07/08/2017

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:00:19. > :00:24.Welcome to our look ahead at what is in The Papers tomorrow. With me in

:00:25. > :00:28.the studio is the political editor of the Sunday express and the

:00:29. > :00:35.comedian and Evening Standard columnist. Thank you both for being

:00:36. > :00:39.with us. Let her show the front papers as we have them. The Michael

:00:40. > :00:44.Fuchs is on the story of a young girl who witnessed her father and

:00:45. > :00:47.flicked a fatal beating on her mother before killing himself in the

:00:48. > :00:53.West Midlands. The independent claims that the overall cost of UK

:00:54. > :00:57.membership in the EU is millions of pounds each week. The sun talks

:00:58. > :01:10.about the screening of Princess Diana's programme. There is also

:01:11. > :01:15.thought in the Financial Times about the Paddy Power Betfair chief quits

:01:16. > :01:21.after transforming the UK gambling industry. And there is talk in the

:01:22. > :01:30.Daily Telegraph of the women that were short in Rio. And in the Times,

:01:31. > :01:39.Tesco is to stop selling disposable plastic bags in a bid to boost their

:01:40. > :01:42.profits. And in the Guardian, US federal workers have been told to

:01:43. > :01:48.stop using the term climate change. Let us begin with the Daily

:01:49. > :01:54.Telegraph and Camilla, this story about the former JCQ -- GCHQ boss

:01:55. > :02:00.telling us that children need digital skills to keep ahead of

:02:01. > :02:05.their rivals. Yes, the tricky waters of the summer holidays! How much

:02:06. > :02:12.tablet time can they have? This is suggesting that everyone to raise a

:02:13. > :02:16.bold, new bright and post-Brexit future we need our children to be

:02:17. > :02:19.online and Internet savvy which I can get and accept, that is the

:02:20. > :02:24.difficulty for parents because on one hand you do not work them to

:02:25. > :02:27.overdo it with technology, we have seen how studies suggest it can

:02:28. > :02:33.stress children out into the course of cyber-bullying. On the other hand

:02:34. > :02:38.we need these digital skills and must be up-to-date. We had the

:02:39. > :02:43.Children's Commissioner telling us this was full of junk food. Yes, she

:02:44. > :02:46.said you have to have your five portions of digital time each day

:02:47. > :02:51.and for it to be quite monitored. The question is, what is it that

:02:52. > :02:55.children are doing? He is right, digital decoder for this country,

:02:56. > :03:00.but is that just looking at this bid and on Twitter or Snapchat or are

:03:01. > :03:03.there better skills that could be done? But there is a massive

:03:04. > :03:10.generational divide for millennial is now, they are known as digital

:03:11. > :03:13.peacocks, their lives have no divide between the physical and the

:03:14. > :03:16.digital, they feel that they do display their world online, that is

:03:17. > :03:19.life for them now, so it is quite difficult to get the balance right.

:03:20. > :03:25.Quite a few Brexit is the reason The Papers, let us run through them. The

:03:26. > :03:31.Telegraph has the Brexit Secretary handing judges powers to see off

:03:32. > :03:34.rebels, what is that about? This is about the European Arrest Warrant

:03:35. > :03:39.and this will please the Eurosceptic Tory MPs in the party who basically

:03:40. > :03:43.what the Supreme Court to have supremacy, pardon the pun, over the

:03:44. > :03:47.EU when it comes to sorting out extradition. They think it is better

:03:48. > :03:52.that these nationals are treated by the courts here than by EU courts

:03:53. > :03:56.that may offer a substantial and substandard judicial system. If he

:03:57. > :04:00.can pledge that, he will keep things happy on his side. The problem is

:04:01. > :04:04.water that is part of the deal because from the other side, senior

:04:05. > :04:09.people in Europe will not want this to happen, they will want the ECG to

:04:10. > :04:14.still have supremacy, so I suspect this is something that will look to

:04:15. > :04:18.appease the backbenchers, but will it actually worked in the reality of

:04:19. > :04:23.the negotiations? Let us look at the Independent and

:04:24. > :04:28.another Brexit story and they are claiming that what the UK pays to

:04:29. > :04:32.the EU, well, that was set during the referendum to be at ?350 million

:04:33. > :04:36.each week and this newspaper is saying it is half of that. This is

:04:37. > :04:43.an important story because at the centre of the successful Leave

:04:44. > :04:47.campaign was this bus with the words ?350 million each week and a lot of

:04:48. > :04:50.people thought, hang on a minute, that seems like a terribly huge

:04:51. > :04:56.amount of money and we should be putting that back into the NHS. As

:04:57. > :04:59.every week was on with all of these Brexit negotiations, we are not

:05:00. > :05:02.getting the hundred and ?50 million back and it looks like this figure

:05:03. > :05:06.was inaccurate. There will be a lot of people who will say this is a lot

:05:07. > :05:12.of money anyway, but truth is really important in politics and this was a

:05:13. > :05:17.central plank of the referendum campaign, so people will be up in

:05:18. > :05:20.arms about it. Camilla, what about Venezuela, Jeremy Corbyn has been

:05:21. > :05:25.under pressure on his stands over Venezuela and the independent has

:05:26. > :05:29.the small headline at the top saying that Jeremy Corbyn has broken his

:05:30. > :05:34.silence on Dennis Wheeler, he is under pressure to condemn the

:05:35. > :05:39.president. Yes, he was good friends with the president, his name escapes

:05:40. > :05:44.me, I think it is President Maduro? He is telling us that he has done

:05:45. > :05:48.great things for the poorer people, even though the Foreign Office has

:05:49. > :05:52.warned people to stay away with writing on the streets and virus, I

:05:53. > :05:58.am not sure how that is a great testament to Communist ruling. Let

:05:59. > :06:04.us go onto the Son and they have said that Spain has done a U-turn on

:06:05. > :06:11.Gibraltar? Is that correct? Yes, there was a big debate about whether

:06:12. > :06:14.this was going to be a pawn in the Brexit thing, Gibraltar, and it

:06:15. > :06:18.looks like the Spanish government is telling us that they are not going

:06:19. > :06:22.to try to disrupt the arrangements, which are very, very important and

:06:23. > :06:26.the people in Gibraltar want to stay connected to the UK. So, I think

:06:27. > :06:33.that is probably the right thing to do. OK. Diana's revenge, that

:06:34. > :06:38.Channel 4 programme that was so controversial, we were talking about

:06:39. > :06:42.it earlier. And the fallout, really, from that continues. You were

:06:43. > :06:46.saying, is this a relevant story because the documentary was on

:06:47. > :06:50.Sunday night and it seems to be continuing to run. This angle looks

:06:51. > :06:54.at the effect now on Prince Charles and Camilla, the Duchess of

:06:55. > :06:58.Cornwall, which is quite a significant and interesting question

:06:59. > :07:03.to ask. Obviously, these tapes that they were discussing backstage half

:07:04. > :07:07.past Princess Diana in a very good light, we now have 20 years between

:07:08. > :07:11.what her death and today to reflect on why she was so unhappy in our

:07:12. > :07:14.marriage and all of these claims that were made about her being

:07:15. > :07:18.unhinged and mentally unstable and this far more kind of mental health

:07:19. > :07:22.conscious times, I think we are looking at a young woman who married

:07:23. > :07:25.into the Royal Family at 19, married for love and did not realise at the

:07:26. > :07:29.time that her husband was seeing another woman and that continued

:07:30. > :07:33.throughout the early stages of their marriage until it collapsed. It does

:07:34. > :07:38.put her in a very positive light, a lot has been said about whether

:07:39. > :07:40.Prince William and Prince Harry will be approved of these dates being

:07:41. > :07:45.aired. Did you think we should have been here? I think Diana probably

:07:46. > :07:52.would have been pleased with the outcome because... Yes, we saw a

:07:53. > :07:56.human person but also quite a strong person as well, we saw somebody,

:07:57. > :08:02.who, I think, probably had quite a lot of fragility with her mental

:08:03. > :08:05.health because of the situation she wasn't, but decided to fight back

:08:06. > :08:12.and fight back she did. There's a line in it, a bit of voice saying,

:08:13. > :08:14.what they feared was strong woman and that is the thing that they felt

:08:15. > :08:19.that they could not handle. So actually, it has -- completely

:08:20. > :08:23.agree, I think it has put her any human light, a good light and many

:08:24. > :08:30.have sympathy for her and I think it does create a big PR problem for

:08:31. > :08:34.Camilla and Charles. The Times has Tesco stopping selling disposable

:08:35. > :08:39.bags. It seems like not so long ago they only started to sell them. The

:08:40. > :08:42.banning of plastic bags has been one of them were successful campaigns in

:08:43. > :08:46.recent times because everyone completely changed their behaviour

:08:47. > :08:51.overnight and that question, do you want a bag and having to pay for it?

:08:52. > :08:55.That has changed things. So you take your own shopping bags? Yes, I do as

:08:56. > :09:01.much as possible but sometimes you do forget. I am like a fiscal

:09:02. > :09:06.stimulus for these bikes are life, I have 150 bags for life in my house

:09:07. > :09:12.because I never ever remember to take them with me! That is what this

:09:13. > :09:18.country needs! Let us talk about the garden -- The Guardian. Several

:09:19. > :09:23.workers in the US have been told they cannot use the term climate

:09:24. > :09:26.change any more. Yes, it has come from the US Department of

:09:27. > :09:30.Agriculture, so therefore straight from the oval office and there's

:09:31. > :09:33.this Donald Trump trying to exert his own climate change denial on the

:09:34. > :09:37.most important department dealing with that? They want the workers to

:09:38. > :09:43.use phrases like weather extremes, we cannot use something about

:09:44. > :09:47.carbon, they cannot use reduce greenhouse gases as a phrase,

:09:48. > :09:52.instead they have to talk about building soil and organic matter and

:09:53. > :09:55.so on, all sounds like jargon but we must have an open and transparent

:09:56. > :09:58.debate about climate change and its possible effects rather than

:09:59. > :10:06.clouding the issue with terminology used. This is just classic Donald

:10:07. > :10:09.Trump, it is like, right, we will completely deny the issue of climate

:10:10. > :10:12.Change Committee has pulled out of the Paris Agreement and this is very

:10:13. > :10:16.interesting, and interesting line at the end that says it has become

:10:17. > :10:20.clear that the previous administration's priority was

:10:21. > :10:24.climate change, the current administration's is not climate

:10:25. > :10:27.change. Donald Trump is doubling down on the fact that he is a

:10:28. > :10:31.sceptic when it comes to climate change, which is very worrying for

:10:32. > :10:35.the planet. Yes, but we do not know that this has come from the White

:10:36. > :10:43.House, do they? I am sure that it has. Staff at the natural resources

:10:44. > :10:47.conservation centre and the Department of Agriculture. He has

:10:48. > :10:50.pulled out of the climate change agreement and has been quite bullish

:10:51. > :10:55.about the fact that he does not have the same thinking on climate change

:10:56. > :11:00.that other world leaders have, so I think he is very much a sceptic when

:11:01. > :11:04.it comes to this. OK, all right. Beulah story we will look at is the

:11:05. > :11:11.cricket. We love our cricket, don't we? We do. I once tried to talk

:11:12. > :11:16.about cricket to Michael Parkinson and he said what the hell do you

:11:17. > :11:22.know about cricket? However, I am familiar with Moeen Ali. I have two

:11:23. > :11:28.older brothers and the cricket mad husband, so there is no escape! This

:11:29. > :11:31.is talking about Moeen Ali being put on a par with Ian Botham because she

:11:32. > :11:36.is such a good all-rounder, I think he got five wickets today. The other

:11:37. > :11:40.great thing, this is jewellery's first captaincy, Alastair Cook

:11:41. > :11:43.handed over the captaincy to him and this is his first series, there was

:11:44. > :11:49.one point when it was going all wrong and now it is going very right

:11:50. > :11:52.and in light of Laura Muir's fourth-place today, which he could

:11:53. > :11:55.not feel for her more, goodness me, at least we have some triumph in

:11:56. > :12:01.another area of town at Old Trafford. But not in London. Moeen

:12:02. > :12:06.Ali, so good with the bat-mac as well, the top scorer. Yes, I

:12:07. > :12:13.understand Ben Stokes did well as well. Moeen Ali committee did not

:12:14. > :12:18.play well at all in India last year and everyone was writing him off.

:12:19. > :12:24.That is a great thing about cricket, one minute you are the top man and

:12:25. > :12:27.the next thing you are just a feather duster. Everyone is selling

:12:28. > :12:31.you a genius again when you do well. So second chances on the bracket are

:12:32. > :12:35.always good to observe, I think. Well, that was fantastic to see. We

:12:36. > :12:40.love watching our cricket. Thank you so much for being with us. Thank

:12:41. > :12:44.you. Very good to have you with us. That is from The Papers and we will

:12:45. > :12:54.see you again very soon. Goodbye for now.

:12:55. > :12:59.Hello once again. The weather has been unsettled of late and continues