the boss of the bank of england has told investors that its bond buying to stabilise pension funds will end on friday, despite pleas to extend it. the pound dropped sharply against the dollar to below $1.10 after andrew bailey s statement. and buckingham palace has announced that king charles will be crowned at westminster abbey on saturday the 6th of may. hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are lord darroch, kim darroch, former uk ambassador to washington and ali miraj, columnist with the article tomorrow s front pages, starting with. the ft leads with the bank of england s latest intervention to buy government bonds but the bank s governor insists the emergency scheme will end by this friday. the i says the prime minister will try and quieten rebels in her own party with a cap on energy profits. the guardian reports that these companies will face a windfall tax. the telegraph leads on the fall in the value of the
factory in china will significantly affect production of the phones and increase wait times ahead of the busy christmas holiday season. hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are rachel cunliffe, the senior associate editor at the new statesman, and ali miraj, who s a columnist for the article. the metro leads on rishi sunak s debut on the world stage at the climate conference in egypt where he made a short speech, and features a photo of a warm embrace between the prime minister and french president, emmanuel macron. the guardian has a powerful lead story from cop with the prime minister of barbados mia mottley condemning richer countries for failing the developing world. also leading on cop, the i reports on the un and exploitation of resources, now, and refusing to cough up the money or helping those poor countries who feel the effects most or helping those poor countries who feel the effects most directly. also l
of year. high pressure will build towards the end of the week and sit across europe and that will be important as it will dry up things, keep those weather fronts out to the north west but still the southerly flow driving in the milder air. we are likely to see temperatures peaking at around 17 degrees on thursday. look at where they should be this time of year. it will stay mild despite the cloud and wind and rain. thanks, louise. and that s bbc news at ten on monday the 7th of november. there s more analysis of the day s main stories on newsnight which isjust getting underway on bbc two. it is my colleague victoria derbyshire who is just preparing to go on air. the news continues here on bbc one as now it s time to join our colleagues across the nations and regions for the news where you are, but from the ten team, it s goodnight. hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are rachel cunliffe, the deputy 0nline editor at
this is my little make up bag. i like to have things all in their set places so i get everything on the bed first and then i m like, right, let me just sort my life out . i was 17 years old when i lost my eyesight and since then, i ve had to discover a load of life hacks to make tasks like packing a suitcase a lot easier. where is it? oh, yeah. there it is. so, these are little packing cubes. basically, i put bottoms in one, tops in the other, i ll zip it up and i might even label, like, day one, in braille, and then i lljust pack it. i live in the uk with my two guide dogs, olga, who is now retired, and miss molly. oh, i want you two to come so badly but i don t want you to be eaten by lions! you are! you will be eaten if you come, so you have to stay with nanny. gotta put you in the car now, my lovelies. it s like my left arm has been chopped off, girls! she ultimately allows me to experience the world in a way where i don t get overwhelmed, because she has got it. # you
electricity and water. at least 19 people have died after a passenger plane crashed into lake victoria in tanzania while attempting to land in stormy weather twenty six of the 43 people on board were initially rescued. hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are ros altman the former conservative pensions minister and parliamentary journalist, tony grew. let s start with the metro, which reports on the death of a 17 year old boy in halifax, who passed away on bonfire night after an incident involving fireworks. the times leads with a story which suggests the government will use its foreign aid budget to deal with the arrival of refugees and migrants, who come to the uk on small boats. as cop27 begins, the telegraph says that the uk may support reperations being paid to developing countries adversely affected by climate change. but the guardian says the uk, the us, canada and australia have fallen billions of dollars s