well, everybody and jesse waters, along with katie pavliksica tar, jesse guitar lo, shannon bream and greg gutfeld. is s o clock in new york city. and this is the five. gelot of big breaking news to get to. new york attorney general letitia james getting read y t to seize donald trump s properties. the whiterties.e wh house rer the first time to that stunning video of an illegal immigranat buinvasion at the border. but first, kate middleton, s the world after revealing that she has cancer. for more, let s go to jonathan hutt. jesse, shocking news, terribleoo news coming out of london at 6 p.m. local time there. time her1 p.m. our time here ine the dreadful news that she hadgi gone for that abdominal surgery that we knew about on januaryweh 16th, we had not heardad anythig about her health status in the intervening two months and then inte lead today, kate, revealing what happened in her own words. listen here. the surgery was successful, however, tests after the ope
the diplodocus. good morning. it s the 4th of january. welcome to bbc newsroom live. britain s outgoing ambassador to the european union, sir ivan rogers, has strongly criticised the government s preparations for brexit. in his resignation letter he said he didn t know what ministers‘ negotiating objectives were and called on his colleagues to challenge what he called muddled thinking. our diplomatic correspondent, james landale, reports. sir ivan rogers has been britain s ambassador to the eu for three yea rs, ambassador to the eu for three years, and his criticisms about the government s preparations for brexit will be hard to ignore. in his resignation e mail he said there is a short supply of serious multilateral negotiating experience in whitehall and he said the structure of the uk s negotiating tea m structure of the uk s negotiating team need rapid resolution. he reveals that even he does not know what the government s negotiating objectives for brexit will be. b
never far away out to the west. but for the time being today the cold front is the story bringing in that cold airand front is the story bringing in that cold air and pushing mild air away to the west. it also brings some outbreaks of rain across south western areas and up to the north east we have showers coming in. they are blowing in on a pretty blustery north west wind making it feel quite cold and raw. inland especially over the high ground we have some sleet and snow and showers running right the way down to the coast of east anglia where again it will feel cold in the strong wind. further west we have sunshine but also extra cloud across the far south west producing the spot of rain and temperatures on chilly side wherever you are. then as soon as it gets dark this evening and tonight, the temperature is are going to plunge. you can see the blue shading spreading right across the map and where we keep the shower going across eastern areas, there could be some icy stret
i can see other dinosaurs, maybe. and what do you think of dippy? he goes, rawr! good afternoon and welcome to bbc news. the european commission has expressed regret over the departure of britain s eu ambassador, sir ivan rogers, saying he was very knowledgeable and always defended his government s interests. sir ivan issued a strong resignation email, warning of muddled thinking over brexit. but leading eurosceptic conservative iain duncan smith said he d undermined ministers trust when his private advice that a brexit deal could take ten years was leaked. our political correspondent ian watson reports. camera shy in public, outspoken in private. sir ivan rogers has exited his role as britain s eu ambassador. when the bbc revealed his private advice that a trade deal with the eu could take ten years, he was attacked by some leave campaigners for being pessimistic. diplomats are supposed to be, well, diplomatic. but in his resignation e mail, he is anything but. he tells h
this little device is paired with a pad under the pillow which detects me snoring and moves just enough to stop me without waking me up. good morning, it s thursday, january five, welcome to bbc newsroom live. a record number of cars were registered in the uk last year but as more of us than ever before splashed out on a brand new vehicle, the industry is warning that this could be the peak of sales. there were nearly 2.7 million new cars on the roads in 2016. this is largely because the way we re buying cars is changing with more affordable finance deals on offer. in 2015 nearly three quarters of cars were bought using something called a personal contract purchase or pcp. that s when you pay a deposit, make monthly payments for three orfour years, and at the end of that you have a choice to buy the car outright or give the car back to the dealer and upgrade. manufacturers are also predicting a 5% fall in new car sales this year with the weaker pound pushing up prices. on