25/03/2017 Breakfast


25/03/2017

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Hello, this is Breakfast, with Charlie Stayt and Rachel

:00:00.:00:00.

A blow for President Trump as he admits defeat on one

:00:00.:00:10.

He's forced to abandon a vote on healthcare reform

:00:11.:00:15.

because he couldn't get enough support from his own party.

:00:16.:00:29.

Good morning, it's Saturday 25th March.

:00:30.:00:35.

Police try to piece together the final movements

:00:36.:00:40.

of the Westminster attacker Khalid Masood.

:00:41.:00:45.

A WhatsApp message sent minutes before his killing spree

:00:46.:00:49.

Police have now released all but two of the 11 people arrested

:00:50.:00:54.

Almost two million people in the UK don't have access to a bank account.

:00:55.:01:01.

A House of Lords report calls it a scandal.

:01:02.:01:05.

In sport, the Republic of Ireland captain, Seamus Coleman,

:01:06.:01:07.

He was injured in a tackle, in the second half of his nation's,

:01:08.:01:13.

goalless draw with Wales, and will have surgery later today.

:01:14.:01:24.

The mass experiment to see if clocks going forward tonight will affect

:01:25.:01:31.

concentration of children in school. A chilly start to the day with frost

:01:32.:01:41.

and fog to contend with but for most of us we look at a dry weekend with

:01:42.:01:47.

plenty of sunshine. In the warm spots it will reach 19 degrees.

:01:48.:01:49.

Donald Trump has tried to shrug off the biggest setback so far

:01:50.:01:56.

in his presidency - a failure to overhaul his

:01:57.:01:58.

predecessor, Barack Obama's health reforms.

:01:59.:02:00.

Senior Republicans withdrew their plans at the last minute

:02:01.:02:02.

because they didn't have enough backing from his own party to win

:02:03.:02:05.

It was a promise that became one of the pillars of his campaign. And one

:02:06.:02:20.

he repeated at every rally. Obama care must be replaced. We will get

:02:21.:02:24.

rid of Obama care which is a disaster. Repealing and replacing

:02:25.:02:34.

the disaster known as Obama care. He pitch to voters- trust me, I am a

:02:35.:02:40.

dealmaker. If you can make a good deal with a politician than there is

:02:41.:02:45.

something wrong with you. You certainly not very good. Throughout

:02:46.:02:49.

Friday, the Trump administration, led by the Vice President was trying

:02:50.:02:52.

to persuade fellow Republicans to back them. It was not working. Some

:02:53.:02:58.

would not accept proposed cuts. Others said they did not go far

:02:59.:03:03.

enough. Facing defeat, Paul Ryan consulted with the President and

:03:04.:03:06.

pulled the plug on the bill. Yeah, we will live with Obama care for the

:03:07.:03:14.

foreseeable future. My worry is that Obama care will be getting even

:03:15.:03:20.

worse. He still predicts that Obama care will end in failure. But he

:03:21.:03:23.

will proceed until Democrats agree he makes changes. He can not change

:03:24.:03:30.

it. It is imploding and soon will explode. It will not be pretty. The

:03:31.:03:35.

Democrats do not want to see that. They will reach out, when they are

:03:36.:03:40.

ready. Pushing through healthcare change in America is one of

:03:41.:03:42.

President Obama's defining achievement in the White House.

:03:43.:03:50.

Opponents say it is too expensive and involves too much government

:03:51.:03:55.

interference in people's lives. But criticising Obamacare has proved

:03:56.:03:58.

much easier than replacing it for Donald Trump. After his

:03:59.:04:02.

controversial travel ban was blocked, this is another blow to his

:04:03.:04:06.

authority less than a month after he took our while.

:04:07.:04:06.

And in a few minutes we'll ask a former advisor to George W Bush

:04:07.:04:10.

Police investigating Wednesday's terror attack in Westminster have

:04:11.:04:14.

released seven of the 11 people they had arrested, without charge.

:04:15.:04:17.

They are appealing for information as they try to establish

:04:18.:04:20.

whether Khalid Masood acted alone or had help,

:04:21.:04:22.

Khalid Masood, the former teacher and father who became a terrorist.

:04:23.:04:40.

Did he act alone? As police begin to build a picture of the killer it

:04:41.:04:44.

emerged that minutes before he launched his attack he used

:04:45.:04:48.

messaging service, what's that Kasi to send a message from his phone.

:04:49.:04:57.

Born Adrian Elms in Kent, by the time he was at school in Tonbridge

:04:58.:05:02.

well he was known by another name. But what triggered such a brutal

:05:03.:05:06.

attack from a sporty schoolboy who liked to party? An incredible

:05:07.:05:13.

fellow. But, you know, I loved him. I just wanted to give him a lift,

:05:14.:05:19.

sort of come to bounce up a bit. He developed a reputation for violence.

:05:20.:05:25.

's spent time in three prisons. Last night, the Saudi Arabian Embassy in

:05:26.:05:29.

London confirmed he had worked there as a teacher around ten years ago. I

:05:30.:05:35.

then, he had converted to Islam. The police investigation into the attack

:05:36.:05:39.

on Wednesday has been swift. It brought in to this hotel in

:05:40.:05:42.

Brighton. Khalid Masood stayed here the night before he carried out his

:05:43.:05:46.

deadly attack which took the lives of four people. Described as a knife

:05:47.:05:51.

guessed he said he was visiting friends. In Manchester, a car was

:05:52.:05:57.

taken away by police. There were further raids and two people, both

:05:58.:06:02.

from Birmingham, remain in custody. The police investigation will now

:06:03.:06:06.

focus on finding out if anyone helped Khalid Masood to carry out

:06:07.:06:11.

his attack and at what inspired him to commit mass murder.

:06:12.:06:14.

Our reporter Alexandra Mackenzie is outside Scotland Yard

:06:15.:06:16.

Can you bring us date with any developments? Well, hundreds of

:06:17.:06:28.

police officers are involved in this investigation and what we have seen

:06:29.:06:32.

so far is a real gathering of evidence stop the 11 people have

:06:33.:06:36.

been arrested, all of them apart from two have now been released. In

:06:37.:06:40.

an remain in police custody. And it none of the people who have been

:06:41.:06:45.

released have been released on bail. We have also seen rates take place

:06:46.:06:48.

across London, Manchester, Birmingham and Brighton. That has

:06:49.:06:52.

been about gathering evidence. Police have taken cars and data from

:06:53.:06:55.

computers, they have taken statements from people and other

:06:56.:07:01.

objects for evidence. So now what they need to do is sift through that

:07:02.:07:06.

phenomenal amount of evidence and tried to paint a picture of who

:07:07.:07:10.

Khalid Masood is on the big question is did he act alone or did anyone

:07:11.:07:16.

else know all was aware of this attack at Westminster? We have heard

:07:17.:07:21.

about the encrypted message that he said through what app, minutes

:07:22.:07:28.

before the attack. Police will look at that and asked the question who

:07:29.:07:32.

was sent to and did they know about the attack?

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There is a payoff of basic services. To end such financial exclusion, the

:08:42.:08:49.

Lords committee is calling for better financial education in

:08:50.:08:52.

schools and a dedicated government minister to tackle the problem and

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for the banks to have a duty of care to their customers. Too many people

:08:57.:09:00.

still do not have a bank account or access to basic and fairly priced

:09:01.:09:07.

financial services. Most of us take it for granted. That means the

:09:08.:09:11.

poverty premium, where the poor pay more for a range of things is

:09:12.:09:18.

leading them into a vicious circle of further debt and financial

:09:19.:09:23.

distress. The government says that 4 million people are benefiting from

:09:24.:09:27.

basic bank accounts which charge no fees and that tough new rules mean

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that the number of payday loans has halved since 2014.

:09:32.:09:41.

Boris Johnson's banned all-male entourages from his trips abroad.

:09:42.:09:43.

It's after he turned up to a women's empowerment event in New York

:09:44.:09:47.

The Foreign Secretary says he'll also ban so-called "manels" -

:09:48.:09:51.

which are panels made up of men - to increase diversity.

:09:52.:09:54.

This year's Red Nose Day has so far raised more than 71 million.

:09:55.:09:57.

Among the highlights of the seven-hour Comic Relief

:09:58.:10:00.

telethon was a sequel to the film, Love Actually.

:10:01.:10:02.

The comedian, Sir Lenny Henry, opened the show with a tribute

:10:03.:10:05.

to those affected by the Westminster attack, as our entertainment

:10:06.:10:08.

The total is that you missed... A huge on the night total. ?71

:10:09.:10:29.

million! That has come from you! It even began with the co-founder, Sir

:10:30.:10:39.

Lenny Henry. The comedian and actor also nodded briefly to this week 's

:10:40.:10:43.

tragic events in Westminster. We would like to send out our love to

:10:44.:10:47.

all those affected by the event in Westminster. Tonight is a chance to

:10:48.:10:51.

reach lives, to reach out in partnership and compassion. The

:10:52.:10:55.

money you give tonight will make things better for people with

:10:56.:11:00.

difficult lives here and abroad. The most anticipated moment of the night

:11:01.:11:04.

was the sequel to Love actually, featuring the original cast in a

:11:05.:11:12.

couple of others. That's great! That is great. Can we have rice with it?

:11:13.:11:25.

I am tired of stirfry. Other highlights included a James Gordon,

:11:26.:11:31.

take that carpool karaoke. -- James cordons. And a special appearance

:11:32.:11:40.

from Mrs Brown. I have all your albums. I love your gloves. There

:11:41.:11:57.

were musical performances. As well as appeal films with celebrities

:11:58.:12:00.

visiting some of the places where the money raised can make a huge

:12:01.:12:04.

difference. And now look at him. He is almost unrecognisable. And that

:12:05.:12:12.

is thanks to you. Please, give generously tonight. If you helped

:12:13.:12:24.

raise money, thank you for your efforts. Time now is 12 minutes past

:12:25.:12:27.

six. It was one of the key campaign

:12:28.:12:29.

pledges by Donald Trump - But the US President's plan

:12:30.:12:32.

to replace Barak Obama's healthcare programme was abandoned moments

:12:33.:12:36.

before a vote in Congress - after it became clear it wouldn't

:12:37.:12:39.

get enough support to pass. President Trump has said

:12:40.:12:48.

there were parts of the Bill he didn't like anyway,

:12:49.:12:50.

and it'll mean a better bill at some Joining us now from Washington

:12:51.:12:54.

is Anneke Green, a former advisor Good morning and thank you for

:12:55.:13:02.

joining us. Repealing Obamacare was so central to the whole Donald Trump

:13:03.:13:07.

campaign. How big a blow is this? It comes across as a very big blow but

:13:08.:13:12.

you can bet that he will do his best to portray this as a smart move and

:13:13.:13:17.

something that he was doing for the American people and I do not think

:13:18.:13:20.

it will actually affect his core supporters. We see that even in the

:13:21.:13:24.

praise that was coming from some of the groups in the house who refused

:13:25.:13:29.

to vote for the bill. That is interesting. How about people who

:13:30.:13:34.

voted out there in the rust gold, in the middle of America, will they

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care? There will definitely care but so far, with his popularity being at

:13:39.:13:45.

about 51%, with his core supporters I think they will see this... They

:13:46.:13:48.

will listen to him when says well, you know what, the Democratic are

:13:49.:13:54.

not voting for this. He did not outreach to Democrats and no

:13:55.:13:58.

Democrats will join in with President Trump to repeal President

:13:59.:14:02.

Obama's signature health-care accomplishment. The key point here

:14:03.:14:06.

is that he was not able to get all the Republicans together to support

:14:07.:14:11.

the bill. Why was that? Well, he tried to reach out to the

:14:12.:14:16.

Republicans. I think he underestimated how difficult it is,

:14:17.:14:19.

legislatively, to get something done, particularly something as

:14:20.:14:21.

important to the far right wing of the party as repealing Obamacare is.

:14:22.:14:27.

When it came down to, despite sending the vice president of the

:14:28.:14:31.

multiple times and doing a lot of personal outreach. The vice

:14:32.:14:35.

president was bringing people to the residents, Donald Trump was bringing

:14:36.:14:39.

people in and out of the Oval Office to the point where somebody said was

:14:40.:14:42.

like a train station with a number of people coming in and out. Yet,

:14:43.:14:46.

the very people in the caucus who said we love Trump and we support

:14:47.:14:50.

him but this, we cannot vote on this bill because of the policy, said

:14:51.:14:54.

they would not do it. So they pulled the bill. What happens now? Is it

:14:55.:14:58.

just forget about it for the rest of his term, move onto something else?

:14:59.:15:02.

He would like to move onto something else and Obamacare was an important

:15:03.:15:05.

promise for his supporters. For him personally he was not as invested in

:15:06.:15:09.

it to the point of really not knowing what was he supported,

:15:10.:15:13.

ultimately, like, what with his make and break. He was more interested in

:15:14.:15:17.

negotiation. Moving forward, what his line will be is that we will get

:15:18.:15:21.

a beautiful deal to the American people want Obamacare fails. His

:15:22.:15:29.

plan now is to let it crumble, to allow premiums to increase and

:15:30.:15:32.

increase the amount of dislikes of the bill so that perhaps some of the

:15:33.:15:36.

people who opposed it the house will actually vote for it. He has warned

:15:37.:15:41.

that Obamacare will explode. Is that inevitable?

:15:42.:15:48.

The way it has been on track is not sustainable. People were promised

:15:49.:15:56.

verbatim that if they liked their coverage, they could keep it. The

:15:57.:16:02.

website to register crashed and people were told they would be fined

:16:03.:16:07.

if they did not register. Even after that, premiums continue to rise. It

:16:08.:16:15.

has arguably affected votes for Hillary Clinton because of the

:16:16.:16:18.

deadlines before the election, people were very upset to see how

:16:19.:16:22.

few options they had for their insurance.

:16:23.:16:25.

Here's Chris with a look at this morning's weather.

:16:26.:16:32.

Good morning to you. High pressure in charge this weekend, the weather

:16:33.:16:40.

looking pretty good. A lot of dry weather and sunshine to come.

:16:41.:16:45.

Becoming quite warm for this time of year in the afternoon. A chilly

:16:46.:16:49.

start to the day. Taking a look at the latest temperatures. A number of

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spots across northern England and Scotland down into the negative

:16:56.:16:58.

temperatures. A chilly start to the day. A little sunshine expected,

:16:59.:17:04.

meaning temperatures will soon rise. Warm spots could get up to 19

:17:05.:17:11.

degrees. Many of the warmest areas are in the west of the UK. Across

:17:12.:17:17.

northern Scotland, quite a bit of cloud Fort Shetland. A windy start.

:17:18.:17:22.

The rest of Scotland, some sunshine. Sunny skies for Northern Ireland.

:17:23.:17:29.

England and Wales mostly having wet weather from the word go, mist and

:17:30.:17:34.

fog stretching across the Midlands. That will take a few hours to burn

:17:35.:17:40.

away. We will get some sunshine eventually. Strong winds blowing

:17:41.:17:44.

towards the southern coast of England, making it feel chilly in

:17:45.:17:48.

the breeze. Lighter winds across the heart of the UK, that is where we

:17:49.:17:54.

will see the warmest weather. In the warmest spots, we could see

:17:55.:17:58.

temperatures hitting 19 Celsius. If we do reach that, it would be the

:17:59.:18:02.

warmest day of the year so far. Overnight, keeping the high pressure

:18:03.:18:06.

with it. Light winds across many areas and temperatures falling back.

:18:07.:18:13.

Expect some frost on Sunday. Sunday dry with plenty of sunshine, some

:18:14.:18:17.

cloud early in the morning. Sunny spells coming through in the

:18:18.:18:22.

afternoon. Temperature wise, highs of around 18 or 19 degrees in the

:18:23.:18:29.

warmest areas. Western UK the most likely to see those higher

:18:30.:18:33.

temperatures. As you go to bed tonight, the clocks will be going

:18:34.:18:39.

forward by Enow. Not good news for everyone, for those early workers

:18:40.:18:44.

like myself, it means in our less in bed. Back to use. A good reminder.

:18:45.:18:49.

-- you. We'll be back with a summary

:18:50.:18:51.

of the news at half past six. Now, it's time for the Film Review

:18:52.:18:55.

with Jane Hill and Mark Kermode. Hello, and welcome to

:18:56.:19:13.

the Film Review on BBC News. To take us through this week's

:19:14.:19:15.

cinema releases is Mark Kermode. We have Life, a science-fiction

:19:16.:19:37.

movie with J Killinghall. And we have a real-life tale of

:19:38.:19:44.

exploration. Life. It could be anything! Set me International Space

:19:45.:19:53.

Station? Yes. A soil sample from Mars is sent back from the

:19:54.:20:00.

International Space Station. They find a single cell organism, they

:20:01.:20:04.

are excited because it is proof of life on Mars. Then it becomes

:20:05.:20:10.

dormant. They decide, against the advice from the entire audience, to

:20:11.:20:16.

give it a bit of an electric shock and see what it does. Ready.

:20:17.:20:29.

Lowering oxygen, more carbon dioxide. Are you sure it won't hurt

:20:30.:20:37.

it? Every single cell is a muscle and nerve cells. -- cell. It's in

:20:38.:20:49.

between my fingers and it's not letting go. Can I make a suggestion?

:20:50.:20:56.

Can I just go in and get him? No, we are demanding quarantine. I can do

:20:57.:21:09.

this, I can. You get the general idea. I was laughing before, but I'm

:21:10.:21:26.

not now. A great cast, Life. It starts out as Laverty, then turns

:21:27.:21:41.

into Alien, then turns back into Gravity -- Gravity. There is not a

:21:42.:21:48.

lot of originality, however, what it does is that it tells a story that

:21:49.:21:57.

you know. It feels like it is 85 minutes long. It sits along, it

:21:58.:22:05.

looks terrific. All the characters are best described as thumbnail

:22:06.:22:10.

sketches. He is the scientist person, this is the person with

:22:11.:22:13.

the... It does exactly what you expect. In alien was drawing on a

:22:14.:22:24.

series of other horror movies. -- Alien was drawing. This is nothing

:22:25.:22:32.

you haven't seen before. Here's the thing, I thought this was meant to

:22:33.:22:37.

be a horror film. I have noticed a smile playing on your lips. There

:22:38.:22:47.

are things in it that are creepy, I enjoyed it. You are not a fan of

:22:48.:22:54.

horror. It is tension, rather than gore. There is a very famous moment

:22:55.:23:01.

in Alien that is much more revolting than anything in this. But when that

:23:02.:23:07.

happened, nobody had ever seen that done before. It has been referred to

:23:08.:23:11.

as a popcorn movie for very good reason. I enjoyed it, but it is not

:23:12.:23:25.

at all original. Moving on to Power Rangers. If you have a enough TV

:23:26.:23:35.

franchise, you just reboot it now --a naff. What you have is this

:23:36.:23:50.

rebooting, it is basically the Breakfast Club in a superhero movie.

:23:51.:24:01.

It addresses things like autism, LGBTIQ issues, a huge amount of that

:24:02.:24:07.

target audience for Power Rangers are younger than 12. The absolute

:24:08.:24:13.

bottom eight is eight. Already today I have seen people asking if they

:24:14.:24:16.

can take their four -year-olds to see it. Well, no. It's a weird film,

:24:17.:24:26.

it has a little bit of violence in it. They are Power Rangers, they

:24:27.:24:31.

kicked people. It is less leering than Transformers, less fun than

:24:32.:24:38.

Real Steel, it's too long and it makes no sense but it wasn't

:24:39.:24:44.

terrible. It was just kind of, OK. That's what Power Rangers looks like

:24:45.:24:48.

when you stick it up on a big screen. It is innocuous and

:24:49.:24:54.

surprisingly unremarkable. I love it when you tell me something and I

:24:55.:24:59.

know it could just go on a poster, this week it is, it's not terrible.

:25:00.:25:14.

Now, The Lost City of Z. Yes, early 20th-century explorations. The man

:25:15.:25:20.

who was described as having made an unfortunate choice of ancestors. He

:25:21.:25:25.

is told that if he goes on this exploration, it will restore his

:25:26.:25:31.

great family name. The more he explores, he discovers that this is

:25:32.:25:36.

what he wants to do with his life. However, where he is travelling to

:25:37.:25:47.

is dangerous and surprising. Get your Constantina! You want me to get

:25:48.:26:00.

it? Yes, come and sing with me. -- concertina. Are you ready? # We're

:26:01.:26:35.

soldiers of the dream, my lad...# Amigos! Amigos! Does that help, the

:26:36.:26:43.

singing? Yes, it does. There are moments that are very strange.

:26:44.:26:48.

Robert Pattinson is almost unrecognisable. It is dutifully

:26:49.:26:54.

shot. It is slow and oddly elliptical. More so than most

:26:55.:26:58.

mainstream audiences will likely be able to cope with. There are

:26:59.:27:03.

individual moments in it that are really striking. There is a moment

:27:04.:27:07.

when they come across a musical being in the jungle which reminds me

:27:08.:27:15.

of Fitzcarraldo. There is also a sequence in it which is reminiscent

:27:16.:27:21.

of another Werner Herzog film. It was strangely funny. It has been

:27:22.:27:28.

five days since I saw it and it has lingered in my mind. There are

:27:29.:27:32.

images that are very arresting, it is beautiful. A terrific performance

:27:33.:27:38.

by Sienna Miller, his wife who is left behind in England. She really

:27:39.:27:42.

make something of this role. She is the toughest character in this

:27:43.:27:49.

movie. It is flawed but it aims high. I would rather see something

:27:50.:27:53.

aim high and fail in certain areas than something which felt like

:27:54.:27:59.

franchise fodder. It has a strangely old-fashioned feeling to it. There

:28:00.:28:04.

are moments, there is a dream sequence which is oddly reminiscent

:28:05.:28:09.

of the end of 2001. That is not something you would expect from a

:28:10.:28:13.

film like this. It is really unusual, definitely flawed but very

:28:14.:28:20.

interesting. OK, the best film? Gets Out. The best way of describing and

:28:21.:28:33.

is, it is kind of a horror movie. -- Get Out. A young African-American

:28:34.:28:41.

members of his girlfriends family and there is something creepy

:28:42.:28:44.

underneath. It's about post- racial America. It is sharp and scary when

:28:45.:28:49.

it needs to me. I know you're not a horror film fan, but it's a

:28:50.:28:53.

thriller. It's not horror, it's a thriller. It is a horror film, but

:28:54.:29:02.

it's a thriller. You'll enjoy it. And a United Kingdom? Based on a

:29:03.:29:12.

true story. His relationships outrage the government. It takes the

:29:13.:29:17.

personal and the political and put them together in a way which is

:29:18.:29:22.

completely understandable and enjoyable, but also tells a great

:29:23.:29:26.

story. Thank you very much. See you next week. A quick reminder that you

:29:27.:29:31.

can find all the film News you would ever want online on our website. You

:29:32.:29:39.

can find all of our previous programmes on I player as well.

:29:40.:29:45.

That's all for this week, thanks very much for watching. -- iPlayer.

:29:46.:30:59.

Hello, this is Breakfast, with Charlie Stayt and Rachel

:31:00.:31:01.

Coming up before seven, Chris will have the weather for you.

:31:02.:31:05.

But first, a summary of this morning's main news.

:31:06.:31:07.

President Trump says he's surprised and disappointed after failing

:31:08.:31:09.

to secure support from his own party for plans to replace Obamacare.

:31:10.:31:15.

He had to withdraw his healthcare bill after it failed to get enough

:31:16.:31:18.

President Trump has said there were parts of it he didn't

:31:19.:31:23.

like anyway, and it'll mean a better bill at some point in the future.

:31:24.:31:27.

Counter-terrorism police have released all but two of the 11

:31:28.:31:30.

people arrested since the attack in Westminster on Wednesday.

:31:31.:31:33.

The attacker, Khalid Masood, killed three people when he drove

:31:34.:31:36.

into pedestrians on Westminster Bridge before stabbing a police

:31:37.:31:38.

Police are still trying to establish whether he acted alone.

:31:39.:31:50.

This weekend marks 60 years since the Treaty of Rome was signed,

:31:51.:31:53.

creating the European Economic Community which we now know

:31:54.:31:56.

More than 20 EU heads of state and government are gathering this

:31:57.:32:01.

weekend in the Italian capital to mark the historic event.

:32:02.:32:04.

Prime Minister Theresa May will not be attending.

:32:05.:32:09.

More needs to be done to help tackle the vicious cycle of debt

:32:10.:32:13.

and overcharging - according to a House

:32:14.:32:15.

It says banks are failing customers who need them most -

:32:16.:32:19.

leaving the poorest to reply on expensive products.

:32:20.:32:22.

It adds controls on "rent to own" products must

:32:23.:32:25.

Too many people still do not have a bank account or access to fairly

:32:26.:32:43.

priced financial services that we take for granted. That means that

:32:44.:32:48.

there is a poverty premium, where the poor pay more for a range of

:32:49.:32:52.

things from heeding their house to getting a loan and is leaving them

:32:53.:32:56.

in a vicious circle of further debt and financial distress.

:32:57.:32:58.

Footage has been released of the moment the Hollywood actor

:32:59.:33:01.

Harrison Ford was involved in a hairy moment while landing his

:33:02.:33:04.

plane at an airport in California last month.

:33:05.:33:06.

His frank exchange with air traffic controllers was also recorded.

:33:07.:33:09.

The Star Wars actor, who has a pilot's licence,

:33:10.:33:11.

accidentally landed on a taxiway at John Wayne Airport in Orange

:33:12.:33:14.

Was a slightly awkward exchange. It could have been a lot more serious

:33:15.:34:06.

than was. This year's Comic Relief has raised

:34:07.:34:06.

more than 71 million. The fundraiser included

:34:07.:34:09.

James Corden's Carpool Karaoke with Take That and a special

:34:10.:34:12.

Love Actually sequel. Comic Relief has raised more

:34:13.:34:15.

than one billion pounds since it Those are the main

:34:16.:34:18.

stories this morning. Our thoughts go out to the Republic

:34:19.:34:34.

of Ireland captain, Seamus Gorman, who broke a leg in the match against

:34:35.:34:42.

Wales. The match ended goalless. Behind us is the aftermath. Many

:34:43.:34:46.

people were seen as an social media. It looks like a horrific injury.

:34:47.:34:53.

Yes, graphic and gruesome. A challenge by Neil Taylor of Wales

:34:54.:34:56.

was quite distraught afterwards himself. It was not malicious, more

:34:57.:35:02.

mistimed. The season is now over for shamans. An important player for

:35:03.:35:08.

both Ireland and his Premier League team. Everton. The match, as I say,

:35:09.:35:11.

ended goalless. chances for either side -

:35:12.:35:12.

but he'll miss the next game against Serbia, after

:35:13.:35:17.

receiving a yellow card. Of course the main talking point

:35:18.:35:19.

though is that horrific injury Neil Taylor was sent

:35:20.:35:22.

off for the challenge, which left Coleman

:35:23.:35:25.

with a broken leg. The manager says it is a bad break.

:35:26.:35:34.

Just miss timed, a poor challenge who was sent or and Taylor was

:35:35.:35:40.

distraught. He went to a apologise to the players afterwards. His

:35:41.:35:46.

manager says he is not that kind of play. A blow to him. He was having

:35:47.:35:51.

the season of a lifetime at club level. He is a big player and a

:35:52.:35:59.

great captain and a great character so it is a big loss. A big loss. A

:36:00.:36:07.

loss to Everton, a loss to us and we hope he will fight back and it puts

:36:08.:36:15.

things in perspective. Taylor is not that kind of player. He has had a

:36:16.:36:23.

serious injury himself. He is a great boy and I have seen the

:36:24.:36:30.

outcome, although not be challenge. It was a shame because he is someone

:36:31.:36:37.

I respect. One of the best full-backs in Premier League.

:36:38.:36:38.

Formula 1 is back, with Lewis Hamilton hoping to make

:36:39.:36:41.

up for last year's disappointment of losing the championship

:36:42.:36:44.

He was the quickest in the first session, Hamilton. You can follow

:36:45.:37:00.

the action on our website right now. It was a busy night in rugby

:37:01.:37:02.

League's Super League, and we have new leaders in Hull FC,

:37:03.:37:05.

thanks to their win at Wigan. But at the other end of the table,

:37:06.:37:08.

things have gone from bad to worse for Warrington, who've lost

:37:09.:37:12.

every game this season - just six months after

:37:13.:37:15.

they were in the grand final, they were beaten 31-6 by St Helens -

:37:16.:37:18.

Adam Swift with the pick In Rugby Union's Premiership,

:37:19.:37:21.

Gloucester comfortably saw off local England wing Jonny May sealed

:37:22.:37:25.

the bonus point win for Gloucester - and Bristol's hopes of avoiding

:37:26.:37:29.

relegation straight back to the Championship look slim -

:37:30.:37:31.

they're seven points adrift at the bottom of the table,

:37:32.:37:34.

with four games to play. In the Pro12, John Andrew's late try

:37:35.:37:40.

secured a crucial win for Ulster The 27-17 victory means

:37:41.:37:43.

Ulster stay in the fourth But Scarlets are also chasing

:37:44.:37:49.

that play-off place - and they're just three

:37:50.:37:55.

points behind Ulster now, after getting a bonus point

:37:56.:37:57.

in their 26-10 win over Edinburgh. Britain's Johanna Konta

:37:58.:38:03.

is through to the third round of the Miami Open tennis,

:38:04.:38:05.

after beating Sasnovich. We're going to return to football

:38:06.:38:11.

now, and a very special little boy who will be at Wembley

:38:12.:38:15.

tomorrow, for England's You may have seen him before -

:38:16.:38:17.

five-year-old Sunderland fan Bradley Lowery is suffering

:38:18.:38:22.

from a rare type of cancer. This is how his mum Gemma,

:38:23.:38:26.

told him he was to be a mascot, alongside his hero and "best

:38:27.:38:30.

mate" Jermain Defoe. Guess who is going to the England

:38:31.:38:47.

match next week? Jermaine. Hooray! At the very beginning it was just

:38:48.:38:54.

amazing. It was his dream come true, true. He calls him his best friend,

:38:55.:39:03.

it is normal for him now but at the beginning it was fantastic and to

:39:04.:39:07.

have that experience, to have all of the experiences he is having at the

:39:08.:39:13.

moment is so surreal and not only for him, it gives as memories that

:39:14.:39:17.

we can carry with us for the rest of our lives as well. How special. They

:39:18.:39:23.

do get big crowds at Sunderland but in front of that Wembley crowd...

:39:24.:39:28.

And it's a Jermaine Defoe was well. He has been recalled to the England

:39:29.:39:33.

side. It is such a beautiful relationship. Both spent time in the

:39:34.:39:35.

hospital together. For now, Could you last a whole hour,

:39:36.:39:37.

doing a non stop whole With a live band, complete mayhem

:39:38.:39:40.

and a lot of laughter? You've heard of zumba,

:39:41.:39:53.

and street dance, well now barn dancing could be the way

:39:54.:39:59.

to improve your fitness. I went to a class in

:40:00.:40:02.

Birmingham to try it out. it is time to cast aside all we

:40:03.:40:19.

thought we knew about barn dancing. It's not about dozy does this former

:40:20.:40:24.

swimming baths in Birmingham. I forgot my hat. He later. Obviously

:40:25.:40:32.

the hat could be a health and safety issue. This is far more than a hoe

:40:33.:40:42.

down. This is barn yard figures. They take the best bits from

:40:43.:40:45.

traditional dances across the world and put them together in an

:40:46.:40:54.

hour-long workout. This is just a warmup. If you go to the gym you use

:40:55.:41:01.

one machine to work a certain set of muscles. Here you were called the

:41:02.:41:06.

muscles and so we do a lot of shaking and we use our faces as well

:41:07.:41:13.

so we are getting a total workout. It is believed by many that barn

:41:14.:41:17.

dancing started a couple of sentries ago in parts of the British Isles

:41:18.:41:22.

where farm peasants would gather in Barnes to copy the ballroom dances

:41:23.:41:26.

of their wealthy land owners. It is sociable and yet it brings people

:41:27.:41:31.

together because you are always swapping partners and positions. It

:41:32.:41:35.

is mentally challenging as well as physically. As you can tell. It is

:41:36.:41:41.

so much fun and exercise. You meet amazing people. There is a lot of

:41:42.:41:47.

emotion out there. It is great. It is fun and it keeps you fit. So they

:41:48.:41:52.

say. You make friends as well. It is good. We have all done this before

:41:53.:41:59.

at weddings. It is a form of dance that really gets people who have no

:42:00.:42:04.

dancing ability or interest up onto the dancefloor like nothing else.

:42:05.:42:08.

You learn the moves eventually as you go along. It does not matter if

:42:09.:42:14.

you embarrass yourself and it is fun to be here. I like it because it is

:42:15.:42:21.

energetic and it is really fun. The other thing that strikes me is how

:42:22.:42:25.

much everybody is laughing. It is great fun. To your left! When it

:42:26.:42:34.

goes wrong, I shout. It is just laughter. My partner looked bemused

:42:35.:42:42.

rather than I'm used to timed with the band keeping the energy going

:42:43.:42:47.

the our flew by. Goodness me, that was not that extreme.

:42:48.:42:51.

It was exhaustive, Sally. Dripping with sweat. I exercised every muscle

:42:52.:43:00.

in my body. I should have taken my hat, that was not necessary. It was

:43:01.:43:04.

an incredible workout and it was fun. He did not have a clue what was

:43:05.:43:10.

going on and my poor partner had to apologise. She had to put up with me

:43:11.:43:17.

for now. It can be a little bit of a nightmare getting children to bed on

:43:18.:43:21.

time at the best of times but with clocks going forward by an hour

:43:22.:43:25.

tonight, what impact will it have? As part of our terrific scientific

:43:26.:43:30.

project to get more young people involved in science, schoolchildren

:43:31.:43:32.

are teaming up with Oxford University academics to try and

:43:33.:43:36.

measure the impact of that lost sleep in.

:43:37.:43:41.

Bedtime in Hull. Or so it should be. This is Eli's house. Can you tell me

:43:42.:43:51.

about bedtime? A nightmare. He has never tired. He always wants to

:43:52.:43:58.

watch TV. He argues that his brothers Gowda Baird later than he

:43:59.:44:03.

does. -- robbers go to bed. Eventually the routine begins for

:44:04.:44:11.

Eli. How about mornings? Mornings are more of a struggle. As a limited

:44:12.:44:16.

time to get up and then five minutes later, get up, get up and get up. It

:44:17.:44:22.

can be difficult. One thing can make it more difficult. In this house

:44:23.:44:30.

that one thing is the clocks change. It is a nightmare of something I did

:44:31.:44:35.

not consider until I had children. It really does affect things. It

:44:36.:44:45.

knocks everything out. It is a disaster either way. And as time

:44:46.:44:53.

happens I wish it wouldn't. So for some it is a problem. But how much

:44:54.:45:01.

of a problem? Well, now that the very first time Oxford University

:45:02.:45:05.

with the help of children here at this primary School will try and

:45:06.:45:11.

measure the problem. What we are trying to see if these people who

:45:12.:45:15.

are more tired have a slower reaction. These children are being

:45:16.:45:19.

monitored in the days before and after the clocks change. Their

:45:20.:45:23.

reaction time is measured and their sleep patterns recorded. You got

:45:24.:45:29.

seven? Seven is your best? Coming times did you drop it was to mark

:45:30.:45:39.

ooh... I drop the daylight of times. Do razor-sharp reactions follow a

:45:40.:45:43.

good nights sleep? Does the clocks change stuff it up? You see children

:45:44.:45:51.

who are not alert, they are not taking anything in. Are you curious

:45:52.:45:54.

about this experiment and what it will show? I am really looking

:45:55.:45:58.

forward to seeing the effect on the reaction tests. As for Miss. I

:45:59.:46:11.

caught it. Not great. What I did you go to bed? I dare not tell you. I am

:46:12.:46:23.

not a great sleeper. Good night. Just how much it matters we will

:46:24.:46:29.

find out in the next month when Oxford University report their

:46:30.:46:36.

findings. I am asleep! That does not look like sleeping to me.

:46:37.:46:44.

Doing the ruler test, do it in the morning and see how it changed later

:46:45.:46:54.

on. Remember that the clocks are going forward by one hour tonight.

:46:55.:46:57.

For more information you can go to bbc.co.uk/terrificscientific.

:46:58.:47:01.

Here's Chris with a look at this morning's weather.

:47:02.:47:05.

I can already see the sunshine! It was gorgeous if today. -- gorgeous

:47:06.:47:19.

yesterday. Keeping the fine and dry weather throughout the weekend. A

:47:20.:47:22.

lot of quiet weather. Warm sunshine in the afternoon, a chilly start.

:47:23.:47:28.

This morning, a number of places have got some frost around. -3 in a

:47:29.:47:38.

number of places. Some pretty low temperatures around this morning.

:47:39.:47:44.

With that sunshine and already coming out, come this afternoon, we

:47:45.:47:48.

should see the warmest places peaking at around 19 degrees.

:47:49.:47:55.

Offshore winds coming in towards eastern areas. A windy start for

:47:56.:48:01.

Shetland. Whether becoming a bit drier later in the day. Most of

:48:02.:48:04.

Scotland and the mainland staying dry. We do have a zone of mist and

:48:05.:48:12.

fog stretching across east Wales, the Midlands and into Yorkshire.

:48:13.:48:18.

That will take an hour or two to clear out of the way. We will

:48:19.:48:22.

eventually get their, some sunshine coming out for all of us. As we get

:48:23.:48:26.

into the afternoon, seeing temperatures rising. The warmest

:48:27.:48:36.

spot is, probably western Wales and south-west England. Quite pleasant

:48:37.:48:39.

for most of us. Towards the east coast and east Anglia, temperatures

:48:40.:48:47.

held back by onshore winds. Inland, clear skies and light winds. Some

:48:48.:48:51.

frost to start the day on Sunday. Sunday should be a decent day.

:48:52.:48:56.

Across England and Wales, temperatures a degree down but not

:48:57.:49:00.

bad for this time of year. Cloud breaking up, some sunshine coming

:49:01.:49:04.

through. Temperatures pushing into the mid- teens in the warmest spot.

:49:05.:49:10.

Temperatures looking good as we go through the rest of the weekend. Act

:49:11.:49:12.

to you too. -- back. --2. We'll be back with the

:49:13.:49:31.

headlines at 7 o'clock. Now it's time for Click

:49:32.:49:33.

with Spencer Kelly. The roads are crammed,

:49:34.:49:39.

the horn is omnipresent Well, they're there

:49:40.:49:58.

somewhere, I'm sure. And that's why we will not be doing

:49:59.:50:01.

a story about self driving cars And despite the fact that it seems

:50:02.:50:05.

like everybody here owns a car, Many people choose to

:50:06.:50:10.

travel by train instead. But if you think that

:50:11.:50:15.

is any less intense... Mumbai Central Station is a massive,

:50:16.:50:18.

heaving hub connecting the city But if you look closely,

:50:19.:50:34.

you will see something else connecting the commuters

:50:35.:50:42.

to the rest of the world. 116 wireless access points provide

:50:43.:50:44.

free Wi-Fi to anybody It is provided by Google

:50:45.:50:47.

which says that about 2.5 TB And here is the interesting part,

:50:48.:50:56.

this is not just about this station. Along India's railway tracks lie

:50:57.:51:03.

45,000 kilometres of optical fibre and Google is piping Internet access

:51:04.:51:11.

down those cables to feed Wi-Fi access to 114 other

:51:12.:51:14.

train stations as well. The man overseeing the project

:51:15.:51:17.

is Gulzar Azad, who I caught up with while he was

:51:18.:51:20.

waiting for a train. If you had to take one place

:51:21.:51:27.

in the country where you wanted tremendous fibre and you had

:51:28.:51:30.

to have reliable power, relatively speaking,

:51:31.:51:32.

power is a challenge across the country, and you had

:51:33.:51:34.

to have the entire country walking through it there is only one place,

:51:35.:51:37.

that is a railway station. Can you guarantee that

:51:38.:51:50.

all services on Google's Wi-Fi I think the whole motivation for us,

:51:51.:51:52.

if you look at the reason why we did this was to see if we could provide

:51:53.:52:13.

an open Internet, completely open So, there is a fibre optic network

:52:14.:52:17.

rolling out from train stations like this to the vast rural areas

:52:18.:52:23.

of this enormous country. And David hopped on a train to find

:52:24.:52:26.

out what effect that's having It is hard not to be romantic

:52:27.:52:30.

about the railways of India. British colonial rulers

:52:31.:52:38.

laid track for control, shifting resources - mostly out -

:52:39.:52:40.

and prising open markets. Now it is about moving

:52:41.:52:42.

people, millions a day. I took the train to Jaipur

:52:43.:52:49.

station to investigate. It has proper broadband

:52:50.:53:04.

and it is free. Apart from some controversy

:53:05.:53:13.

at another station where commuters were using free Wi-Fi to download

:53:14.:53:22.

hard-core pornography, the provision of high-speed Wi-Fi

:53:23.:53:24.

has been almost universally praised. 90,000 people pass through

:53:25.:53:28.

Jaipur station every day. I use the Internet for

:53:29.:53:36.

news and entertainment. For student journalist Urja Sharma,

:53:37.:53:38.

it means she can keep tabs Early in the morning,

:53:39.:53:47.

the world changes like... Indian stations are full

:53:48.:53:52.

of thriving businesses, feeding off or simply feeding

:53:53.:54:02.

the thousands streaming Free Wi-Fi has been a boon

:54:03.:54:04.

to local businesses here. Ashok runs a tea stall

:54:05.:54:11.

on the platform. He makes more money now that his

:54:12.:54:21.

customers can make online I use the Wi-Fi when my 4G

:54:22.:54:24.

signal does not catch. When that does not work,

:54:25.:54:28.

I use Wi-Fi, especially I need it to confirm I have

:54:29.:54:30.

received the payment. Digital payments are worth

:54:31.:54:34.

about 30%-50% of my takings. This is music to the years of people

:54:35.:54:42.

managing the railways of India. A nationalised industry

:54:43.:54:45.

that runs at a loss. They think that high-speed Wi-Fi

:54:46.:54:47.

could be a good pull They plan to build a huge

:54:48.:54:50.

concourse and attract retail As Wi-Fi expands and it becomes

:54:51.:54:54.

taken for granted then I think people will transfer more

:54:55.:55:16.

and more of their business. Jaipur is a domestic

:55:17.:55:18.

and international tourist hub People come out here

:55:19.:55:20.

from all parts of the world. And when you have a huge concourse

:55:21.:55:24.

it becomes an area where you can For Google, more people online

:55:25.:55:28.

is more people to sell to. India's railway is

:55:29.:55:32.

the country's backbone. Its public Wi-Fi is poised to be

:55:33.:55:34.

at least as far reaching. This is the Andumen Irdu

:55:35.:55:51.

Primary School in Calcutta. There are 155 kids here

:55:52.:55:58.

from Grade 1 through to 7, and a whole bunch of

:55:59.:56:01.

dedicated teachers. And this is how

:56:02.:56:03.

they start their day. Over in Virjaya Nijak's

:56:04.:56:17.

classroom, things are So, at the back of the projector,

:56:18.:56:20.

there's a device which is plugged in and is running videos

:56:21.:56:32.

on English, maths and science. The videos are made

:56:33.:56:36.

for the entire region. But then they're dubbed

:56:37.:56:39.

in different dialects, different languages,

:56:40.:56:43.

depending on where they're sent to. Today, we're learning

:56:44.:56:45.

about fractions. It is great teaching tool -

:56:46.:56:47.

as long as there is electricity... But there are plenty

:56:48.:56:50.

of times when there isn't. Earlier, it would be difficult

:56:51.:57:01.

to teach because of power cuts. As the day passed by in

:57:02.:57:05.

the afternoon, we would have power That's why the projector and tablet

:57:06.:57:09.

are hooked up to this box, which is itself attached

:57:10.:57:15.

to a solar panel on the roof. Together, they can provide up

:57:16.:57:18.

to five hours of electricity a day, meaning that classes don't have

:57:19.:57:21.

to be interrupted or cancelled Then, we started using solar power,

:57:22.:57:23.

as it is an easy and natural source We have introduced a study

:57:24.:57:34.

of generating power through solar energy to our students,

:57:35.:57:37.

and are teaching them the importance We also explain to our students

:57:38.:57:40.

that this process will help us in the future to

:57:41.:57:44.

generate electricity. This whole system has been provided

:57:45.:57:54.

by the Selco Foundation, an Indian charity with the aim

:57:55.:57:57.

of hoping to alleviate poverty With this, they will get a better

:57:58.:57:59.

education through audiovisual teaching, and there is no

:58:00.:58:09.

problem of electricity. So any time teachers

:58:10.:58:11.

can take their students to the classroom, they can teach

:58:12.:58:13.

through this medium. Selco and other NGOs they work

:58:14.:58:16.

with pay for half of the cost of installing the projector

:58:17.:58:19.

and solar system - the other half comes from local

:58:20.:58:21.

schools or local governments. TRANSLATION: Before this

:58:22.:58:24.

project came in to use it, But since, we have started

:58:25.:58:31.

using the solar power, our number of students has

:58:32.:58:35.

increased in a good way. We have students coming to us

:58:36.:58:38.

from different villages to learn, and not only students -

:58:39.:58:41.

we have other schools coming down The smart class is a good way

:58:42.:58:44.

of teaching kids these days. They seem to enjoy and

:58:45.:58:51.

learn more than usual. After we introduced smart class,

:58:52.:58:53.

our school stands proudly We plan to grow larger

:58:54.:58:56.

as the years pass by. The same system is already

:58:57.:59:11.

in hundreds of rural schools, and they're aiming to add

:59:12.:59:15.

hundreds more this year. And it's not just key for schools -

:59:16.:59:23.

across rural India, businesses can be helped massively by having

:59:24.:59:27.

a reliable power supply. Somana is a seamstress who lives

:59:28.:59:29.

a short drive from Kindapur. She became the breadwinner

:59:30.:59:32.

for her family after her father The more clothing she can prepare,

:59:33.:59:35.

the more she gets paid. With her old method,

:59:36.:59:44.

she could fix a couple But thanks to the solar panel

:59:45.:59:47.

on her roof, she can whiz Plus, she has a fan,

:59:48.:59:51.

a TV and a light, so she can work One-quarter of India's rural

:59:52.:59:56.

population lives below the official poverty line - that's 216 million

:59:57.:00:08.

people whose livelihoods could be improved by the addition of basic

:00:09.:00:11.

facilities like electricity. And of course, one key way

:00:12.:00:13.

of helping people out It's always such a privilege to come

:00:14.:00:16.

to a place like this and see how the simplest technology can make

:00:17.:00:31.

a world of difference. You can see plenty of

:00:32.:00:33.

photos and more backstage Hello, this is Breakfast,

:00:34.:00:54.

with Charlie Stayt and Rachel A blow for President Trump

:00:55.:01:13.

as he admits defeat on one He's forced to abandon a vote

:01:14.:01:16.

on healthcare reform because he couldn't get enough

:01:17.:01:20.

support from his own party. Good morning, it's

:01:21.:01:34.

Saturday 25th March. Police try to piece together

:01:35.:01:35.

the final movements of the Westminster

:01:36.:01:40.

attacker Khalid Masood. A WhatsApp message sent minutes

:01:41.:01:45.

before his killing spree Police have now released all but two

:01:46.:01:49.

of the 11 people arrested Almost two million people in the UK

:01:50.:01:55.

don't have a bank account. A House of Lords report

:01:56.:02:02.

says it's a scandal. A new push to get more mothers to

:02:03.:02:17.

breastfeed beyond six weeks. And in sport, the Republic of Ireland

:02:18.:02:20.

captain suffers a broken leg. He was injured in the second half of the

:02:21.:02:24.

goalless draw with Wales and will have surgery later today. Chris has

:02:25.:02:33.

the weather for us. ... Well, we hope he has the weather, he had his

:02:34.:02:37.

back to it. It is lovely out there this morning. Here's repairing the

:02:38.:02:40.

weather. First, our main story. Donald Trump has tried to shrug off

:02:41.:02:47.

the biggest setback so far in his presidency,

:02:48.:02:50.

a failure to overhaul He's been forced to scrap a vote

:02:51.:02:52.

on his plans at the last minute because he didn't have enough

:02:53.:02:57.

backing from his own party. It was a promise that became one

:02:58.:03:00.

of the pillars of his campaign. We will get rid of Obamacare

:03:01.:03:04.

which is a disaster. Repealing and replacing

:03:05.:03:11.

the disaster known as Obamacare. His pitch to voters -

:03:12.:03:16.

trust me, I am a dealmaker. If you can't make a good

:03:17.:03:20.

deal with a politician than there is something

:03:21.:03:23.

wrong with you. Throughout Friday,

:03:24.:03:26.

the Trump administration, led by the Vice President was trying

:03:27.:03:33.

to persuade fellow Republicans Others said they did

:03:34.:03:36.

not go far enough. Facing defeat, Paul Ryan consulted

:03:37.:03:46.

with the President and pulled Yeah, we will live with Obamacare

:03:47.:03:50.

for the foreseeable future. My worry is that Obamacare

:03:51.:04:03.

will be getting even worse. He still predicts that Obamacare

:04:04.:04:06.

will end in failure. But he conceded that

:04:07.:04:12.

until Democrats agree It is imploding and

:04:13.:04:17.

soon will explode. The Democrats do not

:04:18.:04:20.

want to see that. They will reach out,

:04:21.:04:23.

when they are ready. Pushing through healthcare

:04:24.:04:26.

change in America is one of President Obama's defining

:04:27.:04:28.

achievement in the White House. It provided over 20 million people

:04:29.:04:34.

with health-insurance. Opponents say it is too expensive

:04:35.:04:37.

and involves too much government But criticising Obamacare has proved

:04:38.:04:40.

much easier than replacing it After his controversial

:04:41.:04:44.

travel ban was blocked, this is another blow

:04:45.:04:46.

to his authority less than a month Counter-terrorism police have

:04:47.:04:54.

released all but two of the 11 people arrested since the attack

:04:55.:05:00.

in Westminster on Wednesday. They are appealing for information

:05:01.:05:03.

as they try to establish whether Khalid Masood

:05:04.:05:05.

acted alone or had help, Khalid Masood, the former teacher

:05:06.:05:08.

and father who became a terrorist. As police begin to build a picture

:05:09.:05:14.

of the killer it emerged that minutes before he launched

:05:15.:05:22.

his attack he used a messaging service, WhatsApp,

:05:23.:05:28.

to send a message from his phone. Born Adrian Elms in Kent,

:05:29.:05:35.

by the time he was at school in Tunbridge Wells he was

:05:36.:05:41.

known by another name. But what triggered such a brutal

:05:42.:05:43.

attack from a sporty schoolboy I just wanted to give him a lift,

:05:44.:05:46.

sort of balance him up a bit. He developed a reputation

:05:47.:06:06.

for violence. Last night, the Saudi Arabian

:06:07.:06:08.

Embassy in London confirmed he had worked there as a teacher

:06:09.:06:12.

around ten years ago. The police investigation

:06:13.:06:15.

into the attack It brought them to this

:06:16.:06:18.

hotel in Brighton. Khalid Masood stayed here the night

:06:19.:06:23.

before he carried out his deadly attack which took the

:06:24.:06:26.

lives of four people. Described as a nice guest,

:06:27.:06:31.

he said he was visiting In Manchester, a car

:06:32.:06:33.

was taken away by police. There were further raids

:06:34.:06:36.

and two people, both The police investigation will now

:06:37.:06:38.

focus on finding out if anyone helped Khalid Masood

:06:39.:06:45.

to carry out his attack and at what inspired him

:06:46.:06:50.

to commit mass murder. Our reporter Alexandra McKenzie

:06:51.:06:58.

is outside New Scotland Yard Can you bring us date with the

:06:59.:07:08.

investigation? This is going into the third full day of the

:07:09.:07:12.

investigation, a massive investigation involving hundreds of

:07:13.:07:16.

officers. So far it is about gathering information. 11 people

:07:17.:07:22.

have been arrested and all but two have now been released. Two of those

:07:23.:07:28.

have been released on bail. Police have also been gathering evidence,

:07:29.:07:31.

they have taken commuters and a phenomenal amount of data to look

:07:32.:07:39.

through. -- take on computers. They also have items seized at properties

:07:40.:07:46.

and the Hotel he stayed at Brighton. Very much about gathering evidence

:07:47.:07:51.

and now they have to begin the massive task of sifting through the

:07:52.:07:57.

evidence. The big question- did he act alone or did somebody else know

:07:58.:08:01.

that this attack was going to happen here at Westminster. We heard about

:08:02.:08:10.

the message is sent via WhatsApp, then just minutes before the attack

:08:11.:08:14.

began. The police will want to know about that and there was the

:08:15.:08:17.

recipient is was aware that the attack was about to happen.

:08:18.:08:19.

This weekend marks 60 years since the Treaty of Rome was signed,

:08:20.:08:22.

creating the European Economic Community which we now know

:08:23.:08:24.

More than 20 EU heads of state and government are gathering this

:08:25.:08:29.

weekend in the Italian capital to mark the historic event.

:08:30.:08:31.

Prime Minister Theresa May will not be attending.

:08:32.:08:35.

More needs to be done to help tackle the vicious cycle of debt

:08:36.:08:39.

and overcharging - according to a House

:08:40.:08:40.

It says banks are failing customers who need them most -

:08:41.:08:45.

leaving the poorest to reply on expensive products.

:08:46.:08:48.

Here's our business correspondent, Jonty Bloom.

:08:49.:08:56.

Banks and building societies are not just for the rich

:08:57.:09:05.

but are difficult for the poor access.

:09:06.:09:07.

1.7 million people in this country have no bank account.

:09:08.:09:09.

Many can only borrow at a high interest

:09:10.:09:11.

rate, at even if they are not forced to use payday lenders.

:09:12.:09:15.

The closure of thousands of high-street banks

:09:16.:09:17.

also hit the poorest and the elderly as they have less access to online

:09:18.:09:20.

working age population have less than ?100 in saving and if they use

:09:21.:09:26.

prepaid meters, they pay more for basic services like gas and

:09:27.:09:27.

electricity. basic services like gas and

:09:28.:09:27.

To end such financial exclusion, for better financial education

:09:28.:09:29.

in schools and a dedicated government minister to tackle

:09:30.:09:33.

the problem and for the banks to have a duty of care

:09:34.:09:35.

to their customers. Too many people still do not

:09:36.:09:40.

have a bank account or access to basic and fairly priced

:09:41.:09:43.

financial services. That means the poverty

:09:44.:09:45.

premium, where the poor pay more for a range of things

:09:46.:09:50.

is leading them into a vicious circle of further debt

:09:51.:09:53.

and financial distress. The government says that 4 million

:09:54.:09:58.

people are benefiting from basic bank accounts which charge no fees

:09:59.:10:02.

and that tough new rules mean that the number of payday loans

:10:03.:10:05.

has halved since 2014. Boris Johnson's banned all-male

:10:06.:10:13.

entourages from his trips abroad. It's after he turned up to a women's

:10:14.:10:16.

empowerment event in New York The Foreign Secretary says he'll

:10:17.:10:22.

also ban so-called "manels" - which are panels made up of men -

:10:23.:10:26.

to increase diversity. A recording has been released

:10:27.:10:33.

of the Hollywood actor Harrison Ford calling himself a "schmuck"

:10:34.:10:36.

after accidentally landing his plane in the wrong part of

:10:37.:10:39.

an airport in California. The Star Wars actor,

:10:40.:10:41.

who has a pilot's licence, was talking to air traffic

:10:42.:10:45.

controllers at John Wayne Airport in Orange County immediately

:10:46.:10:48.

after the incident last month. A ban on taking laptops and tablets

:10:49.:10:50.

on board flights to the UK from six Passengers travelling from Turkey,

:10:51.:11:44.

Egypt, Lebanon, Jordan, Tunisia and Saudi Arabia must put

:11:45.:11:47.

any electronic device larger than a standard smart

:11:48.:11:50.

phone into the hold. The ban was imposed

:11:51.:11:52.

following a similar measure This year's Red Nose Day has so far

:11:53.:11:56.

raised more than 71 million. Among the highlights

:11:57.:12:01.

of the seven-hour Comic Relief telethon was a sequel

:12:02.:12:04.

to the film, Love Actually. The comedian, Sir Lenny Henry,

:12:05.:12:07.

opened the show with a tribute to those affected by the Westminster

:12:08.:12:10.

attack, as our entertainment The total... A huge total. ?71

:12:11.:12:33.

million! The evening began with comic relief co-founder, Sir Lenny

:12:34.:12:41.

Henry. The comedian and actor also referred briefly to the tragic

:12:42.:12:46.

events this week. We would like to send our thoughts and love to all

:12:47.:12:51.

those affected by the events in Westminster. Tonight is a chance to

:12:52.:12:55.

save lives, to reach out in the spirit of compassion. The money you

:12:56.:12:58.

give tonight will make things better for people with difficult lives at

:12:59.:13:01.

home and abroad. The most anticipated moment of the night was

:13:02.:13:06.

the Love Actually sequel featuring many of the original cast and a

:13:07.:13:08.

couple of other familiar faces. That's great! That is a great! Can

:13:09.:13:24.

we have rice with it this time? I am getting tired of stirfry. Other

:13:25.:13:32.

comedy highlights included a James Corden, take that carpel karaoke.

:13:33.:13:45.

And a special appearance from Mrs Brown. There were musical

:13:46.:13:52.

performances from the likes of Ed Sheerin.

:13:53.:14:00.

As well as a peal films with celebrities visiting some of the

:14:01.:14:05.

places where the money raised can make a huge difference. And now look

:14:06.:14:09.

at him stop he is almost unrecognisable. That is down to you.

:14:10.:14:15.

The money that you raised. Please, give generously tonight.

:14:16.:14:22.

Just to confirm, at this stage, ?71 million raised on the night. That

:14:23.:14:29.

number often rises in the following days. Well done to everybody who

:14:30.:14:34.

took part yesterday. It is Saturday morning and you are watching

:14:35.:14:37.

breakfast. The man behind the Westminster attacks, Khalid Masood,

:14:38.:14:43.

or was born in Kent and named Adrian Elms. Police are now trying to find

:14:44.:14:48.

out what or who turned him into a killer. One thing we do know is that

:14:49.:14:53.

he was a convert to Islam in their life. Police say that they're

:14:54.:14:56.

working assumption is that he was inspired by international terrorism.

:14:57.:15:00.

It is not the first time a convert has been linked to a major terror

:15:01.:15:05.

attack. One report suggested 16% of people convicted of terror offences

:15:06.:15:07.

in the UK were converts. They include: Richard Reid,

:15:08.:15:22.

the shoe bomber who tried to blow up He is now serving a life

:15:23.:15:25.

sentence in the States. Michael Adebolajo, one

:15:26.:15:29.

of the men who killed Fusilier Lee Rigby in Woolwich

:15:30.:15:31.

also converted to Islam. As did Richard Dart,

:15:32.:15:34.

the son of teachers from Dorset, who was jailed for preparing acts

:15:35.:15:37.

of terrorism in 2013. So are converts to Islam

:15:38.:15:39.

particularly vulnerable Zahed Amanullah from the Institute

:15:40.:15:41.

for Strategic Dialogue joins us now. Thank you very much. Why did you

:15:42.:15:49.

think, in fact, did you think there is a particular issue with condos?

:15:50.:15:54.

-- converts. By and large, converts are by and large not involved in any

:15:55.:15:58.

activity like this. That goes without saying. But people that do

:15:59.:16:03.

convert to a religion, at what it is, AMD needs of looking for an

:16:04.:16:07.

identity other than they have. So that is a very vulnerable time for

:16:08.:16:11.

people. In my personal experience, from people I know who are

:16:12.:16:14.

converted, a lot of time they have converted by marrying into a Muslim

:16:15.:16:18.

family. We do not see people in those positions going on to commit

:16:19.:16:22.

these kinds of crimes. It is the people who are converting on our

:16:23.:16:26.

own, and it depends who is doing the converting, who is guiding them. And

:16:27.:16:30.

that is where we have to look at extremist recruitment. And you are

:16:31.:16:35.

quite right to point out that many converts to many religions quite

:16:36.:16:38.

often are more orthodox, more fundamentally Nepalese. It is true.

:16:39.:16:44.

A lot of times, people looking for that just 68. They can be a little

:16:45.:16:48.

bit more orthodox or conservative, for example, but that alone, of

:16:49.:16:52.

course, is not the only driving factor. It is how it fits into a

:16:53.:16:58.

pattern of grievances, we have seen the pattern of mental health

:16:59.:17:01.

backgrounds and criminal backgrounds, and is a risk factors.

:17:02.:17:05.

It is the type of conversion that makes a difference. Talk to us from

:17:06.:17:09.

what we know so far, and indeed a lot in the papers today are trying

:17:10.:17:14.

to piece together Khalid Masood, and the various parts of his life. On

:17:15.:17:17.

the face of it, it is quite confusing. We see these pictures

:17:18.:17:21.

people are talking about of him as a child, and then later in life, he

:17:22.:17:25.

got in trouble with the law. Was of the picture is emerging to you?

:17:26.:17:29.

CHEERING We do want to regulate too much. -- what is the picture that

:17:30.:17:33.

is. Was he acting alone is the real question. That remains to be seen.

:17:34.:17:37.

But in terms of the pattern of behaviour we have seen in his life,

:17:38.:17:40.

we have seen the troubled background, for example, and the

:17:41.:17:46.

present time that he served. All of these things show there was a search

:17:47.:17:51.

for stability in his life, in his very life, and so forth. These

:17:52.:17:55.

things to play a part. We know that the risk factors can include

:17:56.:17:58.

psychological problems, as well. So there is evidence, here, as there is

:17:59.:18:06.

in many other Logan Act cases. Your in situ has indicated signs of early

:18:07.:18:14.

warning signs. What would investigate is currently be looking

:18:15.:18:17.

at in terms of what size they may have been in the buildup? As

:18:18.:18:20.

mentioned before, the risk factors themselves are not alone, they are

:18:21.:18:24.

not the only things to look at. What we need to look at is what ideology

:18:25.:18:28.

was introduced to this person that caused them to turn those risk

:18:29.:18:31.

factors into an actual threat of violence and terrorism. And often

:18:32.:18:35.

that is extra is recruitment that can happen online or off-line. There

:18:36.:18:39.

is indications, for example, that he might have met with other people

:18:40.:18:43.

before the incident. We will need to find out if those people were

:18:44.:18:48.

influencing him to commit this act. But it is that extremist ideology

:18:49.:18:52.

that plays into the vulnerability of the individual that Leighton leaves

:18:53.:18:56.

them to commit a terrorist act. -- that then leave, it leaves them. We

:18:57.:19:03.

are working with organisations to try to intercept that recruitment of

:19:04.:19:06.

vulnerable people. It is early days, but we have done studies to show

:19:07.:19:12.

that that can work. But it is to be done on a mass scale. Typically,

:19:13.:19:16.

then this kind of radicalisation happen quickly? It can. It depends

:19:17.:19:24.

on the individual. -- can this kind. What are the grievances driving and?

:19:25.:19:27.

But it is that recruitment that often makes the difference. And that

:19:28.:19:31.

is why it is important for intelligence services to find out if

:19:32.:19:35.

there was anyone who has influenced him in the last few days. And indeed

:19:36.:19:40.

he has a current network of people. Absolutely. That is critical. If you

:19:41.:19:45.

identify that, we can identify the kind of messaging. Visible, from a

:19:46.:19:49.

logistically to do. Second of all, why he felt this was an act he

:19:50.:19:53.

needed to take. Thank you for joining us this morning, Zahed

:19:54.:19:57.

Amanullah. It's 7:20 and you're watching

:19:58.:20:04.

Breakfast from BBC News. President Trump's suffered a setback

:20:05.:20:07.

on one of his main campaign pledges. He's been forced to abandon a vote

:20:08.:20:11.

on health care reform because of a lack of support

:20:12.:20:14.

from his own party. Police investigating the terror

:20:15.:20:17.

attack on Westminster are continuing Nine others who had been arrested

:20:18.:20:20.

have been released as officers try to establish whether the killer

:20:21.:20:24.

Khalid Masood was working alone. well, we've all sat in classrooms

:20:25.:20:27.

listening to history teachers. Now we'll take a look

:20:28.:20:31.

at the technology that's allowing pupils to travel hundreds

:20:32.:20:34.

of miles from their desks, That would liven up a history

:20:35.:20:36.

lesson! Here's Chris with a look

:20:37.:20:41.

at this morning's weather. The weekend is looking fine,

:20:42.:20:52.

weatherwise, because we have an air of high pressure with us both today

:20:53.:20:56.

and tomorrow. That is good to bring a lot of dry weather with sunshine.

:20:57.:20:59.

But it is quite chilly this morning. If you have Origi been out this

:21:00.:21:03.

morning, there are a number of places that have had a frost

:21:04.:21:06.

overnight. These are the overnight lows. Miners fighting Kate Ridge and

:21:07.:21:12.

Topcliffe. A number of spots or -3 and -4 Indian northern part of the

:21:13.:21:18.

UK. A cool site of the day. That frost moving away and we will see

:21:19.:21:22.

things warm up quite nicely through the afternoon. Hives will hit 19

:21:23.:21:26.

degrees or so. The warmest spot is probably around parts of south-west

:21:27.:21:29.

England, Wales, north-west England, too. To start the day. We have mist

:21:30.:21:34.

in fog stretching across the Midlands, Lincolnshire, and

:21:35.:21:40.

Yorkshire. Should not soon. It will stay quite cloudy today in Shetland.

:21:41.:21:44.

An odd spot of morning rain and then dry bright. Sunshine in the mainland

:21:45.:21:51.

Scotland. Sunny in Northern too. In both, at temperatures should get to

:21:52.:21:56.

70 degrees in the warm spots. But possibly 1819 degrees in parts of

:21:57.:22:00.

western Wales, where there are some hotspots. Cooler on the east coast

:22:01.:22:05.

due to onshore winds. Gusty winds, too, and overnight cloud with those

:22:06.:22:12.

clear skies in place, whether winds are light, it will be cold, down two

:22:13.:22:19.

-4 minus five degrees. -- where the winds. A similar one to the Wungong

:22:20.:22:24.

pass. The cloud should burn off early. Plenty of sunshine again, but

:22:25.:22:28.

the taps temperatures will be an odd degree lower across England and

:22:29.:22:35.

Wales, competitive age. -- to the one just past. Winds are blowing

:22:36.:22:38.

across the South Coast of England. That is Alinta look out for. Plenty

:22:39.:22:42.

of sunshine through the course of the day. Senator looking fine dry,

:22:43.:22:48.

but the clocks go forward by an hour tonight, and that means if you are

:22:49.:22:52.

working, like me, tomorrow, that is now less than that. Back

:22:53.:22:57.

Thank you very much. Do not forget. It is 7:22.

:22:58.:23:08.

More than half of mothers who breastfeed stop after six

:23:09.:23:10.

to eight weeks, according to a survey

:23:11.:23:12.

Their research found although three quarters of new mums

:23:13.:23:16.

chose to breastfeed from birth, this figure dropped significantly

:23:17.:23:18.

within two months, as Frankie McCamley reports.

:23:19.:23:25.

Like many new mums, Laura started breast-feeding as soon as autumn was

:23:26.:23:31.

born, but after around six weeks, they both fell ill, so she had to

:23:32.:23:36.

stop. When I decided to give up breast-feeding, I kind of did not

:23:37.:23:43.

really want to. It was something I thought about a lot. I did a lot of

:23:44.:23:47.

research about how to rain get my supply back up with power pumping

:23:48.:23:53.

and things like eating oats. -- trying. So I tried a lot of those

:23:54.:23:57.

things, but unfortunately, it did not really work at all. The whole

:23:58.:24:00.

experience left her feeling extremely anxious of breast-feeding.

:24:01.:24:05.

Additionally fellow people would be judging me when they saw me feeding

:24:06.:24:12.

her with a bottle. To some extent, I still do. I find that very kind of

:24:13.:24:17.

difficult when I feed her in public, I think maybe people are wondering

:24:18.:24:23.

why I am not breast-feeding her and kind of thinking that IM not a good

:24:24.:24:28.

mum, or maybe I don't love her as much as other people love their

:24:29.:24:32.

babies, because I am not doing what is considered best. -- I'm not.

:24:33.:24:39.

According to public of England, little Autumn is not alone. A survey

:24:40.:24:44.

found that while almost three quarters of women starting

:24:45.:24:46.

breast-feeding when their child was born, less than half of them were

:24:47.:24:51.

still doing that six to eight weeks later. It is now launching Chatbot,

:24:52.:25:01.

to help mothers with concerns they might have. According to public

:25:02.:25:04.

health England, breast-feeding can boost their babies ability to fight

:25:05.:25:09.

illness and infectious. And for mothers, it can reduce the risk of

:25:10.:25:13.

ovarian and breast cancer. It also burns about 500 calories a day. As

:25:14.:25:18.

for Laura and her family, though, they said that the service would not

:25:19.:25:22.

have changed their minds to stop breast-feeding, but a support like

:25:23.:25:26.

it would have been a great help at the time. Frankie McCamley, BBC

:25:27.:25:27.

News. Joining us now is Jackie Hall,

:25:28.:25:27.

a breastfeeding consultant for the NHS, and Emma Blinkhorn,

:25:28.:25:30.

who's been breastfeeding her daughter since she was

:25:31.:25:33.

born five months ago. Isn't she gorgeous? How is it going?

:25:34.:25:49.

How are you? Brilliant. Thank you. Five months now. It was tricky at

:25:50.:25:55.

the start, but we have overcome obstacles to get where we are today.

:25:56.:25:59.

Did you always think you would breast feed? I have. I always wanted

:26:00.:26:05.

to give it a go. At the start, I was not sure what it would entail or how

:26:06.:26:09.

difficult it would be. I thought it would just come naturally. Because

:26:10.:26:12.

nobody else in your family had breast-fed? No. I had not been

:26:13.:26:17.

around anyone had breast-fed before. So it was a new experience. I

:26:18.:26:21.

disorder would come naturally. And I did not know that there would be so

:26:22.:26:25.

many issues to overcome at the start. It can be tough. Tell us

:26:26.:26:29.

about some of the challenges that you face. Just some of the cluster

:26:30.:26:37.

feeding at the start, babies will eat a lot of the beginning. Naively,

:26:38.:26:43.

I thought that they would have three set meals a day, maybe. Something

:26:44.:26:48.

tells me Lily-May has something on her mind right now... Tell us,

:26:49.:26:57.

Jackie, from the statistics, Emma is coming up to precisely the time when

:26:58.:27:01.

a lot of mothers stop to breastfeed. There seems to be any number of

:27:02.:27:05.

reasons around. What you think the main reason is? Certainly, I think a

:27:06.:27:10.

lot of people hear the term six months and tend to think that is

:27:11.:27:14.

what the Department of Health recommends. Six months exclusive

:27:15.:27:20.

breast-feeding. But we know the World Health Organization encourages

:27:21.:27:23.

breast-feeding beyond six months alongside Soz and -- solids, as

:27:24.:27:31.

well. And up to two years and beyond. Our Department of Health

:27:32.:27:34.

tent is a one year and beyond, with no cut-off point. So there is

:27:35.:27:39.

sometimes just a lot of ladies that think that six months as the cover

:27:40.:27:45.

point. Lily-May is clearly a little... Tell us what is going on!

:27:46.:27:51.

Is it because she... Yes... Our timing... Our timing is all wrong.

:27:52.:27:59.

Now, our direct it will tell us and we can still here. Can we? That is

:28:00.:28:06.

good. No, that is fine. So, what about the embarrassment factor and

:28:07.:28:10.

that sort of thing? Is that have a part to play, so you? Other people

:28:11.:28:15.

are. At the start, yes. Comments at the start. There has been some

:28:16.:28:20.

negativity. But then there is a lot more positivity out there than there

:28:21.:28:23.

is negativity. And it is hard to get over it. It is hard to be out there

:28:24.:28:28.

publicly feeding your child when you are not sure how people will take

:28:29.:28:32.

it. But it is something that I have overcome, and it is completely

:28:33.:28:34.

natural thing. It is completely normal. And it is a shame, because

:28:35.:28:38.

of there were more people doing it, I think would be more normal, as

:28:39.:28:42.

well, for people to see people breast-feeding. And from a health

:28:43.:28:45.

benefits point of view, just take us through the principles. We know that

:28:46.:28:55.

breastmilk is a normal, normal fluid that babies need, and also for

:28:56.:28:59.

nutrition. It is packed full of antibodies, which protect against

:29:00.:29:06.

chest infections, protects against diarrhoea and other gastric

:29:07.:29:11.

infections, like that. And there is just a whole range of wonderful

:29:12.:29:15.

things that happen because of the breastmilk. So we know a lot more

:29:16.:29:20.

now than we used to. The reason why we do promote it. That's not be

:29:21.:29:30.

accused of everyday sexism. Come on... It is that it said that a lot

:29:31.:29:36.

of women try to breast feed via difficult. And women will always

:29:37.:29:39.

tell us that in these situations, as well, that they feel an enormous

:29:40.:29:43.

amount of pressure and that there is pressure from health visitors,

:29:44.:29:46.

midwives, and so on. And that almost puts them. And I can fully

:29:47.:29:51.

understand that. Even from my own experience. These early weeks are so

:29:52.:29:59.

intensive. -- puts them off. People think that they are going to be

:30:00.:30:03.

easy. But we know that it takes a good for to six weeks to get your

:30:04.:30:08.

milk supply established. And that requires a rather frequent feeding,

:30:09.:30:11.

getting used to feeding and different positions. It can be

:30:12.:30:14.

discomfort, as well, at the beginning. But it is not meant to be

:30:15.:30:18.

painful. So, you know, we always encourage people to seek out 1-to-1

:30:19.:30:24.

support. Go along to drop ins. We certainly worked to produce these...

:30:25.:30:29.

It really helps to have support around. I promise we are living Bell

:30:30.:30:37.

listening. But Lily-May is fast taking my job, as long as my script.

:30:38.:30:43.

-- I promise we are listening. Thank you so much for bringing her in. She

:30:44.:30:48.

has been brilliant. Well done. She has been lovely. We will leave you

:30:49.:30:57.

for a moment, and handover. So thank you very much, and we have the

:30:58.:31:01.

headlines coming up in just a moment.

:31:02.:31:48.

Hello, this is Breakfast, with Charlie Stayt and Rachel

:31:49.:31:50.

Coming up before eight, Chris will have the weather for you.

:31:51.:31:56.

But first, a summary of this morning's main news.

:31:57.:32:02.

President Trump says he's surprised and disappointed after failing

:32:03.:32:04.

to secure support from his own party for plans to replace Obamacare.

:32:05.:32:07.

He had to withdraw his healthcare bill after it failed to get enough

:32:08.:32:11.

President Trump has said there were parts of it he didn't

:32:12.:32:18.

like anyway, and it'll mean a better bill at some point in the future.

:32:19.:32:22.

Speaking earlier on Breakfast, former advisor to George W Bush,

:32:23.:32:25.

Anneke Green, told us President Bush still has support in his party.

:32:26.:32:33.

It is coming across in the press as a blow but he will give it portray

:32:34.:32:44.

this as a smart move and something he is doing for the American people

:32:45.:32:48.

and I do not think it will affect his core support. We see that even

:32:49.:32:52.

in the praise coming from the groups in the house who refused to vote for

:32:53.:32:54.

the bill. Counter-terrorism police have

:32:55.:32:55.

released all but two of the 11 people arrested since the attack

:32:56.:32:57.

in Westminster on Wednesday. The attacker, Khalid Masood,

:32:58.:33:00.

killed three people when he drove into pedestrians on Westminster

:33:01.:33:03.

Bridge before stabbing a police Police are still trying to establish

:33:04.:33:05.

whether he acted alone. This weekend marks 60 years

:33:06.:33:11.

since the Treaty of Rome was signed, creating the European Economic

:33:12.:33:15.

Community which we now know More than 20 EU heads of state

:33:16.:33:17.

and government are gathering this weekend in the Italian capital

:33:18.:33:23.

to mark the historic event. Prime Minister Theresa May

:33:24.:33:25.

will not be attending. More needs to be done to help tackle

:33:26.:33:30.

the vicious cycle of debt and overcharging -

:33:31.:33:34.

according to a House It says banks are failing customers

:33:35.:33:36.

who need them most - leaving the poorest to rely

:33:37.:33:41.

on expensive products. It adds controls on "rent

:33:42.:33:43.

to own" products must Too many people still do not have a

:33:44.:34:00.

bank account or access to basic and fairly priced financial services of

:34:01.:34:03.

the sort that most of us take for granted. That means that poverty

:34:04.:34:07.

premium, where the poor pay more for a range of things from a leading man

:34:08.:34:12.

hours to getting a loan is leading them into a vicious circle of

:34:13.:34:14.

further debt and financial distress. This year's Comic Relief has raised

:34:15.:34:18.

more than ?71 million. The fundraiser included

:34:19.:34:21.

James Corden's Carpool Karaoke with Take That and a special

:34:22.:34:23.

Love Actually sequel. Comic Relief has raised more

:34:24.:34:25.

than one billion pounds since it That total, ?71 million as it stands

:34:26.:34:28.

right now. It is incredible. We are thinking today about poor old

:34:29.:34:48.

Seamus Coleman and his horrible injury. 28 years old with a great

:34:49.:34:53.

season so far, although that is over now. Republic of Ireland in Wales,

:34:54.:34:59.

the game was goalless and not that memorable but will now be remembered

:35:00.:35:03.

for the wrong reasons, a horrific tackle. Just reading a form of river

:35:04.:35:10.

re- saying that the challenge was reckless and out of control and that

:35:11.:35:13.

Neil Taylor was distraught afterwards. He is in hospital. He

:35:14.:35:20.

will have surgery today and then we will have more of an idea. But the

:35:21.:35:27.

manager says it is a bad break. I don't know what that means but it

:35:28.:35:30.

sounds like it will be a long recovery.

:35:31.:35:32.

chances for either side - but he'll miss the next game

:35:33.:35:37.

against Serbia, after receiving a yellow card.

:35:38.:35:39.

Of course the main talking point though is that horrific injury

:35:40.:35:42.

Manager Martin O'Neill, said it was a bad break -

:35:43.:35:46.

it wasn't a malicious tackle, but it was mistimed and a very

:35:47.:35:49.

And Neil Taylor was sent off for it, as Coleman was carried off

:35:50.:35:53.

on a stretcher, needing oxygen, to help him cope

:35:54.:36:03.

. A load to him, he was having the season of a lifetime at club level.

:36:04.:36:13.

He is a big player for us and a great captain. A great character. So

:36:14.:36:22.

it is a big loss. A big loss to Everton come to us but he will fight

:36:23.:36:30.

back, I hope. It puts things in perspective, I suppose. He is not

:36:31.:36:41.

that type of player. Taylor. He is a great boy. I have not seen the

:36:42.:36:45.

challenge but I have seen the outcome, if you like. So... It is

:36:46.:36:52.

terrible for Seamus and it is a shame because he is someone I

:36:53.:36:57.

respect, one of the best fullbacks in Premier League.

:36:58.:37:01.

There was quite a reaction on social media to Seamus Coleman's injury ...

:37:02.:37:05.

Former Evertonian Wayne Rooney led by the way by tweeting"Hope

:37:06.:37:07.

Among the celebrities to express their support,

:37:08.:37:11.

was One Direction star Niall Horan, who wrote: "Horrific what happened

:37:12.:37:14.

And James Corden said: "Stay strong, Seamus Coleman.

:37:15.:37:19.

Every true football fan wishes you a strong recovery."

:37:20.:37:26.

Formula 1 is back, and so is Lewis Hamilton.

:37:27.:37:29.

He missed out on the world title last season, but has dominated

:37:30.:37:32.

Hamilton claimed a record equalling sixth pole position

:37:33.:37:40.

The Briton was more than a quarter of a second quicker

:37:41.:37:44.

His new Mercedes team-mate Valtteri Bottas was third.

:37:45.:37:51.

It was a busy night in rugby League's Super League,

:37:52.:37:55.

and we have new leaders in Hull FC, thanks to their win at Wigan.

:37:56.:37:59.

But at the other end of the table, things have gone from bad to worse

:38:00.:38:03.

for Warrington, who've lost every game this season -

:38:04.:38:06.

just six months after they were in the grand final,

:38:07.:38:08.

they were beaten 31-6 by St Helens - Adam Swift with the pick

:38:09.:38:12.

In Rugby Union's Premiership, Gloucester comfortably,

:38:13.:38:15.

England wing Jonny May, sealed the bonus point win

:38:16.:38:21.

for Gloucester - and Bristol's hopes of avoiding relegation straight back

:38:22.:38:24.

to the Championship look slim - they're seven points adrift

:38:25.:38:27.

at the bottom of the table, with four games to play.

:38:28.:38:30.

In the Pro12, John Andrew's late try, secured a crucial win

:38:31.:38:34.

for Ulster against Newport Gwent Dragons.

:38:35.:38:36.

The 27-17 victory, means Ulster stay in the fourth

:38:37.:38:38.

But Scarlets, are also chasing that play-off place -

:38:39.:38:45.

and they're just three points behind Ulster now,

:38:46.:38:48.

after getting a bonus point in their 26-10 win over Edinburgh.

:38:49.:38:54.

Britain's Johanna Konta is through to the third

:38:55.:38:56.

round of the Miami Open tennis, after beating Sasnovich.

:38:57.:39:01.

We're going to return to football now, and a very special little boy

:39:02.:39:05.

who will be at Wembley tomorrow, for England's

:39:06.:39:07.

You may have seen him before - five-year-old Sunderland fan

:39:08.:39:15.

Bradley Lowery, is suffering from a rare type of cancer.

:39:16.:39:18.

This is how his mum Gemma, told him he was to be a mascot,

:39:19.:39:22.

alongside his hero and "best mate" Jermain Defoe.

:39:23.:39:28.

Guess who is going to the England match next week? Jermain Defoe.

:39:29.:39:42.

Hooray! Are you buzzing? At the very beginning it was just amazing. It

:39:43.:39:50.

was his dream come true. Now he just calls Jermain Defoe his best friend.

:39:51.:39:54.

It is normal for him now but at the beginning it was fantastic and to

:39:55.:39:58.

have that experience and all the experiences he has at the moment is

:39:59.:40:03.

quite surreal. And not only for him. It gives us memories that we can

:40:04.:40:08.

carry with us for the rest of our lives. A proud moment. And I love

:40:09.:40:17.

the way that all of the players they were giving him fist pumps. I am

:40:18.:40:23.

sure they will do that tomorrow. She is common. We also wish him all the

:40:24.:40:28.

best. I won't show you the picture but it is horrific. The immediate

:40:29.:40:34.

aftermath of that tackle. It was completely upended, completely

:40:35.:40:40.

horrible. To be fair, Neil Taylor realised it was broken straightaway

:40:41.:40:43.

and was quite distraught afterwards. How awful. Imagine the pain he must

:40:44.:40:48.

have been in. Hopefully the operation goes well. Thank you very

:40:49.:40:50.

much. History helps us to paint a picture

:40:51.:40:52.

of the past but the future We will come back to that. ... It is

:40:53.:41:06.

about how technology can understand that what happens to people in the

:41:07.:41:12.

past. We will talk about virtual reality headset because they are

:41:13.:41:14.

being introduced into history lessons to make them or interesting.

:41:15.:41:20.

A development team are inventing a new way to use a virtual reality

:41:21.:41:24.

headset to take students to the battlefields of the First World War.

:41:25.:41:28.

Thousands of children have followed the Centenary trail across the

:41:29.:41:34.

Channel to visit the First World War battlefields. Thousands more will

:41:35.:41:39.

not have that chance. Now, the Merseyside development team think

:41:40.:41:43.

they have a solution. Keep it in the background. Maybe start there, walk

:41:44.:41:51.

there. If you move around to the farmhouse... Get to one o'clock. The

:41:52.:41:56.

historian Peter Barton facing a battery of small cameras is here to

:41:57.:42:00.

bring history alive by inviting students into the trenches. Trench

:42:01.:42:04.

warfare was more about maintenance rather than anything else. He is a

:42:05.:42:11.

solitary figure. His department crew is hidden from sight as cameras

:42:12.:42:17.

record his view of the landslide. I speak to that block of cameras as if

:42:18.:42:22.

it is to a group. The idea is to make it as informal as possible.

:42:23.:42:29.

Normally on television you get a very small timescale. Here I can

:42:30.:42:33.

talk for as long as I like so I can talk for five or six or seven

:42:34.:42:38.

minutes. Back in Liverpool, the individual images stitched together

:42:39.:42:40.

to make a 360 degrees virtual reality. I think history as a

:42:41.:42:45.

subject can be quite dull if taught in a particular way and it enables

:42:46.:42:51.

children from all walks of life to take part and experience the First

:42:52.:42:59.

World War battlefields. We can sit in classrooms like that and listen

:43:00.:43:03.

to teachers at the front talk about important events in history. This

:43:04.:43:06.

technology will enable students to travel miles from their desk and

:43:07.:43:12.

onto the actual battlefield. And what they are doing over there is

:43:13.:43:18.

defending themselves, their regiment... What I will do is take

:43:19.:43:22.

you straight into where they sold to spend his life, in the front-line

:43:23.:43:26.

trench. At this collagen crossbreed, the acid tressed test. Remember, you

:43:27.:43:34.

can adjust focus, the volume, the system will enable a class of

:43:35.:43:38.

students to share the experience, but to react as individuals. What

:43:39.:43:42.

did they make of it? Everyone loves the technology of it and is far more

:43:43.:43:47.

massive when you can see what you can do with it. It is not difficult

:43:48.:43:52.

to listen to, it is there was no distractions. The man who oversees

:43:53.:43:57.

government funded visits during the Centenary, believes the virtual

:43:58.:44:00.

reality is that the start of its journey. Here is an opportunity to

:44:01.:44:04.

take young people all over the world to show them the sides where things

:44:05.:44:08.

have happened in the past and to give them a genuine immersive

:44:09.:44:11.

experience which they could not otherwise get. Without being there

:44:12.:44:17.

themselves. These are early days of the virtual world is without limit,

:44:18.:44:24.

enabling more and more of us to step back in history.

:44:25.:44:25.

Amazing images. Parts of the country are looking sunny this morning.

:44:26.:44:37.

Chris, what do you have? Decent sunshine today, Charlie, in a

:44:38.:44:41.

nutshell. This is the early-morning Weather Watcher picture, then to us

:44:42.:44:44.

from Wales showing clear skies and cloud in the sky. This is the scene

:44:45.:44:48.

in north-west Wales. Beautiful sunshine around, really, but as cold

:44:49.:44:53.

start to the day. To tell us might drop to -5 in the coldest parts of

:44:54.:44:56.

North Yorkshire in Northern Ireland as well. It is chilly first thing

:44:57.:45:01.

this morning. With the Sun already up, any early-morning fist and book

:45:02.:45:05.

burning away we will see where temperatures rise by nicely and in

:45:06.:45:08.

the afternoon we should see warm spots getting up to 1890 degrees. It

:45:09.:45:12.

will be there or thereabouts for being warmest day of the year so

:45:13.:45:17.

far. This weather for the weekend. A few fog patches this morning from

:45:18.:45:21.

east Wales through the Midlands to Lincolnshire. Not massively

:45:22.:45:24.

expensive so they should move away quickly this morning. Northern

:45:25.:45:28.

Scotland, it seemed cloudy and Shetland with a few spots of morning

:45:29.:45:31.

rain botrytis afternoon where is the rest of the mainland should state

:45:32.:45:35.

drives sunshine. Sunshine is what the Northern Ireland and that is

:45:36.:45:38.

early-morning mist and fog burning away quickly this morning. Looking

:45:39.:45:42.

at those sunny skies. Warmest weather is towards the western side

:45:43.:45:45.

of England and Wales with temperatures at 18 or 19 degrees.

:45:46.:45:49.

The grief with the wind coming in at will keep things a bit chilly around

:45:50.:45:55.

the south Coast towards the coast of Kent and parts of East Anglia.

:45:56.:45:58.

Overnight, another cold one coming up. In the countryside again will

:45:59.:46:02.

see temperatures falling away to give pockets of rust. I don't see

:46:03.:46:05.

why we should not get temperatures down as low as -4, minus five

:46:06.:46:11.

degrees. Remember Sunday, if anything there is a sunshine again,

:46:12.:46:14.

still with chilly wind in the south but the temperature is probably a

:46:15.:46:18.

degree down across much of England and Wales compared with today. Still

:46:19.:46:22.

a decent kind of day. But average in the warmest spot is again climbing

:46:23.:46:26.

into the mid to upper teens. Pleasant sunshine to come as we go

:46:27.:46:30.

through the course of both this afternoon and Sunday afternoon as

:46:31.:46:34.

well. That is how the weather looks. A quick reminder that as you go to

:46:35.:46:38.

bed tonight, the clock will move forward and now. That for though of

:46:39.:46:43.

us working tomorrow, and our lesson there, I am afraid. I'm already not

:46:44.:46:47.

looking forward to that. The clocks will change later tonight.

:46:48.:46:51.

Thank you. That was a welcome reminder.

:46:52.:46:56.

We'll be back with the headlines at 8am.

:46:57.:46:58.

Now it's time for Newswatch with Samira Ahmed.

:46:59.:47:00.

Hello and welcome to Newswatch with me, Samira Ahmed.

:47:01.:47:04.

Two big issues on this week's programme:

:47:05.:47:06.

BBC News programmes decant to Westminster,

:47:07.:47:15.

of these outside broadcasts exactly the response the attacker might

:47:16.:47:21.

And did coverage of Martin McGuinness' death focus too

:47:22.:47:24.

much on his role as a peacemaker and statesman, and not enough

:47:25.:47:27.

From early Wednesday afternoon onwards, millions of us

:47:28.:47:33.

have watched what unfolded in Westminster, with a sense

:47:34.:47:36.

For some, though, there was also concern about whether

:47:37.:47:40.

the huge media attention played into the hands of those

:47:41.:47:43.

Updating you on an ongoing incident outside the Palace of Westminster...

:47:44.:47:54.

We were treated to nothing more than oft repeated

:47:55.:48:00.

sequences of something like three or four events that have happened,

:48:01.:48:03.

interspersed with speculation, then the events repeated,

:48:04.:48:05.

Repeating things over and over again, highlighting the terrorism,

:48:06.:48:21.

isn't that exactly what the terrorists want?

:48:22.:48:23.

Tim Crompton with his views, there, which were echoed

:48:24.:48:27.

Of course, a degree of repetition and speculation is

:48:28.:48:32.

inevitable in the initial reporting

:48:33.:48:34.

But other viewers objected to the choice made BBC News

:48:35.:48:41.

to broadcast extensively, since the attack, not from its usual

:48:42.:48:44.

studios, but from the streets of Westminster,

:48:45.:48:46.

Wednesday's news at ten, Thursday's breakfast programme,

:48:47.:48:54.

Victoria Derbyshire that day, and much of the news channel's

:48:55.:48:57.

output all mounted outside broadcasts, which, felt

:48:58.:48:59.

some, could have disrupted police work, and was the very opposite

:49:00.:49:07.

of the "carry on as normal" approach which the Prime Minister herself had

:49:08.:49:11.

described as the right response to terrorism.

:49:12.:49:13.

Why on earth do the anchors have to run

:49:14.:49:16.

the programme from an empty street, reading from a makeshift prompt?

:49:17.:49:19.

What is the latest from there, Helena?

:49:20.:49:21.

Well, Ben, this is one of five hospitals...

:49:22.:49:23.

Why were there repeated visits to reporters outside hospitals

:49:24.:49:32.

All of this served to own unduly dramatise ties the situation,

:49:33.:49:36.

adding nothing to the quality of the coverage, but giving

:49:37.:49:39.

Apart from reporting facts and showing respect for victims,

:49:40.:49:43.

the day after an attack like this should be

:49:44.:49:45.

If the programme had been run from the

:49:46.:49:50.

studio, with some time allocated to other news,

:49:51.:49:52.

the BBC would have shown that normality had not been

:49:53.:49:54.

Instead, you choose - chose to show the terrorists

:49:55.:50:02.

Well, to discuss how BBC News covered the attacks

:50:03.:50:07.

and the aftermath, that, I am joined by Gavin Allen,

:50:08.:50:10.

the BBC's controller of daily news programmes.

:50:11.:50:12.

Viewers have been saying, what was to be gained by all these

:50:13.:50:27.

broadcasts, the day after, given there were no further

:50:28.:50:30.

Well, there were further developments, in fact.

:50:31.:50:33.

On the morning after, for instance, itremained an unfolding situation.

:50:34.:50:36.

There was a minute's silence about to happen.

:50:37.:50:39.

MPs were coming back from the special statement

:50:40.:50:42.

But is also partly about the nature of

:50:43.:50:45.

I think to be at a location where a news event has

:50:46.:50:49.

happened, you simply do get, as a journalist, a better

:50:50.:50:51.

understanding, than sat in front of your desk or in a studio.

:50:52.:50:55.

It also, I think, conveys to the audience, importantly,

:50:56.:50:57.

this is a major event, and if you like it

:50:58.:51:00.

or not, it is could have a huge impact on the UK.

:51:01.:51:03.

There is a real concern about copycats, fuelled

:51:04.:51:05.

I don't think - I don't think responsibly reporting what has

:51:06.:51:09.

I mean, we are very aware of the responsibilities

:51:10.:51:13.

we have, but we are also aware that there are millions of people

:51:14.:51:16.

out there, the audiences of different programmes,

:51:17.:51:18.

who really want to know what actually happened,

:51:19.:51:21.

not what is being speculated, or not what they think

:51:22.:51:23.

has happened or what the rumour says.

:51:24.:51:25.

They come to the BBC to really understand what has actually

:51:26.:51:28.

occurred, and I think it is our job to tell them.

:51:29.:51:31.

At the end of the day, whether we like it or not,

:51:32.:51:34.

let's be realistic, this was a huge event and there is going to be

:51:35.:51:38.

publicity, as you put it, for the terrorists, in this case.

:51:39.:51:41.

Because everywhere, social media, every media

:51:42.:51:43.

I think responsibility for us, the BBC, is to make sure

:51:44.:51:47.

that the way we cover it and the procedures

:51:48.:51:50.

with which we cover it, is absolutely

:51:51.:51:52.

So you get the information you need, without overly

:51:53.:51:54.

There were lots of images of the dead or dying and severely

:51:55.:51:58.

I quibble with that, actually, because

:51:59.:52:04.

I think there were an awful lot of images, I have seen across this

:52:05.:52:08.

week, both in the newsroom and in newspapers,

:52:09.:52:10.

But we take really great care to really

:52:11.:52:13.

think about what we are conveying with the images.

:52:14.:52:16.

And there are a lot of images that we did not show.

:52:17.:52:19.

And I think in terms of conveying and trying to understand

:52:20.:52:23.

for the audience's sake, what has happened, and the severity

:52:24.:52:26.

- the horror of what has happened, but not to overflow

:52:27.:52:29.

into insensitivity and in thinking on the

:52:30.:52:31.

sort of dignity of the injured or the dying, or, sadly,

:52:32.:52:34.

in the case of the dead, their families.

:52:35.:52:36.

Yes, PC Keith Palmer, who died, people would

:52:37.:52:40.

The images we showed - we were very careful not

:52:41.:52:46.

What we try to show is the scene, a more

:52:47.:52:50.

general, had generic sequence of people gathered around him,

:52:51.:52:53.

But we were very careful about what we...

:52:54.:52:56.

But again, it is about that balance about...

:52:57.:52:58.

This is an event which actually happened.

:52:59.:53:00.

People thought they saw the bodies of the severely injured.

:53:01.:53:03.

And that - the fact that they did not necessarily

:53:04.:53:07.

see their faces did not necessarily make it acceptable.

:53:08.:53:09.

It makes quite a big difference, actually.

:53:10.:53:11.

I think if you see a crowd of people around someone

:53:12.:53:14.

who is injured, that is very different from some of the images

:53:15.:53:18.

as seen elsewhere of the person themselves injured, and the blood.

:53:19.:53:21.

That is actually quite a big difference, and it

:53:22.:53:24.

But in fairness, it is not a precise line.

:53:25.:53:29.

You need to make a judgement, which is why different

:53:30.:53:32.

broadcasters, and different media organisations have come to different

:53:33.:53:35.

In the early hours, as one of the viewers was saying,

:53:36.:53:38.

there, you've got a lot of repetition

:53:39.:53:40.

With not very much in the way of facts.

:53:41.:53:44.

So some viewers feel that this kind of coverage is,

:53:45.:53:46.

in a sense, adding to a sense of panic, unnecessarily.

:53:47.:53:49.

I think people come to a particular news channel,

:53:50.:53:54.

Now, how long they stay for is up to them, but it varies,

:53:55.:54:00.

But if you come in, you want the news instantly.

:54:01.:54:03.

So inevitably, there will be repetition.

:54:04.:54:04.

But any minute, there could be an update with new news

:54:05.:54:07.

What we try to do is ensure that every bit of that information

:54:08.:54:12.

was conveyed clearly, and accurately, and not

:54:13.:54:14.

And I think we achieved that, fairly well.

:54:15.:54:16.

We will talk about our nets issue now, because that was not

:54:17.:54:21.

the only big controversy about BBC News coverage this week.

:54:22.:54:24.

Martin McGuinness, who died on Tuesday, was a former IRA leader,

:54:25.:54:27.

who played a significant role in the Northern

:54:28.:54:29.

Ireland peace process, subsequently becoming Deputy First

:54:30.:54:31.

But for hundreds of viewers, the BBC focused too much

:54:32.:54:34.

on the latter part of his life, and not enough on the former.

:54:35.:54:38.

One of them, called Tim, from Northern Ireland,

:54:39.:54:40.

I think it's unbelievable that BBC has lined up

:54:41.:54:44.

people with prayers, prayers, prayers, for a butcher.

:54:45.:54:46.

Other viewers also objected to the scale and tone

:54:47.:55:00.

of the coverage, including Des Murphy, who sent

:55:01.:55:02.

And Gavin Allen is still with me in the studio.

:55:03.:55:26.

The main charge is that the BBC glossed over his very serious past

:55:27.:55:31.

as a senior IRA commander, and that was unacceptable,

:55:32.:55:34.

It would absolutely have been unacceptable if we would have

:55:35.:55:38.

glossed over that core part of Martin McGuinness' life.

:55:39.:55:41.

It was really clear in the interviews we did,

:55:42.:55:44.

in the packages we ran, and the bulletins,

:55:45.:55:49.

that we were conveying somebody who, yes, in the second half

:55:50.:55:53.

of their life, was a senior politician, and a negotiator

:55:54.:55:56.

for peace and the peace process, but in

:55:57.:55:58.

the early half, was absolutely clearly involved with the IRA

:55:59.:56:01.

and was responsible, either directly or

:56:02.:56:03.

And we - we wouldn't and couldn't have glossed over that.

:56:04.:56:08.

We had hundreds of complaints saying they felt it

:56:09.:56:11.

was not given enough attention, that the terrorist past.

:56:12.:56:13.

And most of those interviewed, such as Tony

:56:14.:56:15.

Blair and Bill Clinton, were paying tribute about the peace process.

:56:16.:56:18.

Critical voices seemed a lot further down the running order.

:56:19.:56:21.

I - I'm not sure which bulletin you are referring to.

:56:22.:56:24.

In terms of prominence overall, in terms of who was being

:56:25.:56:30.

interviewed, and what they had to say.

:56:31.:56:31.

But I can think of many examples and certainly on every

:56:32.:56:34.

programme, that we ran, we will have had the voices

:56:35.:56:37.

of relatives of victims, people such as Norman

:56:38.:56:39.

Tebbit, who were absolutely clear in their utter condemnation

:56:40.:56:42.

and loathing of someone they described

:56:43.:56:43.

as a coward, and the world is a sweeter place without them.

:56:44.:56:51.

We were very clear there was some hatred

:56:52.:56:54.

of Martin McGuinness, but there was also a reference

:56:55.:56:56.

for him by others, and what we had to do is try and make sure that this

:56:57.:57:01.

was a very complex person, for a number of people,

:57:02.:57:03.

We had to convey that was who he was.

:57:04.:57:08.

Reverence is a really interesting issue here,

:57:09.:57:10.

Because when it comes to an obituary, the BBC can be

:57:11.:57:14.

accused of having a tendency to be too

:57:15.:57:16.

reverential for fear of causing offence, because that person has

:57:17.:57:19.

Yes, I don't think it is fear of causing offence.

:57:20.:57:22.

It's all obituaries, not just the BBC.

:57:23.:57:24.

By its very nature, and somebody has just died,

:57:25.:57:26.

you tend to accentuate the positive, and

:57:27.:57:28.

We try to be as balance as we can be, and as impartial as we can be.

:57:29.:57:35.

But in obituaries, I think it is incredibly

:57:36.:57:37.

important new convey a person's life, not just a sort of sensitivity

:57:38.:57:40.

towards relatives and the moment that he's died.

:57:41.:57:43.

Well, as I said, we've had hundreds of complaints

:57:44.:57:45.

from people who are really very angry.

:57:46.:57:47.

They say the BBC didn't give enough attention to Martin

:57:48.:57:50.

I suppose what I might say is that one of the images

:57:51.:57:55.

of this week, that stays with me, about Martin McGuinness,

:57:56.:57:58.

the First Minister, or former First Minister,

:57:59.:58:01.

Arlene Foster, going to that funeral yesterday as a member

:58:02.:58:03.

of the Democratic Unionist Party, at the funeral of a former IRA

:58:04.:58:07.

That is a pretty extraordinary juxtaposition of someone who should

:58:08.:58:10.

be a sworn enemy, but recognises this is actually

:58:11.:58:12.

I don't underplay at all, in any way, the fact that,

:58:13.:58:16.

to try and represent the totality of somebody,

:58:17.:58:22.

Gavin Allen, thank you for coming on Newswatch.

:58:23.:58:26.

Thank you for all of your comments this week.

:58:27.:58:29.

Please share your opinion on BBC News by calling

:58:30.:58:31.

And do have a look at our website for previous

:58:32.:58:36.

We will be back to hear your thoughts

:58:37.:58:39.

about BBC News coverage again next week.

:58:40.:58:41.

Hello, this is Breakfast with Charlie Stayt and Rachel Burden.

:58:42.:59:53.

A blow for President Trump as he admits defeat on one

:59:54.:59:57.

He's forced to abandon a vote on healthcare reform

:59:58.:00:02.

because he couldn't get enough support from his own party.

:00:03.:00:17.

Good morning. It's Saturday, 25th March.

:00:18.:00:20.

Police try to piece together the final movements

:00:21.:00:26.

of the Westminster attacker Khalid Masood.

:00:27.:00:32.

A whatsapp message sent minutes before his killing spree is being

:00:33.:00:41.

looked at and two people remain in custody. The rest have been

:00:42.:00:43.

released. Almost two million people in the UK

:00:44.:00:48.

don't have a bank account. A House of Lords report

:00:49.:00:50.

says it's a scandal. In sport, the Republic of Ireland

:00:51.:00:53.

captain, Seamus Coleman, He was injured in a

:00:54.:00:56.

tackle, in the second half of his nation's,

:00:57.:01:06.

goalless draw with Wales, And we'll look back on Red Nose Day

:01:07.:01:08.

as more than ?70 million We're looking at a chilly start with

:01:09.:01:25.

frost and fog patches to contend with, but we are looking at a dry

:01:26.:01:29.

weekend. In the warmest spots, it is forecast to reach 19 Celsius later

:01:30.:01:31.

today. Thank you. Good morning.

:01:32.:01:38.

First, our main story. Donald Trump has tried to shrug

:01:39.:01:39.

off the biggest setback so far in his presidency,

:01:40.:01:42.

a failure to overhaul He has been forced to scrap a vote

:01:43.:01:44.

on his plans at the last minute because he didn't have enough

:01:45.:01:49.

backing from his own party. It was a promise that became one

:01:50.:01:52.

of the pillars of his campaign We're going to get rid of Obamacare

:01:53.:01:56.

which is a disaster. Repealing and replacing

:01:57.:02:02.

the disaster known as Obamacare. His pitch to voters -

:02:03.:02:09.

trust me, I'm a dealmaker. If you can't make a good deal

:02:10.:02:12.

with a politician than there's Throughout Friday,

:02:13.:02:15.

the Trump administration, led by the vice-president,

:02:16.:02:25.

was trying to persuade fellow Some wouldn't accept proposed

:02:26.:02:28.

cuts to health coverage. Others said they didn't

:02:29.:02:34.

go far enough. Facing defeat, House Speaker Paul

:02:35.:02:36.

Ryan consulted with the President Yeah, we're going to be

:02:37.:02:40.

living with Obamacare I don't know how long

:02:41.:02:45.

it's going to take us My worry is Obamacare

:02:46.:02:49.

is going to be getting even worse. Donald Trump still predicts that

:02:50.:02:53.

Obamacare will end in failure, but conceded until Democrats agree

:02:54.:02:55.

it's time to make changes, It's imploding and soon will explode

:02:56.:02:58.

and it's not going to be pretty. The Democrats don't want to see that

:02:59.:03:05.

so they're going to reach out when they're ready and whenever

:03:06.:03:11.

they're ready, we're ready. Pushing through healthcare

:03:12.:03:15.

change in America was one of President Obama's defining

:03:16.:03:17.

achievements in the White House. It provided more than 20 million

:03:18.:03:20.

people with health insurance, but opponents say it is too

:03:21.:03:23.

expensive and involves too much government

:03:24.:03:26.

interference in people's lives. But criticising Obamacare has proved

:03:27.:03:29.

much easier than replacing After his controversial

:03:30.:03:31.

travel ban was blocked, this failure is another blow

:03:32.:03:38.

to his authority less than three Counter-terrorism police have

:03:39.:03:40.

released all but two of the 11 people arrested since the attack

:03:41.:03:50.

in Westminster on Wednesday. They are appealing for information

:03:51.:03:54.

as they try to establish whether Khalid Masood acted alone

:03:55.:03:56.

or had help, as Alexandra Khalid Masood, the former teacher

:03:57.:03:59.

and father who became a terrorist. As police begin to build a picture

:04:00.:04:05.

of the killer it has emerged that minutes before

:04:06.:04:18.

he launched his attack he used messaging service,

:04:19.:04:20.

Whatsapp to send a message Born Adrian Elms in Kent,

:04:21.:04:22.

by the time he was at Huntley's School for Boys

:04:23.:04:27.

in Tunbridge Wells, But what triggered such a brutal

:04:28.:04:28.

act from a once sporty But, you know, like I say,

:04:29.:04:38.

when I see him, I loved him. I just wanted to give him a lift

:04:39.:04:47.

and talk and balance him up a bit. He had developed

:04:48.:04:51.

a reputation for violence. Last night, the Saudi Arabian

:04:52.:04:53.

Embassy in London confirmed he had worked there as a teacher around

:04:54.:04:57.

ten years ago. The police investigation into

:04:58.:05:00.

Wednesday's attack has been swift. It brought them to this

:05:01.:05:14.

hotel in Brighton. Masood stayed here the night before

:05:15.:05:16.

he carried out his deadly attack Described as a nice guest,

:05:17.:05:19.

he said he was visiting friends. In Manchester, a car

:05:20.:05:24.

was taken away by police. There were further raids

:05:25.:05:28.

and two people, both The police investigation will now

:05:29.:05:30.

focus on finding out if anyone helped Khalid Masood to carry

:05:31.:05:36.

out his attack and at what inspired Alexandra McKenzie is

:05:37.:05:39.

outside New Scotland Yard. Good morning. Are we expecting any

:05:40.:05:58.

further updates from the police? We're not sure. This time yesterday

:05:59.:06:03.

there was a police statement, but we're not expecting that today. This

:06:04.:06:07.

is the third full day of this massive investigation involving

:06:08.:06:10.

hundreds of officers. So far it has been about gathering evidence. We

:06:11.:06:15.

have seen 11 people arrested, all but two have been released and two

:06:16.:06:19.

of those released are on bail. We have seen 20 raids on properties in

:06:20.:06:24.

London, Birmingham and Manchester. Police say they have seized

:06:25.:06:27.

thousands of items from those properties and they've also said

:06:28.:06:31.

that they've seized a large amount of computer data. So it will now

:06:32.:06:35.

become about sifting through that evidence that they have gathered and

:06:36.:06:41.

that one big question, did he act alone or did somebody help him? Did

:06:42.:06:45.

somebody know that this terror attack was going to happen? Also we

:06:46.:06:50.

have that whatsapp message that was sent just minutes before the attack.

:06:51.:06:54.

Police will be very interested to find out who that message was sent

:06:55.:06:57.

to and did they know about the attack?

:06:58.:06:58.

Thank you very much. This weekend marks 60 years

:06:59.:07:03.

since the Treaty of Rome was signed, creating

:07:04.:07:05.

the European Economic Community which we now know

:07:06.:07:07.

as the European Union. More than 20 EU heads of state

:07:08.:07:09.

and government are gathering this weekend in the Italian capital

:07:10.:07:12.

to mark the historic event. Prime Minister Theresa May

:07:13.:07:14.

will not be attending. More needs to be done to help

:07:15.:07:21.

tackle the vicious cycle of debt and overcharging,

:07:22.:07:25.

according to a House It says banks are failing

:07:26.:07:27.

customers who need them most, leaving the poorest to rely

:07:28.:07:32.

on expensive products. Here's our Business

:07:33.:07:33.

Correspondent, Jonty Bloom. 1.7 million people in this country

:07:34.:07:46.

have no bank account, many can only borrow at high interest rates and

:07:47.:07:49.

even if they aren't forced to use payday lenders. The closure of

:07:50.:07:53.

thousands of high street banks also hits the poorest and especially the

:07:54.:07:58.

elderly as they have less access to online services. 40% of the working

:07:59.:08:02.

age population have less than ?100 in savings, and if they have to use

:08:03.:08:07.

pre-paid meters, they pay more more basic services like gas and

:08:08.:08:11.

electricity. To end such financial exclusion the Lords committee is

:08:12.:08:15.

calling for better financial education in schools, a dedicated

:08:16.:08:17.

Government minister to tackle the problem and for the banks to have a

:08:18.:08:21.

duty of care to customers. Too many people still don't have a bank

:08:22.:08:26.

account or access to basic and fairly priced financial services of

:08:27.:08:30.

the sort that most of us take for granted. That means that the poverty

:08:31.:08:34.

premium, where the poor are paying more, for a range of things from

:08:35.:08:38.

heating their house to being able to get a loan is leading them into a

:08:39.:08:44.

vicious circle of further debt and financial distress. The Government

:08:45.:08:49.

says four million people are benefiting from basic bank accounts

:08:50.:08:52.

which charge no fees and that tough new rules mean that the number of

:08:53.:08:54.

payday loans has halved since 2014. The UN has raised concerns

:08:55.:09:04.

about reports of a high number of civilian casualties in the Iraqi

:09:05.:09:07.

city of Mosul. It's claimed at least 200 people

:09:08.:09:09.

died in an air strike Government forces are trying

:09:10.:09:12.

to retake the city from A ban on taking laptops and tablets

:09:13.:09:15.

on board flights to the UK from six Passengers travelling from Turkey,

:09:16.:09:21.

Egypt, Lebanon, Jordan, Tunisia and Saudi Arabia must put

:09:22.:09:24.

any electronic device larger than a standard smart

:09:25.:09:26.

phone into the hold. The ban was imposed

:09:27.:09:31.

following a similar measure Boris Johnson's banned all-male

:09:32.:09:33.

entourages from his trips abroad. It's after he turned up to a women's

:09:34.:09:41.

empowerment event in New York The Foreign Secretary says he'll

:09:42.:09:44.

also ban so-called "manels" which are panels made up of men

:09:45.:09:49.

to increase diversity. A recording has been released

:09:50.:09:59.

of the Hollywood actor Harrison Ford calling himself a "schmuck"

:10:00.:10:02.

after accidentally landing his plane in the wrong part

:10:03.:10:04.

of an airport in California. The Star Wars actor,

:10:05.:10:07.

who has a pilot's licence, was talking to air traffic

:10:08.:10:09.

controllers at John Wayne Airport in Orange County immediately

:10:10.:10:11.

after the incident last month. It was very nearly a big deal for

:10:12.:11:04.

other people actually. He clearly doesn't have the flying

:11:05.:11:10.

skills of Hans Solo. Police are appealing for information

:11:11.:11:15.

as they try to establish whether the Westminster attacker,

:11:16.:11:17.

Khalid Masood, was acting alone, What they do know is

:11:18.:11:19.

that he had a violent past Now questions are being asked

:11:20.:11:24.

about whether he could have been For more let's speak to Ian Acheson

:11:25.:11:27.

a former prison governor who wrote review for the Government

:11:28.:11:32.

on extremism in prisons. Thank you very much for your time

:11:33.:11:44.

this morning. It is not clear yet whether Khalid Masood was

:11:45.:11:47.

radicalised when he was in prison, but it is a problem within the

:11:48.:11:51.

prison system, isn't it? Well, certainly radicalisation in prisons

:11:52.:11:54.

is a problem and we identified that very clearly in my report to

:11:55.:11:58.

Government, but it is very important Charlie to reiterate at the start

:11:59.:12:02.

that there is no information at the moment, no certain information, that

:12:03.:12:06.

points to the significance of his three periods in custody and whether

:12:07.:12:11.

or not they had a bearing on his conversion to murderous terrorist or

:12:12.:12:17.

not, but yes, prisons are an environment where radicalisation can

:12:18.:12:20.

be incubated and we have seen that very clearly in the report and we

:12:21.:12:23.

made a number of recommendations to Government which I'm pleased to say

:12:24.:12:26.

they have adopted to tackle the problem. Yes, now, as we're piecing

:12:27.:12:32.

together more of his life. One of the places we know he was in prison

:12:33.:12:39.

was HMP way land. As I understand it, that's a prison that you have

:12:40.:12:46.

done some research on and looked at? Well, back in 2016/2015 when we

:12:47.:12:50.

wrote the report we visited dozens of prisons and we had access to

:12:51.:12:55.

intelligence and we also widely surveyed some of the 40,000 people

:12:56.:12:59.

who work for the National Offender Management Service. And following

:13:00.:13:03.

our visits and our assessments we were concerned about HMP way land.

:13:04.:13:09.

It was a place that-an environment that was conducive to radicalised

:13:10.:13:14.

behaviour. We drew the general conclusion from our research and

:13:15.:13:19.

analysis that the prison's outside the high security estate, prisons

:13:20.:13:25.

like Wayland did not possess the capability or the capacity to fully

:13:26.:13:29.

understand the threat of radicalisation and staff did not

:13:30.:13:33.

feel supported and enabled to intervene and deal with the problem.

:13:34.:13:39.

This is very interesting. Explain to us, what practical ways could the

:13:40.:13:43.

prison authorities intervene and in what circumstances, what is that

:13:44.:13:47.

defining line between picking out someone within the prison community

:13:48.:13:50.

who is doing something, effectively which is illegal, is that the key

:13:51.:13:54.

element? They have to be doing something that in other

:13:55.:13:56.

circumstances would be illegal to do with what they are saying or what

:13:57.:14:01.

they're doing? Well, prisons are very volatile environments and

:14:02.:14:07.

they're full of young men who are often imprisoned for violent

:14:08.:14:09.

offences and are searching for meaning and in some cases, in some

:14:10.:14:13.

prisons, not all prison environments, it is important to

:14:14.:14:16.

say, but in some institutions they are very close to people who come

:14:17.:14:22.

into custody, who are charismatic and who want to promote the hateful

:14:23.:14:28.

death cult, ideology of Islamist extremism and one of the practical

:14:29.:14:31.

recommendations that we made, that the Government is going to adopt as

:14:32.:14:35.

I understand it, is to make sure that where you have psychologically

:14:36.:14:41.

dangerous, charismatic, they must be separated by people who might be

:14:42.:14:45.

vulnerable to that message. So that's one particular practical way

:14:46.:14:50.

that we might reduce the problem. The other approaches that we've

:14:51.:14:53.

recommended is a significant amount of training and support to staff,

:14:54.:15:00.

all public institutions including prisons, have a legal obligation

:15:01.:15:04.

under the prevent duty to promote British values in prisons. We

:15:05.:15:07.

haven't seen that happening yetment it is a place where you cannot have

:15:08.:15:12.

one narrative dominating all others. So in other words we have to skill

:15:13.:15:17.

up and enable prison staff to be able to confront immediately hateful

:15:18.:15:24.

ideologies being promoted of any extremist nature, including Islamist

:15:25.:15:27.

extremism on our prison landings. It is a very difficult task. Prisons

:15:28.:15:31.

are volatile environments and there is a lot else going on as I'm sure

:15:32.:15:36.

you know from the headlines in terms of an order and control crisis

:15:37.:15:41.

across many of our prison institutions. So this is just one

:15:42.:15:45.

more of a serious load of challenges that the Prison Service faces, but

:15:46.:15:50.

it is a lethal challenge. Given what you're saying, it is very

:15:51.:15:55.

interesting how you explain who might be selected possibly to be

:15:56.:15:59.

removed from other prisoners. Would you have much confidence that as we

:16:00.:16:07.

speak today there are people free within prisons to propagate the

:16:08.:16:11.

belief set that we would associate with so-called Islamic State? Would

:16:12.:16:14.

you be confident in thinking if someone is doing that openly that

:16:15.:16:21.

they would be removed? No, I'm not confident at the moment that that

:16:22.:16:23.

would happen. But I have confidence that the Government are taking the

:16:24.:16:27.

matter very seriously and there are measures in train to deal with the

:16:28.:16:31.

issue and to be able to isolate these people and there are only a

:16:32.:16:35.

few of them. We believe that the intelligence would indicate there

:16:36.:16:40.

are only a very small number of charismatic people inside prison who

:16:41.:16:47.

want to propagate Islamic extreme ym and convert others to their cause

:16:48.:16:51.

and they must be isolated and their influence cut off and we must do

:16:52.:16:54.

something with those people when we've got them isolated. I don't

:16:55.:16:58.

think it is enough to say it is a safeguarding issue and we just move

:16:59.:17:01.

these people out of the way. We have to understand what their motivations

:17:02.:17:06.

are and we have to try and intervene to reduce their dangerousness and to

:17:07.:17:11.

return them to normal locations as soon as that it is safe to do so.

:17:12.:17:17.

Thank you very much. The author of the Government commissioned

:17:18.:17:19.

independent review into extremism in prisons. Just a heads up, the clocks

:17:20.:17:26.

go forward and we will be getting advice on how to encourage children

:17:27.:17:32.

to work their way into the sleep pattern when the clocks change.

:17:33.:17:35.

Here's Chris with a look at this morning's weather.

:17:36.:17:44.

High cloud around. It will make the sunshine hazy, but for most of us, a

:17:45.:17:50.

glorious, if somewhat chilly start to the morning. Yes, we have seen

:17:51.:17:57.

temperatures tumble overnight. So it is a cold start to the day. But with

:17:58.:18:01.

the sun already out, the temperatures are rising. We've got

:18:02.:18:04.

temperatures up to ten Celsius in West Wales. And later on today, we

:18:05.:18:08.

should see those temperatures hitting 18 Celsius or 19 Celsius.

:18:09.:18:12.

That's around about the temperature for the highest temperature we have

:18:13.:18:16.

seen so far this year. It will be one of the warmest days of the year

:18:17.:18:22.

so far. Quite a bit of cloud around. There will be rain in Shetland from

:18:23.:18:25.

time to time. The afternoon becoming drier. Away from the far north, the

:18:26.:18:31.

rest of mainland, sunshine. Highs of 17 Celsius. We should see

:18:32.:18:35.

temperatures up to 17 Celsius in Northern Ireland. Western counties

:18:36.:18:38.

having the highest temperatures here. For Wales, 18, 19 Celsius on

:18:39.:18:42.

the cards. Pretty good temperatures as well for the north of Cornwall

:18:43.:18:49.

and Devon. 16 Celsius or so for London, around the South Coast, it

:18:50.:18:53.

will feel chilly where we have the brisk on shore winds. It is these

:18:54.:18:56.

winds that will keep the frost at bay. Elsewhere, with clear skies,

:18:57.:19:02.

again a cold one in the countryside, temperatures probably getting down

:19:03.:19:06.

to minus four or minus five Celsius in the coldest spots. That takes us

:19:07.:19:10.

on into tomorrow, high pressure is still with us. A similar day. We

:19:11.:19:15.

might see early morning cloud with sunshine coming through. We're

:19:16.:19:18.

staying dry. Similar kind of temperatures, maybe an odd degree

:19:19.:19:21.

cooler across England, but still decent for the time of year. We will

:19:22.:19:26.

see the warmest spots across western areas of Wales and north-west

:19:27.:19:30.

England where we could see temperatures around 16 or 17

:19:31.:19:34.

Celsius. As we've already mentioned, the clocks will be going forward,

:19:35.:19:37.

that means darker mornings, but lighter evenings and for those of us

:19:38.:19:43.

working tomorrow, less time in bed! Yes, see you then Chris Fawkes!

:19:44.:19:52.

It can be a bit of a nightmare getting children to bed on time,

:19:53.:19:55.

but with the clocks going forward by an hour tonight, what impact

:19:56.:19:58.

As part of the BBC's Terrific Scientific project -

:19:59.:20:02.

to get more young people involved in science - schoolchildren

:20:03.:20:04.

are teaming up with academics from Oxford University

:20:05.:20:06.

to try to measure the impact of that lost lie-in.

:20:07.:20:09.

Breakfast's Jayne McCubbin went to Hull to join the experiment.

:20:10.:20:13.

Bedtime in Hull, or so it should be. This is Elie's house. Describe

:20:14.:20:23.

bedtime. Nightmare. He's never ready. No, I'm not ready. He always

:20:24.:20:31.

wants to watch more telly. Argues when his brothers are going to bed

:20:32.:20:39.

later than he is. Bla-bla-bla. The bedtime routine begins for elie and

:20:40.:20:42.

for Amy. What about mornings? Mornings are a struggle. Come on,

:20:43.:20:48.

Amy, it is time to get up. Five minutes later, Amy will you please

:20:49.:20:52.

get up. Amy, will you please? It can be tough. One thing can make it

:20:53.:20:58.

tougher. I'm not even tired. That one thing is... I'm not very tired.

:20:59.:21:04.

The clock change. It is a nightmare and something I did not consider

:21:05.:21:07.

until I had children. Stop showing off. Get into bedment it really does

:21:08.:21:11.

affect things. It knocks everything out. It is a disaster. It is

:21:12.:21:22.

complicated. Every time it happens, I wish they didn't do the clock

:21:23.:21:25.

change. It will take a while. So for some, it's a problem, but how much

:21:26.:21:31.

of a problem? Well, now for the very first time,

:21:32.:21:37.

Oxford University with the help of children at this primary school will

:21:38.:21:41.

try to measure that problem. What we're trying to see is if people who

:21:42.:21:45.

are more tired have slower reactions? That's it, yes. These

:21:46.:21:49.

children are being monitored in the days before and after the clock

:21:50.:21:55.

change. Their reaction time is measured, their sleep patterns

:21:56.:21:59.

recorded. You have got how many? Seven. Seven was your best. How many

:22:00.:22:06.

times have you dropped it? Oh... LAUGHTER

:22:07.:22:12.

Spill the beans. I dropped it a lot. Do raiser sharp reactions follow a

:22:13.:22:16.

good night's sleep? Does the clock change stuff it all up? We see

:22:17.:22:20.

children who are not alert. They're not taking anything in. Are you

:22:21.:22:24.

curious about what this experiment is going to show? Are you

:22:25.:22:28.

interested? I'm really looking forward to seeing the effect on the

:22:29.:22:34.

reaction tests. No cheating. As for Miss? Oh. I caught it. Not bad. Not

:22:35.:22:43.

bad. Not great to be fair. Nowhere near as great as them. What type did

:22:44.:22:49.

you go to bed, Miss? I daren't tell you. I'm not a great sleeper! Sleep,

:22:50.:22:54.

you see, matters. Good night. Just how much it matters

:22:55.:23:00.

we'll find out in the next month when Oxford University report their

:23:01.:23:05.

findings. I'm asleep. It doesn't look like sleeping to me. Get into

:23:06.:23:14.

bed. If they say they are asleep, they

:23:15.:23:16.

probably aren't. How are the sleep patterns for you?

:23:17.:23:27.

I get affected every day. In this job, earlies, lates, going to bed

:23:28.:23:33.

late, but trying to get up a bit later. I'm going to test Rachel...

:23:34.:23:39.

This is my sixth early in a row. Right. That's my excuse. Are you

:23:40.:23:47.

ready? I'm ready. Are we on it? OK. Yes!

:23:48.:23:55.

See what she is like tomorrow. Let's look through some of the front pages

:23:56.:24:00.

first and we'll just look at the Times newspaper is the first one

:24:01.:24:03.

we're going to look at now. If I hold those up for you. Of course, a

:24:04.:24:09.

lot of attention right now on the police search, secret texts of

:24:10.:24:13.

terrorist, you can see there on the front of the Times and many of the

:24:14.:24:18.

newspapers using the images that emerged of Khalid Masood. This is

:24:19.:24:21.

the picture from Tunbridge Wells in Kent when he was at school. All the

:24:22.:24:25.

papers, of course, needless to say are desperate to find out more about

:24:26.:24:30.

his life, his background. The Mail describes him as the middle-class

:24:31.:24:36.

Jihadi and growing up in east Sussex and later on his relationship with

:24:37.:24:40.

his partner, the mother of his two daughters. The Mirror has spoken to

:24:41.:24:48.

his first wife, describing him as a violent psychopath. The last one

:24:49.:24:53.

from the front pages is the Guardian newspaper, that's an image you will

:24:54.:24:56.

be familiar with by now. Police race to unravel the past of the London

:24:57.:25:01.

killer. Well, Ian, we might touch on that story in a moment, but first of

:25:02.:25:04.

all let's start with something which will become quite important to all

:25:05.:25:08.

of us shortly and that's the new ?1 coin. Yes, because whenever they

:25:09.:25:13.

bring out a new coin, they tell you 100 years before it is about to

:25:14.:25:16.

happen and then suddenly it arrives. On Tuesday the new coin goes into

:25:17.:25:20.

circulation, but of course, you forget the amount of areas that this

:25:21.:25:24.

affects like machines that need to change over their capability to

:25:25.:25:28.

accept the new coin. Tesco are in the middle of this, because you have

:25:29.:25:33.

to pay ?1 to get the trolley. Well, Tesco aren't the other one. I always

:25:34.:25:37.

look for the trolley that's been left somewhere where you don't have

:25:38.:25:44.

to pay the 1. They have got 100,000 trolleys at Tesco's to accept the

:25:45.:25:50.

new 12-sided coin. How are they going to deal with it? They are

:25:51.:25:53.

going to allow you to use the trolleys. For free? Are you take the

:25:54.:25:59.

whole stack with them around the aisle like a big caterpillar

:26:00.:26:02.

trolley! It is interesting you've chosen that

:26:03.:26:06.

because a lot of people have said and in the light of Wednesday's

:26:07.:26:11.

attack, you know, often these things sound trite, the thing about life

:26:12.:26:14.

going on. The little things, the silly things that you do every day,

:26:15.:26:19.

you go shopping and you take the kids to the park, it... It's true.

:26:20.:26:26.

There is an element of that. There are hundreds of people working on

:26:27.:26:31.

this to make sure that the world can carry on functioning with new money.

:26:32.:26:35.

Railway ticket machines is another one where people are going to

:26:36.:26:38.

discover their pound coin doesn't necessarily work if it has not been

:26:39.:26:42.

changed over. Are you going to take us back to Wednesday's events.

:26:43.:26:45.

Massive coverage. Why have you picked out this piece from the

:26:46.:26:50.

Times? This is fascinating. We talk about this a lot on the radio, the

:26:51.:26:56.

whole free speech thing and how do you police which videos are allowed,

:26:57.:27:01.

what is offensive to one person is an education to another. You know,

:27:02.:27:05.

images of animals being treated badly or children being bullied are

:27:06.:27:09.

available online. I find those offensive as well and Google is

:27:10.:27:14.

accused allowing hate preachers to post videos as well within this big

:27:15.:27:18.

mix, but if you begin to police that, then where, who sets the

:27:19.:27:22.

criteria? Who is setting the bar as to what you can and cannot have

:27:23.:27:26.

online? If you decide we're going to ban somebody whose opinions are

:27:27.:27:36.

somehow sub dikate the terrain of decency. Google suffered a lot

:27:37.:27:40.

recently because a lot of advertisers pulled their advertising

:27:41.:27:42.

because they have been alined to these extremist videos. They have an

:27:43.:27:50.

automatic advertising system. You had ads for the British Army for

:27:51.:27:55.

recruitment before stuff like this which didn't sit very well with

:27:56.:27:58.

people. They are trying to get on top of it, but I have no idea how

:27:59.:28:04.

you police that. The thing about the advertising, that might be the way

:28:05.:28:08.

the bigger portals make those decisions. If they see it as

:28:09.:28:11.

commercially bad, they will act. I don't think a lot of people consider

:28:12.:28:15.

that. You look at YouTube, the ad comes on, you're willing for it to

:28:16.:28:19.

finish, you're not paying much attention. You want to get to the

:28:20.:28:23.

funny shot of the kitten falling off-the-shelf. But in all that time,

:28:24.:28:29.

there is millions of different clips of stuff that are proceeded by ads.

:28:30.:28:35.

This tiny piece which you've managed to squirrel out of the Mirror about

:28:36.:28:40.

the learner driver who has finally passed her test on the 33rd time!

:28:41.:28:46.

Yes, if you get to ten, somebody should say, "I think we better stop

:28:47.:28:50.

this." Do you want to meet this person on the road? I think maybe

:28:51.:28:54.

you're a bit rubbish at this driving thing. Good luck. Keep in touch. Is

:28:55.:28:58.

there any accounting what was going on wrong in the other 32? No, we

:28:59.:29:01.

can't get to the bottom of what happened. He has had 14 different

:29:02.:29:09.

instructors. And cost ?10,000. One instructor said, "He gave up and he

:29:10.:29:12.

told me to give up because I'd never pass." There is that possibility

:29:13.:29:17.

that you luck out on the last question or the, I don't know, some

:29:18.:29:23.

minor thing that happens by a terrible coincidence on each one,

:29:24.:29:28.

but 33 times, your insurance premium you'd think if it took you 32 goes

:29:29.:29:33.

would be about ?52,000. His parallel parking must be amazing! It should

:29:34.:29:40.

be by now. Stay away from Barnsley if you don't want to bump into this

:29:41.:29:45.

man! You're going to come back and talk

:29:46.:29:49.

about one of those things that people get really wound up about,

:29:50.:29:51.

parking. Oh, this is a beauty. Mike dressed up

:29:52.:29:56.

as a cowboy while doing What more could you want

:29:57.:30:06.

on a Saturday morning? See how he got on trying out barn

:30:07.:30:12.

dancing as a way to keep fit. We'll have a summary of the news

:30:13.:30:16.

in just a moment.trup Hello, this is Breakfast, with

:30:17.:31:23.

Charlie Stayt and Rachel Burden. Coming up before 9am: Chris

:31:24.:31:28.

will have the weather for you. But first, a summary of this

:31:29.:31:31.

morning's main news. President Trump says he's surprised

:31:32.:31:34.

and disappointed after failing to secure support from his own party

:31:35.:31:36.

for plans to replace Obamacare. He had to withdraw his health care

:31:37.:31:40.

bill after it failed to get enough President Trump has said

:31:41.:31:43.

there were parts of it he didn't like anyway,

:31:44.:31:49.

and it'll mean a better bill at some Speaking earlier on Breakfast,

:31:50.:31:52.

former advisor to George W Bush, Anneke Green, told us

:31:53.:31:57.

President Trump still has It is coming across in the press

:31:58.:31:59.

as a blow, but he will portray this as a smart move

:32:00.:32:10.

and something he is doing for the American people,

:32:11.:32:13.

and I do not think it We see that even in the praise

:32:14.:32:16.

coming from the groups in the house Counter-terrorism police have

:32:17.:32:29.

released all but two of the 11 people arrested since the attack

:32:30.:32:35.

in Westminster on Wednesday. The attacker, Khalid Masood,

:32:36.:32:37.

killed three people when he drove into pedestrians

:32:38.:32:39.

on Westminster Bridge before stabbing a police officer

:32:40.:32:41.

to death outside Parliament. Police are still trying to establish

:32:42.:32:43.

whether he acted alone. Questions are being asked about

:32:44.:32:53.

whether he could have been radicalised whilst serving time in

:32:54.:32:59.

prison. We were concerned about the prison

:33:00.:33:05.

he attended, it was a place that had an environment that was conducive to

:33:06.:33:11.

radicalised behaviour. I cannot be drawn on details, but we did draw

:33:12.:33:14.

the general conclusion from our research and analysis that the

:33:15.:33:19.

prisons outside the high security estate, prisons like Wayland which

:33:20.:33:22.

are a medium secure facility, did not possess the opacity to fully

:33:23.:33:27.

understand the threat of radicalisation.

:33:28.:33:29.

This weekend marks 60 years since the Treaty of Rome

:33:30.:33:32.

was signed, creating the European Economic

:33:33.:33:33.

Community which we now know as the European Union.

:33:34.:33:37.

More than 20 EU heads of state and government are gathering this

:33:38.:33:40.

weekend in the Italian capital to mark the historic event.

:33:41.:33:42.

Prime Minister Theresa May will not be attending.

:33:43.:33:45.

The UN has raised concerns about reports of a high number

:33:46.:33:48.

of civilian casualties in the Iraqi city of Mosul.

:33:49.:33:51.

It's claimed at least 200 people died in an air strike

:33:52.:33:54.

Government forces are trying to retake the city from

:33:55.:33:59.

More needs to be done to help tackle the vicious cycle

:34:00.:34:05.

of debt and overcharging, according to a House

:34:06.:34:07.

It says banks are failing customers who need them most,

:34:08.:34:12.

leaving the poorest to rely on expensive products.

:34:13.:34:15.

It adds controls on "rent to own" products must be

:34:16.:34:17.

Too many people don't have access to a bank account of the sort most of

:34:18.:34:35.

us take for granted. That means that the poverty premium, where the poor

:34:36.:34:38.

are paying more for a range of things, from eating their house to

:34:39.:34:42.

being able to get a loan, is leading them into a vicious circle of

:34:43.:34:46.

further debt and financial distress. This year's Comic Relief has raised

:34:47.:34:50.

more than ?71 million. The fundraiser included

:34:51.:34:52.

James Corden's Carpool Karaoke with Take That and a special

:34:53.:34:54.

Love Actually sequel. Sir Lenny Henry opened the show with

:34:55.:35:04.

a tribute to those affected by the Westminster attack.

:35:05.:35:16.

The evening began with Comic Relief co-founder, Sir Lenny Henry.

:35:17.:35:25.

The comedian and actor also referred briefly to the tragic

:35:26.:35:28.

We would like to send our thoughts and love to all those affected

:35:29.:35:35.

Tonight is a chance to save lives, to reach out in the spirit

:35:36.:35:40.

The money you give tonight will make things better

:35:41.:35:46.

for people with tough lives at home and abroad.

:35:47.:35:49.

The most anticipated moment of the night was the Love Actually

:35:50.:35:52.

sequel, featuring many of the original cast and a couple

:35:53.:35:54.

Other comedy highlights included a James Corden,

:35:55.:36:18.

And a special appearance from Mrs Brown.

:36:19.:36:34.

There were musical performances from the likes of Ed Sheeran,

:36:35.:36:44.

As well as appeal films with celebrities visiting some

:36:45.:36:47.

of the places where the money raised can

:36:48.:36:49.

So, ?71 million raised, thank you to all of you who sent money.

:36:50.:37:18.

Good morning. You were there as well, that counts.

:37:19.:37:24.

Good morning. We are talking about Seamus Coleman, who is grateful for

:37:25.:37:33.

his country, but in a flash his season is over. It was a horrible

:37:34.:37:39.

tackle in a bad-tempered game. It resulted in this tackle, which ended

:37:40.:37:43.

up in him breaking his right leg. Neil Taylor who did the tackle, it

:37:44.:37:48.

was Miss timed, rather than being malicious. Afterwards he was very

:37:49.:37:53.

apologetic. He went to see the Republic of Ireland team to

:37:54.:37:58.

apologise, like then Seamus was already on his way to hospital.

:37:59.:38:01.

Gareth Bale had the only real chances for either side,

:38:02.:38:05.

but he'll miss the next game against Serbia, after

:38:06.:38:08.

Of course the main talking point though is that awful

:38:09.:38:12.

Manager Martin O'Neill, said it was a bad break -

:38:13.:38:18.

it wasn't a malicious tackle, but it was mistimed

:38:19.:38:20.

Neil Taylor was sent off for it, as Coleman was carried off

:38:21.:38:28.

on a stretcher, needing gas and air, to help him cope.

:38:29.:38:35.

A real blow to him. He was having the season of a lifetime at club

:38:36.:38:42.

level. He is a great player for us, a great captain. A great character.

:38:43.:38:50.

It is a big, big loss. A big loss. A big loss to everyone, a big loss to

:38:51.:38:57.

us. But he will fight back, I hope. It puts things in perspective, I

:38:58.:39:00.

suppose. Taylor is not that type of player.

:39:01.:39:05.

He has had a serious injury himself. He is a great boy, a cracking lad. I

:39:06.:39:13.

have not seen the challenge, but I have seen the outcome, if you like.

:39:14.:39:19.

It is a bad one for Seamus, and that is a shame because he is someone I

:39:20.:39:25.

respect. I think he is one of the best fullbacks in the Premier

:39:26.:39:26.

League. Dan from football focus joined us.

:39:27.:39:38.

When you say a bad break, what does that mean? A double fracture. You

:39:39.:39:43.

saw the pain that he was in last night, and the way that Shane Long

:39:44.:39:47.

was comforting him. You know that he will be out of the game for a long

:39:48.:39:53.

time. It could be six months or a year out of football. It really is

:39:54.:39:57.

an awful injury. You saw how it affected Neil Taylor as well. John

:39:58.:40:03.

was that the game last night and will join us on the programme. We

:40:04.:40:10.

have got Liver Bird looking at Scotland against Slovenia. There is

:40:11.:40:19.

a sense they are in a difficult place at the moment. There is also

:40:20.:40:23.

an international flavour will stop we have got the Belgian

:40:24.:40:30.

international, looking at some of the best football players on the

:40:31.:40:33.

planet, can he make this Belgian side into a brilliant side?

:40:34.:40:41.

At the moment, Everton have an outstanding striker. What is it like

:40:42.:40:47.

to be working with him is to mark when you work with him, you

:40:48.:40:50.

understand that he lives for the game. He is pure football, from the

:40:51.:40:55.

start to the finish. From the age of 21 to the age of 23 now, he has

:40:56.:41:01.

changed a lot. He wants to improve. He works on the whole play, he

:41:02.:41:04.

worked on improving and using his body. What he has never lost is the

:41:05.:41:11.

outstanding quality of scoring goals. I always believe he has the

:41:12.:41:17.

possibility of becoming the best in world football because he has got

:41:18.:41:21.

absolutely everything. A fantastic season. That is high praise. Belgium

:41:22.:41:28.

are playing Weise this weekend. Look across the international spectrum.

:41:29.:41:31.

And domestically, League 1 and football to look at. We have been to

:41:32.:41:38.

Bradford this week. They are a German owned site. It is an

:41:39.:41:44.

interesting insight. Another bit of international football this weekend,

:41:45.:41:52.

so we are on from midday. Half an hour. We are not allowed the full

:41:53.:41:59.

hour. We will cram it in. We have got Andy Cole on site as well, so it

:42:00.:42:01.

should be a good half hour. I have a mental image of you on an

:42:02.:42:16.

exercise machine, a power half hour. If you want to sweat, try and

:42:17.:42:19.

dancing! Formula One is back,

:42:20.:42:23.

and so is Lewis Hamilton, who's Hamilton claimed pole position

:42:24.:42:26.

for a record-equalling sixth time, at the Australian Grand Prix,

:42:27.:42:31.

as the new era of faster, more demanding cars got off

:42:32.:42:34.

to a promising start. He was more than a quarter

:42:35.:42:37.

of a second quicker, than Ferrari's Sebastian Vettel,

:42:38.:42:41.

with Hamilton's new Mercedes team And good luck later today

:42:42.:42:43.

to the four British riders in qualifying for the opening Moto

:42:44.:42:51.

GP race of the season in Qatar. Cal Crutchlow, Bradley Smith,

:42:52.:42:54.

Scott Redding are joined Right, he has gone now, so we can

:42:55.:42:56.

talk about one dancing. Could you last a whole

:42:57.:43:23.

hour doing a non-stop, Well, add a live band, complete

:43:24.:43:25.

mayhem and a lot of laughter? You've heard of zumba,

:43:26.:43:29.

and street dance, well now barn dancing could be the way

:43:30.:43:32.

to improve your fitness. I went to a class in

:43:33.:43:34.

Birmingham to try it out. It's time to cast aside

:43:35.:43:39.

all we thought we knew It's not about do-si-does at this

:43:40.:43:41.

former swimming baths in Birmingham. Obviously the hat could be

:43:42.:43:47.

a health and safety issue. They take the best bits

:43:48.:43:58.

from traditional dances across the world and put them

:43:59.:44:09.

together in an hour-long workout. If you go to the gym,

:44:10.:44:18.

you use one machine to work Here, you use all the muscles

:44:19.:44:25.

and so we do a lot of shaking and we use our faces as well,

:44:26.:44:31.

so we are getting a total workout. It is believed by many that barn

:44:32.:44:38.

dancing started a couple of centuries ago in parts

:44:39.:44:41.

of the British Isles where farm peasants would gather

:44:42.:44:43.

in barns to copy the ballroom dances It is sociable and yet

:44:44.:44:47.

it brings people together because you are always

:44:48.:44:53.

swapping partners and positions. It is mentally challenging

:44:54.:44:57.

as well as physically. We have all done this

:44:58.:45:00.

before at weddings. It is a form of dance that really

:45:01.:45:22.

gets people who have no dancing ability or interest

:45:23.:45:25.

up onto the dancefloor You learn the moves

:45:26.:45:28.

eventually as you go along. It does not matter if you embarrass

:45:29.:45:36.

yourself and it is fun I like it because it is energetic

:45:37.:45:39.

and it is really fun. The other thing that

:45:40.:45:45.

strikes me is how My partner looked bemused

:45:46.:45:47.

rather than amused. With the band keeping the energy

:45:48.:46:10.

going, the hour flew by. Because you were laughing and with

:46:11.:46:23.

the music, you did not notice that you had done a whole hour of

:46:24.:46:26.

exercise. I remember once, long ago, I used to

:46:27.:46:30.

go to lapse. And you would dance for two or three hours. It is a great

:46:31.:46:36.

form of exercise. Yes, whatever it is. A discotheque.

:46:37.:46:43.

Yes, Charlie, that is you back in the 70s. Thank you. Are you

:46:44.:46:46.

finished? I think so. Nearly two million people don't

:46:47.:46:51.

have a bank account, and four in ten households own less

:46:52.:46:54.

than ?100 in savings, A House of Lords committee says

:46:55.:46:56.

the government should appoint a minister to tackle what it calls

:46:57.:47:02.

the scandal of the poorest people being barred from basic

:47:03.:47:06.

financial services. Joining us now from our London

:47:07.:47:08.

newsroom is Paul Lewis This is what is known as financial

:47:09.:47:19.

exclusion. Can you do find it more broadly for us? Well, it is, it is

:47:20.:47:24.

people who don't have access to a bank account, which is more and more

:47:25.:47:30.

annoyed Billy Macri important now, people who can't get low-cost loans,

:47:31.:47:34.

people who are just excluded from all the basic financial services

:47:35.:47:37.

that most of us do take for granted. So, it is a broad range of people,

:47:38.:47:42.

and nearly to me and people don't even have a bank account, and that

:47:43.:47:45.

is something that these banks could do something about. What sort of

:47:46.:47:50.

people are we talking about, and what is the problem? Well, they are

:47:51.:47:55.

mainly lower income people, poorer people. The report makes it clear

:47:56.:47:59.

that one of the things that is making financial exclusion worse has

:48:00.:48:03.

been six years of cuts in welfare benefits, and of course there will

:48:04.:48:08.

be more of those at the start of April. It wants the government to

:48:09.:48:13.

look at the impact of those cuts. It is also people who cannot manage

:48:14.:48:16.

with online or mobile phone apps, and needs a bank branch to visit,

:48:17.:48:22.

but more than half of them have closed over the last 20 years. The

:48:23.:48:26.

committee says very clearly that there should be something to replace

:48:27.:48:32.

those for those who can't manage, either through disability or being

:48:33.:48:36.

very old. I am talking about the older old, as they call it. Yes. It

:48:37.:48:41.

is interesting because he would have thought in this day and age, a bank

:48:42.:48:45.

account is almost required. Yes, it is. And are supposed to let people

:48:46.:48:52.

have what is called a basic bank account, that was one successes of a

:48:53.:48:55.

previous look at financial exclusion a decade ago. But banks don't

:48:56.:49:00.

promote them, and the committee says clearly they should be more active

:49:01.:49:04.

in promoting them, and really anybody, with the possible exception

:49:05.:49:08.

of people who have just gone bankrupt or just out of prison,

:49:09.:49:12.

anybody should be able to open a bank account. And even those really

:49:13.:49:16.

excluded groups, the bank should be doing more. The other thing the

:49:17.:49:22.

emitting says is with bank branches dosing, it makes it more difficult

:49:23.:49:27.

to go in and open an account, but post offices should make more of the

:49:28.:49:31.

fact that you can use them like a bank. De Guzman should also credit

:49:32.:49:37.

unions and see them as providing an alternative service for those on low

:49:38.:49:43.

incomes -- the government. Yes, the Post Office role, that is something

:49:44.:49:47.

many are not aware of, that you can conduct normal bank service there.

:49:48.:49:51.

Whose responsibility is it to support these people and give them

:49:52.:49:54.

guidance, and show them how to manage their finances? The problem

:49:55.:49:59.

is, it is no one's responsibility. They used to be a financial

:50:00.:50:04.

exclusion task force which has now been scrapped. This committee has

:50:05.:50:08.

done a great job in bringing this back into the public domain. It

:50:09.:50:13.

wants, as you heard earlier, a minister for financial inclusion,

:50:14.:50:18.

and somebody who is responsible and gives an annual report to Parliament

:50:19.:50:22.

every year about what progress is being made. That would be a great

:50:23.:50:26.

advantage because at the moment it is split between at least for

:50:27.:50:30.

government departments and, of course, local authorities, who also

:50:31.:50:35.

have to do a lot. I think we need a concentration on this to make sure

:50:36.:50:39.

that everybody, even those on the lowest incomes, get access, not just

:50:40.:50:43.

to financial services, but to reasonably costed financial

:50:44.:50:47.

services. It is an important issue, thank you for highlighting this.

:50:48.:50:49.

More on Money Box, Radio 4 at midday.

:50:50.:50:56.

Here's Chris with a look at this morning's weather.

:50:57.:51:02.

It looks lovely, that is just outside our building. Is that

:51:03.:51:09.

reflected elsewhere? Yes, it is. We have got the same

:51:10.:51:14.

high cloud in the sky from our weather watcher picture. Sunshine

:51:15.:51:20.

for most parts of the country. A little bit of missed in the

:51:21.:51:27.

background, but clearing away. This morning we have had temperatures as

:51:28.:51:31.

low as minus five Celsius, but with the sun already up, temperatures are

:51:32.:51:35.

rising quickly and later this afternoon they should climb to 18 or

:51:36.:51:41.

even 19 Celsius. If we reach 19, that would make today the warmest

:51:42.:51:46.

day of the year so far. Today we have got high pressure in charge. It

:51:47.:51:51.

is bringing some strong winds to Southern counties of England, so

:51:52.:51:55.

rusty conditions, keeping things cooler around the coastline of East

:51:56.:52:01.

Anglia and eastern Kent. For the far north of Scotland, cloudy skies for

:52:02.:52:05.

Shepton. Some morning drizzle, but apart from that, mainland Scotland

:52:06.:52:12.

will be dry. The highest temperatures will be in Western

:52:13.:52:18.

counties. 18 or 19 in West Wales and parts of Southwest England. 15 or 16

:52:19.:52:29.

in London. Overnight tonight, the wind stays fairly brisk in the

:52:30.:52:33.

south, keeping the frost at bay, but another cold one in the countryside

:52:34.:52:35.

with tempered as taking another tumble. Eight few folk patch is

:52:36.:52:43.

possible, maybe some cloud as well. By and large another decent day with

:52:44.:52:47.

plenty of spring sunshine to look forward to. Chilly winds knocking

:52:48.:52:51.

the edge of temperatures in parts of southern England. For most of us,

:52:52.:52:59.

more spring sunshine on the way. Similar temperatures, but still good

:53:00.:53:03.

for the time of year. Not a bad weekend all in all. A reminder that

:53:04.:53:11.

the clocks will go forward and our tonight, so that means an hour less

:53:12.:53:15.

in bed. Back to you both. Thank you, Chris.

:53:16.:53:19.

Buildings around the world will be plunged into darkness

:53:20.:53:21.

tonight to raise awareness of climate change.

:53:22.:53:24.

Buckingham Palace, the Empire State Building

:53:25.:53:25.

and Beijing's Bird's Nest Stadium are among the hundreds

:53:26.:53:31.

of landmarks taking part in Earth Hour, which is organised

:53:32.:53:33.

Its Chief Executive is Tanya Steele and she joins us now.

:53:34.:53:42.

This is an incredible event where hundreds of millions of people

:53:43.:53:47.

across the world turn off their lights for an hour at 8:30pm as the

:53:48.:53:53.

biggest symbolic action against climate change. It is something we

:53:54.:53:57.

are concerned about. There is a serious message that sits high and

:53:58.:54:02.

the onset of climate change. This is from previous events. It is quite

:54:03.:54:07.

dramatic. That is the whole point, it is a moment where you make people

:54:08.:54:12.

stop and think. Yes, very much so. Does it actually do any good. I

:54:13.:54:18.

think it does, firstly because of the numbers of people involved, but

:54:19.:54:22.

also because we know those people think differently about climate

:54:23.:54:27.

change. We have seen big shifts from government, business, regarding

:54:28.:54:30.

climate change. We do need to reduce our emissions in terms of how much

:54:31.:54:36.

carbon energy we use. If we don't, we will see widespread impacts. Last

:54:37.:54:41.

year was the hottest year on record. This is not something that we can

:54:42.:54:45.

ignore, and certainly we are concerned about the impact in some

:54:46.:54:53.

of the most important places in the world including places like the

:54:54.:54:57.

Great Barrier Reef. It is all very well sitting here in the studio

:54:58.:55:02.

talking about it, but unless countries like China and India are

:55:03.:55:08.

included in this, it makes little difference. There has been an

:55:09.:55:14.

agreement to the reduction in emissions, and that is something we

:55:15.:55:17.

have to accelerate. We are seeing a huge swing behind solar energy,

:55:18.:55:22.

right the way through to electric cars, which we hope will hit the

:55:23.:55:28.

streets very seen whether it is in London or Manchester or elsewhere.

:55:29.:55:31.

There are also things we can do at home. If as an idea? It is not just

:55:32.:55:40.

switching of the lights, although that is a good thing. Up to 30% of

:55:41.:55:45.

all carbon emissions come from our homes, and if we don't integrate our

:55:46.:55:50.

walls and lofts, which actually saves money, and that is leaking out

:55:51.:55:55.

into the atmosphere. How much does your heart sink when you hear some

:55:56.:56:00.

of the things that come out of the US administration and some of Donald

:56:01.:56:05.

Trump's team? There is no doubt that we need all nations to get behind

:56:06.:56:10.

this, and the science is compelling, from Nasa through to the British

:56:11.:56:13.

Antarctic survey, who know that climate change is beginning to hit

:56:14.:56:17.

hard. Politicians do sometimes ignore scientific advice. Yes, but

:56:18.:56:24.

the good news is this is a worldwide agreement. China is committed to

:56:25.:56:28.

investing 300 billion in renewable energy. We are seeing a huge

:56:29.:56:34.

acceleration. In the UK, in terms of the great we take our electricity

:56:35.:56:36.

from, a quarter comes from renewables. We are calling on the

:56:37.:56:41.

government to do more and to do it faster, especially on things like

:56:42.:56:45.

emissions. We are very worried about ebb pollution. Thank you for joining

:56:46.:56:46.

us this morning. History helps us to paint

:56:47.:56:49.

a picture of the past, but the future of the subject may

:56:50.:56:51.

well lie in virtual reality. A development team from Liverpool

:56:52.:56:54.

has invented a new way to use one of these -

:56:55.:56:56.

a VR headset, to take students to the battlefields

:56:57.:57:01.

of the First World War. With these goggles, you put your

:57:02.:57:09.

phone inside. It is not happening right now, is

:57:10.:57:22.

it? I can't see anything! Thousands of children have

:57:23.:57:28.

followed the Centenary trail across the Channel to visit

:57:29.:57:31.

the First World War battlefields. Thousands more will not

:57:32.:57:33.

have that chance. Now, this Merseyside development

:57:34.:57:38.

team think they have a solution. Keep the countryside

:57:39.:57:43.

in the background. If you move around

:57:44.:57:45.

to the farmhouse... Historian Peter Barton,

:57:46.:57:49.

facing a battery of small cameras, is here to bring history alive

:57:50.:57:55.

by inviting students Trench warfare was more

:57:56.:57:57.

about maintenance rather His production crew is hidden

:57:58.:58:02.

from sight as cameras I am talking to that block

:58:03.:58:12.

of cameras as if it is tour group. The idea is to make it

:58:13.:58:22.

as informal as possible. Normally on television you get

:58:23.:58:25.

a very small timescale. Here I can talk for as long

:58:26.:58:28.

as I like, so I can talk for five Back in Liverpool, the individual

:58:29.:58:31.

images are stitched together to make I think history as a subject can be

:58:32.:58:38.

quite dull if taught in a particular way and it enables children

:58:39.:58:45.

from all walks of life to take part and experience

:58:46.:58:49.

the First World War battlefields. We can sit in classrooms like that

:58:50.:58:56.

and listen to teachers at the front talk about important

:58:57.:59:00.

events in history. This technology will enable students

:59:01.:59:02.

to travel miles from their desk And what they are doing

:59:03.:59:05.

over there is defending What I will do is take

:59:06.:59:12.

you straight into where the soldier spent his life,

:59:13.:59:21.

in the front-line trench. At St Mary's College,

:59:22.:59:29.

the acid stress test. Remember, you can adjust focus,

:59:30.:59:31.

the volume, the system will enable a class of students to share

:59:32.:59:36.

the experience, but to Everyone loves the technology

:59:37.:59:38.

of it and it's far more Everyone loves the technology of it

:59:39.:59:47.

and it's far more immersive when you can see what you can

:59:48.:59:49.

do with it. It is not difficult to listen to,

:59:50.:59:52.

there were no distractions. The man who oversees government

:59:53.:59:54.

funded visits during the Centenary, believes the virtual reality

:59:55.:59:57.

is at the start of its journey. Here is an opportunity to take young

:59:58.:59:59.

people all over the world to show them the sites where things have

:00:00.:00:03.

happened in the past and to give them a genuine immersive experience

:00:04.:00:06.

which they could not otherwise get. These are early days, but

:00:07.:00:09.

the virtual world is without limit, enabling more and more of us

:00:10.:00:15.

to step back in history. Hello, this is Breakfast with

:00:16.:01:02.

Charlie Stayt and Rachel Burden. A blow for President Trump

:01:03.:01:05.

as he admits defeat on one He's forced to abandon a vote

:01:06.:01:07.

on health care reform because he couldn't get enough

:01:08.:01:13.

support from his own party. Good morning.

:01:14.:01:29.

It's Saturday, 25th March. Police try to piece together

:01:30.:01:31.

the final movements of the Westminster attacker Khalid

:01:32.:01:38.

Masood. A whatsapp message sent minutes

:01:39.:01:48.

before his killing spree is being looked at and police released all

:01:49.:01:51.

but two of the people arrested since the attack on Wednesday.

:01:52.:01:57.

Almost two million people in the UK don't have a bank account.

:01:58.:02:00.

A House of Lords report says it's a scandal.

:02:01.:02:07.

We'll look back on Red Nose Day as more than ?70 million

:02:08.:02:10.

It is pole position for Lewis Hamilton. I'm not even tired!

:02:11.:02:29.

The mass experiment to see if the clocks going forward

:02:30.:02:32.

tonight affects children's concentration in school.

:02:33.:02:33.

We are looking at a chilly start to the day with a little bit of frost

:02:34.:02:42.

and a few fog patches to contend with, but for most of us, we are

:02:43.:02:46.

looking at a dry weekend with plenty of sunshine. In the warmest spots,

:02:47.:02:50.

it is forecast to reach 19 Celsius later today.

:02:51.:02:54.

Donald Trump has tried to shrug off the biggest setback

:02:55.:02:58.

so far in his presidency, a failure to overhaul

:02:59.:03:00.

He has been forced to scrap a vote on his plans at the last minute

:03:01.:03:05.

because he didn't have enough backing from his own party.

:03:06.:03:08.

It was a promise that became one of the pillars of his campaign

:03:09.:03:12.

We're going to get rid of Obamacare which is a disaster.

:03:13.:03:20.

Repealing and replacing the disaster known as Obamacare.

:03:21.:03:27.

His pitch to voters - trust me, I'm a dealmaker.

:03:28.:03:30.

If you can't make a good deal with a politician than there's

:03:31.:03:33.

Throughout Friday, the Trump administration,

:03:34.:03:44.

led by the vice-president, was trying to persuade fellow

:03:45.:03:47.

Some wouldn't accept proposed cuts to health coverage.

:03:48.:03:52.

Others said they didn't go far enough.

:03:53.:03:53.

Facing defeat, House Speaker Paul Ryan consulted with the President

:03:54.:03:59.

Yeah, we're going to be living with Obamacare

:04:00.:04:04.

I don't know how long it's going to take us

:04:05.:04:07.

My worry is Obamacare is going to be getting even worse.

:04:08.:04:13.

Donald Trump still predicts that Obamacare will end in failure,

:04:14.:04:15.

but conceded until Democrats agree it's time to make changes,

:04:16.:04:18.

It's imploding and soon will explode and it's not going to be pretty.

:04:19.:04:26.

The Democrats don't want to see that so they're going to reach out

:04:27.:04:29.

when they're ready and whenever they're ready, we're ready.

:04:30.:04:33.

Pushing through healthcare change in America was one

:04:34.:04:36.

of President Obama's defining achievements in the White House.

:04:37.:04:38.

It provided more than 20 million people with health insurance,

:04:39.:04:42.

but opponents say it is too expensive and involves

:04:43.:04:45.

too much government interference in people's lives.

:04:46.:04:47.

But criticising Obamacare has proved much easier than replacing

:04:48.:04:49.

After his controversial travel ban was blocked,

:04:50.:04:54.

this failure is another blow to his authority less than three

:04:55.:04:56.

Counter-terrorism police have released all but two of the 11

:04:57.:05:08.

people arrested since the attack in Westminster on Wednesday.

:05:09.:05:10.

They are appealing for information as they try to establish

:05:11.:05:12.

whether Khalid Masood acted alone or had help, as Alexandra

:05:13.:05:14.

Khalid Masood, the former teacher and father who became a terrorist.

:05:15.:05:26.

As police begin to build a picture of the killer it has

:05:27.:05:31.

emerged that minutes before he launched his attack

:05:32.:05:38.

he used messaging service, Whatsapp to send an encrypted message

:05:39.:05:40.

Born Adrian Elms in Kent, by the time he was at

:05:41.:05:50.

Huntley's Secondary School for Boys in Tunbridge Wells,

:05:51.:05:52.

But what triggered such a brutal act from a once sporty

:05:53.:05:55.

But, you know, like I say, when I see him, I loved him.

:05:56.:06:08.

I just wanted to give him a lift sort of and talk

:06:09.:06:11.

He had developed a reputation for violence.

:06:12.:06:14.

Last night, the Saudi Arabian Embassy in London confirmed he had

:06:15.:06:19.

worked there as a teacher around ten years ago.

:06:20.:06:20.

The police investigation into Wednesday's attack has been swift.

:06:21.:06:27.

It brought them to this hotel in Brighton.

:06:28.:06:29.

Masood stayed here the night before he carried out his deadly attack

:06:30.:06:34.

Described as a nice guest, he said he was visiting friends.

:06:35.:06:40.

In Manchester, a car was taken away by police.

:06:41.:06:44.

There were further raids and two people, both

:06:45.:06:47.

The police investigation will now focus on finding out if anyone

:06:48.:06:53.

helped Khalid Masood to carry out his attack and at what inspired

:06:54.:06:56.

Now, questions are being asked about whether he could have been

:06:57.:07:12.

Earlier we spoke to Ian Acheson a former prison governor who raised

:07:13.:07:18.

concerns about HMP Weyland, which is where Masood served time.

:07:19.:07:23.

We were concerned about HMP Wayland as a place that had an environment

:07:24.:07:30.

that was conducive to radicalised behaviour. He can't be drawn on the

:07:31.:07:34.

details there, but we did draw the general conclusion from our research

:07:35.:07:39.

and our analysis that the prisons outside the high security estate,

:07:40.:07:43.

prisons like Wayland which are a medium secure facility did not

:07:44.:07:47.

possess the capability or the capacity to fully understand the

:07:48.:07:49.

threat of radicalisation. Alexandra McKenzie is

:07:50.:07:53.

outside New Scotland Yard. I notice one or two floral tributes

:07:54.:08:01.

have appeared there. I don't think we are expecting any further police

:08:02.:08:06.

updates this morning, are we? No, that's right. There have been floral

:08:07.:08:11.

tributes here for PC Keith Palmer and at this time yesterday we had an

:08:12.:08:16.

update, but we're not expecting that this morning. As the investigation

:08:17.:08:21.

enters its third day, a massive investigation involving hundreds of

:08:22.:08:25.

officers who are gathering as much information as possible to piece

:08:26.:08:29.

together exactly what happened. As we said, 11 people have been

:08:30.:08:33.

arrested. All but two have been released and at least 20 properties

:08:34.:08:39.

have been raided and thousands of items have been seized from these

:08:40.:08:44.

properties as evidence which will help specialist teams try and

:08:45.:08:50.

picture or paint a picture of what exactly has happened and the main

:08:51.:08:54.

question, Khalid Masood, did he act alone or did he have help planning

:08:55.:09:00.

or carrying out the terrorist attack here at Westminster last Wednesday.

:09:01.:09:07.

As we said, it has emerged that a whatsapp message, an encrypted

:09:08.:09:09.

whatsapp message was sent interest his phone minutes before that attack

:09:10.:09:14.

and police will be particularly keen to find out who received that

:09:15.:09:18.

message and what they knew about the attack and if they were at all

:09:19.:09:22.

involved? Thank you.

:09:23.:09:27.

The UN has raised concerns about reports of a high number

:09:28.:09:30.

of civilian casualties in the Iraqi city of Mosul.

:09:31.:09:32.

It's claimed at least 200 people died in an air strike

:09:33.:09:34.

Government forces are trying to retake the city from

:09:35.:09:37.

More needs to be done to help tackle the vicious cycle

:09:38.:09:45.

of debt and overcharging, according to a House

:09:46.:09:47.

It says banks are failing customers who need them most,

:09:48.:09:50.

leaving the poorest to rely on expensive products.

:09:51.:09:52.

Here's our Business Correspondent, Jonty Bloom.

:09:53.:09:55.

Banks and building societies are not only there for the rich,

:09:56.:09:57.

but they are more difficult for the poor to access.

:09:58.:10:01.

1.7 million people in this country have no bank account,

:10:02.:10:03.

many can only borrow at high interest rates even if they aren't

:10:04.:10:06.

The closure of thousands of high street banks also hits the poorest

:10:07.:10:13.

and especially the elderly as they have less access

:10:14.:10:15.

40% of the working age population have less than ?100 in savings,

:10:16.:10:20.

and if they have to use pre-paid meters, they also pay

:10:21.:10:23.

more more basic services like gas and electricity.

:10:24.:10:29.

To end such financial exclusion the Lords committee is calling

:10:30.:10:31.

for better financial education in schools, a dedicated government

:10:32.:10:33.

minister to tackle the problem and for the banks to have a duty

:10:34.:10:36.

Too many people still don't have a bank account or access

:10:37.:10:46.

to basic and fairly priced financial services of the sort that most

:10:47.:10:49.

That means that the poverty premium, where the poor are paying more

:10:50.:10:53.

for a range of things from heating their house

:10:54.:10:55.

to being able to get a loan, is leading them into a vicious

:10:56.:10:58.

circle of further debt and financial distress.

:10:59.:11:05.

The Government says four million people are benefiting from basic

:11:06.:11:08.

bank accounts which charge no fees and that tough new rules mean

:11:09.:11:10.

that the number of payday loans has halved since 2014.

:11:11.:11:20.

A ban on taking laptops and tablets on board flights to the UK from six

:11:21.:11:24.

Passengers travelling from Turkey, Egypt, Lebanon, Jordan,

:11:25.:11:31.

Tunisia and Saudi Arabia must put any electronic device larger

:11:32.:11:40.

than a standard smartphone into the hold.

:11:41.:11:41.

The ban was imposed following a similar measure

:11:42.:11:43.

This year's Comic Relief has raised more than ?71 million.

:11:44.:11:53.

The fundraiser included James Corden's Carpool Karaoke

:11:54.:11:56.

with Take That and a special Love Actually sequel.

:11:57.:12:00.

Comic Relief has raised more than ?1 billion

:12:01.:12:03.

Getting a runaway cow back in to its pen isn't an easy job.

:12:04.:12:15.

But it's one a police officer in Temple in Texas

:12:16.:12:17.

He thought he'd managed to get it back in its field,

:12:18.:12:22.

but just as he closed the gate, the cow came bolting towards him.

:12:23.:12:37.

It looked very much like a bull there. He's fast whatever else was

:12:38.:12:41.

going on there. No one was hurt in the case,

:12:42.:12:46.

but police say the cow's If we locate the cow by the end of

:12:47.:13:01.

the programme, we'll let you know. It is 9.12am.

:13:02.:13:05.

A woman who was refused permission to divorce her husband of nearly 40

:13:06.:13:08.

years has lost her case at the Court of Appeal.

:13:09.:13:11.

The judges told Tini Owens, who is 66, that being

:13:12.:13:13.

in a "wretchedly unhappy marriage" was not a ground for divorce.

:13:14.:13:19.

It has been described as an "extraordinarily unusual" case.

:13:20.:13:22.

So let's tell you a bit more about it.

:13:23.:13:24.

Last year Tini Owens argued that their marriage had

:13:25.:13:31.

irretrievably broken down, but her efforts at getting

:13:32.:13:33.

The judge in the case said her reasons for wanting a divorce,

:13:34.:13:44.

which included rowing in an airport, were "of the kind to be

:13:45.:13:47.

Yesterday the Court of Appeal backed that decision.

:13:48.:13:51.

Sir James Munby, the most senior family court judge

:13:52.:13:54.

in England and Wales, said Parliament has decreed that

:13:55.:13:58.

"it is not a ground for divorce that you find yourself in a wretchedly

:13:59.:14:01.

unhappy marriage, though some people may say it should be".

:14:02.:14:03.

To get a divorce in England and Wales, you must prove

:14:04.:14:05.

that a marriage has broken down irretrievably.

:14:06.:14:13.

There are five ways to show this - adultery, unreasonable behaviour,

:14:14.:14:15.

desertion, living apart for two years and both sides

:14:16.:14:18.

agreeing to a divorce, or living apart for at least five

:14:19.:14:20.

years, even if your partner disagrees.

:14:21.:14:23.

The case has certainly highlighted a peculiar quirk in English

:14:24.:14:29.

Joining us in the studio is Jo Edwards, head

:14:30.:14:32.

Jo, first of all, did the judges make the correct decision in this

:14:33.:14:44.

case? Based on the law as it presently stands the judges made

:14:45.:14:48.

absolutely the right decision and effectively what the Court of Appeal

:14:49.:14:52.

said yesterday is, we are hands strung, we're not happy about it,

:14:53.:14:57.

but we're hand strung by the present state of the law. This led to a

:14:58.:15:03.

wider debate about why the law presently is as it is. It has been

:15:04.:15:06.

this way for 48 years and should there be a change? We say,

:15:07.:15:10.

practitioners say, national family lawyers says there should be a

:15:11.:15:13.

change in the law. It is unusual, isn't it? We heard about a similar

:15:14.:15:19.

case a couple of months ago and people said this rarely happens and

:15:20.:15:21.

now we have another one. There was a change to the law in Scotland. So it

:15:22.:15:25.

is different there. And should we be following their lead? Well, we

:15:26.:15:29.

certainly should change. I think in Scotland what's happened is about

:15:30.:15:33.

ten years ago, they reduced the periods of separation that you have

:15:34.:15:35.

to have so here as you mentioned, you have to be separated for two

:15:36.:15:40.

years and both agree to a divorce or five years and only one party needs

:15:41.:15:44.

to proceed with the divorce. In Scotland the periods are one year

:15:45.:15:48.

and two years respectively. Since that change came in, 95% of divorces

:15:49.:15:53.

in Scotland are on the periods of separation. Actually in England, I

:15:54.:15:58.

would like us to go further. What resolution advocates is a period of

:15:59.:16:02.

six months. At the start of which one or both parties can say we think

:16:03.:16:06.

this marriage has broken down. They should have access to counselling

:16:07.:16:12.

services and discussions about children and about money. If at the

:16:13.:16:17.

end of the six month period, one or both feel the marriage is broken

:16:18.:16:22.

down, they should be entitled to their decree. How unusual is it one

:16:23.:16:28.

party is saying, I want out, I want a divorce, the other side is saying,

:16:29.:16:32.

"Everything is fine. I won't agree." It is incredibly unusual. The last

:16:33.:16:38.

statistics we have are for 2014. In England and Wales there were 111,000

:16:39.:16:49.

divorces. The reality is the court will say if one party isn't happy,

:16:50.:16:54.

how can a marriage continue? But the point in this case was on the facts

:16:55.:16:58.

and on the state of the law, Mrs Owens hadn't proven to the court's

:16:59.:17:02.

satisfaction that the behaviour was such that she couldn't reasonably be

:17:03.:17:05.

expected to live with her husband and therefore the marriage hasn't

:17:06.:17:10.

broken down. All she can do now, unless Mr Owens will become down is

:17:11.:17:14.

wait until she has been separated for five years. Ie another three

:17:15.:17:20.

years time. Is it because there is concern about splitting the assets?

:17:21.:17:27.

I know you can't say in this case? Some practitioners suggested that

:17:28.:17:29.

maybe the motivation. You're right to identify. One can't access

:17:30.:17:33.

financial remedies until a divorce process is in train so that does

:17:34.:17:37.

create difficulties. Mr Owens, I think, would just say, I still think

:17:38.:17:41.

there is life left in this marriage and I want to save it. Should it be

:17:42.:17:47.

right for one party to be able to dissolve a marriage or should it be

:17:48.:17:50.

by mutual consent? Jo, thank you very much. Jo Edwards who is a

:17:51.:17:53.

family lawyer. Here's Chris with a look

:17:54.:17:58.

at this morning's weather. High pressure is firmly in charge

:17:59.:18:05.

and for just about everyone that means plenty of sunshine. The

:18:06.:18:09.

Weather Watchers have been out snapping the early morning spring

:18:10.:18:13.

sunshine. There is mist on the horizon, but blue skies for most of

:18:14.:18:16.

us. If you have been outside this morning, you will know how chilly it

:18:17.:18:21.

has been. Temperatures got down to minus five Celsius last night. But

:18:22.:18:26.

with the sun in the sky now, temperatures in West Wales have

:18:27.:18:29.

reached 12 Celsius and through this afternoon, the warm spots likely to

:18:30.:18:32.

be West Wales. 18 Celsius, 19 Celsius. If we get to 19 Celsius

:18:33.:18:37.

that would make it the warmest day of the year so far. Things are

:18:38.:18:41.

looking up. It is not sunny everywhere. For the far north of

:18:42.:18:44.

Scotland, we have got more in the way of cloud and that clawed will

:18:45.:18:47.

threaten the occasional spot of rain. It should stay dry in Orkney,

:18:48.:18:52.

but the cloud coming and going here. Plenty of sunshine elsewhere in

:18:53.:18:55.

Scotlandment highs reaching 17 Celsius. 1 Celsius likely to be the

:18:56.:18:59.

top temperature this Northern Ireland. Probably for western

:19:00.:19:03.

counties. 17 or 18 Celsius around Greater Manchester, Merseyside and

:19:04.:19:06.

Cheshire and maybe a 19 Celsius for West Wales. 18 Celsius for the

:19:07.:19:10.

south-west of England. Towards the South Coast, some strong gusts of

:19:11.:19:15.

winds. Gusting at around 30mph. That will knock the edge of the

:19:16.:19:19.

temperatures. Those winds keeping the frost at bay overnight across

:19:20.:19:23.

the south of England. In the countryside, where the winds fall

:19:24.:19:27.

light across the heart of the UK, that's where temperatures are going

:19:28.:19:30.

to plummet once again. A widespread frost. Temperatures as low as minus

:19:31.:19:34.

five Celsius. Sunday, another beautiful day. Spring sunshine.

:19:35.:19:40.

Again, those chilly easterly winds move across southern counties.

:19:41.:19:45.

Temperatures a notch of a degree down. The cloud will take a while to

:19:46.:19:51.

break up, but the sunshine will come through. We will see the

:19:52.:19:54.

temperatures climbing into the high teens. So pretty good for

:19:55.:19:58.

temperatures really this weekend. Plenty of spring sunshine to look

:19:59.:20:03.

forward to, but also an hour less in bed. The clocks are going to be put

:20:04.:20:07.

forward one hour. Darker mornings on the way, but brighter evenings too.

:20:08.:20:08.

That's the weather. Thaumpks Chris.

:20:09.:20:13.

-- thanks, Chris. More than half of mothers

:20:14.:20:21.

who breastfeed stop after six to eight weeks, according

:20:22.:20:23.

to a survey by Public Their research found although

:20:24.:20:25.

three-quarters of new mums chose to breastfeed from birth,

:20:26.:20:29.

this figure dropped significantly within two months,

:20:30.:20:30.

as Frankie McCamley reports. Like many new mums, Laura started

:20:31.:20:37.

breast-feeding as soon as autumn was born, but after six weeks, they both

:20:38.:20:44.

fell ill so she had to stop. When I decided to give up breast-feeding, I

:20:45.:20:50.

kind of didn't really want to. It was something that I thought about a

:20:51.:20:53.

lot. I did lots of research about how to try and get my supply back up

:20:54.:20:58.

with power pumping and things like eating oats. So I tried a lot of

:20:59.:21:04.

those things, but unfortunately, it just didn't really work at all. The

:21:05.:21:09.

whole experience left her feeling extremely anxious of breast-feeding.

:21:10.:21:13.

I definitely felt like people would be judging me when they saw me

:21:14.:21:18.

feeding her with a bottle. To some extent I still do. I find that very

:21:19.:21:25.

kind of difficult when I feed her in public, I kind of think maybe people

:21:26.:21:30.

are wondering why I'm not breast-feeding her and kind of

:21:31.:21:34.

thinking that I'm not a good mum or maybe I don't love her as much as

:21:35.:21:38.

other people love their babies because I'm not doing what's

:21:39.:21:43.

considered best. According to Public Health England, little Autumn is not

:21:44.:21:46.

alone when it comes to drinking formula milk. A survey of 500

:21:47.:21:51.

mothers found whilst almost three-quarters of women started

:21:52.:21:54.

breast-feeding when their child was born, less than half of them were

:21:55.:21:58.

still doing that six to eight weeks later. It is now launching chat bot

:21:59.:22:07.

an around the clock support tool to help mothers with any concerns they

:22:08.:22:11.

may have. According to Public Health England, breast-feeding can boost a

:22:12.:22:16.

baby's ability to fight illnesses and infections and for mothers it

:22:17.:22:20.

can reduce the risk of ovarian and breast cancer and it also burns 500

:22:21.:22:25.

calories a day. As for Laura and her family, they say the new service

:22:26.:22:29.

wouldn't have changed their minds to stop breast-feeding, but a support

:22:30.:22:31.

like it would have been a huge help at the time.

:22:32.:22:40.

We had a couple of guests this after the story and they really stole the

:22:41.:22:46.

show. We will tell you about that shortly.

:22:47.:22:48.

Some of you have been getting in touch on this story.

:22:49.:22:52.

Stacie said, "I know breast is said to be best,

:22:53.:22:54.

but I was unfortunate after having a lump removed.

:22:55.:22:56.

I couldn't breastfeed and feel I'm judged for it."

:22:57.:22:59.

Dad Simon said, "My wife started breastfeeding both of our babies,

:23:00.:23:02.

but she wasn't suited to it. They're both thriving.

:23:03.:23:04.

We spoke about this earlier with new mum Emma Blinkhorn,

:23:05.:23:13.

but it was her daughter Lily-May who stole the show

:23:14.:23:19.

She started reading the news and just took over!

:23:20.:23:36.

Quite a lot of people were saying all eyes on Lily-Mae.

:23:37.:23:44.

Don't let ITV see that, she will be presenting the Nightly Show next

:23:45.:23:48.

week! It's time for a look

:23:49.:23:52.

at the newspapers. Journalist and broadcaster,

:23:53.:23:54.

Ian Collins is here to tell us Police are claiming he may have

:23:55.:24:04.

taken instructions from other accomplices in the moments before he

:24:05.:24:07.

struck. Still vgting whether there was a network behind him. On the

:24:08.:24:13.

front page of the Mail, the middle-class Jihadi they're saying

:24:14.:24:17.

as more details emerge of Khalid Masood's past. The front page of the

:24:18.:24:23.

Mirror. They have what they claim as an exclusive, an interview with the

:24:24.:24:26.

wife who was married to Khalid Masood for weeks before fleeing

:24:27.:24:31.

after he attacked her. She says he was a psychopath and she was scared

:24:32.:24:35.

of him. She went to the other end of the country. The front page of the

:24:36.:24:43.

Guardian how boyfriend came from Kent, became an outsider. Ian, where

:24:44.:24:48.

are you going to start? There is nothing like a parking story to

:24:49.:24:51.

start the day off in fine fashion. This comes under the category at

:24:52.:24:54.

what point did you think that was OK? It is people who park on

:24:55.:24:57.

pavements. Interestingly, I didn't realise that local authorities are

:24:58.:25:03.

restricted about what they can do about pavement parking. Outside

:25:04.:25:08.

London it was made illegal. There are exceptions, every now and then

:25:09.:25:12.

you see a sign that says you have to park on the pavement. But than you

:25:13.:25:15.

get the other side of things, where I live for example there is no

:25:16.:25:18.

pavement on one side of the road, on the other side particularly on a

:25:19.:25:22.

weekend, people just park right across and you couldn't get a

:25:23.:25:27.

pushchair a wheelchair, a guide dog, it is completely thoughtless for

:25:28.:25:31.

anybody that does it, but local authorities are quite impotent about

:25:32.:25:35.

what they can do about it. They want to change the laws to give them

:25:36.:25:39.

greater powers. I assumed that everywhere you can't park on the

:25:40.:25:47.

pavement? So did I. There is always strange laws and bye-laws. If you

:25:48.:25:52.

have a road that's narrow, sometimes you think maybe I'm doing the right

:25:53.:25:55.

thing by leaving a wider gap for cars to pass by. You would use your

:25:56.:26:00.

brain and say hang on a second, there is a road, there is no

:26:01.:26:05.

pavement that side, if I park fully, nobody can walk past without walking

:26:06.:26:10.

into the middle of the road. You have to take the common sense

:26:11.:26:14.

approach. I was wacking past a residential area the other day where

:26:15.:26:17.

the grass verge along the pavement had been cut up, it was just tyre

:26:18.:26:22.

marks and it looks a mess. People will try and park wherever, there

:26:23.:26:25.

will be a story of the Daily Mail that turned part of their small

:26:26.:26:29.

garden into a driveway and lowered the kerb and done the whole thing

:26:30.:26:33.

and they get into trouble for that, but yeah, it's difficult. There is

:26:34.:26:39.

thousands more cars than there ever were and it is not about to get

:26:40.:26:43.

easier. Your newspaper review illustrates the stuff that we worry

:26:44.:26:47.

about and the really big stuff that is so in people's minds at the

:26:48.:26:51.

moment? Yes, I had an experience of this, about 15 years ago, I saw one

:26:52.:26:54.

of these trucks on the road. I was driving through a part of London and

:26:55.:26:58.

suddenly I was aware of blue lights in my rear view mirror and I pulled

:26:59.:27:02.

over and 17 of these things went past and it was harrowing. I have

:27:03.:27:05.

never seen one of these things before. Than the next time was last

:27:06.:27:09.

Wednesday. I went down to Trafalgar Square and last Thursday, evening,

:27:10.:27:12.

where the Mayor of London and the Home Secretary and the police chief

:27:13.:27:16.

were giving this kind of set of talks, speeches to thousands of

:27:17.:27:20.

people and it was interesting to me that these things that look like

:27:21.:27:24.

space ships have landed into our lives and try to get past this, past

:27:25.:27:29.

a wall of very heavily armed police officers to be told by the Mayor of

:27:30.:27:33.

London that nothing changes and we all get on with our lives, this is,

:27:34.:27:37.

of course, a nonsense that's a myth that's pedalled out by politicians

:27:38.:27:40.

that the stiff upper lip, we just get on with it. Well, you do to a

:27:41.:27:44.

degree, but to say nothing changes and life goes on, to me walking

:27:45.:27:49.

through the streets of the capital seeing these as your defought police

:27:50.:27:53.

vehicle and dozens of police vehicles means that life has

:27:54.:27:57.

changed. It is worth showing people this, this morning. People are

:27:58.:28:00.

teaching their cats to use the toilet! This is no yoke joke, it is

:28:01.:28:07.

not 1st April! I don't know why you'd want to own a cat. They have

:28:08.:28:11.

no loyalty to you. They have about ten owners each anyway, don't they?

:28:12.:28:16.

Let's face it. You've upset half the nation! Get a dog. How does that

:28:17.:28:23.

work? It is toilet train your cat plain and simple. It is a guide that

:28:24.:28:28.

will allow you to show your cat, they don't have to use the litter

:28:29.:28:32.

tray or dig up your garden, thick use a conventional loo!

:28:33.:28:38.

That cat clearly is in the wrong position, it is not going to work.

:28:39.:28:42.

It is clearly not a toilet trained cat! It has been coerced up there

:28:43.:28:50.

against its fee line will. Our cat can't do that, but I saw our cat

:28:51.:28:54.

sitting on the toilet seat the other day, but he had his head in the bowl

:28:55.:29:01.

and he was dripping drinking the water.

:29:02.:29:03.

-- drinking the water. We're on BBC One until ten

:29:04.:29:06.

o'clock this morning, when Angela Hartnett takes over

:29:07.:29:08.

in the Saturday kitchen. We have got an amazing guest,

:29:09.:29:22.

Badell. What is your favourite food? Curry. I think it is a lamb curry.

:29:23.:29:28.

Beautiful lamb curry with lamb chops, we've grilled. It sounds like

:29:29.:29:31.

heaven. You better be nice. What about food hell? Well, I don't like,

:29:32.:29:37.

I like some fish, but just ordinary whitefish, you know, the way that

:29:38.:29:41.

you sometimes get it in hospital! LAUGHTER

:29:42.:29:47.

That is my hell, I think. So you have met Nathan, a fish chef! I'm

:29:48.:29:51.

sure it is not hell when he cooks it. What are you going to cook

:29:52.:29:56.

today? Boring jacket potatoes with cod and parsley, no, no. Cod and

:29:57.:30:01.

parsley jacket potatoes. It wasn't boring. We tasted it in rehearsal

:30:02.:30:05.

and welcome Dan from New York. What are you going to cook today? A

:30:06.:30:13.

vegetable pulp cheeseburger with hamburger buns and a slab of bacon.

:30:14.:30:18.

Nothing vegetarian today. We will see you at 10am.

:30:19.:30:48.

Hello, this is Breakfast, with Charlie Stayt and Rachel Burden.

:30:49.:30:50.

But first, a summary of this morning's main news.

:30:51.:30:59.

President Trump says he's surprised and disappointed after failing

:31:00.:31:01.

to secure support from his own party for plans to replace Obamacare.

:31:02.:31:05.

He had to withdraw his health care bill after it failed to get enough

:31:06.:31:08.

President Trump has said there were parts of it

:31:09.:31:13.

he didn't like anyway, and it'll mean a better bill at some

:31:14.:31:16.

Speaking earlier on Breakfast, former advisor to George W Bush,

:31:17.:31:21.

Anneke Green, told us President Trump still has

:31:22.:31:23.

It is coming across in the press as a blow, but he will portray this

:31:24.:31:36.

as the smart move and something he is doing

:31:37.:31:38.

for the American people, and I do not think it

:31:39.:31:41.

We see that even in the praise coming from the groups in the house

:31:42.:31:47.

Counter-terrorism police have released all but two of the 11

:31:48.:31:52.

people arrested since the attack in Westminster on Wednesday.

:31:53.:31:55.

The attacker, Khalid Masood, killed three people

:31:56.:31:58.

when he drove into pedestrians on Westminster Bridge before

:31:59.:32:01.

stabbing a police officer to death outside Parliament.

:32:02.:32:05.

Police are still trying to establish whether he acted alone.

:32:06.:32:09.

Questions are being asked about whether he could have been

:32:10.:32:12.

Earlier we spoke to Ian Acheson, a former prison governor who raised

:32:13.:32:19.

concerns about HMP Weyland, where Masood served time.

:32:20.:32:29.

We were concerned about HMP Weyland as a place that had

:32:30.:32:31.

an environment that was conducive to radicalised behaviour.

:32:32.:32:33.

I cannot be drawn on details, but we did draw the general

:32:34.:32:39.

conclusion from our research and analysis that prisons

:32:40.:32:41.

outside the high security estate, prisons like HMP Weyland,

:32:42.:32:43.

which are a medium secure facility, did not possess the capacity

:32:44.:32:46.

to fully understand the threat of radicalisation.

:32:47.:32:53.

The UN has raised concerns about reports of a high number

:32:54.:32:56.

of civilian casualties in the Iraqi city of Mosul.

:32:57.:32:58.

It's claimed at least 200 people died in an air strike

:32:59.:33:00.

Government forces are trying to retake the city from

:33:01.:33:04.

A recording has been released of the Hollywood actor Harrison Ford

:33:05.:33:12.

calling himself a "schmuck" after accidentally landing his

:33:13.:33:14.

plane in the wrong part of an airport in California.

:33:15.:33:16.

The Star Wars actor, who has a pilot's licence,

:33:17.:33:18.

was talking to air traffic controllers at John Wayne Airport

:33:19.:33:21.

immediately after the incident last month when he flew directly over

:33:22.:33:23.

The controller did not raise any eyebrows over the name.

:33:24.:34:18.

This year's Comic Relief has raised more than ?71 million.

:34:19.:34:21.

The fundraiser included James Corden's Carpool Karaoke

:34:22.:34:22.

with Take That and a special Love Actually sequel.

:34:23.:34:24.

Comic Relief has raised more than ?1 billion

:34:25.:34:26.

Getting a runaway cow back in to its pen isn't an easy job.

:34:27.:34:37.

But it's one a police officer in Temple in Texas had to yesterday.

:34:38.:34:46.

He thought he'd managed to get it back in its field,

:34:47.:34:50.

but just as he closed the gate, the cow came bolting towards him.

:34:51.:34:54.

He had to make a quick run for it and managed not to get hit.

:34:55.:34:59.

No-one was hurt in the case, but police say the cow's

:35:00.:35:04.

I know that they can move at the speed of 40 mph. A couple of years

:35:05.:35:23.

ago, we had a show jumping who became very famous on this

:35:24.:35:29.

programme. I think the farmer was called Mr onions. That maybe another

:35:30.:35:39.

story. No Red Bull showing in the Formula

:35:40.:35:49.

1. But Lewis Hamilton was fast. It hurt him to finish second last

:35:50.:35:53.

season to Nico Rosberg and he is desperate to get his fourth world

:35:54.:35:54.

title. Formula One is back,

:35:55.:35:58.

and so is Lewis Hamilton, who's Hamilton claimed pole position

:35:59.:36:00.

for a record-equalling sixth time, at the Australian Grand Prix,

:36:01.:36:04.

as the new era of faster, more demanding cars got off

:36:05.:36:07.

to a promising start. He was more than a quarter

:36:08.:36:09.

of a second quicker, than Ferrari's Sebastian Vettel,

:36:10.:36:12.

with Hamilton's new Mercedes team And good luck later today

:36:13.:36:14.

to the four British riders in qualifying for the opening Moto

:36:15.:36:18.

GP race of the season in Qatar. Cal Crutchlow, Bradley Smith,

:36:19.:36:21.

Scott Redding are joined Seamus Coleman suffered a broken leg

:36:22.:36:40.

in the match between Republic of Ireland and Wales.

:36:41.:36:42.

Gareth Bale had the only real chances for either side,

:36:43.:36:46.

but he'll miss the next game against Serbia, after

:36:47.:36:48.

Of course the main talking point though is that awful

:36:49.:36:55.

Manager Martin O'Neill, said it was a bad break -

:36:56.:36:58.

it wasn't a malicious tackle, but it was mistimed

:36:59.:37:00.

Neil Taylor was sent off for it, as Coleman was carried off

:37:01.:37:04.

on a stretcher, needing gas and air, to help him cope.

:37:05.:37:07.

He was having the season of a lifetime at club level.

:37:08.:37:11.

He is a great player for us, a great captain.

:37:12.:37:13.

A big loss to everyone, a big loss to us.

:37:14.:37:20.

It puts things in perspective, I suppose.

:37:21.:37:29.

I have not seen the challenge, but I have seen the outcome, if you like.

:37:30.:37:41.

It is a bad one for Seamus, and that is a shame

:37:42.:37:44.

I think he is one of the best fullbacks in the Premier League.

:37:45.:37:59.

It was a busy night in rugby League's Superleague,

:38:00.:38:01.

and we have new leaders in Hull FC, thanks to their win at Wigan.

:38:02.:38:04.

But at the other end of the table, things have gone from bad

:38:05.:38:07.

to worse for Warrington, who've lost every game this

:38:08.:38:09.

season, just six months after they were in the grand final,

:38:10.:38:12.

Adam Swift with the pick of their five tries.

:38:13.:38:18.

In Rugby Union's Premiership, Gloucester comfortably saw off local

:38:19.:38:21.

England wing Jonny May sealed the bonus point win for Gloucester

:38:22.:38:26.

and Bristol's hopes of avoiding relegation straight back

:38:27.:38:28.

to the Championship look slim - they're seven points adrift

:38:29.:38:31.

at the bottom of the table, with four games to play.

:38:32.:38:40.

In Rugby Union's Premiership, Gloucester comfortably saw off local

:38:41.:38:42.

But Scarlets are also chasing that play-off place -

:38:43.:38:51.

and they're just three points behind Ulster now, after getting a bonus

:38:52.:38:54.

point in their 26-10 win over Edinburgh.

:38:55.:38:58.

Britain's Johanna Konta is through to the third

:38:59.:39:01.

round of the Miami Open tennis, after beating Aliaksandra Sasnovich.

:39:02.:39:07.

We're going to return to football now, and a very special little boy

:39:08.:39:10.

who will be at Wembley tomorrow, for England's World Cup

:39:11.:39:13.

You may have seen him before, five-year-old Sunderland fan

:39:14.:39:17.

Bradley Lowery, who's suffering from a rare type of cancer.

:39:18.:39:20.

He's going to be a mascot tomorrow, and this is how his mum Gemma

:39:21.:39:24.

told him he'd also be reunited with his hero Jermain Defoe.

:39:25.:39:29.

Guess who is going to the England match next week?

:39:30.:39:35.

At the very beginning it was just amazing.

:39:36.:39:46.

Now he just calls Jermain Defoe his best friend.

:39:47.:39:52.

It is normal for him now, but at the beginning

:39:53.:39:56.

it was fantastic and to have that experience and all the experiences

:39:57.:39:59.

he has at the moment is quite surreal.

:40:00.:40:01.

It gives us memories that we can carry with us

:40:02.:40:06.

They have done it in Sunderland colours. Tomorrow, they will walk

:40:07.:40:24.

out together, both as proud as each other. A special moment indeed.

:40:25.:40:32.

Now, could you last a whole hour doing a non-stop,

:40:33.:40:35.

Well, add a live band, complete mayhem and a lot of laughter?

:40:36.:40:40.

You've heard of zumba, and street dance, well now barn

:40:41.:40:42.

dancing could be the way to improve your fitness.

:40:43.:40:45.

I went to a class in Birmingham to try it out.

:40:46.:40:56.

It's time to cast aside all we thought we knew

:40:57.:40:59.

It's not about do-si-does at this former swimming baths in Birmingham.

:41:00.:41:06.

Obviously the hat could be a health and safety issue.

:41:07.:41:17.

They take the best bits from traditional dances

:41:18.:41:26.

across the world and put them together in an hour-long workout.

:41:27.:41:29.

If you go to the gym, you use one machine to work

:41:30.:41:41.

Here, you use all the muscles and so we do a lot of shaking

:41:42.:41:46.

and we use our faces as well, so we are getting a total workout.

:41:47.:41:51.

It is believed by many that barn dancing started a couple

:41:52.:41:56.

of centuries ago in parts of the British Isles where farm

:41:57.:41:59.

peasants would gather in barns to copy the ballroom dances

:42:00.:42:02.

It is sociable and yet it brings people together

:42:03.:42:09.

because you are always swapping partners and positions.

:42:10.:42:14.

It is mentally challenging as well as physically.

:42:15.:42:17.

We have all done this before at weddings.

:42:18.:42:38.

It is a form of dance that really gets people who have no dancing

:42:39.:42:42.

ability or interest up onto the dancefloor

:42:43.:42:47.

You learn the moves eventually as you go along.

:42:48.:42:53.

It does not matter if you embarrass yourself and it is fun to be here.

:42:54.:42:58.

I like it because it is energetic and it is really fun.

:42:59.:43:02.

The other thing that strikes me is how much everybody is laughing.

:43:03.:43:05.

My partner looked bemused rather than amused.

:43:06.:43:21.

With the band keeping the energy going, the hour flew by.

:43:22.:43:25.

Exercise is so much better when you don't win it is it happening and the

:43:26.:43:42.

music keeps you going. A huge crowd, they get that several times a week.

:43:43.:43:47.

I would be like you, standing on everyone's feet.

:43:48.:43:52.

I kept going the wrong way! I kept bumping into people, but that was

:43:53.:43:56.

part of the fun. If you want to have your fun

:43:57.:44:00.

outside, you need decent weather. That is the image outside our studio

:44:01.:44:03.

this morning. What a beautiful day. It is getting quite mild. Yesterday,

:44:04.:44:25.

we mistakenly said it was going to be 88 degrees. And that made the

:44:26.:44:31.

papers. We are talking about 18 or 19 degrees in some places, so it is

:44:32.:44:37.

looking rather... It is glass like water. It is incredibly still, but

:44:38.:44:43.

they do a lot of sport there as well. As far as I am where, it is

:44:44.:44:50.

pretty much the picture around the country. It looks good for the whole

:44:51.:44:56.

country today, although this morning, when I got out of bed and

:44:57.:45:01.

came downstairs, I had to scrape ice of my windscreen. The reason we are

:45:02.:45:06.

lingering slightly longer, let's be honest, Chris is not ready with the

:45:07.:45:12.

weather so we are doing and ad hoc weather forecast for you. It is a

:45:13.:45:16.

bit like that in most cases. Actually, I think Chris is ready but

:45:17.:45:21.

he has got technical issues. I am not having a go at him. It is not

:45:22.:45:26.

like he is doing his hair or having a banana, it is technical issues.

:45:27.:45:33.

Hello, Chris! It is coming! The hair is looking

:45:34.:45:39.

good, I am just waiting for my computer to wake up. Can you give us

:45:40.:45:44.

the verbal version? Yes, we have high-pressure in charge

:45:45.:45:52.

today. Temperatures last night got down to minus five Celsius, so a

:45:53.:45:55.

cold start to the day. The fog has pretty much laid out of the way. R,

:45:56.:46:02.

finally. We have got scenes like this up and down the country, with

:46:03.:46:08.

plenty of sunshine. Temperatures could hit 19 Celsius later on. But

:46:09.:46:12.

these were the temperatures we had earlier today, -4 or minus five

:46:13.:46:16.

Celsius. With the sun up, tempters are already 12 in West Wales, and we

:46:17.:46:22.

expect the western side of Wales to reach the highest temperature is, up

:46:23.:46:27.

to 19 Celsius. Let's look at the weather in detail. Sunny skies for

:46:28.:46:31.

most of us, but across the northern isles of Scotland, it is different

:46:32.:46:35.

with more loud and that will bring some rain for Shetland. Otherwise,

:46:36.:46:40.

plenty of sunshine. Gusty winds across the South of England, making

:46:41.:46:44.

it feel a bit cooler. In the sunshine, in Scotland and Northern

:46:45.:46:48.

Ireland, the warmest spots could hit 17 or 18 Celsius. Western Wales up

:46:49.:46:57.

to 19 Celsius, and probably 18 Celsius for western areas of

:46:58.:47:00.

south-west England. Temperatures kept a bit lower by the gusty winds

:47:01.:47:10.

in East Anglia and South England. Overnight, the wind will keep the

:47:11.:47:18.

fast at bay. Temperatures down to minus five Celsius again, with the

:47:19.:47:21.

cold really across northern England, Scotland and Northern Ireland in the

:47:22.:47:25.

countryside. Again, you will be scraping the car windscreen first

:47:26.:47:30.

thing in the morning, but another day of glorious spring sunshine with

:47:31.:47:33.

high pressure in charge. Early fog clearing quickly, and then sunny

:47:34.:47:37.

pretty much all the way into the afternoon. Temperatures similar,

:47:38.:47:43.

maybe a degree down on today, but still good for the time of year.

:47:44.:47:47.

Before I go, a reminder that the clocks are going forward by an hour

:47:48.:47:51.

tonight, though the mornings will get a bit darker and the evening is

:47:52.:47:56.

a bit lighter. For those getting up early tomorrow, and our less in bed.

:47:57.:48:02.

Back to you both. The clock is the important thing to

:48:03.:48:04.

finish on. A reminder to everyone. We've all heard of bucket lists

:48:05.:48:10.

for people, but what about for dogs? When Lauren Watts' dog Gizelle

:48:11.:48:13.

was diagnosed with bone cancer, she created a bucket list to make

:48:14.:48:16.

the most of the time they had left. Their story went viral,

:48:17.:48:24.

and has now been turned into a book. Good morning. We are going to show

:48:25.:48:34.

you some of the pictures of Gizelle. Could you first establish, when

:48:35.:48:39.

debating of you come together? We came together when I was 19 years

:48:40.:48:45.

old. I was a transfer in college, and it was a summer in Tennessee and

:48:46.:48:54.

my mum was pretty impulsive, and she so struggled with addiction, and one

:48:55.:48:57.

morning she woke up and decided that we should get a really big dog. I

:48:58.:49:04.

was a big dog girl and we already had two dogs, so that day we drove

:49:05.:49:10.

and got them to macro. Was she that size when you got her? No, she was a

:49:11.:49:16.

puppy. When we made eye contact, I knew she was my dog. They keep

:49:17.:49:20.

growing, and she became one had ?60 in weight. Dash-macro 160. A lot of

:49:21.:49:29.

people have a special relationship with their dog, but how did Gizelle

:49:30.:49:35.

help you? For me, she was a constant. I have to fund the ages of

:49:36.:49:44.

19-25. It was the last summer my parents would live together, they

:49:45.:49:49.

got a divorce shortly after Gizelle came into my life. My mother was

:49:50.:49:54.

struggling with addiction and there were a lot of ups and downs with

:49:55.:49:58.

that, but a dog is always there when you get home, she was my best

:49:59.:50:05.

friend, very loyal. These pictures are a sink from all the lovely

:50:06.:50:10.

things you did together on the bucket list. Tell us about your

:50:11.:50:15.

bucket list. I think a dog bucket list is quite simple. Dogs are a

:50:16.:50:20.

reminder to enjoy the little things in life, so we did quite simple

:50:21.:50:24.

things. We went to the beach, that was one of my favourite things. I

:50:25.:50:28.

always said I wanted to take her to the beach but we had not done it,

:50:29.:50:33.

and when I found out she was sick, we had to go. Giving her a stake was

:50:34.:50:40.

another one. She kind of swallowed it in one! I thought she would enjoy

:50:41.:50:46.

it like a lion and rip it to shreds, but it was just one to. Obviously

:50:47.:50:53.

you had a lot of fun doing this, presumably this is all part of you

:50:54.:50:56.

getting used to the idea that she was very ill, getting used to the

:50:57.:51:00.

moment when she would not be around any more. Yes, that is the hardest

:51:01.:51:05.

part about it. Coming up with the idea, I am going to do these things,

:51:06.:51:11.

finding out your dog will not live much longer is devastated because

:51:12.:51:14.

she was my very best friend, so I wanted to do something to make the

:51:15.:51:18.

most of the time we had left and try not to be so sad about it. Are you

:51:19.:51:23.

in a better place now? Yes, yes, I have a new dog now and we have a

:51:24.:51:31.

bucket list going. Lovely to see you this morning, thank you. Thank you

:51:32.:51:33.

for having me. And Lauren's book is called

:51:34.:51:35.

Gizelle's Bucket List. It can be a bit of a nightmare

:51:36.:51:40.

getting children to bed on time, but with the clocks going forward

:51:41.:51:43.

by an hour tonight, what impact As part of the BBC's

:51:44.:51:46.

Terrific Scientific project to get more young people involved

:51:47.:51:50.

in science, school children are teaming up with academics

:51:51.:51:52.

from Oxford University to try to measure the impact

:51:53.:51:54.

of that lost lie-in. Breakfast's Jayne McCubbin went

:51:55.:51:57.

to Hull to join the experiment. He argues that his brothers go

:51:58.:52:03.

to bed later than he does. Eventually the routine

:52:04.:52:24.

begins for Eli. I ask Amy once to get up,

:52:25.:52:31.

and then five minutes In this house that one thing

:52:32.:52:41.

is the clock change. It is a nightmare -

:52:42.:52:58.

something I did not consider And each time it happens

:52:59.:53:00.

I wish it wouldn't. Well, now for the very first

:53:01.:53:15.

time, Oxford University with the help of children

:53:16.:53:27.

here at this primary school, What we are trying to see

:53:28.:53:30.

is if people who are more These children are being

:53:31.:53:40.

monitored in the days before Their reaction time

:53:41.:53:44.

is measured and their Do razor-sharp reactions follow

:53:45.:53:47.

a good nights sleep? You see children who are not

:53:48.:54:07.

alert, they are not Are you curious about what this

:54:08.:54:13.

experiment will show? I am really looking forward

:54:14.:54:25.

to seeing the effect Just how much it matters

:54:26.:54:27.

we will find out in the next month when Oxford University

:54:28.:54:55.

report their findings. That does not look

:54:56.:54:57.

like sleeping to me. The scientist and broadcaster

:54:58.:55:03.

Fran Scott is an ambassador How disruptive is the clock change

:55:04.:55:16.

to children? It is disruptive because it changes how light it is

:55:17.:55:19.

and how dark it is when we wake up and go to sleep, and our body clock

:55:20.:55:26.

is affected by a part of the brain. What that does is it talks to

:55:27.:55:30.

another part of the brain and tells it to produce, or not produce, a

:55:31.:55:35.

hormone called melatonin. That is the Dracula of hormones, so it only

:55:36.:55:40.

comes out at night. The more melatonin we have, the more sleepy

:55:41.:55:44.

we feel. That is good, but it is affected by light. So, if it is

:55:45.:55:48.

light when we are trying to get to sleep, then the light signals do not

:55:49.:55:51.

go through, melatonin is not produced, and therefore we do not

:55:52.:55:55.

feel sleepy. So that is the science, the natural part of this. But the

:55:56.:55:59.

unnatural part is that we message with this, we change the clocks. We

:56:00.:56:04.

do. Of course it will affect us because it is not dark when we go to

:56:05.:56:11.

sleep. It is about making it dark at night, getting blackout blinds, and

:56:12.:56:15.

not being exposed to screens because screens produce a higher

:56:16.:56:21.

concentration of new light, and that affects how much melatonin is

:56:22.:56:24.

produced, compared to natural light. So stay away from screens. How much

:56:25.:56:30.

time away from a screen before their time? I would say an hour to be

:56:31.:56:35.

careful. That goes for all of us. Just even glancing at your phone

:56:36.:56:38.

before you go to sleep. Yes, and in the morning before you get going,

:56:39.:56:46.

have an hour outside to get you going. And our is a big shift in a

:56:47.:56:51.

child's's schedule. Perhaps think back four days before, adjusted by

:56:52.:56:55.

quarter of an hour each day in turn. Not just be going to bed time, but

:56:56.:57:01.

the whole bedtime ritual. So when the clocks actually change, they are

:57:02.:57:06.

more used to it. Sometimes people say it helps them sleep, and others

:57:07.:57:10.

say it doesn't, a night-time drink. A nice cup of tea or something. I am

:57:11.:57:15.

sure scientists say it is the last thing you should do. It is all about

:57:16.:57:19.

routine. Your brain is marvellous and it loves routine. If you always

:57:20.:57:23.

do a certain thing before you go to sleep, then your brain will say are,

:57:24.:57:27.

sleep is due in half an hour. It is different for each person. If you

:57:28.:57:30.

keep the same routine, your brain will learn that sleep is coming. You

:57:31.:57:35.

won't be getting to change clock tonight, will you? I won't, but I am

:57:36.:57:43.

an excellent sleeper falls stop. Thank you for joining us. That final

:57:44.:57:47.

reminder for you, the clocks go forward tonight.

:57:48.:57:52.

I'll be back tomorrow morning from 6am on BBC One

:57:53.:57:56.

Hello, Agnes Brown here. I've got a brand-new entertainment show

:57:57.:58:17.

and it's being filmed at an exciting, glitzy studio.

:58:18.:58:19.

Isn't this...? No, Agnes, we're doing it here.

:58:20.:58:22.

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