21/12/2015

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:00:00. > :00:00.take a look at how the English cricketers are doing ahead of the

:00:00. > :00:16.Test series starting on Boxing Day in South Africa.

:00:17. > :00:17.Hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the papers will be

:00:18. > :00:32.With me are the former trade minister Lord Digby Jones and

:00:33. > :00:38.broadcaster to. -- Henry Bonsu. And we start with the Financial Times.

:00:39. > :00:44.Apple launching a fight back over the surveillance bill. And

:00:45. > :00:52.temperatures will reach 17 degrees in tomorrow's winter solstice, as

:00:53. > :00:55.warm as the summer solstice in June. And hospitals making up to ?3.7

:00:56. > :01:02.million each per year on car park charges for patients. The mirror has

:01:03. > :01:05.that story as well and also an interview with the late Cilla Black

:01:06. > :01:11.in the sun. And British families in the sun. And British families

:01:12. > :01:17.fuel fears of a new financial crash according to the Independent. And

:01:18. > :01:20.the decision to ban Sepp Blatter and the shell Platini for eight years

:01:21. > :01:32.leading the front page on the Guardian. The Daily Mail, a move to

:01:33. > :01:37.let ministers campaign to leave the EU. Well we start with the Fifa

:01:38. > :01:40.story. One point two million or whatever it was, a gentleman 's

:01:41. > :02:04.agreement, what is the problem? Well allow me a bit of French! It is

:02:05. > :02:10.not to do with disloyalty, but an unauthorised payment. Neither man

:02:11. > :02:18.can explain it away sufficiently to the satisfaction of the ethics

:02:19. > :02:25.committee. It goes back to a period between 1990 and 2002 when Michel

:02:26. > :02:31.Platini acted as special adviser to Sepp Blatter during the period of

:02:32. > :02:32.time. Because they cannot explain it away and do not have any cogent

:02:33. > :02:39.reason for this money, that is why reason for this money, that is

:02:40. > :02:44.they have been handed a red card. They have not found guilty of

:02:45. > :02:55.corruption, extraordinary given everything else swirling around. It

:02:56. > :03:01.it well, a few weeks before the it well, a few weeks before the

:03:02. > :03:07.presidential election in which time Sepp Blatter faced a challenge from

:03:08. > :03:11.the Qatari who was himself ultimately ran for bribery claims,

:03:12. > :03:19.this guy suddenly does not stand against Sepp Blatter and a few years

:03:20. > :03:31.with classic English understatement, with classic English understatement,

:03:32. > :03:34.in addition to alleged corruption, which carried a potential lifetime

:03:35. > :03:40.ban, the charges were based on four other potential riches,

:03:41. > :03:42.mismanagement, conflict of interest, false accounting and noncooperation

:03:43. > :03:52.with the ethics committee. I would call that bang to rights! They are

:03:53. > :03:57.appealing. Appealing incentives. He looks a bit dishevelled, Sepp

:03:58. > :04:04.Blatter, diminished by the whole thing. He does not want his legacy

:04:05. > :04:07.to be this. He sees himself as a man who globalised football and to go

:04:08. > :04:12.from the hands of Europe and spread it around the world. There is

:04:13. > :04:18.something to be said for that. We have seen it in Latin America, in

:04:19. > :04:23.Russia, he feels he has used football as a tool for development

:04:24. > :04:31.for the global good and he does not want that to be his legacy. It would

:04:32. > :04:37.have been such a fabulous legacy, that is the shame. He should've seen

:04:38. > :04:44.the writing on the wall and step down a few years ago. The Daily

:04:45. > :04:52.Express. My mother was in Warwick Hospital for five days about a year

:04:53. > :04:57.ago. I was amazed at how much money you have defined just to park your

:04:58. > :05:04.car. I asked the receptionist one-day and said all well and good

:05:05. > :05:09.for people like me but does this happen to someone in hospital for 28

:05:10. > :05:16.days and family maybe doing a vigil at the bedside. Oh, yes. I said it

:05:17. > :05:19.is inherently wrong and she said, if you have seen what happened when we

:05:20. > :05:24.did not charge, people used to park their cars and walk to work. They

:05:25. > :05:31.used it as a free car park to do stuff nothing to do with the

:05:32. > :05:35.hospital. I asked why not have some kind of card when someone registers

:05:36. > :05:41.in the hospital, they put a band on the wrist, they create a history.

:05:42. > :05:48.Why not create a bad code that gives you free parking. -- bar code. This

:05:49. > :05:56.is on the front page of a number of papers. Up to 3.7 million a year

:05:57. > :06:03.each by ripping off patients, visitors and staff with car park

:06:04. > :06:09.charges. Making a fortune. The patient does not get charged car

:06:10. > :06:16.parking when they're in bed, to make that clear, it is outpatient visits.

:06:17. > :06:26.And visitors and staff. There has got to be a better way. One of the

:06:27. > :06:31.problems, when you allow market forces to run things, when you

:06:32. > :06:39.outsource, morality goes out the window. Let's have a proper

:06:40. > :06:48.conversation about outsourcing. It is morally wrong to charge people.

:06:49. > :06:56.Nothing to do with capitalism. You will be talking about

:06:57. > :07:04.nationalisation in a minute! This is wrong. Nothing to do with capitalism

:07:05. > :07:11.or socialism. When you allow these quote, profit hungry private firms

:07:12. > :07:19.to run these car parks, beastly profiteering companies, then you see

:07:20. > :07:24.people who have got to use the car parks... A private company will only

:07:25. > :07:31.do what the person paying them tells them to do. They are morally

:07:32. > :07:37.absolved? No, you have the NHS telling a private company that

:07:38. > :07:42.not blame the private company, in not blame the private company, in

:07:43. > :07:48.legal terms all they are doing is fulfilling their contract. It is

:07:49. > :08:03.about the culture that has been encouraged. You have to dig deeper.

:08:04. > :08:09.We have got to move on. The Daily Mail. That ministers speak out on

:08:10. > :08:13.Europe, the Prime Minister is told. David Cameron must that Cabinet

:08:14. > :08:24.colleagues speak freely on Europe. This is Lord Lawson. John Major

:08:25. > :08:28.yesterday morning said that talking about Cabinet responsibility, until

:08:29. > :08:34.the consolidated position brought back by the Prime Minister has been

:08:35. > :08:41.explained. As we know exactly what we are going to be voting on. Sounds

:08:42. > :08:44.reasonable. But we need to declare freedom from now, Cabinet ministers

:08:45. > :08:49.allowed to go their own way even though normally we have rules of

:08:50. > :08:57.Cabinet responsibility. He seems to be saying this is so important, they

:08:58. > :09:01.should be allowed to speak out. Regardless of your views on Europe,

:09:02. > :09:06.if you're where in the Cabinet now, would you expect to be able to come

:09:07. > :09:10.out at this stage in negotiations, and say you know what, I think we

:09:11. > :09:19.should stay in or I think we should pull out. I believe they should have

:09:20. > :09:26.a free vote. I am worried that this EU referendum vote, the biggest

:09:27. > :09:33.thing for 50 years, will be trivialised to an issue of

:09:34. > :09:38.immigration. And also will be trivialised party politically. What

:09:39. > :09:44.we should be doing is looking at reforming Europe for Europe, not for

:09:45. > :09:53.the UK. We should get a young man in Greece, to work. The way to do this

:09:54. > :09:55.is education. We subsidise French farmers with our taxes more than

:09:56. > :10:04.schools across southern Europe. Why schools across southern Europe. Why

:10:05. > :10:15.not mention that, reform should not be trivialised down to a Tory party

:10:16. > :10:20.that. Until he says to the country, here is the question, I think it

:10:21. > :10:28.should be a free vote. Until that point, your on the team. Just a

:10:29. > :10:41.couple of minutes left. The Daily Telegraph. Steve Harvey is the man

:10:42. > :10:49.who gave up the wrong name when trying to reveal the one crucial

:10:50. > :10:56.point of his contract. Miss universe. Building up to a

:10:57. > :11:02.crescendo. But he got the wrong country. He was given a card, first

:11:03. > :11:09.and second runner-up and then winner. The way it was laid out on

:11:10. > :11:15.the card confused him. He was confused and named Columbia as the

:11:16. > :11:24.winner when she was first runner-up. The response has been savage. They

:11:25. > :11:28.took the crown off the woman and put it on someone else! She was Miss

:11:29. > :11:34.universe for three minutes. They should never have privatised Miss

:11:35. > :11:51.universe! They should have left it nationalised! Gentleman, come on!

:11:52. > :11:59.Limbering up for the second round! I would not like to be Tyson Fury!

:12:00. > :12:03.Gentleman, you are back in an hour and we will see you then. Now time

:12:04. > :12:04.for the sports