at the trust. Have they reached out to you . Are you working in partnership with the trust question what they did start to reach out to us. In april of last year, 16, 17 months ago, they had an extraordinary Board Meeting where we we re extraordinary Board Meeting where we were allowed to talk to the board and discuss the two nhs investigations we just mentioned about the whole Holistic Care given to rhiannon and how we were treated after kates, which is possibly more woeful. The ombudsman found the trust guilty of maladministration, lying and deceit. 0therfamilies Have suffered losses since kate, avoidable losses. 0nly last year we we re avoidable losses. 0nly last year we were approached by a family from North Shropshire who lost their baby daughter, paper, unavoidably this trust. They were being fobbed off and told they could not be a part of this investigation into why pick thes was so bad. They could not be a part of it at all. That is not right. Just to give you an example of how this trust likes to say one thing and do another, only six weeks ago, five weeks ago, they had a meeting at the trust in true spree to look at an internal report they did in which they invited stakeholders. Me and rhiannon, my wife, and kayleigh and Colin Griffiths have written jointly to jeremy hunt and the Care Quality Commission to raise issues about the care. We were barred from coming by the west Murcia Police that the trust had called to stop us from entering that meeting. That trust is not open, honest and transparent. The reason we were told we could not attend was weak would not understand policy or what they were talking about. Please dont patronise us. I ama about. Please dont patronise us. I am a stakeholder. We are all stakeholders in the nhs. More than that, i am an expert into care was afforded to my. Without the tenacity of rhiannon and my fight to take this to the trust all the way over the past eight years, we would not be where we are now, unveiling that nearly 50 families, 50 families have come forward now with grave concerns about why their babies died or were injured at this trust. 15 are being investigated but more than 50 have approached us at the bbc and various Media Outlets to raise their concerns. That is a lot more than the quoted number of Thatjeremy Hunt has said will now be looked up. Going forward there will be further investigations. Thank you for joining us and your time this morning. Thank you. While we didnt receive a statement from the trust press office, we did pick up some relevant bits of information in the 16 page summary of their response to the report. In it they say. Still to come newly revealed figures from the nhs suggest one in 50 women given a vagina or mesh implant to help deal with Bladder Incontinence and prolapse after childbirth will need surgery to have them removed because of serious complications. We will speak to a surgeon complications. We will speak to a surgeon who has carried out hundreds of removals. Heres rebecca in the bbc newsroom with a summary of todays news. The government says it wants to maintain a seamless border between Northern Ireland and the irish republic after the uk leaves the eu. A Paper Setting out britains Negotiating Position being published today rejects what it calls the Hard Borders Of The Past and sets out plans to allow people and goods to continue to move freely. Ministers insist an open border is realistic. This is not just this is notjust some sort of unilateral, one way issue i am talking about. When you look at the trade the uk has, for example, with ireland, around 13. 6 billion, equally the trade from ireland to the uk of around 9. 1 billion, it is that sort of flow of trade we do see in both directions. This matters for both of us. The Northern Ireland secretary, james broken shire. Donald trump has faced renewed criticism from within his own Republican Party by again blaming both sides involved in the clashes in virginia last weekend. The us president appeared to distance himself from his own statement a day earlier in which he condemned White Supremacists who had marched in charlottesville. In his latest news conference, he also blamed left wing supporters for charging at the so called alt right. You had a group on one side that was bad and you had a group on the other side that was also very violent. And nobody wants to say that, but ill say it right now. You had a group on the other side that came charging in without a permit and they were very, very violent. A homeless man hailed as a hero for helping victims of the manchester bomb has been charged in connection with the theft of a bank card in the arena that night. Chris parker ran towards the scene of the attack, which killed 22 people. He is due to appear before magistrates in Greater Manchester later. Officials in sierra leone say at least 600 people are still missing following a mudslide that swamped hundreds of homes on the outskirts of the capital, freetown, on monday. Rescue workers have so far recovered nearly 400 bodies. The red cross has warned it is now a race against time to find survivors. The United Nations is drawing up plans to deal with any outbreak of diseases like cholera and typhoid. The number of care home places in england for older people with substantial needs will need to rise by nearly a third within ten years because of increasing life expectancy. Academics at Newcastle University say more than 71,000 extra places will be needed by 2025. The Department Of Health says councils have been given a £2 billion boost over the next three years to put social care on a sustainable footing. The biggest warship ever built for the royal navy the aircraft carrier, hms Queen Elizabeth is entering her home port of portsmouth for the first time. The 65,000 tonne ship has been undergoing sea trials since setting sail from Rosyth Shipyard in scotland injune. The ship is 280 metres long, and Herflight Deck is big enough for three football pitches. Shes expected to be the navys flagship for the next 50 years. The Actor Daniel Craig has ended years of speculation and confirmed he will return to play james bond one more time. Speaking on a us chat show last night, he also stressed that his fifth appearance as the spy would be his last. The film is due to be released in 2019. Two years ago craig said he would rather slash his wrists than playjames bond again. Liverpool beat hoffenheim 2 1 in their Champions League first leg play off, as they bid to reach the group stages for the first time in three years. 18 year old Trent Alexander arnolds screamer of a free kick put klopps side ahead. They were leading 2 0 courtesy of an own goal, but hoffenheim pulled one back on 87 minutes to ensure a Nervy Second Leg At Anfield next week. The Champions League qualifiers continue tonight. Scottish champions celtic host kazakhstan champions astana at celtic park tonight in their first leg playoff. Maria sharapova will make her first appearance in a grand slam in over 18 months, after being given a wildcard for the main draw of the us open. The former world number one returned to action in april after serving a 15 month doping ban, but missed the grasscourt season with an injury. And joanna konta is preparing well at the warm up event for the us open. Shes through to the third round of the Cincinatti 0pen after beating kiki bertens of the netherlands in straight sets. Shell play frances alize cornet next. The latest Employment Numbers are out. Our business correspondent, ben thompson, is here to talk us through them. What are they . There is a lot to get through. Tried to explain as much as ican. Through. Tried to explain as much as i can. The headline, the one the politicians will talk a lot about now, the Headline Rate has fallen. Van from 4. 5 in the previous measure. The Unemployment Rate is now at its lowest level since 1975 shall submit means unemployment, the number of people out of work, fell by 50 7000. It is now 1. 48 billion people looking for work and not able to find it. Those are the headlines. When you start looking down into the more interesting stuff further down we get more detail. Wages, that is the bit everyone will look at. We have talked about whether wages are keeping up with rising prices. Yesterday we were told prices were rising at 2. 6 . Today we learn that wages are going up by 2. 1 . The gap between rising prices and wages is getting smaller. The hats we might not be feeling the squeeze as much as we have in the past was interestingly, if you compare this year with plaster, we are still half a percent worse off. It might not sound a lot but traditionally wages should be rising as the economy grows. In real terms we are half a percent worse off than we were this time last year. Also some Interesting Data about zero hours contracts. There are 20,000 fewer people on zero hours contracts. That is a big change as well. A lot of publicity about the people on those contracts that guarantee no set hours of work every week. A lot of publicity about why people are on the man white employers are using them. Perhaps we are seeing a shift away from them. 20,000 the headline figure. And Deployment Rate falling to 4. 4 . M is striking when you see that that is striking when you see that that is the lowest rate since 1975 dustup in terms of productivity in the economy though, what is the picture . We call this a productivity bustle. Does that mean were all going to work, putting our feet does that mean were all going to work, putting ourfeet up does that mean were all going to work, putting our feet up and does that mean were all going to work, putting ourfeet up and not doing much question that some may say that is the case. There has been so little incentive for people to work harder. Wages are not going up if your boss is saying to work hard about i will not pay you any more for it, that is one of the big issues. It is also a challenge for making us as a country more productive, being able to deliver more for the same amount of money. We have also seen improvements in how we do things, be it the internet, be it technology. In this case we are still facing a problem where productivity is still sluggish in the uk. Getting more of us into work is one part of this challenge. When were at work getting us to produce more is another thing. I do not think we will see great economic growth. Things are ok but given all the uncertainty for things like brexit right now, a lot of us are saying, will hold up until we know what is happening. There is clearly a lot of debate still to be had. Hms Queen Elizabeth, the uks new £3 billion aircraft carrier, and its 700 staff have arrived in portsmouth. The 65,000 tonne ship has been undergoing sea trials since Setting Sailfrom Rosyth Dockyard in fife, where it was built, injune. Although at the moment it isnt able to deploy planes it is expected to be the navys flagship for the next 50 years and Duncan Kennedy is there for us this morning. Good morning. Iwant good morning. I want to reassure you and all viewers first of all, that is not the carrier. That is hms victory, lord nelsons flagship, dating from 1805 which fought in the battle of trafalgar. I wanted to show it to you as a matter of contrast. This is the old, three and a half thousand tonnes. This is the new. Hms Queen Elizabeth 65,000 tonnes. Its length, the length of three football pitches. Its height, the height of nelson s column. It isa the height of nelson s column. It is a massive ship on every available level you can imagine. 0n is a massive ship on every available level you can imagine. On board at the moment is the Prime Minister put up the moment is the Prime Minister put up she is getting a first tour. It is the first time she has come home here to the home of the royal navy and it is from where she will be based for the next five decades as she patrols the sea. Why will she be patrolling the sea . To Project British power that meansjets on board, the eft 35 flown by the likes of my guest here, the wing commander. Youre undergoing the training and putting us all together. Where are thejets . They are not on board yet. No they are not. Were receiving a new aircraft about every eight weeks was the best bit between two locations on the east coast of america we have a squadron working with the marine corps to train pilots. We have pilots about to start on a journey on to eft 35. Over on the west coast, Edwards Air Force base, currently has 17 squadron, who are conducting operational tests and evaluation. That is putting the jets are its paces to check it works correctly and prove that should improve it on areas we need to improve it on areas we need to improve it on areas we need to improve it and sort the tactics apple. When will it first appeared on the carrier behind this question that well see the tests initially start at the end of next year. The ship needs to prepare itself to check it is safe on the seas. That is what we are seeing it going through right now. The same time the aircraft are preparing themselves ready to merge with it. Those two facets will come together and about september next year for the you have heard the critics. We will get 30 to 40 on board now. Why do we need that . The adversary is changing. Dogfights are long gone full of it is all beyond visual range. An enemy you cannot see. If a pilotjet where he cannot be seen and get closer and it is far safer he cannot be seen and get closer and it is farsaferand he cannot be seen and get closer and it is far safer and you can deliver better potency. Turning a question around, when you get the dirty, 40 aircraft on board the carrier, how much of a game changer will it be . s eye macro it is massive. We have an ability to float the Queen Elizabeth wherever we want to. An ability to float the Queen Elizabeth wherever we want to. M is massive. It means i am invisible, outside enemy radar. I can operate my aircraft and project, however i want. In the week where we are marking the Independence Of India and pakistan all those years ago in 1947, people are saying that this is too much power and we are trying to be a first class power and we are a middle world power so why have this effort and expense, £3 billion for the carrier alone, in 2017 . |j effort and expense, £3 billion for the carrier alone, in 2017 . I would love to be able to draw a Map Of The World and show instability in iraq and syria and africa and the far east. They could not be more apt to bring ina east. They could not be more apt to bring in a capability like this with the environment in north korea at the environment in north korea at the moment and it will never be more relevant. This is one of two karius, the hms Prince Of Wales is coming in two yea rs the hms Prince Of Wales is coming in two years time carriers. The hms Prince Of Wales is coming in two years time carriers. The disposition, means we will have. Itll be down to her defence wants to allocate those assets. We have the ability to operate lightning on either carrier or from a Forward Operating base so flexible as he is the key. And the jets you will be flying are short and vertical take off so why do you need a big runway they are not that short, we dont vertically take off airborne and with a full payload of weapons and with a full payload of weapons and a significant amount of fuel you need about 500 feet hence what it is that long but they have a vertical landing mode and we can get it back on the debt. The jets have been criticised for the cost, £100 million each, Manoeuvre Ability and softwa re million each, Manoeuvre Ability and Software Issues but how are they shaping up . They are looking awesome. 17 squadron are putting them through their paces and the pilots are delighted with the performance. It is ideally suited for the future of warfare. Thank you very much. That is a look at what aircraft will be on board. The carrier will not be fully operationalfor another carrier will not be fully operational for another couple of yea rs, operational for another couple of years, this is just operational for another couple of years, this isjust its homecoming to its home base for a lot of work to its home base for a lot of work to be done. 10,000 people to build it, many more thousands to get it fully operational but what the government said today was a way of projecting british power around the world. Thank you. He kept us in suspense for two years but daniel craig will be back as bond for the 5th time at the age of 49. Good news . Bad news . Let us know what you think. The usual ways of getting in touch. An increasing number of parents and ca re rs an increasing number of parents and carers try to avoid Gender Stereotyping play but ikeme difficult to overcome registers. Prejudices. Look at this would you like a dolly . There is a good girl. You are a good girl, sophie. What does this say . Sweet dreams. Look at this. I think she liked the pink dolly the best. Say hello. Isnt that interesting. That was pa rt isnt that interesting. That was part of a documentary. And you can watch no more Boys And Girls can our kids go gender free . tonight on bbc two at 9pm and afterwards on bbc iplayer. And do let us know what you think get in touch in the usual ways. New figures from the nhs suggest that one in every 15 women who are given a vaginal mesh implant to help deal with Bladder Incontinence and pelvic Organ Prolapse are having surgery to have them removed because of serious complications. Earlier this year, this programme revealed that hundreds of women are living with chronic pain and complications after undergoing surgery. A recent report by nhs england has called for better reporting of problems and increased knowledge sharing, but has not recommended discontinuing use of the mesh. Dr Sohier Elneil is a consultant Uro Gynaecological Surgeon at University College hospital london, and has carried out hundreds of removal procedures. Lisa hunter has been Suffering Problems with a mesh since it was first fitted in 2006. And jemima Gaye Williams has been caused considerable problems by a mesh too. Thank you forjoining us. One in 15 women are having her to have these implants removed. Are you surprised it is that many . Im not surprised only in as much as in my practice it seems to be the vast majority of work im doing increasingly. It is the first time we have got some specific figures because most of the mesh competitions and issues are often self reported. So getting them on to our system and getting them coded accordingly has not always been easy. Dealing with this huge range of competitions that occur means that i suspect we are at the tip of the iceberg. Lisa, you were fitted with a vaginal mesh in 2016 and it was only watching this programme you realised that was the reason for problems you were experiencing. Thats true. Actually january of this year. The competitions started at the end of march. And really the Eureka Moment was seeing all of these convocations being shown on your show in april this year and it was a real Eureka Moment. Before that, what did you think was going on . |j moment. Before that, what did you think was going on . Ijust had mending and knitting pains but they we re mending and knitting pains but they were quite severe. After seeing the show i thought that this was not normal, it is not a normal mending paint and normal, it is not a normal mending paint and i had to take it back to my gp to get a referral back to the gynaecologist mending pain. My gp to get a referral back to the gynaecologist mending pain. What has your experience been since 2002 when you had it . Absolutely horrendous, i have recently been advised to have a colostomy and this is 15 years later and im still going through agony. I have a small hole at the base of my spine and there is a foreign body there which is trying to push out through the base of my spine. I dont want to talk about me, im the founder of the welsh mesh sieve by the group. And im here on the half of all of them mesh survivor. And this is a global problem and one in 50 is the tip of the iceberg. I have been damp aiming since 2011 to raise awareness one aiming since 2011 to raise awareness one in 15. I have been writing to government and i have a message from all those in the uk. Scotland since 2014 have had a suspension on vaginal mesh operations. We are the united kingdom, what has happened, wales, england, Northern Ireland . We need a suspension of this stuff until further investigations. That is all i had to say really because im really angry because there has been no need for all of these women to go through the things im having to go through the things im having to go through the things im having to go through. Every night im up until about 3am talking to women who are desperate, absolutely desperate. I have been on the verge of suicide myself back in 2005 because consultants said to me there was nothing that could be done. There are women out there today who are being told that. Last night, crystal in america died, the seventh person i have spoken to personally, and some of these people. Just to interrupt, when you say they have died, asa interrupt, when you say they have died, as a result of complications . Because of convocations with mesh, sepsis, inflammatory problems that have caused Heart Problems because of complications. This is notjust the mesh, it is complications because of it. Sorry to interrupt, we are obviously hearing a lot from jemima on other women as well and she is asking why these operations are not suspended. I think for a long time it was thought that the problems were in a very small proportion of women and often quoted was this 1 2 and eventually it went up to 5 and then 10 and studies then were showing Complication Rate Running at 30 40 so there was a tendency to believe they must be doing some good in a of women. But gradually the focus of the medical professional Community Moved away from thinking, it is only if the mesh has got into an organ thatis if the mesh has got into an organ that is a problem, to what are the secondary effects and they are the worse i am seeing, the chronic pain which is difficult to get on top of, the inflammatory process is effecting all parts of the body. And i know of patients with Heart Problems and so on. So what is the threshold for a decision to be taken for it to be suspended . It has been suspended in scotland. We have come to that point now and the time has come for all mesh procedures to be stopped and we have to go back and re evaluate the data, go back to the women who have been infected and understand the issues. We do not understand the issues. We do not understand them fully and we need to doa understand them fully and we need to do a lot more, there is a lot more science that needs to be done and also a lot more uptake and belief in the women who have suffered these problems. I said it up carried out hundreds of these removals, do you still put them in . No, we have unusual situations where there are certain women for whom there is no other possibility but the key is that you speak to women and given the opposition the options and discuss them fully and that is quite critical in this current situation. But given that i have done so many removals and increasingly in the last 5 7 years, it is increasingly difficult to even think about putting them in. Complications that are reported by surgeons are not correct. Less than a third of all Mesh Removals need to be logged and monitored correctly. A full suspension in england. Thank you all very much. Do keep your thought on this coming through to a full list is something we started talking about the programme because of the viewer getting in touch with is about this issue. Every time you talk about it we do get lots of comments from it. Do keep them coming. The usual ways of getting in touch with. Now for the weather. A bit of an east west split. A cloudy start the sun. 0thers a bit of an east west split. A cloudy start the sun. Others will have a fine start. Some will get some rain. The rain is not moving quickly. The direction it is heading is eastwards. For many of us, we will carry on with a lot of dry weather around. Some beautiful weather around. Some beautiful weather watchers pictures. You can see the waves whipping up. Also quite a breezy day. Gusty winds. In North Berwick and lothian beautiful. Lovely blue skies. There is a front which is dragging the rain from the west, moving slowly eased if you look at the proximity of the isobars, they are quite squashed together. That indicates it will be a breezy day. This is the rainfall we have had. It has not been moving particularly quickly but is making progress now in Northern Ireland and fringing in across western parts of scotland. It will continue to do that as we go through the course of the day. Later getting into west wales and south west of england. Some of the rain could be heavy. Ahead of it we are starting with high level cloud that will break. We will cease more sunshine. In the sunshine it will feel pleasant. By the afternoon we still rain coming across the south west of england. Into the south eastern quarter of the country at a fair bit of sunshine. Much of the north of england staying driver that you can see the progress. Behind it we will see the progress. Behind it we will see some showers in Northern Ireland. As rain continues to move north eastwards across scotland, not all of scotland will be wet at this stage. Lothian and borders, the north east game drive. Here we have highs of 16. Further south in the sunshine, 23 will feel quite pleasant. This evening and overnight, the band of Rain In The West will move eastwards. Behind that, there will be some cloud and some murky conditions and a few showers still in the north west. Under clearer skies it would be quite chilly, rather like the one just gone. We start with the rain across is to the central and southern parts of england heading south west and the Channel Islands. As we head through the course of tomorrow, you will find their rain continuing to middleweight onto the near continent were clearing the Channel Islands last. Behind it there will be variable amount of cloud and a fair bit of sunshine. Also some showers will stop some of the showers are likely to be heavy. Not all of us will catch one. Tomorrow will be breezy as well. Not as breezy as friday. If you look at the isobars, they are squashed together. Low pressure dominating the weather with its front. Across the weather with its front. Across the north east of scotland we have rain. Elsewhere we are looking sunshine and showers. Breezy in the central parts of the country could if you are exposed to the breeze and showers it will feel nippy. If you miss them altogether, 20 themselves list will feel quite pleasant. 21 celsius. Hello its wednesday, its10 oclock. Im joanna gosling. This isjoy watson and her husband and carer tony. When joy was diagnosed with early onset alzheimers, she set up a charity to help people in a similar situation. She became an alzheimers ambassador and even met david cameron, but now her support benefits have been stopped because a recent Government Assessment deemed her fit and healthy. She disagrees. Well be speaking to her shortly. An invisible irish border. The government says it does not won any border posts between Northern Ireland and the republic. Critics say there is no detail on how that could work. 40 years since the death of the king, Tens Of Thousands of fans including his family hold an overnight vigil at his former home in graceland. Well have four superfans in the studio complete with tattoos and costumes to discuss why hes still so worshipped. Good morning. Heres rebecca in the bbc newsroom with a summary of todays news. The government says it wants to maintain a seamless border between Northern Ireland and the irish republic after the uk leaves the eu. A Paper Setting out britains Negotiating Position being published today rejects what it calls the Hard Borders Of The Past and sets out plans to allow people and goods to continue to move freely. Ministers insist an open border is realistic. This is notjust some sort of unilateral, one way issue i am talking about. When you look at the trade the uk has, for example, with ireland, around 13. 6 billion, equally the trade from ireland to the uk of around 9. 1 billion, it is that sort of flow of trade we do see in both directions. This matters for both of us. Donald trump has faced renewed criticism from within his own Republican Party by again blaming both sides involved in the clashes in virginia last weekend. The us president appeared to distance himself from his own statement a day earlier in which he condemned White Supremacists who had marched in charlottesville. In his latest news conference, he also blamed left wing supporters for charging at the so called alt right. You had a group on one side that was bad and you had a group on the other side that was also very violent. And nobody wants to say that, but ill say it right now. You had a group on the other side that came charging in without a permit and they were very, very violent. The latest Unemployment Figures are out. The jobless rate the latest Unemployment Figures are out. Thejobless rate has reached a 42 year low. None of people out of work in the uk fell by 57,000 in the three months to june, work in the uk fell by 57,000 in the three months tojune, bringing the jobless rate down to 4. 4 . That is the lowest since 1975. Average Weekly Earnings were up by 2. 1 compared with a year ago. However, when compared to the rate of inflation about earnings fell by. 5 . A Hospital Trust at the centre of an inquiry into a number of avoidable deaths among newborn babies, has been criticised forfailing to learn the lessons of past mistakes. A report by the nhs standards watchdog, the Care Quality Commission, found that safety still needs to improve in Maternity Services at The Shrewsbury and Telford Hospital nhs trust. The trust said challenges needed to be resolved and it wanted to work more closely with gps. But a father whose daughter died at the unit told this programme fundamental changes are needed. This is a trust which lacks leadership. Lacks a longer term vision for what its Patients Want and what should be delivered as safe care. Thats a summary of the latest bbc news more at 10. 30am. Coming up well be getting the latest on the ground in sierra leone. Many have lost their homes after huge landslides in the capital, freetown. Well be sticking toa capital, freetown. Well be sticking to a gay woman who has won her right for a file in the uk only after a 30 year legal battle. Do get in touch. Now for a look at the sport. Liverpool took a significant step towards reaching the Champions League group stage, after Beating Hoffeinheim 2 1 in Theirfirst Leg play off in germany. A result at anfield next week and theyll be back in europes top Club Competition for the first time in three years. Tim hague reports. Is the coutinho leaving liverpool . Everyone wants to know. Jurgen klopp had to deal with more noise tonight in the Champions League qualifier. Against hoffenheim, it was tricky from the. A penalty for Simon Mignolet to save an awful attempt. While liverpool might have been behind with a then went ahead. 18 year old Trent Alexander arnold was not the obvious choice to step up was not the obvious choice to step up when it mattered most. While he was magnificent on european debut, the brunt of victory was not as smooth and liverpool should have had more goals before and after half time. They got a second thanks to be deflected cross of james milner, they left the door open for their opponents. Hoffenheim were keptin their opponents. Hoffenheim were kept in the tie with a lovely late goal. Not the perfect night the liverpool but still plenty to smile about after a difficult week as the Champions League group stages move ever closer. Everton have agreed a deal to sign swansea city midfielder gil Fi Sigurdsson for a fee of around £45 million. The Iceland International will have a medical today and would become evertons record signing, beating the 30 Million Pounds they paid sunderland for goalkeeper Jordan Pickford last month. The former one day captain Paul Collingwood has criticised the use of the new pink ball for englands historic day night cricket test against the west indies at trent bridge tomorrow. Collingwood says the ball becomes as soft as plastic after a few overs. One man hoping to get to grips with it is chris woakes, available for selection again after being injured. I have not experienced it yet, apart from a Training Last Night was that it could move around a bit after the twilight period. I suppose that is the time to bowl. You might have to bat in those conditions as well stop the more you can get used to using it in the practice sessions, the better for us. It is a it in the practice sessions, the betterfor us. It is a bit it in the practice sessions, the better for us. It is a bit of an unknown how it will react. Former world number one Maria Sharapova has been handed a wildcard to compete at the us 0pen she returned from a 15 month doping ban earlier this year, but was denied a wildcard at the french open, before missing wimbledon through injury. That is the sport for now. In 2013, joy watson was diagnosed with early onset dementia. In the wake of the devastating diagnosis she went on to set up a charity in her local area that campaigned to make local businesses to become dementia friendly spaces. But in may this yearjoy had her benefits stopped after being assessed for personal independence payments which would have replaced the Disability Living Allowance she already received. She and her husband are now left struggling to pay their bills until they can go to tribunal, the final stage of appeal which is unlikely to happen before the end of the year. This isnt the first time were reported on cases like this. Last year our Reporterjim Reed spoke to 59 year old Wendy Mitchell who was diagnosed with early onset dementia in 2014. Her personal independence payments were cut from £77 a week to nothing. I dont remember the content of the interview, but i remember feeling that i wasnt there very long and the person didnt ask me many questions to help me remember what i was supposed to be saying. Did you feel they had an understanding of your condition at the end of it . No. I felt that they totally lacked any knowledge of dementia whatsoever. And then i got the shocking letter that told me that i was no longer going to get any payment whatsoever and a list of all the things that i was apparently better at than i was 18 months previously, which was ridiculous. I wish i was better. Who wouldnt when theyve got dementia . When you received that letter, what went through your head, how did it make you feel . Oh, well, itjust makes you feel so tomorrow lies. So demoralised. I instantly knew that the system is simply broken, because how can they tell me that im better than i was when i have deteriorated . Joy and tonyjoin us now along with their local mp, labours rebecca long bailey, who has taken up the couples case. Thank you forjoining us. As we said, you have been living with alzheimers for four years and your work was recognised by david cameron. Now you have been knocked back for benefits. How are you feeling about all of these things . If im honest, quite devastated. I was devastated when i got the diagnosis and this decision has knocked me for six. Diagnosis and this decision has knocked me forsix. Im. Im quite fea rful knocked me forsix. Im. Im quite fearful and upset. How much money have you lost as a result . Basically about £400 a month. And that includes your carers about £400 a month. And that includes your ca rers allowance . Yes, it is the disability living allowa nce, yes, it is the Disability Living Allowance, a small carers allowance and help with our council tax. What impact is it having . A huge impact for me. I have got a dementia dog and having to stop her training because i cant afford it. And basic things i was trying hardest to up for my funeral and that has had to go for my funeral and that has had to 9 by for my funeral and that has had to go by the board. Everything isjust upside down. Tell us more about the assessment that you had. Alzheimers Isa Assessment that you had. Alzheimers is a degenerative condition. And you we re is a degenerative condition. And you were obviously assessed as having the right to get the benefit but under the reassessment you are found to not need it at all so tell us how thatis to not need it at all so tell us how that is carried out. We asked for the assessment to be carried out in our own home because it was too stressful for joy our own home because it was too stressful forjoy to our own home because it was too stressful for joy to attend our own home because it was too stressful forjoy to attend the centre. This lady came into our house and from the way she was talking and sitting and carrying out the conversation we felt she had no Practical Knowledge of dementia, no actual living experience of working with people with dementia. She was asking practical questions, like what you do from day to day, how you do things, and saying basically that joy do things, and saying basically that joy was ok doing various things although we fully explained that i do all the coding now because it is too dangerous forjoy because she forgets to turn the gas on or off and things of that nature it i do all the cooking. That came back that she was fully able to cook. Joy is fully able to or that there is somebody in the house who can do it . Asa carer, somebody in the house who can do it . As a carer, i do things forjoy that she would like to do herself but cannot. The report from the assessor basically said thatjoy cannot. The report from the assessor basically said that joy is able to prepare a meal. Could you do that . No way. On a good day i could maybe make myself a drink. 0n no way. On a good day i could maybe make myself a drink. On a bad day i would be looking in the Washing Machine for the milk and things like that. I have scalded myself and my clumsiness, which was one of the first symptoms, that has deteriorated to the extent where i just knock over things and drop things. One of the reasons cited in the assessment is that you drive sometimes locally. Very rarely. I am assessed on a yearly basis but im desperate to keep my license for emergencies. Ive got two grandchildren and if there was an emergency or, as has happened in the past, tony was rushed to a e, i feel more confident knowing i can drive. But if i go to any talks or anything i always have my Support Worker with me and she does all the driving if tonyis me and she does all the driving if tony is unavailable. My friends from age uk showed me around. Yes, i can drive, but i dont. David cameron praised you for the way you live with alzheimers and the work you have done around people having it to try to make life better for them. Do you feel your positive attitude may have expired . Yes, i do. May have backfired. Sometimes i feel, what is the point . I use so much of my energy fighting the dementia that i havent got any extra energy to fight the system. It does take a lot to get up and think about the people, i feel responsible to get up and think about the people, ifeel responsible because of the work i do, i feel responsible, i have a lot of people my age who are now in care homes living with 80, 90 year old and i feel a responsibility to help people to continue to live well. And it is hard, and this has made it even harder because my future is so uncertain now. I dont know where the bills are going to be paid, i am relying on my son to give me hand outs. People have said, you can go along to the food banks. Who has said that, anybody in authority . Go along to the food banks. Who has said that, anybody in authority7m was somebody from the ccg. I think it was a flippant the mark. That is the clinical commissioning group. We do some work with them with Dementia Awareness and i do some work with them with Dementia Awareness and i was do some work with them with Dementia Awareness and i was in conversation with them. Best intentions, they we re with them. Best intentions, they were trying to say there are things you can do to help yourself and i go along with that. But it is still a struggle to get up and go to my groups and put on the face, that im an ambassador for the alzheimers society, i encourage us all to live well and to have this. Lets bring in yourmp, well and to have this. Lets bring in your mp, rebecca long bailey, thank you forjoining us. What is your reaction tojoy having her benefits stopped . Your reaction tojoy having her benefits stopped . |j your reaction tojoy having her benefits stopped . I was absolutely horrified when she came into the office and told me what has happened. She is so well known across salford, everybody speaks highly of her, evenjust across salford, everybody speaks highly of her, even just a few weeks ago i had customers in the hairdressers talking to me about the work she has done. She has done a phenomenal work in the community to help people with dementia despite the hardship she is facing and so to hear she has been pushed Over The Edge by such an unjust decision was absolutely staggering. I think the way the assessment was carried out leaves a lot to be desired and the fa ct leaves a lot to be desired and the fact that when joy appealed the first time she was awarded points score four and when she appealed, they gave the an award of zero. That was the State Of Affairs and now she is being forced to go to a tribunal which is an extremely stressful situation for anybody to go through, and the fact is it is likely this case, and and the fact is it is likely this case, and i hope it will be, overturned. As a constituency mp i have to say this is not a rare case. There have been a number of cases reported to salford of a similar vein. Iwas reported to salford of a similar vein. I was speaking to an organisation gold Salford Unemployed Resource Centre last week and they told me that 99 of the cases they ta ke told me that 99 of the cases they take to tribunal in relation to assessment are overturned. There is clearly something wrong with the syste m clearly something wrong with the system and it needs to be reviewed urgently which is what i have taken onjoys case urgently which is what i have taken on joys case and asked the urgently which is what i have taken onjoys case and asked the dwp urgently which is what i have taken on joys case and asked the dwp to look at it urgently and also asked david gauke to carry out an urgent review into the Assessment Procedure itself. I want to read a statement from the department for work and pensions. This is part of a wider strategy and policy looking at payments and whether in some cases they are being paid where they should not be. The spokesperson said. Personal independence payments take a much wider look at the way someones Health Condition or disability impacts them on a daily basis, taking into account all the supporting evidence from someones gp or medical specialist. Regular reassessments mean we can ensure people with degenerative conditions get the help they need as their condition changes. Do you agree that it is right, in principle, for all the cases to be looked at in the way they are . |j dont think anybody can dispute the need for assessment in many cases but it is how is fairly the assessments are carried out and in the case ofjoy it clearly wasnt the case ofjoy it clearly wasnt the case. We also need to look at the case. We also need to look at the fact that alzheimers and dementia are degenerative emissions so we dementia are degenerative emissions so we will not see an improvement degenerative conditions. Joy will get steadily worse and she will have to manage that going forward. get steadily worse and she will have to manage that going forward. Ijust wa nt to to manage that going forward. Ijust want to read a comment on facebook from someone whose husband knows you. Suzie preston says her husband was diagnosed with alzheimers at 54, it leaves you financially crippled, not able to work, still with mortgages and some people have young children. My husband is frightened they will take his personal independence payment away. It has an impact on the system the leigh symptoms of his condition. On the symptoms of his condition. When you have got the diagnosis of alzheimers, how did it change your life . Were you working previously . Yes, ironically i was a carer looking after people with severe dementia as well as ms and other conditions. I had to give up thejob i loved and that hit me hard. But it took five or six years to actually get a formal diagnosis. When i got that i just took to the sofa because i know what the future holds. I have looked after people with dementia andi looked after people with dementia and i dont know how many years ive got. Some of my friends are in care homes and it hurt to look to the future where my resources are limited and we would not be able to do the things i enjoyed, with support. That changes my whole mindset ina support. That changes my whole mindset in a way because as much as i enjoy raising awareness and stuff, i will not be able to afford to take my grandchildren out to lunch, to do the things i want to do. And that could quite easily put me back on the Sofa Thinking quite suicidal because i know a few years down the line what i might face and i want to make the most of it now. And i do resonate with those people, like what you read, i can relate that completely. And that is why i do what i do because i want to help other people not to have to go through this assessment as i have had to. And if we can bring about change or other people with dementia dont have to experience what i have, i will have done something good. Joy and tony, thank you, and rebecca long bailey, thank you. And a quick tweet, saying this is disgraceful, i am crying for this courageous lady and her husband and others affected. Thank you very much. Still to come. The 40th Anniversary of the death of the King Of Rock N Roll has been marked with a candlelit vigil in graceland. Well be speaking to Elvis Superfans here in the studio. It is 28 minutes past ten and we are turning our attention to sierra leone. 0ne Local In Freetown has talked about overwhelming devastation in the wake of the deadly mudslide on monday. Nearly 400 people have been killed and up to 600 more are still missing according to the red cross who say they are still struggling to recover some bodies. The situation is so desperate that a mass burial of victims has been planned to free up space in the regions mortuaries. Lets speak now to some people who are all helping with the Relief Effort in freetown. Ishmeal charles from the Healey International Relief Foundation which helps vulnerable individuals in sierra leone. Ramatu jalloh from save the children. Ben munson from street child. You were close to where the mudslide happened and saw people running away. What did you see and what have people told you . We were on our way ona people told you . We were on our way on a mission to another district and we used the route where the mudslide took place. The morning there was very heavy rain and basically what we observed on our trip was a woman running towards the main road crying and gesticulating. She approached another woman who was on a bike in front of us. They had a brief conversation and the next thing we saw was this woman crying. Immediately after that another man came running towards our vehicle informing us, he simply said, thousands have been lost, this is desperate. It was at this point we realised something had happened. We contacted our office and informed them that something was wrong because we could not actually see the site and it was not too long after we found out that a landslide had taken place. What is it like there now . People are still buried. Extraordinary, people are being pulled out alive. This is alljust very recent, just happening on monday. How are people reacting . What are conditions like . We have been lucky. Since yesterday we have had no rain. That is pretty unusualfor we have had no rain. That is pretty unusual for this we have had no rain. That is pretty unusualfor this time we have had no rain. That is pretty unusual for this time of year. That will not necessarily hamper relief effo rts will not necessarily hamper Relief Efforts or the Excavation Efforts going on on site. Field workers were on the site yesterday. 0ne going on on site. Field workers were on the site yesterday. One of them describe the horrific smell, which is quite frightening really, and the fa ct is quite frightening really, and the fact that people are still feeling quite desperate about the situation. I think really, there is some level of hope among the communities living in the area, hoping some of their neighbours and friends will be rescued. But also there is some concern that, as the days go by, the level of hope will dwindle. What have you been seeing of people actually being pulled out alive . Especially at the centre where the mudslide actually took place. Definitely there are no survivors underneath that slide. For obvious reasons, the weight and the force the mud came down with was so heavy toa the mud came down with was so heavy to a point that, if people had survived it was only for a few minutes. Then they were crushed jude to the weight. There have been testimonies, people speaking. 0ne woman went to a neighbouring house to stay with a friend. Eventually she slept in a friends house. That is how she was saved for that if her family who wanted to get back to see her in the morning and there was no one in the house anymore. A family man travelled to the province and came back to freetown and there was no house anymore and no Family Members. It is that kind of desperate situation where there is really no one who survived who was in any of those buildings at the time. What is your organisation doing to help . Street child has been on the ground pretty much from day one. We realise the immediate need for a response. Some of the families being displaced lost everything. No food and water available. We would be providing basic food rations and water for the victims who have been displaced. I went with the Street Child Team just after we launched our Flood Release Appeal for the International Money is flooding in. Some of these centres, the stories are horrific, as you can imagine. 0ne lady who the team was working with was inconsolable. She had injuries on her arms and herface. She was eating the food we were handing out. My team later managed to calm her down and she explained her story. Unfortunately she had lost all her children and her husband. There are some really difficult stories. Street charges tried to do what it can. What are the immediate priorities for your charity . At save the children, the priority is to support government with the response. They have been working with the office of national security, linking with the ministry of social welfare, which is in the process of leading a Registration Process of leading a Registration Process in what i will describe as the red zone areas. The aim of that was to try to identify displaced families and children, the deaths. The families who have lost everything and those who had suffered Household Damage as a result of the flooding that took place. We are also now looking at doing assessments with regards to these schools and centres the where these schools and centres the where the families and children are being placed at the moment. We are also looking at possibly supporting the children, whose families have lost everything with regards to preparing them to go back to school. These are some of the issues we will be working around now. Thank you all very much. Thank you. Still to come. We will be speaking to a nigerian lg bt we will be speaking to a Nigerian Lgbt Activist who was granted asylum. Today marks the anniversary of 40 years since the death of elvis, with fans marking the occasion with a candlelit vigil in graceland. Well be speaking to some of his superfans in the studio. With the news, heres rebecca in the bbc newsroom. The government has said it does not want border posts between Northern Ireland and the republic following brexit. A document to be published this lunchtime will say that ministers want a seamless border so people and goods can move freely. But brexit critics say there are no credible details on how an open border could be maintained. Donald trump has faced renewed criticism from within his own Republican Party by again blaming both sides involved in the clashes in virginia last weekend. The us president appeared to distance himself from his own statement a day earlier in which he condemned White Supremacists who had marched in charlottesville. In his latest news conference, he also blamed left wing supporters for charging at the so called alt right. The latest Unemployment Figures are out and the the jobless rate has reached a 42 year low. The number of people out of work in the uk fell by 57,000 in the three months tojune, bringing the jobless rate down to 4. 4 its lowest since 1975. Average Weekly Earnings were up by 2. 1 compared with a year ago. However, when compared to the rate of inflation, real earnings fell by 0. 5 . A leading consultant has told this programme that vaginal mesh implants, which are given to women to help deal with Bladder Incontinence and pelvic Organ Prolapse, should be banned. Earlier this year, this programme revealed that hundreds of women are living with chronic pain and complications after undergoing surgery. A recent report by nhs england has called for better reporting of problems and increased knowledge sharing, but has not recommended discontinuing use of the mesh. I think the time has come for all mesh procedures to be stopped and we need to go back and re evaluate all the data, go back to all the women who have been affected and really understand the issues. We dont understand them fully. And we need to do, there is a lot more science of it that needs to be done and also a lot more uptake and belief in the women who have suffered these problems. The biggest warship ever built for the royal navy the aircraft carrier, hms Queen Elizabeth is entering her home port of portsmouth for the first time. The 65,000 tonne ship has been undergoing sea trials since setting sail from Rosyth Shipyard in scotland injune. The ship is 280 metres long, and Herflight Deck is big enough for three football pitches. Shes expected to be the navys flagship for the next 50 years. That is a summary of the latest news. Now for the sport. Liverpool beat hoffenheim 2 1 in the Champions League first leg play off as they bid to reach the group save stages. Jurgen klopps side went ahead. Hoffenheim pulled one back on 87 minutes to ensure a Nervy Second Leg At Anfield next week. The Champions League qualifiers continued tonight. Celtic host astana at celtic park in the first leg play off. Elsewhere, joanna konta is preparing welcome the warm up event for the us open. She is through to the third round of the cincinnati open. Joe pavey says she wants to defend her european 10,000 metres title next year, a month before her 45th birthday. She missed the Athletics Champions in Fashion Bitch and ships in london through injury and says she has no plans to retire. After a 13 year legal battle, the home office has now granted Refugee Status to a Nigerian Lgbt Activist, who was accused of faking her sexuality in order to stay in the uk. Aderonke apata says she knew she was gay from the age of 16 and was persecuted in nigeria. She fled for her life and arrived in the uk in 2004, but did not claim asylum on the grounds of her sexuality until 2012. When she did file that claim, the home office considered she was lying about being in a lesbian relationship but now, after a public and high profile legal fight, the home office have granted her Refugee Status. Aderonke isjoining us for her first tv interview since the home office decision. Thank you very much forjoining us. Take us back to your childhood in nigeria, when you knew you were gay and you say you were persecuted. What happened . And you say you were persecuted. What happened . Thank you for having me. When i was growing up in nigeria, i have always known i was a lesbian, i was different. I did not know the name for what i was and that made it difficult for me. I could not tell anybody about what i was going through. As time went by i realise i was attracted to these same sex women and that led to so many things which made me flee nigeria for the uk. What happened in terms of you being persecuted in nigeria . So many things happen. I was accused of witchcraft and it was just toxic. Ive found it difficult myself to express myself as a lesbian in an environment that was quite homophobic. So toxic for people to live in. You decided to leave your country because of your sexuality. I think initially you headed for canada but were barred from going there, so you stayed in this country. You did not immediately claim asylum on grounds of your sexuality, why was that . Yell ai of your sexuality, why was that . Yell al was on my way to canada before i was stopped here in the uk. I could not discuss my sexuality with anybody because it is something i have never, never spoken to anybody about. I was also arrested in nigeria. I did not know how to tell the authorities. I could not talk about it. I did not know sexuality was basis for asylum. I did not have a clue about it. That is why it took that long for me to talk about my sexuality. I have been living in the closet for many years of my life. It was difficult for me to talk about. When you came here, what status where you living under . Can you repeat that question . When i arrived, i did claim asylum based on arrived, i did claim asylum based on a little religion. Based on my religion back home, i was allowed to stay in the country whilst my application was going on. That is what was happening until it came to the point where i was refused totally. I knew going back home was going to be a thing of life and death. I went underground and that is how i lived until 2012 when i claimed asylum, based on my sexuality. At that point, the home 0ffice contested the argument you put forward on the grounds of your sexuality. What argument to date give . It was always saying i was lying and it was a publicity stunt, wanting to remain in the uk. Ifind that there are difficult to agree with. When i was in nigeria, i was doing well, really well. I would not know why i would want to stay in the uk by having to lie about my sexuality. I did not have the need to do that. That is what i was trying to say to them. It was because nigeria was not safe for me to stay in, based on my sexuality and the persecution i would face. How did you feel, not being believed in that way . Yell ai how did you feel, not being believed in that way . Yell al was so sad, angry and bitter. I did not know how to put the case across to them until i was able to get a legal team. Also number five chambers. They looked into the case and said this case has never been properly from day one. They were able to turn it around. You had a lot of support from high profile witnesses. You they do now have Refugee Status. How do you feel now that everything is settled and out there in the open . now that everything is settled and out there in the open . I would like to ta ke out there in the open . I would like to take this opportunity to say thank you to everyone who has supported me, including lord elizabeth barker, peter tatchell, supported me, including lord elizabeth barker, petertatchell, my very good friend jason, who is a lwa ys very good friend jason, who is always there for me, and so many other people. I cannot remember all the names of people. It was a high profile campaign. Im grateful to everybody who supported me. I am glad that i am here and i say. At the same time i am angry. There are so the same time i am angry. There are so many others like me who are facing the same problem and not being believed still going through the system. I think the system needs to change. Thank youjoining the system. I think the system needs to change. Thank you joining us. A Home Office Spokesperson said we do not routinely comment on individual cases. The home office does not and would never ask for an applicant to produce video proof of their sexuality. This government has a proud record of providing protection for Asylum Seekers fleeing persecution because their Sexual Orientation or gender identity and remains committed to improving the asylum process for those claiming asylum on the basis of their Sexual Orientation and gender identity. We have worked closely with ngos and the un high commissioner for refugees to develop dedicated guidance and training for case workers. A leading consultant has told this programme that vaginal mesh implants, which are given to women to help deal with Bladder Incontinence and pelvic Organ Prolapse, should be stopped immediately. A recent report by nhs england has called for better reporting of problems and increased knowledge sharing, but has not recommended discontinuing use of the mesh. Consultant Uro Gynaecological Surgeon dr Sohier Elneil said a halt to using the implants was needed now, while further research is carried out. I think the time has come for all mesh procedures to be stopped and we need to go back and re evaluate all the data, go back to all the women who have been affected and really understand the issues. We dont understand them fully. And we need to do, there is a lot more science of it that needs to be done and also a lot more uptake and belief in the women who have suffered these problems. Isaid i said you had carried out hundreds of removals, do you still put them in . No, we have unusual situations where there are certain women for whom there is no other possibility that the key is that you speak to women and give them the options and discuss them fully. That is quite critical in this current situation. But given that i have done so many removals, increasingly so in the last five to seven years, it is increasingly difficult to even think about putting them in. After saying he would rather slash his wrists than play bond again, hes back last night on the us chat chat the late show, daniel craig told Host Stephen Colbert that he would return as the iconic 007 for the 27th james bond film. Chat show. Many people know you as james bond. I think the greatest bond. I think youre the greatest bond. Cheering thank you. I truly. The first time, casino royale, everyone said james bond would return. I went. Better. Thank you very much. I would see another Daniel Craig James bond movie in a minute. Right. Now, youve been reported to have accepted the role of james bond again. In the new york times, back injuly, they said that you are going to be the next james bond. Yeah. People have been asking about it all day. Yes, they have. Ive been doing interviews. Ive been quite cagey about it. Ive been doing interviews all day and people have been asking me and i think ive been rather coy, but i kind of felt like, you know, if i was going to speak the truth, i should speak the truth to you. Cheering daniel craig, we could use some good news here. Will you return as james bond . Lovely to see you again. Listen, so is this the last bond, can you tell me if youre going to do the one after that . No, i think this is it. This is it, yeah. Ijust want to go out on a high note and i cant wait. He cant wait, he has changed anna smith joins he cant wait, he has changed anna smithjoins us. He said he would rather cut his wrists than do it but are you happy he has changed his mind . I think a lot of people are, im not that thrilled. I thought perhaps quit when youre ahead, it was time for him in the franchise to move on but he is a solid pair of hands and showed he is very adept at the role. He was brilliant in skyfall so lets hope he delivers another winner. How does it compare to the other ones . He is very much action man, this gritty action packed style, he was great at the combat scenes. Perhaps not as funny, the likes of roger moore and sean connery and Pierce Brosnan had more of that smooth guy element and did the humour well so it will be interesting to see if we have a funny a james bond moving forward. Is there any reason he cant keep going on if he wants . Who knows . Maybe we go through the same thing every time but are these decisions within the gift of the actor who is ultimately written the choice . Within the gift of the actor who is ultimately written the choice . M within the gift of the actor who is ultimately written the choice . It is a huge negotiation process which is why it has taken so long for him to make the announcement himself. A lot of money involved and politics and of money involved and politics and of course you think about the future of course you think about the future of the franchise, it depends on which director is involved and what their plans and feelings are about what kind of james their plans and feelings are about what kind ofjames bond their plans and feelings are about what kind of james bond they want. It makes sense to refresh it every few years i think. It is a franchise that has been going for a long time. How much has changed within the james bond movies to get date with modern day issues around equality and Everything Else . We have seen over the years he has become a bit less of a womaniser. He still has that smooth guy touch but they have moved on from this terribly sexist james bond of the 1970s. I was not thrilled by his attitude to women in the recent films but it has moved on andi the recent films but it has moved on and i dont think there are as many horrible racial stereotypes as we used to seem so things have moved a bit with the times but it is still the old school. It is, thank you very much. Today marks the 40th Anniversary of the death of the bestselling solo artist of all time elvis presley. The king enjoyed worldwide sales of around one billion but at the age of 42 he was found unresponsive on the floor of the bathroom at his graceland home. The coroner recorded an official verdict of cardiac arrhythmia, widely thought to have been caused by an overdose of prescription drugs. For many the memory of the man lives on and they celebrate his life listening to his music, buying memorabilia and even performing as him and thousands of people are expected to flock to his memphis home to pay tribute and hold a vigil. Lets speak now to paul hyu, or chinese elvis. He has done between 800 and 1,000 performances impersonating elvis. Debbie evans, has been a fan of elvis since she was six years old and loves him so much she regularly travels to memphis and even has a tattoo of him on her shoulder. What do you say . For ever and elvis presley. Steve and michele bloomfield who run the elvis radio show, they both met at an elvis fan event. Welcome all of you. You are all elvis super fans, you welcome all of you. You are all Elvis Superfans, you have welcome all of you. You are all elvis super fans, you have the tattoo, debbie, why did you get that and why do you love him . tattoo, debbie, why did you get that and why do you love him . I had it for my 50th birthday, ijust love elvis so much. I have grown up with him since the age of six when my mum played the music and he has become pa rt played the music and he has become part of my life will stop he is a Family Member more than anything. And you have a picture of him next to your bed rather than your husband yes he is used to it paul, it is fair to say you describe yourself as an actor more than a superfan . Yourself as an actor more than a super fan . I think that is fair to say. Im an actor, but if i take my glasses off, the viewers might see that im chinese elvis, that is the name of the act. I think im creating a bit of tv history because i think creating a bit of tv history because ithink im creating a bit of tv history because i think im the first elvis impersonator to appear personally with grey hair but also his own facial hair, the remnants of a goatee beard ive had for a role. This is what you can elvis would have looked like if he was 15 and chinese . Thats exactly it. If he was 50. I have been doing elvis much like every other was apart from that i was chinese elvis and there is powered by that you had to do your best to look like him and perform the songs in the same style. When i got 242, the age he was he died, i felt i was free of that now. Because ieitherquit, felt i was free of that now. Because i either quit, which many elvis impersonators have to consider, it must be a lot of fun. Steve and michelle, you run a radio show. You met. At an elvis festival. What is it about him . The same as debbie, we we re it about him . The same as debbie, we were brought up with elvis music with my mum and auntie. He wasjust so with my mum and auntie. He wasjust so talented, so underrated as an artist, the biggest artist there has ever been and there will be never be anyone like him. It is exceptional obviously that someone who has been dead a long time is still having an enormous impact on the lives of a lot of people. People like his music but dont celebrate it in the way that you do so what is so special about it . It is the versatility and range of his voice, it is fantastic. Do you ever get sick of it . No we do the show every week and we are doing one when we get home today. Michelle, it is a 50 hour tribute youre doing. We gutted on the weekend starting on friday night. Weekend starting on friday night. We have got it at the weekend. Will that just be a we have got it at the weekend. Will thatjust be a lot of his music on repeat . It is in sections, a live show on friday and on saturday but in between there will be 505, 605, 705, live, 5tudio outtake5. In between there will be 505, 605, 70s, live, studio outtakes. How much is on repeat, how much can you play without repeating . We can go the whole weekend. There will be a few track5 repeated but different ver5ion5 track5 repeated but different versions but we could go the whole weekend without playing the same 5ong. Weekend without playing the same song. Debbie, you go to graceland. Every year, 12 years now. It is absolutely wonderful. It is different to what people think it is. Graceland is quite small, it is not a massive house come up but when you get there, you have got friends there although you dont know people because you will walk up in the morning, go to the Meditation Garden and you can sit by elviss grave. That is your only connection with com plete that is your only connection with complete strangers but you feel you are among friends . I have so many friends i have made from going to memphis every year. We all have something in common, we all love elvis presley. What is his legacy for you . That i love him completely. And he will always be in my heart. Thank you all very much forjoining us. Lovely to have you. Bbc newsroom live is coming up next. Have a lovely afternoon. I will see you tomorrow. Goodbye. In england at the moment. This is in east yorkshire. We have got some Rain In The West and this is the recent radar picture. The rain is in Northern Ireland and are going into western scotland. The rebel move erratically eastwards throughout the day. Ledger today, the rain dripping into the west of wales. I heard of that, some increasing cloud, but in many parts of england and wales, dry. Sunny spells at times. Further north, quite a strong wind. The rain is moving through. Through this evening, moving erratically eastward. During thursday, most of it will clear away. For most, not a bad day. One or two spells dotted around. This is bbc news. These are the top stories developing at 11am. A seamless border the government prepares to set out its aims for a post brexit frontier between Northern Ireland and the republic. Yes, there is work to do and thats why we have also said that we think an interim period is required so there isnt a sudden shift, a sudden cliff edge, with all of the uncertainties and that means. Im live on the border in county durham. The government says it wants to keep the movement of people and goods across the border as easily as possible. The Unemployment Rate falls to the lowest level since 1975 but real wages also drop. Donald trump faces criticism from within his own party after once more blaming both sides for violence in charlottesville

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