:00:00. > :00:00.of public service is to expose inequalities in the way that ethnic
:00:00. > :00:12.minorities and white working-class people are treated.
:00:13. > :00:16.Hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the the papers will be
:00:17. > :00:24.With me are broadcaster Rachel Shabi and journalist Eva Simpson.
:00:25. > :00:31.Good evening to you both. Before we hear from them, let's have a quick
:00:32. > :00:33.look at what the papers are bringing us.
:00:34. > :00:35.The Observer quotes a former Tory health minister calling
:00:36. > :00:38.for a new tax to fund the NHS and social care.
:00:39. > :00:49.The Sunday Times has pictures of Theresa May enjoying
:00:50. > :00:51.The Sunday Telegraph says Theresa May is asking her
:00:52. > :00:52.ministers for their personal Brexit blueprints.
:00:53. > :00:55.More lives could be lost on Britain's beaches according
:00:56. > :00:57.to the Sunday Express - which blames cuts for leaving coast
:00:58. > :01:01.The Mail on Sunday claims victory over plans they say are in place
:01:02. > :01:04.to divert tens of millions of pounds in foreign aid
:01:05. > :01:14.So Brexit is back. The Sunday Times and the Sunday Telegraph, and get to
:01:15. > :01:19.that a moment, pictures the of the reason me enjoying a cup of tea and
:01:20. > :01:23.watching the cricket. It can't be more British than that for a British
:01:24. > :01:31.Prime Minister. What do you think she is thinking of? Probably the
:01:32. > :01:36.cricket photo is to enable the strapline may prepares to umpire
:01:37. > :01:42.Brexit clash and that is very much what this study and others are
:01:43. > :01:48.focused on, which is that there is this almighty tussle with various of
:01:49. > :01:54.her ministers. This story in the Sunday Times is talking about the
:01:55. > :02:02.Chancellor trying to muscle in on Brexit deals, in a way that the
:02:03. > :02:07.other ministers do not particularly welcome. I imagine she is going to
:02:08. > :02:12.have two sort of pull them apart and ask them to focus on the task at
:02:13. > :02:17.hand. The other interesting thing is that all along she said Brexit means
:02:18. > :02:21.Brexit but still no one knows what that means. According to the Sunday
:02:22. > :02:25.Times she has told her Cabinet ministers to come to a meeting with
:02:26. > :02:32.the idea of how to get the best out of Brexit. Who has been quoted?
:02:33. > :02:37.There are no Cabinet ministers who have been quartered. There are
:02:38. > :02:42.reliable sources in this. Has split at the Cabinet supposed to be? Three
:02:43. > :02:46.quarters of them are remain supporters so they must come to this
:02:47. > :02:50.meeting with the plans on how did best go forward with Brexit.
:02:51. > :02:55.Meanwhile there is a turf war going on with people trying to muscle in
:02:56. > :03:02.with other people. Is that what the papers want us to believe? How
:03:03. > :03:06.reliable are the Westminster lobby? The government and they must listen
:03:07. > :03:12.to the people who voted for Brexit, they must see it through. One
:03:13. > :03:16.wonders how divided the Cabinet are. Yes the country voted for Brexit but
:03:17. > :03:21.no one knows what that means so now they must come up with a plan. There
:03:22. > :03:25.is no plan, that is what I'm taking from this piece. She wants everyone
:03:26. > :03:31.to come together. This will be the staff meeting from hell. This will
:03:32. > :03:36.be worried a lot of people at home who voted for Brexit and the people
:03:37. > :03:42.who are in power who are being asked to make it happen and come up with a
:03:43. > :03:48.plan. The Sunday Telegraph describes it as May is the Brexit -- Brexit
:03:49. > :03:52.enforcer. Then makes you wonder how many people when they voted for
:03:53. > :03:58.Brexit realise that there wasn't that much of a plan. People may have
:03:59. > :04:02.thought there was a Pied Piper ultimately things by campaigners but
:04:03. > :04:04.the one thought for one minute that the people reading the Brexit
:04:05. > :04:10.campaign didn't really know how this would manifest itself if indeed we
:04:11. > :04:16.voted to leave the EU. Now we have really lies there is no plan. There
:04:17. > :04:23.are lots of divisions. People said no to the EU but we don't know what
:04:24. > :04:28.kind of know that was. There is disagreement in the Cabinet. Do we
:04:29. > :04:34.stay in the single market? If we do the week at a the controls on
:04:35. > :04:38.migration that we think we can and should control. Or presumably that
:04:39. > :04:42.some people do. It is almost inevitable that there would be these
:04:43. > :04:47.divisions given that we did not know the first place what Brexit would
:04:48. > :04:52.mean. Do you think what the Times and Telegraph are suggesting our big
:04:53. > :04:59.divisions in the Cabinet? Cabinet falling apart over Brexit. Not that
:05:00. > :05:02.they are falling apart but the sense that they all must come up with the
:05:03. > :05:07.strategy. There is no strategy and now they must come up with one. They
:05:08. > :05:13.are all coming at it from different perspectives. Both newspapers
:05:14. > :05:16.highlight the divisions between different departments. There are
:05:17. > :05:22.suggestions that some departments have been briefing negative stories
:05:23. > :05:30.about new departments. See what I mean? Be careful what you read! It
:05:31. > :05:37.is fascinating but I guess the headline is correct. This is why
:05:38. > :05:41.until perhaps we have heard from the horses mouth about divisions in the
:05:42. > :05:50.capital, Debbie takes... I am asking the question, Adi... It will never
:05:51. > :05:55.say, I am cross with Boris because he will not let the muscle in. We
:05:56. > :05:59.know that with the lobby. We will see what happens after Wednesday.
:06:00. > :06:08.Showery moved on to the mild on Sunday? At last MOS victory on
:06:09. > :06:14.foreign aid is the claim. This has been a long-running campaign. It has
:06:15. > :06:18.with the mild on Sunday. They claimed a victory because Priti
:06:19. > :06:24.Patel the new International developer secretary has said that
:06:25. > :06:29.she plans to divert the foreign aid budget to go towards funding the war
:06:30. > :06:33.on terror. There is not much more meat to the silly that we have seen
:06:34. > :06:40.but it is a heartbreaking headline to read. We know that she is not in
:06:41. > :06:45.favour of foreign aid. I think it is a bit of an easy win for her. An
:06:46. > :06:52.easy headline. Quite a populist thing for her to do. For me it is
:06:53. > :06:55.quite a sad thing because as much as we have read headlines with the
:06:56. > :07:02.foreign aid budget funding some despot doing this and it is all
:07:03. > :07:08.going to corrupt regimes, who actually does a lot of good and why
:07:09. > :07:16.should people suffer? It does a lot of good. Pakistan is among the
:07:17. > :07:21.biggest receivers of foreign aid, it is huge, and there is an issue of
:07:22. > :07:27.terrorism there but there's poverty and problems. Refugees. It is
:07:28. > :07:33.difficult to know where the money is going to go. Not really. I think
:07:34. > :07:39.eyebrows and should have raised when Priti Patel was appointed the new
:07:40. > :07:41.international developer secretary. She does not believe in
:07:42. > :07:49.international development because she has decided to scrap it. This is
:07:50. > :07:54.0.7% of Britain's budget. It is going to places like Pakistan and
:07:55. > :07:56.helping to send girls to school in Pakistan and helping with
:07:57. > :08:01.immunisation programmes in Africa and helping Syrian refugees. The
:08:02. > :08:06.bulk of it is funnelled through the UN. You say why should they suffer
:08:07. > :08:09.because some of that money in certain parts of the country ends up
:08:10. > :08:15.in the wrong hands are being misspent? That is just a way of
:08:16. > :08:21.saying, that is a way of avoiding paying it. It would be hard to
:08:22. > :08:30.imagine that most of it is not going to the right place. And the idea
:08:31. > :08:32.that it is an either or scenario. We can't fund counterterrorism and
:08:33. > :08:39.foreign aid as though we need to make that choice, we don't. We also
:08:40. > :08:45.need to find the NHS. Also an ideal logical choice. The Observer UK
:08:46. > :08:50.needs new tax to save NHS and social care from collapse according to top
:08:51. > :09:01.Tory. MP demands action by made to solve cash crisis for NHS. Is this a
:09:02. > :09:05.new tax for the NHS? This is something else for treason these
:09:06. > :09:11.injury. There is a long list of things for her to do. Dan Poulter
:09:12. > :09:15.suggests there should be a tax so that we can safeguard money for
:09:16. > :09:18.social care. It is a long-running issue the idea that elderly people
:09:19. > :09:21.once they go into hospital they stay in hospital because there isn't a
:09:22. > :09:25.social care plan that there is nowhere for them to go so instead of
:09:26. > :09:29.leaving the stay in hospital, which costs them more. He is suggesting
:09:30. > :09:35.that there should be some ring fencing of funds to prevent that
:09:36. > :09:43.happening. Because he said it is urgently required I'd is a crisis.
:09:44. > :09:46.It is good to see this issue raised. He was from the Department of Health
:09:47. > :09:52.but he is also a part-time NHS doctor and this correlation between
:09:53. > :09:57.starving social services, of course if you cut social services to the
:09:58. > :10:00.extent that we have in the UK through austerity that will have an
:10:01. > :10:07.impact on the NHS. Of course it will affect the NHS in a negative way. So
:10:08. > :10:13.to connect those dots I think is a really important things. Obviously
:10:14. > :10:19.we should be seeing, trying to fund the two together because they work
:10:20. > :10:24.so closely in tandem. Not strike to staff one and overburdened the
:10:25. > :10:28.other. The Sunday express, this is not an issue that seems to be going
:10:29. > :10:35.away it has been going for some time. It started in local papers in
:10:36. > :10:41.Sussex and now graces the national papers. Cuts led to drownings, no
:10:42. > :10:44.cash to guard our beaches are still die in one week. There has been a
:10:45. > :10:49.lot of calls from lifeguards to be there but it is quite a quiet beach,
:10:50. > :10:57.but very popular. The local council, I read that they said there is no
:10:58. > :11:01.need for lifeguards. According to this and people in the government,
:11:02. > :11:04.local government for these cuts and he is demanding that something be
:11:05. > :11:10.done about it in the light of all these tragedies over the summer.
:11:11. > :11:16.Other tweet I saw saying, I don't not it is true, but they claim that
:11:17. > :11:20.the local council make between 30 and ?50,000 per year out of the car
:11:21. > :11:22.park on the beach. That could go some way towards putting some
:11:23. > :11:27.lifeguards on the beach to make sure people don't get trapped in the
:11:28. > :11:32.sand. Local authorities are having to decide what to cut, these cuts
:11:33. > :11:38.have been imposed upon the idea must decide which of the local services
:11:39. > :11:45.they can get rid of. It is no grey surprise to discover that we do not
:11:46. > :11:49.have enough coastguards, and that service has been starved of funds
:11:50. > :11:54.given so much about local authorities provide has been. We
:11:55. > :12:01.just have time to squeeze in a story that I really want to about,
:12:02. > :12:08.snoring. Talk It is the traffic's fault. It sleepiness during the day
:12:09. > :12:12.is linked to traffic pollution. I have just moved to the countryside
:12:13. > :12:25.and I definitely stop snoring. I sleep like a baby. Your nostrils get
:12:26. > :12:34.blocked up. Is it a pollution related thing? They discovered that
:12:35. > :12:36.25% of men snort. Added his traffic pollution there is the likelihood
:12:37. > :12:45.that snarling increased with the exposure to traffic. One more thing
:12:46. > :12:51.caused by pollution. Thank you very much for taking us to the papers. We
:12:52. > :12:57.will do it again at 30p.m.. Goodbye. Thank you very much for watching.
:12:58. > :13:01.Coming up next is this weeks edition of reporters. A full round-up of the
:13:02. > :13:24.best reports from that week. From here in the BBC newsroom,
:13:25. > :13:27.we send out correspondents to bring