20/05/2014 Look East - East


20/05/2014

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The leading plastic surgeons in the world who don't save lives,

:00:00.:00:11.

The most important factor is to have something that looks relatively

:00:12.:00:24.

An alliance between the Conservatives and UKIP

:00:25.:00:27.

which could see them regain control of Norfolk County Council?

:00:28.:00:30.

In court for assault, pop star Tulisa tells a judge her life

:00:31.:00:35.

And it's farming but not as we know it.

:00:36.:00:39.

Welcome to the world of Practical Pig.

:00:40.:00:50.

We start tonight with the leading plastic surgeons

:00:51.:00:54.

in the world who have come to Norfolk to talk about the latest

:00:55.:00:58.

That means anything from breast reconstruction to things

:00:59.:01:01.

Over the last 12 months, 700 microsurgery operations were

:01:02.:01:04.

That's about 20% of the national total.

:01:05.:01:07.

In a moment, we'll hear from a man who had part of his face rebuilt.

:01:08.:01:11.

But first this from our chief reporter Kim Riley.

:01:12.:01:25.

In the plastic surgery unit at the hospital, three surgeons worked

:01:26.:01:32.

together on a combined must sector me and breast reconstruction

:01:33.:01:38.

operation. The unit is a recognised centre of excellence. Its invitation

:01:39.:01:42.

to this conference has bought experts from all over the world.

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They are coming from the USA, Taiwan, India, Europe, France,

:01:48.:01:55.

Germany, Italy, they are interested in the meeting. This reflects the

:01:56.:01:58.

idea that in Norwich we do good things, not only clinical but now

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organising this meeting as well. This charity supports women

:02:04.:02:09.

diagnosed with cancer. Jane had a combined reconstruction operation

:02:10.:02:12.

five years ago. And you were pleased with the results? Absolutely

:02:13.:02:16.

delighted, yes. Certainly the right decision. I would do it again

:02:17.:02:22.

tomorrow if I had to. The surgeons are simply brilliant. I cannot speak

:02:23.:02:29.

highly enough about them. On display today, photographs of women who have

:02:30.:02:31.

been through that reconstruction process. Margaret is a nurse in the

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Norfolk and Norwich plastic surgery department. My main aim is to show

:02:36.:02:41.

lady is that we can become feminine again after fantastic work that

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these surgeons do with reconstructive surgery. You are

:02:46.:02:50.

proud of that picture. I am, actually. It sounds very vain but I

:02:51.:02:55.

am mixing the proud of that picture. This professor is from Boston, he

:02:56.:02:58.

works at the new frontier of microsurgery, facial

:02:59.:03:04.

transplantation. There are still things that reconstructive surgery

:03:05.:03:09.

cannot reconstruct adequately. With a Strasberg, you are transferring

:03:10.:03:15.

something that God made. `` with a face transplant. It can do a lot of

:03:16.:03:22.

good. As the professor put it to me, it is good to exchange ideas and

:03:23.:03:24.

further collaboration across the pond.

:03:25.:03:27.

further collaboration across the pond.

:03:28.:03:30.

face been

:03:31.:03:33.

One of those who's benefited from facial reconstruction from the world

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class surgeons at the Norfolk and Norwich Hospital is Stephen Burton.

:03:37.:03:39.

He tripped at work, fell face down onto a concrete

:03:40.:03:42.

floor, causing considerable damage to his nose, eyes and mouth.

:03:43.:03:44.

You may find some of these pictures upsetting.

:03:45.:03:47.

It has been a tough and life changing journey. After two

:03:48.:03:50.

operations and as many months off work, Stephen Burton and his wife

:03:51.:03:53.

believe he looks better now than he did in this photo just months before

:03:54.:03:59.

his accident. It is unbelievable what they have done, no scarring, no

:04:00.:04:02.

disfigurement. Everything is perfect. This is him on the table at

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the hospital just hours after falling face first on the hospital

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just hours after falling face first, fragments of bone went through his

:04:10.:04:14.

skin, badly bruised both eye sockets and pushed his top teeth through his

:04:15.:04:21.

bottom lip. It was a shock what it can do to your body and how

:04:22.:04:24.

vulnerable we are. And how vulnerable life is. Every time I

:04:25.:04:26.

looked in the mirror, I would instantly have a memory of the

:04:27.:04:31.

incident in December. I think the most important factor is to have

:04:32.:04:36.

something that looks relatively perfect so you do not relive the

:04:37.:04:40.

incident every moment of your life. This is the day after reconstructive

:04:41.:04:45.

surgery. A silicon implant put into his nose. It was not just his face

:04:46.:04:48.

that needed rebuilding. He now has post from a big stress and a phobia

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of walking on hard surfaces. `` post`traumatic stress. Your thought

:04:56.:05:03.

process and your brain takes over. Natural instincts affect you in

:05:04.:05:09.

dealing with situations. I cannot put it into words. Stephen Burton

:05:10.:05:16.

knows his facial scars have disappeared, the emotional ones will

:05:17.:05:17.

take longer to heal. Members of the Conservative Party on

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Norfolk County council are meeting now to discuss a possible alliance

:05:20.:05:25.

with the UK Independence Party. If it's approved,

:05:26.:05:28.

it would put the Conservatives back But how would it go

:05:29.:05:30.

down with the party and voters? How serious is this idea? Remember,

:05:31.:05:45.

the Conservatives are the largest party by far on the county council,

:05:46.:05:48.

just three short of a majority. But Labour was able to put together this

:05:49.:05:52.

so`called rainbow Alliance. Now there have been unofficial chats and

:05:53.:05:57.

musings for some time about some sort of tie up between UKIP and the

:05:58.:06:01.

Tories but now there has been a formal offer from UKIP, not for a

:06:02.:06:06.

proper Coalition but what has been called a common understanding which

:06:07.:06:08.

would amount to UKIP supporting the Tories during key votes. And this

:06:09.:06:13.

will give them control of the county council again? Yes, it has been

:06:14.:06:17.

championed by the group leader who in an e`mail to councillors which we

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have seen says this would put the town `` the Tories back in power

:06:23.:06:28.

until 2017. They would get through Tory legislation and he says this

:06:29.:06:31.

would be a turnaround in the party 's fortunes. You would think that

:06:32.:06:36.

would sound attractive to the Conservatives. Will it happen? There

:06:37.:06:40.

are a lot of obstacles. There are members of UKIP who think that

:06:41.:06:46.

voters may see them as being unprincipled. A lot of Tory

:06:47.:06:50.

councillors are unhappy because UKIP took a lot of seats from them last

:06:51.:06:53.

time around. Also, how do you think this will go down in election week?

:06:54.:06:59.

One senior Conservative said to me today he thinks this idea would be

:07:00.:07:02.

laughed out at tonight 's meeting. As Ali, there could be a twist. ``

:07:03.:07:09.

bizarrely. This could put pressure on the rainbow Alliance. If the

:07:10.:07:12.

rainbow Alliance collapses, the Tories might end up taking over.

:07:13.:07:14.

Pop star Tulisa says being on trial for assault has put her

:07:15.:07:19.

She's accused of punching an entertainment writer

:07:20.:07:23.

She made the comments as she gave evidence at

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A scrum of photographers outside Chelmsford Magistrates Court and

:07:28.:07:40.

this is who they were waiting for. Tulisa, the former X factor judge

:07:41.:07:44.

and singer was about to give evidence on the second day of her

:07:45.:07:47.

trial for assault. And this is the man she is accused of punching at

:07:48.:07:52.

the V Festival, Savvas Morgan. A showbiz blogger. He publishes

:07:53.:07:59.

celebrity gossip online. She said she had been at the V Festival

:08:00.:08:02.

enjoying herself drink in cocktails and had watched the headline act and

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she said in the early hours of the morning she was heading back to her

:08:07.:08:12.

Winnie Bay go in the VIP camping area at the festival. She was with a

:08:13.:08:16.

group of friends that included singer Alexandra Burke and a former

:08:17.:08:20.

member of the pop group the sugar babes. She said Savvas Morgan had

:08:21.:08:28.

tagged along uninvited. She had tried to stop him entering the VIP

:08:29.:08:33.

Winnebago area. She said he had become aggressive. She told the

:08:34.:08:37.

court that she had not laid a finger on him. From the witness box, Tulisa

:08:38.:08:43.

said this is my life on the line, my livelihood, I cannot believe I am

:08:44.:08:48.

standing here today. Tulisa said she had fallen out with Savvas Morgan in

:08:49.:08:52.

the past and he had been waging a vendetta against her. She said the

:08:53.:08:56.

claim she had assaulted him was nothing more than a pub is a decent.

:08:57.:09:05.

As she left `` a publicity stunt. She left court and was whisked away

:09:06.:09:08.

in a car. The trial continues on Friday.

:09:09.:09:13.

As you probably know, dementia is a huge and growing problem.

:09:14.:09:16.

800,000 people have it and by 2021, experts believe the figure will be

:09:17.:09:20.

At this moment, about 50,000 people in Essex, Suffolk and

:09:21.:09:24.

Ian Barmer has been to West Norfolk to see how more care is delivered

:09:25.:09:29.

Hello, nice to see you again. I do not think I have met you before.

:09:30.:09:47.

This is Cheryl. How are things going. These two women are mental

:09:48.:09:54.

health practitioners, part of the mental health support team in Kings

:09:55.:09:57.

Lynn. They have gone to see if on, diagnosed with dementia two years

:09:58.:10:01.

ago, she is looked after by her family. `` Yvonne. It can be quite

:10:02.:10:07.

tough because she can be quite demanding. You are doing so well. We

:10:08.:10:14.

do not think that you need is really any more. 85% of the team 's

:10:15.:10:23.

patients have dementia. It is by far the most common mental health issue

:10:24.:10:26.

they deal with. And in a fairly advanced case like this, there are

:10:27.:10:33.

always surprises. Sometimes, she just lies down, on the grass or

:10:34.:10:41.

inside. It is something she has started doing in the last few weeks.

:10:42.:10:51.

All the work is in the community after two mental health wards in

:10:52.:10:54.

Kings Lynn closed last year. It was part of cut backs. People come to

:10:55.:11:00.

East Anglia to retire. More older people means more dementia. We cover

:11:01.:11:09.

the coastal areas. Families are living quite a long way away. They

:11:10.:11:12.

do not have that natural support network. What about the tablets?

:11:13.:11:19.

Everything OK with those? The mental health trust says there has been a

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700% increase in the number of patients they are able to help

:11:24.:11:26.

compared with the time when people were kept in hospital. You have

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someone coming in in the morning. Peggy is in the early stages of

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dementia and her husband George looks after her. It has been made

:11:36.:11:43.

sure that the right level of care in the home is in case with macro

:11:44.:11:49.

place. With demand growing, the team can only help people judged to be in

:11:50.:11:55.

the most need. But they insist that care at home is the way to help more

:11:56.:11:59.

Willie Cruickshank is Director of the Norfolk

:12:00.:12:04.

When he came into the studio late this afternoon,

:12:05.:12:07.

I wanted to know if this is the way forward for dementia care.

:12:08.:12:14.

It is a good idea. We know from the evidence being gathered that the

:12:15.:12:20.

best outcomes for people with dementia is if they are living in

:12:21.:12:24.

their own homes. But there are lots of cases where it is difficult not

:12:25.:12:27.

just for the person with dementia but for their partner as well. It

:12:28.:12:32.

is. They are a combined unit and we have to look after them both and

:12:33.:12:36.

make sure they are supported and able to continue living in their own

:12:37.:12:40.

home as much as possible. The cynic will say that actually this is just

:12:41.:12:43.

the way of saving money because if you put someone with dementia in

:12:44.:12:47.

hospital it will cost more. It does cost an awful lot more. But if you

:12:48.:12:50.

put someone with dementia in a hospital, they will decline at

:12:51.:12:54.

around 5% per day. That is why when we look at people going into

:12:55.:12:57.

hospital, around one third never go home again. It is not a good place

:12:58.:13:02.

for someone with dementia to be. Someone with engines should be cared

:13:03.:13:06.

for in the community and in their own as much as possible. `` someone

:13:07.:13:19.

with dementia. They lose their ability to live independently. We

:13:20.:13:24.

institutionalise them. That is why the mantra today are supporting

:13:25.:13:26.

people to live rather than caring for them. If you take away

:13:27.:13:30.

independents and they have dementia, it is difficult for people to gain

:13:31.:13:34.

that back. We want to support them in maintaining their independence.

:13:35.:13:40.

Very often, this is an elderly person with an elderly partner and

:13:41.:13:43.

it puts an enormous amount of pressure on that elderly partner. It

:13:44.:13:48.

does and a high number of people who transfer from living in their own

:13:49.:13:50.

home in to living in residential care is not because of any

:13:51.:13:58.

significant dividends were macro difference Defra... Ill be some

:13:59.:14:05.

people watching this evening I believe they may be have dementia

:14:06.:14:09.

and are afraid to admit it. `` there will be. I would say do not be

:14:10.:14:16.

afraid. There is no cure for it but with the right support in place, it

:14:17.:14:20.

has been shown that people can be supported to live well with dementia

:14:21.:14:23.

in the community, in their own homes, with their family, for as

:14:24.:14:26.

long as possible. Go and speak to your GP. They will go through the

:14:27.:14:29.

process of eliminating whatever else it might be for going down the path

:14:30.:14:35.

of referring you to a memory service to them actually having someone

:14:36.:14:38.

decide whether it may or may not be dementia. Thank you very much.

:14:39.:14:47.

All this week, BBC Radio Norfolk is talking about dementia care.

:14:48.:14:56.

You can hear more on the Nick Conrad show tomorrow from 9am.

:14:57.:15:01.

A third person has been arrested on suspicion of assault following a BBC

:15:02.:15:04.

Panorama investigation into an Essex care home The programme, which was

:15:05.:15:07.

broadcast last month, highlighted the treatment of residents

:15:08.:15:10.

Detectives have been examining the footage.

:15:11.:15:13.

Two other women are currently on police bail.

:15:14.:15:27.

Staff at Ipswich Borough Council have been asked to disclose any

:15:28.:15:39.

Two days before the European elections we look

:15:40.:15:42.

at how many Bulgarians and Romanians have come to settle here after work

:15:43.:15:45.

Plus it's farming but not as we know it.

:15:46.:15:49.

Welcome to the world of Practical Pig.

:15:50.:15:55.

The weather has been changing. Yes, we have had more cloud around and we

:15:56.:16:02.

have more showers and outbreaks of rain. There has been sunshine.

:16:03.:16:05.

Temperatures in parts of North book up to 24.6 Celsius. `` Norfolk.

:16:06.:16:12.

Lower temperatures and much more changeable conditions are on the

:16:13.:16:17.

way. But it is fine in Peterborough. That

:16:18.:16:20.

is where we are going now for some cycling.

:16:21.:16:26.

Yes, we have had a few spots of rain but it has not kept the crowds away

:16:27.:16:30.

from Cathedral Square. The pro tour is coming to town. Here tonight are

:16:31.:16:35.

the top teams across the country. Some of the people competing tonight

:16:36.:16:40.

will be racing in the Tour de France but this is a city `based circuit.

:16:41.:16:47.

They have arrived, the sports top teams. The city streets today

:16:48.:16:59.

belonged to the cycle. Great fun, great advertisement for

:17:00.:17:01.

Peterborough, cycling is on the up. Brilliant. It is marvellous. You

:17:02.:17:06.

just get so close to them and see them whizz by. You do not realise

:17:07.:17:11.

the actual speed they are going at. The problem with the bigger races is

:17:12.:17:14.

they go past and you do not see them. At least here, you get a

:17:15.:17:18.

number of chances to watch them. They raced for just over an hour.

:17:19.:17:21.

The circuit covered in less than a minute. These are top`level bikes.

:17:22.:17:29.

They cost around ?9,000 and are made from carbon fibre. They are

:17:30.:17:35.

extremely light. Dean Downing has won in Peterborough in the past. The

:17:36.:17:40.

perfect place to race, he says. It is fast and furious and the speeds

:17:41.:17:43.

are a lot higher but it is a little bit more nervous because you have

:17:44.:17:46.

lots of corners, tight roads. But then the support that you get from

:17:47.:17:51.

the crowd is like the last kilometre of the Tour de France. The race

:17:52.:17:56.

abandoned last year after a lack of funding. ?40,000 from government

:17:57.:18:01.

help ring it back this year. This is the kind of event that showcases the

:18:02.:18:05.

city on a national platform and turns the city centre into a

:18:06.:18:09.

sporting arena and it brings thousands of people into the city on

:18:10.:18:11.

what would otherwise be a very quiet Tuesday night. The women's race

:18:12.:18:17.

already finished. The men still to start. The city centre a sporting

:18:18.:18:25.

spectacle into the night. Joining us now is Eileen Roe. She won the

:18:26.:18:31.

ladies event. What was that like? It was amazing. The crowd was so

:18:32.:18:36.

enthusiastic. It is nice to come along and see the crowd support a

:18:37.:18:40.

women's race. It makes you race harder. What is it like racing

:18:41.:18:47.

through a city? The longer events, you only see spectators at the

:18:48.:18:53.

finishing line. You get to see everyone every minute or so. The

:18:54.:19:00.

crowd are amazing. We have had the International toy here for the first

:19:01.:19:04.

time. It is a big time for cycling in Britain. Yes, I was told that

:19:05.:19:11.

they had half a billion viewers for the women 's tour. That shows you

:19:12.:19:15.

how enthusiastically viewers are about cycling. Congratulations.

:19:16.:19:28.

In two days? time we go to the polls to vote on who will represent us

:19:29.:19:32.

Most of the region is in the Eastern constituency and there are seven

:19:33.:19:37.

Lifting work restriction this year for Romanians and Bulgarians

:19:38.:19:43.

But last week the Office of National Statistics revealed the number

:19:44.:19:46.

of Romanian and Bulgarians working in Briton had actually decreased in

:19:47.:19:49.

Julian Sturdy has been looking at the impact on this region.

:19:50.:19:54.

Adriana Biziru ending that report by Julian Sturdy.

:19:55.:20:01.

Do they get up early or late? I do not get up early in the morning.

:20:02.:20:11.

English lessons for new arrivals from Romania. I have been here four

:20:12.:20:21.

months. But to find a job, he knows he needs to speak the language.

:20:22.:20:27.

Today, I have had the school. It is run by a charity in Luton. We work

:20:28.:20:35.

with proximity 1500 people over a year. About 100 different people

:20:36.:20:39.

every day come through the welfare centre. About 40% of them are mania.

:20:40.:20:50.

In our experience, the majority of them are eager and keen to find

:20:51.:20:55.

work. This woman was to find a job in a care home. `` want to. Some

:20:56.:21:03.

people are very welcoming, some people have a problem. Part of my

:21:04.:21:08.

job really is to encourage the people that come here to believe

:21:09.:21:14.

that they can find work, that they can raise their levels of literacy

:21:15.:21:16.

in the English language and there is a real hope for the future. It was

:21:17.:21:26.

quite easy for us. We were prepared to do almost everything. This woman

:21:27.:21:32.

used to earn just ?150 per month is a prime the school teacher in

:21:33.:21:34.

Romania. She and her husband left their children behind to move to

:21:35.:21:42.

Norfolk. It was the minimum wages but because in Romania, the salaries

:21:43.:21:48.

are very low, this money is good for us. We brought our children in about

:21:49.:21:57.

five months. In this country. We don't thing to comeback. As far as

:21:58.:22:05.

we know, we will not go back. Now we want to buy a house in this country.

:22:06.:22:10.

We want to have our roots here in this country.

:22:11.:22:15.

Adriana Biziru ending that report by Julian Sturdy.

:22:16.:22:17.

It's designed to help people training to work in

:22:18.:22:22.

the pig industry and is being used for the first time in this region.

:22:23.:22:28.

it's called Practical Pig and it's thought

:22:29.:22:32.

the app may revolutionise training across the agricultural sector.

:22:33.:22:36.

This is the Practical Pig app on a tablet being used by mark on a farm

:22:37.:22:47.

near Shepherd. It contains a large range of training films. I like it

:22:48.:22:54.

because I am not in a classroom and I am not round loads of people and I

:22:55.:22:59.

can take my time. He works for farmer Tony. He has seven kilos of

:23:00.:23:06.

piglets that are sent on and grown at a specialist nursery. He welcomes

:23:07.:23:14.

the use of new technology. It is not intimidating to people who do not

:23:15.:23:20.

thrive on a classroom environment. They can work at their own pace. The

:23:21.:23:25.

beauty is that you can download it onto your device and then you do not

:23:26.:23:28.

need the Internet. You can literally go wherever you like to use it. It

:23:29.:23:35.

is accessible. If you rely on the Internet alone, you have to do it in

:23:36.:23:39.

an office. Practical Pig is available for use on Apple and

:23:40.:23:44.

android devices. It is free to download. Other parts of the

:23:45.:23:48.

agricultural sector are now thinking about doing something similar.

:23:49.:23:50.

agricultural sector are now thinking about doing something similar.

:23:51.:23:59.

I am going to start with the satellite picture because it shows

:24:00.:24:04.

you where we have the thickest cloud on the radar. That shows you the

:24:05.:24:11.

rain pushing up from the continent. Some of that rain has been on the

:24:12.:24:14.

heavy side. There is still the potential for it to be heavy and

:24:15.:24:18.

thundery over the next few hours but it should clearway fairly quickly. A

:24:19.:24:25.

largely dry night with some clear spells. Tonight, staying in double

:24:26.:24:33.

figures. It could fall lower in Google spots. The `` in the

:24:34.:24:47.

countryside. The further west you are, the more likely you are to have

:24:48.:24:55.

drier skies. Sunshine will help to bridge is up to around 19 Celsius. A

:24:56.:25:00.

little bit down on today `` temperatures. Into the evening, a

:25:01.:25:10.

few showers around at first and then if all goes to plan, I will just let

:25:11.:25:13.

the sequence ran into Wednesday night, it looks like we will have

:25:14.:25:18.

this huge area of rain pushing in from the south`west. `` South East.

:25:19.:25:21.

Hopefully clearing during Thursday morning. There is still a lot of

:25:22.:25:29.

uncertainty because over the next few days, as you can see from the

:25:30.:25:32.

pressure chart, low pressure is very nearby. Pinning down the local

:25:33.:25:38.

detail is proving pretty tricky. On Wednesday, the further east you are,

:25:39.:25:44.

the more likely to have cloudy skies with rain. On Thursday, probably

:25:45.:25:49.

that thundery rain to start with, then that should clear. And Friday

:25:50.:25:54.

and Saturday, as it stands, the run`up to the bank holiday, showers

:25:55.:26:00.

or longer spells of rain and some of that could be on the heavy side. As

:26:01.:26:03.

ever, I will keep you posted. that could be on the heavy side. As

:26:04.:26:09.

ever, I will keep you posted. heavy

:26:10.:26:14.

Congratulations are in order for the 14 prize winners from the Look East

:26:15.:26:18.

They includes this garden we featured

:26:19.:26:22.

on last night's programme which will be replanted at the Help for Heroes

:26:23.:26:25.

It won the Royal Horticultural Society's Silver Gilt Flora award.

:26:26.:26:52.

Some people don't think real change in Europe is possible.

:26:53.:26:56.

Some people don't think real change is necessary.

:26:57.:27:00.

Some people don't think it's worth fighting for.

:27:01.:27:04.

But we want to make Europe work for Britain,

:27:05.:27:07.

and give you the final say with an in-out referendum in 2017.

:27:08.:27:11.

have made Britain's economy stronger and more competitive.

:27:12.:27:17.

a record number of people in work. And we're predicted to be

:27:18.:27:22.

the fastest-growing economy in the G7 this year.

:27:23.:27:26.

We're working through our long-term economic plan at home

:27:27.:27:31.

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