and alongside that, as a viable palestinian state, a state which is not in the gift of any neighbour, but is an inalienable right of the palestinian people and is recognised by this party and the world. applause. that is what we must hope for now, conference. and there is always power in hope. hope is the fuel of change, the oxygen of a better future. and that is what we must offer scotland. because after 1a years of tory failure in westminster, 17 years of snp failure in holyrood, only labour can provide the change that scotland needs. applause. imean, i mean, look around this nation. drug deaths off the scale. schools, going backwards. buses that cost a fortune. those ferries still not serving the island communities who need them. and as eileen mentioned, a terrible crisis in our nhs. the ambulances queueing outside a&e, patients who need treatment waiting inside. conference, what does the first minister say to people like eileen? what does he say to the scots who think i m
the wounds of the past 1a years and move forward, britain must come together. and that means we will need you. but also know that, whether you are thinking of voting labour for the first time, whether you always vote labour or whether you have no intention of voting labour whatsoever, my party will serve you. that is who we are now, a changed party, no longer enthralled to gesture politics, no longer a party of protest. a party of service. rebuilt, renewed, reconnected to an old partnership, a labour partnership that we serve working people as they drive britain forward. during that event in mansfield, the prime minister reacted to the labour leader s speech. let s hear what he had to say. since i became chancellor, since i became prime minister, we have continued to increase funding for local government, particularly for social care where that is very clearly the biggest pressure that local authorities face. look, the situation here is crystal clear. you have a labour run co
as he surrenders to justice and we get our first look at his charges. all in starts right now. good evening from new york, i m chris hayes. tonight, the world is reflecting on the life and legacy of the longest reigning monarch in history, queen elizabeth ii. who died today in her home in balmoral, scotland, at the age of 96. the queen ruled over britain for 70 years, but it was not a role she was not supposed to inherit when she was born back in 1926. you see, elizabeth was the first third grandchild of king george the fifth, of the first child of his second son. she was only ten years old when her uncle, in what was at the time a remarkable turn of events, a scandal, abdicated the throne, leaving her father to take over as king. elizabeth then, first in the line of succession. she took the role and responsibility seriously from a young age, famously declaring her devotion to the duty on her 21st birthday. i declare before you all that my whole life, whether it be
also in the next hour, the heavyweights head for wembley. around 90,000 people will pack into the stadium tonight as anthonyjoshua faces wladimir klitschko in the richest bout in british boxing history. and at ii.30pm we ll bring you india s millenials, where the bbc speaks to young adults from mumbai, from across the social classes, about their hopes and dreams. good afternoon. welcome to bbc news. the 27 remaining european union countries have unanimously adopted guidelines for negotiating britain s withdrawal. the president of the european council, donald tusk, said the summit in brussels had approved a firm and fair mandate for setting the terms of brexit. my colleague ben brown is in brussels. the first thing donald tusk said, which was of huge interest, was he emphasised what he called the outstanding unity of the 27 as they press ahead? that is right. unity has been the watchword among the remaining 27 eu leaders and there have been plenty of summits here in brussels t
that everybody wants. many of the ideas have a popular ring on the doorstep. will voters trust those bearing the message? david grossman has been gauging reaction. i normally vote for labour. i m a member of the labour party. but i m loathe to say what i really think at the minute. go on, tell me. no. and where does this manifesto fit into the political firmament? 0ur panel is raring to go, with our left right blackboard. good evening. it was not so long ago we moaned about all political parties looking and sounding the same. failure to offer proper choice to the voter, failure to bring anything new to the table. well, no one looking at labour s manifesto in whatever form it finally emerges can parrot that line now. if the leaked draft remains true to character, then this is a bold political treatise, and one we re exploring across the show tonight. it offers a role for the state, perhaps not seen since the post war days of clement attlee. it seeks bigger national service