good evening. the weather will turn wet and windy tomorrow. at the moment it is pretty clear out there. calm winds and mist and fog forming but the rain and wind is in the forecast for tomorrow afternoon. the weather front sweeping across the country, pushed by a jet stream. we actually need the rain, it has been so dry over the summer, we don t want strong winds which will also arrive with this weather system but the rainfall is not necessarily bad news. here it is approaching north western parts of the uk. these are the gusts of wind we could see in the morning and afternoon, up to 70 mph and it will be a blustery inland as well once this band of rain suites right across the country and here it is moving through england and wales through three o clock in the afternoon. many parts of scotland and northern ireland turned writer with some showers following in behind. the rain will clear away east anglia and the south east by the time we get to midnight and then basically it is
british prime minister, liz truss, has defended her government s chaos, and a sharp drop in the value of the pound. hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me arejessica elgot, deputy political editor at the guardian and emma wolf an author and journalist. we usually start with newspaper front pages, but the economist magazine s cover is so eye catching, we thought we d kick off with it: under a banner of how not to run a country it shows liz truss and kwasi kwarteng in a sinking rowing boat named great britain . the i newspaper continues the theme with the banner: tories fear wipe out after three weeks of truss as pm, also highlighting the yougov poll which they suggest shows more than half of voters would back the opposition in a general election. the times picks up with new bad news. the daily mail echoes the sentiment trust i am not for turning. the guardian looks ahead to tomorrow s meeting between liz truss and br
hello, and welcome to our look ahead to what the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me arejessica elgot who s the chief political correspondent at the guardian. and sam lister who s the deputy political editor at the daily express. tomorrow s front pages. the observer is leading on the conservative leadership contest. they report that a senior tory believes borisjohnson is bitter and say he s trying to wreck sunak s bid to replace him . the sunday telegraph is also leading on the leadership contest but they focus on jeremy hunt and sajid javid, reporting that they re both calling for cuts to taxation. the sunday times takes a similar line on the leadership contest by highlighting issues around tax. they report that the former chancellor rishi sunak is being attacked from all sides . meanwhile the front page of the sunday express is more focussed on brexit they quote the brexit ministerjacob rees mogg who says those who betrayed boris will now seek to neuter brex
hello, and welcome if you re watching in the uk or around the world. sri lanka s president, gotabaya rajapaksa, has announced he will be stepping down. it comes after protesters stormed his official residence and set fire to the prime minister s house. roger hundreds of thousands of demonstrators descended on the capital colombo after months of protests over economic mismanagement. sri lanka is suffering rampant inflation and is struggling to import food, fuel, and medicine. from the capital colombo, our correspondent anbarasan ethirajan now reports. the barricades were meant to keep the protesters back, but they were no barrier for the furious and desperate crowds, all suffering the effects of living in economic collapse. police used water cannon and fired shots in the air, but the crowds were more determined. and they kept surging forward until eventually they converged on the presidential palace and took over the home and office of the man they want to force from power. he
hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me arejessica elgot the chief political correspondent, the guardian and katy balls who is the deputy political editor, spectator. tomorrow s front pages, many of them dominated by tomorrow s ambulance strikes. the ipaper says strike action has put safety at risk at accident and emergency units. the metro leads on a warning from the health minister will quince not to get hurt or ill during the ambulance strike. the telegraph has latest comments from the health secretary who is blaming the unions for the crisis. away from the strikes the mirror features a picture of the under fire tory peer michelle mone on holiday in the alps. so, let s begin. talking about unions and now they re making the choice in terms of