All right, where do you want me . Bouncing on my knee where do you think i want you . And David Beckham makes his Big Screen Debut in king arthur but his cameo gets mixed reviews. Good morning. Its thursday 11th may. Im annita mcveigh. Welcome to bbc Newsroom Live. A draft of labours 51 page General Election manifesto has been leaked and seen by the bbc and a number of other news organisation. The leak came as the document was due to be formally signed off today. The document contains a number of eye catching policies including bringing the railways back into Public Ownership as franchises expire and repealing the 1993 railways act which privatised the network. Plans to reverse the privatisation of royal mail at the earliest opportunity. The reintroduction of Maintenance Grants for University Students and a pledge to abolish University Tuition fees. 0n energy the document includes a policy of creating at least one publicly owned Energy Company in every region of the uk, with public con
Were live until 11 this morning. Well bring you the developing news on ba rclays bank. Well bring you the developing news on Barclays Bank. Four individuals are facing Fraud Conspiracy charges including the former Chief Executive. Its a complex story and oui executive. Its a complex story and our correspondent will be here to explain. Get in touch on everything we are talking about this morning. Our top story today. The family of a man arrested after a Terror Attack near a London Mosque say they are shocked and devastated. Father of four Darren Osborne was held on suspicion of Attempted Murder and terror offences after a Van Hit Muslim Worshippers in Finsbury Park. Last night a vigil took place near the scene of the attack. Simon clemison reports. Call to prayer. They came to break their fast with prayer, just as they had 2a hours a demonstration that nothing has changed, ramadan too important to miss. Everyone is still feeling shocked about what happened, there is a little bit of fear
And this budget is an example. Nick watt reports. We havent quite heard the first cuckoo, but spring will soon be upon us. As the buds slowly sprout, its time to prepare for future climates, both sunny and chilly. That was the spirit Philip Hammond invoked in the lead up to the budget. Expect to prepare for troubled times as the uk leads the eu. It actually turned out that spreadsheet phil is so comfortable in his dream job that we witnessed gag a minute phil as he cracked a joke about the last chancellor, who announced the demise of the Spring Budget. The treasury has helpfully reminded me that i am not the first chancellor to announce the last Spring Budget. 2a years ago, Norman Lamont also presented what was billed then as the last Spring Budget. What they fail to remind me, mr deputy speaker, was that ten weeks later he was sacked laughter so wish me luck today ah, a chancellor who thinks he can deliver a deadly serious budget whilst lightening the mood with some gags at the expens
"Q3 consumption growth likely to lag. K-shaped recovery continues. Industrial sector expected to perform decently. Services sector should be fine. Agri sector not expected to contribute significantly. Trade, hotel, transport, and communication may be affected. Construction sector momentum may slow down. The financial service, real estate, professional services should be relatively fine, that should be relatively strong in this quarter. "
Indonesia's economy grew 5.0% in the fourth quarter from a year earlier, supported by resilient domestic consumption, despite exports shrinking and commodity prices falling, a Reuters poll of 23 economists found. Growth in Southeast Asia's largest economy was mostly driven by private consumption which remains strong against a cumulative 250 basis points of interest rate hikes by Bank Indonesia since August 2022. "The current policy rate is not tight enough to hinder economic growth because consumer appetite to withdraw loans remains robust and we saw good performance in terms of consumption, working capital and investment", said Irman Faiz, an economist at Bank Danamon.