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    Hello good morning it’s 7:00 if you’re going out today even us Northerners might need our big coats after a week of storms torrential rains and floods get ready for The Big Chill there is snow coming it’s Monday the 8th of January hundreds of flood warnings are

    Still in place and the Met Office says that snow could cause Rush Hour chaos across the southeast Amber warnings for cold weather yellow warnings for ice across large par of the country just days after communities were flooded also ahead ministers meet this morning to consider how post office

    Branch officers who were the victims of a miscarriage of Justice can be cleared the door that blew off Alaska Airlines jet is found by a school teacher a rocket to the moon the first Luna mission is in more than 50 years is due to launch in the next few few minutes

    Plus and the Golden Globe goes to Oppenheimer Christopher Nolan’s Blockbuster about the father of the atomic bomb winds big at the Golden Globes well thanks so much for joining us let’s talk to Rob and Steph about the big stories of the day uh Rob day back at school for MPS yeah morning Jane the back after the Christmas break I think a big story today is going to be this post

    Office Scandal ministers likely to meet to discuss what can be done to speed up the quashing of those wrongful convictions some awkward questions as well for the lib Dem leader Ed Davy he was post office minister at the time during the Coalition years and Steph the

    Cold weather is here it is here it’s no more it’s on its way this is it so it’s cold us really in the Southeast we’ve got a very strong wind that’s making it feel far colder than it is and further north there’s also some showers there as

    Well but it’s the southeast that we’re watching could bring us some snow w we shall see just a bit late for Christmas uh well as Steph was saying after the floods comes the freeze over the past week we have seen storms and torrential rain cause rivers to burst their Banks

    From gloucestershire to Nottinghamshire the environment agency says more than 1,800 properties have been flooded and communities are still mopping up it has happened before but it’s all been thoroughly repaired and tanked since then we were not expecting it because we had a lot of work done on it and we’ve

    Had it all checked and maintained it’s just although it’s not high nevertheless it’s getting everything wet and it’s seeping in as if it’s got under the floor so bull stti stream goes right up into our yard uh there’s a there’s a kind of toe path that walks that we

    Walked behind there usually that’s of course completely underwater now uh the blood water has came up very quickly uh since Friday it had been stable but it’s right up to our back patio almost almost to our back door we have a neighborhood WhatsApp group and it was I’ve never

    Seen it this active in the three years we’ve moved here uh some of our neighbors are dealing with a little bit of flooding in their kitchen um we’ve been pretty stressed out uh on Friday since I as I said it’s stabilized since Friday right now we’re okay kind of hoping for the

    Best in England there are still 169 flood warnings and 159 flood alerts in place but attention is already turning to what is coming next that is snow ice and freezing temperatures well let’s cross live to our west of England and Wales correspondent Dan Whitehead he’s in Longford in gloustershire at Dan a

    Bit late for a white Christmas but it looks like it’s coming yeah for these communities here in Longford and elsewhere in the country who’ve just come off the back of floods this is not the news that they wanted the UK Health Security Agency in the Met Office at the weekend issuing this Amber

    Warning for cold uh weather and it covers large sways of the country not just the southwest of England where I am also uh the West Midlands the Northwest East Midlands right through until midday on Friday so expect those freezing temperatures right across uh the week what does an amber alert mean well

    According to the UK HSA it means that this cold weather is going to impact um across the whole Health Service for an extended period of time so the advice is to check on those people who might be vulnerable now we’ve heard this morning about another warning as well this one

    Specifically from the Met Office this is for a yellow warning of ice in London in parts of the southeast southeast of England and also some parts of Northern Ireland you were mentioning the flood warnings there we’re on the High Street here in Longford which just a couple of

    Days ago was completely underwater you can see some of the flood water Still Remains behind me it has now started to recede but this is not what these communities wanted they are mopping up still there’s lots of debris on the road and the concern is that this uh water

    This dirty water that remains in streets and communities that have been flooded over the last couple of days could then of course turn to ice that combined with warnings of snow means it’s going to be a very tricky couple of days ahead for those communities hit last week okay Dan

    Good Hat thanks very much uh let’s bring in Sky meteorologist Steph gter he’s here um Steph how cold is it going to get well it depends where you are because if you’re in the Southeast that’s where it’s going to be coldest today and tomorrow we’ve got this wind

    Coming in from the East and it’s tapping into some extremely cold air that we’ve had in Scandinavia now they’ve had it cold for Scandinavia but fortunately it’s going to be slightly diluted by the time it reaches us but still strong wind and a little bit of moisture means that

    Parts of the southeast may see some showers today some of them could turn wintry mostly on the North Downs so a little bit of a wintry flavor there but elsewhere the winds will probably turn Northerly later in the week so for Scotland that’s when they’re going to

    See their snow it’ll continue off and on sort throughout the week but F the west where we’ve had some of the worst of the flooding there actually the snow should stay away so yes it will be be cold but at least we’re not going to have snow to

    Deal with as well okay Steph warm coats but don’t panic essentially exactly great okay thanks very much now to politics and ministers are meeting this morning to consider how post office branch officers who were wrongly convicted of fraud can be cleared the Horizon it system was introduced by the

    Post office in 1999 almost immediately losses in the system emerged with the post office taking legal action by 2015 736 people had been criminally prosecuted with 700 convicted a public inquiry into the Scandal was established in 2020 to date 93 convictions have been overturned with around 138 million pounds paid in compensation our

    Political correspondent Rob poell has more on this Rob the Justice secretary looking into how the government can help these victims and some would say not before time yeah morning Jane I think if you’ve been campaigning on this for years and years and years you probably are wondering this morning why it’s

    Taken an ITV drama series to kind of prompt the government to were into action to look at what can be done to speed up the quashing of some of these convictions I think we’re likely to get meetings of ministers today to discuss how this can be done stripping the post

    Office out of the appeals process potentially of course other campaigners want something more widespread legislation to get some kind of mass exoneration of sub postmasters I think we’re also likely to see backbenchers as they return for their first day after the Christmas break trying to bring a minister to the commons through an

    Urgent question something like that to address um some of these issues and as well as I think looking forward there may well be a little bit of looking backwards at how this was handled by conservative Le governments in the past when some of these allegations first

    Emerged there was a lot in the papers over the weekend about how people like sir Ed Davy who in 2010 was the minister in the coalition government responsible for the Post Office how seriously they took some of the accusations and some of of the concerns that were being raised

    By campaigners like um Alan Bates now a lot of unhappiness from those campaigners about what went on back then think s ed dve is not helped by the fact that he is quite fond of calling for people to resign over um perceived um Maps or inadequacies what the Times

    Newspaper has clocked up 31 times since 2019 that he has called for someone to resign on his online Twitter X account so that might be why some people feel it would be appropriate to subject him to a little bit of pressure as MPS come back um to Westminster for their part the Liv

    Dems and Davey says that back then he met Alan Bates that he regrets that he essentially didn’t realize that the post office was lying to him over concerns um about the Horizon software but I think likely to be the big story that dominates today on the first B first day

    Back at term for mpce okay Rob thanks very much well let’s take a look at the papers this morning and the mail is leading with a post office Scandal it says pressure is growing on the government to to compensate the thousands of sub postmasters who were wrongly convicted as part of the Horizon

    It Scandal elsewhere the guardian claims a senior conservative MP has warned his party faces obliteration at the next election the times warns That official government forecasts predict two million more people will be claiming disability benefit by the end of the decade meanwhile the telegraph says the mayor of London sadique Khan has bowed

    To rail unions by offering a bumper pay offer to avoid strikes on the London Underground and the Daily Star has a weather warning for us they say a 12-day chill and white outs are on the way from Scandinavia as Steph has just been explaining to

    Us well let’s take a look at some of the day’s other headlines now and Ukraine’s military says Russia has launched a large-scale missile attack on several Ukrainian regions in the early hours of the morning military officials say the capital K is under threat from ballistic missiles and have urged people to find

    Shelter they say areas including zapara and KH are also under attack a new National Drive to get pupils back into the classroom is being launched today the department for education is promising 18 new attendance hubs across six regions of England bringing the total to 32 it says it’ll help nearly 2,000 schools tackle

    Persistent absences new research has found that the UK is the only country in the G7 where household budgets have not recovered to prepandemic levels the TU claim families would be 750 a year better off if incomes had grown in line with other leading economies Al jazer has accused Israel of

    Deliberately targeting journalists after two of of its staff were killed in an air strike near Rafa in southern Gaza Mustafa thorah and Hamza Dadu died in the strike yesterday hza was the eldest son of alzer’s Chief correspondent Wu what did Hamza do to them what did

    The family do to them what did the safe civilians in the Gaza Strip due to them but the world is blind to what’s happening in the Gaza Strip in a statement the AL jazer media Network strongly condemned the attack saying the assassination of Mustafa and Hamza while they were on their way to

    Carry out their Duty in the Gaza Strip reaffirms the need to take immediate necessary legal measures against the occupation forces to ensure that there is no impunity Hamza is the fifth member of w dadu’s family to die since the start of the conflict he lost his wife son daughter and

    Grandson to an Israeli air raid at the end of October meanwhile the US Secretary of State is in Abu Dhabi for the latest stage of his tour of the Middle East anony Anthony blink’s meeting with Arab leaders in an attempt to prevent the conflict in Gaza from spreading across the

    Region the missing door that blew off an Alaska Airline flight in midair has been found by a school teacher in his garden well sabba chowri has more on this sabba so remind us what happened over the weekend with this plain door and it has at least finally turned up good morning

    Jane well the incident took place uh on Friday and it was minutes after a takeoff from Portland International Airport the pilots on board a Boeing 737 Max 9 aircraft were forced to perform an emergency landing and this was after a mass massive hole RI through the side of

    The aircraft now luckily no one was seriously hurt and the plane the pilots were able to land the plane safely but as I say it could have been so much worse not just for the passengers and the people on the plane but also those on the ground in terms of

    Deis that debris was today found by a teacher called Bob in Portland so a key component uh of that door that’s gone missing the door clug has today been found now uh this door without a doubt will be used in uh the investigation that’s currently ongoing to determine

    The cause of what happened with this particular uh incident but the anxiety amongst passengers I’m sure is uh really uh sort of uh adding especially after given the fact that this is the fourth issue with Alaska Airlines flight uh in the past two months four incidents have

    Been reported by pilots uh to the airline uh so this as I say will be adding to anxiety amongst Flyers indeed SE thanks very much well still to come on the program at 7:30 we’re going to be talking to the Pitch Perfect actress Britany snow about

    Her role in a new film highlighting the plight of women trying to seek an abortion in the United States later we’ll hear from the conservative MP David Davis who’s urging the government to hold accountable those responsible for the Post Office Scandal well the let’s tell you a little

    Bit more about a story about the paragan mission one it is attempting to become the first US Luna Lander since Apollo 17 uh more than 50 years ago uh this is the live shot that we are getting from NASA it’s going to take off very very soon our science correspondent Thomas Moore

    Has more on this Thomas uh what are they trying to achieve here just explain it to us in simple terms yeah you’re looking at the United launch Alliance Vulcan centur on Cape uh canaval in Florida there it’s due for launch any minute now uh the launch window is about

    45 minutes it has to be quite precise in order to get to the moon at a point in uh so that it can enter orbit and it will be going for a Landing they hope on the 23rd of February now this is a really interesting Mission not just

    Because it’s the first us uh Lander to go to the Moon uh since Apollo 17 in December uh 1972 but this time NASA is not at the controls it has bought a ticket to ride it has five instruments on board but it is paying a private us company to

    Develop the rocket and another one to uh to actually uh build design uh and and control the Lander now this is controversial because alongside those instruments there will be commercial payloads too in including uh some human remains that have been cremated uh and are being taken to the moon and indeed

    Also a marketing Stunt by a sports drink manufacturer and many scientists feel this is all a little bit icky um but uh for NASA it means that can control the cost of they’re paying just $18 million to get to the moon which is an absolute

    Bargain but to get to such a low price they are taking a massive gamble here that rocket has never flown before the Lander has never attempted uh to to leave Earth’s orbit before so this technology is is really being tested well beyond its uh uh limits as as far

    As uh the existing tests down here on Earth so it’ll be interesting to see whether this actually happens we know that getting to space isn’t easy um but uh United launch Alliance have flown other designs of Rocket before just just not this one so it’ll be interesting to see what

    Happens and in terms of of what NASA will will benefit the fact that they are sort of Outsourcing various elements of it um I mean it’s still going to be of enormous scientific benefit to NASA isn’t it yes I mean this isn’t a purely scientific Mission they don’t have a

    Particular goal but they have got five instruments on board including one designed uh at the open University in Milton ke uh where they have an instrument that will be looking at the the moon’s extraordinarily thin atmosphere and trying to look at what happens to water molecules okay uh thanks so much Thomas

    So it’s one minute to launch uh before this United launch Alliance from Cape canaval in Florida sets off hoping to land on the moon on the 23rd of February let’s listen in 30 E4 start bot go status check go Vulcan go Centaur Jo perig 15

    10 tus 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 we have ignition and liftoff of the first United launch Alliance Vulcan rocket launching a new era in space flight to the moon and Beyond two good srbs hitting Peak pressure on the srbs everything looking Good and we got Pitch programs in coming into normal rates for that event we have good hydraulic pressure on both engines good chamber pressure on both engines everything looking good Coming up on 60 seconds into the flight everything looking good two good engines two good srbs body rates look good nice and smooth and we’ve hit our first throttle point on the b4s everything looking good and we have passed through Mach One we are now supersonic coming up on Max

    Q had Max Dynamic pressure everything looking good we’re rolling off on the srbs and we have cut off on the srbs coming up on jettison and approximately 30 seconds 15 seconds SRB jet b4s continue to operate nominally seeing expected pu activity on the Boost remains and we have separation of both

    Srbs everything looking good b4s continue to operate normally coming up on two minutes into the mission we are now 17 miles in altitude we just heard confirmation of solid rocket booster jettison we have about 3 minutes until we well there a successful launch of the United launch Alliance

    From Cape Canaveral uh the paragan mission let’s bring in our science correspondent Thomas Moore Thomas what are the big hurdles the Milestones that this rocket will will have to overcome in the next few minutes and hours that we know it’ll be it’s been a success

    Yeah so far so good but it has to get to to orbit it’s got a few minutes to to to go yet uh then it will do one uh rotation around the earth then the peragine uh mission one Lander will separate from the rocket and will Veer

    Off be slingshot to towards the moon uh traveling at very high speed while the rocket and uh human remains and DNA from from 60 people including Star Trek Creator Gene Roddenberry and three other Star Trek uh actors astronauts and various others all that will head towards the the sun where it the the

    Rocket and and those remains will remain in In Perpetual uh orbit U something that they clearly wanted to do be part of uh the celestial makeup um the the Lander itself will then head to the Moon it will do a series of orbits around the

    Moon uh while it tries to uh find the the exact spot that it wants to land it’s waiting for Sunrise so the lighting conditions are are right over there and then on the 23rd of February it will attempt a robotic Landing uh and then it

    Will it remain there for for a series of days uh while all those uh scientific experiments are undertaken Thomas Thanks so much uh before we leave the story uh let’s just look back again at the launch and liftoff of the first United launch Alliance Vulcan rocket launching

    A new era in space flight to the moon and Beyond two good srbs hitting Peak pressure on the srbs everything looking good we’re going to be talking more about this later on in the program so stay tuned about quarter 9 we’re going to be talking to a space journalist on this as

    Well well let’s get more on our big story of the day the post office Scandal which saw hundreds of sub postmasters falsely convicted of stealing money due to a faulty it system well the Scandal has been thrust back into the Spotlight by a TV drama let’s talk to conservative

    Pier Lord abot who is uh features in that drama he played a prominent role in Seeking Justice For Those affec from the very beginning really and he joins me now um how do you feel about the fact that it appears to have taken a TV drama

    To actually get some kind of action for all of those who have been wronged here well drama has its important role to play but the problem before was that the sub postmasters were failed by virtually every sector of society including by politicians um because we I was just

    Representative on that TV drama over a number of MPS who were working uh we failed to achieve anything it was uh Alan Bates taking the thing to court and having a fantastic judgment from Mr Peter Fraser uh and then the TV drama that have really caught first uh the

    Imagination of the court of appeal and second the imagination of the public uh but the the post the sub post Masters have been really failed by the legal system before that by the uh corporate system by the media by everybody and so I’m delighted that at last it’s got to

    The attention of the public who do you blame for not taking it seriously at the time because of course Alan Bates and and the others they did the right thing they they went to their local MPS to complain and to raise the issue uh he was very clear sighted about what was

    Going wrong you got got on board why did others in government not take it seriously there was the problem that the post office was the most trusted brand in the country the problem that the court system uh did not work for the sub postmasters uh lawyers were acting for

    Their client of the post office and the post office had Deep Pockets and the sub postmasters did not uh the media found it difficult to cover because it was complicated and who wants to take on the post office uh and these people had been convicted of theft why believe them um

    It was a series of catastrophes for the sub poost Masters and I just take my hat off to Alan Bates and all of his uh sub postmasters who were working so hard together that they persevered and look what they’re now beginning to achieve but we’re still only in the foothold of what we’ve

    Actually got to achieve indeed I mean do do you think that Davy has questions to answer he was the minister in charge of post office at the time um actually I think I think that’s a bit of a red herring I think that what Ed Davy

    When he came into office as the post office Minister was doing he was following the uh line of the previous uh labor government namely this is an arms length organization which uh the government was simply refusing to oversee properly uh so yes all ministers who are involved in this

    Labor libdem and conservative have got questions to answer I wouldn’t concentrate too much on uh any one party because no party comes out of it well no indeed I mean David Cameron prime minister at the time I mean are you aware whether the claims made it all the

    Way to his desk whether he ignored what the postmasters were saying I don’t actually know whether it got onto his desk uh I don’t I don’t remember putting it onto his desk myself um but I mean certainly I wrote I wrote to David Cameron along with all MPS to

    Ask have you got similar problems to the ones that are cropping up in my constituency because as I say none of us politicians come out of this well the post office itself you talked about it being you know such a big corporate entity should it now be

    Stripped of its power to prosecute cases and should it it lose an ability to really have an influence over the appeals as well well the post office cannot be trusted by the sub postmasters and it should not prosecute anybody uh the idea that a corporation which itself is being

    Investigated by the police should uh start Prosecuting people is absurd um so that would be that’ be quite wrong but I think they stopped Prosecuting people in 2015 that not before time um what what what would you like to see the government do to make this right

    One of the greatest problems is that there have been between 700 and 900 convictions of sub postmasters and only 93 of those convictions have been overturned that’s an awfully small pathetically small number and I think that this is a mass problem which has

    Got to be dealt with in a mass way and I think that Parliament has got to step in and say that post office convictions are not not safe we’ve seen the way that investigators behaved and they behaved in a way which was contrary to the rule of law and they’ve these convictions

    Have got to be set aside we shall see Lord of buut uh very good to talk to you thanks very much thank you well it is cold out there let’s get a look at the weather in more detail warm memories wherever you go fly the weather sponsored by katar

    Airways conditions will be quiet and cold this week with a freshening Breeze bringing a significant wind chill to Southern parts of the country this morning there’ll be a widespread Frost overnight temperatures having dropped close to or below freezing patches of dense freezing fog over parts of Ireland Scotland and Northwest England will be

    Slow to clear some may linger throughout the day the weather sponsored by Kata Airways you’re watching Sky News breakfast still to come this hour we’re going to be joined by the star of a new Oscar shortlisted short film shining a light on the danger face by women seeking abortions in the United States so the Taliban government have EMP power since 2021 and in that time they have built Bridges and built roads and infrastructure and the country is coming to a point of Peace but they just don’t recognize women women’s education after the sixth grade doesn’t exist uh women are not

    Allowed to go to Beauty parls which have been closed there are um parks are closed they can’t work for Nos and at this current day and age that is unacceptable that’s 20 million Afghan women who are being treated as second class citizens and that’s what I tried to highlight with my film well

    Afghanistan has such a unique history in the sense that in my lifetime the country’s flag has changed 19 times it’s just a a a chaotic time of Government after government and every single time the women have always been victims to all these new different regimes um and they’ve always been impacted and it’s

    Just it’s just enough there is no excuse for women not to be able to study 3,000 Afghan women Were Meant to join the Afghan Service as doctors but the board examinations were cancelled and they are just at home doing nothing those as a country we need stability and our

    Economy to rise we need all the help we can get so it just doesn’t make sense that this policy set forth by the afan government is in place it’s it’s completely ridiculous the world is at a time where there’s just chaos and and upsetting uh events happening everywhere

    But at the same time the Afghan women are being forgotten and this is what I’ve tried to do with my film yellow and it’s resonated so much around the world I get messages every day from people who’ve seen it and feel that it’s a message that needs to be told women are

    Becoming invisible again and as an Afghan myself I can’t let that happen it’s my duty as an artist and as a filmmaker to try to bring that to life Welcome back you’re watching Sky News breakfast at exactly 18 minutes past 7 the first rocket to the moon since 1972 was launched from Cape canaval in Florida the Apollo missions more than 50 years ago if it all goes well it will attempt to land on the surface of the Moon with

    Scientific equipment to gather data Paving the way for a future human Mission everything looking good now since the US Supreme Court’s controversial decision to abolish the national right to abortion in 2022 the issue has become a key Battle Ground for both Republicans and Democrats now a new Oscar shortlisted short film about a

    Single mother who crosses state borders in search of an abortion shining a light on the lengths some women are forced to to go to find help well let’s talk to the star of that show Britney Snow in just a moment first let’s take a little

    Look at the film I’ve come all the way from I’ve Yeah you and everybody from that state and all the other ones too please I’m Desperate well the actress Britney Snow who plays Rachel in the film joins us now from Los Angeles uh Britney lovely to talk to you today why did you want to get involved with this film um I think it’s a very important issue obviously one that’s very topical

    To um so many of us specifically in the United States and something that we definitely need to discuss and what I loved about this short was it didn’t do it in a didactic way it it merely showed a lens and light on something that I felt was heartbreaking and poignant

    Without pointing any fingers and I feel like a lot of people can take a lot of lessons from it without it being preachy were you not afraid of of stepping into to such a political subject because of course many actors and actresses go out of their way to

    Avoid a role that could polarize an audience oh I think that’s some of the best parts of doing um anything artistic is is uh putting what you feel and what you want out into the world whether it is polarizing or not I guess um and I think the great thing about this short

    Is that it really just poses a lot of questions and it doesn’t really necessarily um uh point it in any direction ction to to preach um and I think that that’s something that I really strive to do in my career as well is just to pose a lot of questions so I

    Was I was grateful to be a part of it and how would you describe the reaction to the film so far it’s been really amazing to see how many people have um have commented on it and take it in um i’ I’ve gotten even some people who have changed their minds

    Um whether it be from one side to the other and um I think that that’s really what I what I set out to do and I think what the filmmakers really set out to do was just not necessarily change people’s minds but see it from a different perspective and you mentioned the

    Filmmaker nazarin Chow a British screenwriter and director what was it like working with her it was so great I mean when I read the short I hadn’t done I I actually don’t think I’ve ever acted in a short film before and so I I read it you know

    With a little bit of hesitation not that I wouldn’t do it but just I you know I was like this better be good and when I read there’s a there’s a Twist that happens that I will not give away um and it viscerally uh spoke to me it went

    Through my entire body and I I talked to her right away and I said you are so talented and I need to be a part of this uh without question so I respected her talent and I knew exactly what she was set out to do which I think is really a

    Marking of a great director and of course it is an election year in the United States how great an issue do do you think abortion is going to be in the next few months I think it’s hugely important I think if um I think it’s going to be a

    Very heated debate yes polarizing but I think something that we do need to speak about and I think that’s what I love about the Arts and I think that’s what I love about this short film is that um it is an election year and I think people

    Will be talking about it hopefully due to this short how do you feel about about the state of Democracy in America at the moment I have my opinions um I wish things were you know all sorts of different ways but I will be um I will

    Be silent about this for now because I do you know love my country but I I think you know you guys I wish I was over there [Laughter] sometimes the other the other big story of course across your side of the pond overnight is the Golden Globes um it’s

    Been a big night for Barbie big night for Oppenheimer big night for succession uh what are your thoughts about about the winners I loved Oppenheimer I loved Barbie I think that Barbie also liked this short did a really good job of uh painting a picture of something without it being

    Too heavy-handed and also posing a lot of questions and um and doing it in entertaining really uh entertaining uh fascinating way so I loved I loved that movie um I didn’t get to go to the awards which is quite all right I was in my pajamas I’m in my pajamas now under here

    Don’t worry I was my pajamas as well the cloes was on I was fast asleep yes exactly well listen lovely to talk to you and it’s a really fascinating film and it is a short so you know lots of people should be able to watch it uh Britney Snow good to talk

    To you thanks for joining us on sky thank you for having me well as we were saying Christopher Nolan’s Blockbuster biopic about the father of the atomic bong took home the top gong at the Golden Globes overnight uh there were for the opheim director as well as his leading man selan Murphy but

    There was upset for fan favorite Barbie as poor things pipped it to best comedy musical of course Barbie did get other honors our arts and entertainment correspondent Katie Spencer reports and the Golden Globe goes to Barbie pitched as the Battle of barbon Heimer this year’s Golden Globes dominated by two films that when

    Combined made over two billion while Barbie was recognized for its box office achievement thank you we would like to dedicate this to every single person on the planet who dressed up and went to the greatest place on Earth the movie theaters this was Christopher Nolan’s night his nuclear arms race Thriller

    Taking home best film Best Director as well as a win for its leading man first question do I have lipstick all over my nose I’m just going to leave it I was in the hands of a Visionary director a and I want to thank Chris and Emma Amy are you

    Okay yeah as for TV while chaotic road rage Thriller beef and frenetic kitchen drama the bear both went away with three Globes each perhaps more predictable the coldblooded power plays of the final season of Sky Atlantic succession sweeping the board with wins for Sarah snook this is really heavy um mat

    Mcfaden I just adored every second playing um the weird and wonderful human grease stain that is Tom W and Kieran culin rather fittingly loing it up over his Rivals this is a nice moment suck it Pedro sorry British showrunner Jesse Armstrong admitting it hadn’t been an easy

    Decision to end the series we decided this was the right time to end the show and um that was very Bittersweet and the Golden Globe goes to Oppenheimer the first big Awards event of the Year recognizing the huge cultural impact of some of the most critically acclaimed drama we’ve seen in

    A long time Katy Spencer Sky News that’s been a fantastic 12 months on screen hasn’t it uh still to come we’re going to take a look at the new exhibition bringing the Stark reality of homelessness to Parliament This is a a piece of uh Hardware built at the O University in metal kees it it’s called a mass spectrometer but what that is is a device that will land on the surface of the Moon on this Mission and it will measure the composition of the lunar atmosphere very very thin

    Lunar atmosphere less than the millionth of the millionth of the thickness of the atmosphere on Earth and it will basically it acts like a weighing scales so it separates the atmospheric molecules account according to how heavy they are and we know that water molecules weigh 18 nitrogen weighs 28 so

    We can identify what those molecules are when when we did land on the moon we put you know humans on there and and um you know the initial idea was that the moon was quite dry it seemed to be a dry Barren bu dusty place but more recently

    In the last 10 years or so we’ve had orbiters going around the Moon which is starting to reveal a different picture and and we’re getting suggestions that there’s actually a a very tenuous water cycle going on on the moon with with kind of water molecules moving around

    The surface maybe getting stuck at the poles and Frozen down as ice where it’s very very cold and also techniques have improved so the last time an instrument like this went to the moon was 50 years ago you know technology moves on so you know this mission is the first time to

    Go and do this kind of science again after 50 years I mean the Moon is a real it’s getting to be a busy place with missions you know you as you’ve probably seen on your on your coverage um what’s different about this mission is that it’s commercially LED so it’s kind of

    There’s a global feeling that the best way to explore space and the Moon is the the nearest place to go so this is where you’re going to go and try this out in the first place is to get everybody involved so it’s not just a kind of a national agency Endeavor but it’s

    Involving commercial companies and universities and and trying to bring that all together to make it more sustainable and a cheaper way to explore one of the reasons people are really interested in water on the moon is that it might help sustain EXP exporation there so if we want to put astronauts on

    The moon if we want to take a bottle of water up to them which weighs you know half a kilogram for a bottle of water it’s going to take about half a million pounds to do that because of lifting it through the Earth’s gravity field so one

    Of the ideas that if you can find appreciable quantity of water on the moon and purify it bottle it sell it for less than half a million pounds then you’ve got a business case now that’s not my bag but you can see how using resources locally and not having to take

    Everything with you in a massive spacecraft can make space exploration more Agile and liftoff of the first United launch Alliance Vulcan rocket launching a new era in space flight to the Moon fantastic pictures aren’t they at exactly 18 minutes past 7 this morning the first rocket to the moon was launched from Cape canaval in Florida the first since the Apollo missions more

    Than 50 years ago if all goes well it’ll attempt to land on the surface with scientific equipment to gather data Paving the way for a future human our science correspondent Thomas mo has more Thomas when’s it going to land so it’s due to do a series of

    Orbits and then uh land on the moon on the 23rd of February it has to wait for particular light conditions before it can do that safely and that’s why we are so well ahead of the actual launch uh day it only takes less than a week to

    Get to the moon itself so um they want to make sure that everything good launch they’ve got a series of payloads on board uh this is the first commercial uh Mission uh from the United States which is really interesting it just a big gear shift there from NASA they’re n of the

    Controls they’ just bought a ticket to ride they got five experiments on board but they’ve paid this uh other company astrobotic to develop this robotic Ander um and they are paying just $18 million uh to transport their kit to the Luna surface but it is the private

    Company that is taking all the risk uh and part of that risk was actually uh sending everything up on an untested rocket this was the the first launch of this particular rocket but it seems to have gone completely to plan it’s now uh in orbit around the Earth doing a series

    Of engine Burns before it slings this uh this capsule this uh astrobotic Lander which is the size of a garden shed out towards the moon in the in the coming minutes Thomas why why is there interest in going back to the moon now why is it taken 50 years for the idea of

    Revisiting it it’s because they they realize that there is water on on the moon and that has given an awful lot of uh interest to to people going back there using the moon as a as a staging post to uh travel perhaps to Mars or even even Beyond because with with water

    You can make oxygen you can obviously hydrate astronauts but also there’s a possibility of making Rocket Fuel itself now it would be extremely expensive to lift so much water off uh Earth because of of it has to escape gravity but if there’s water there on the moon it is it

    Becomes relatively cheap to get to these FL flung uh destinations within the solar system uh that’s really driven uh this this new interest it’s not just about the science on the moon now it is about the practical application of space exploration so the beginning of a really exciting era in space

    Travel okay Thomas Thanks so much now from today politicians members of the House of Lords and visitors to the houses of Parliament will be able to see a powerful new exhibition documenting homelessness in the UK from across the last six years well joining me now in the studio is the chief

    Executive of the charity crisis Matt Downey uh and also the labor MP Paula Barker who is also co-chair of the all par party parliamentary group on ending homelessness um Matt to you first of all tell me about the exhibition what are you hoping it’ll achieve well it’s a beautiful exhibition uh detailing the

    Kind of the light in the dark of homelessness so the darkness of people’s circumstances but also the light of their potential and it’s and it’s it brings brings forward the humanity of people because quite often we stereotype homelessness we see people on the streets and we and we blame them for

    Their situations um this really brings that uh into a different light and says no these are real lives that could have been where homelessness could have been prevented and it’s a message that can be taken to Paula’s colleagues in in Parliament to say actually there are better choices parliamentarians can make

    To make sure people don’t end up homeless to start with I’m just looking at these images they they are beautiful and and Stark images lot of them Paula why do you think it is important that this is displayed in the house of parliament well as mass has already said

    It’s very important for us to be able to see the potential of these people every single person who is homeless has their own story to tell they all have their own dreams and aspirations and you see so often people walking past people on the street who are homeless as if they

    Don’t exist these have an individual story to tell and Mark has captured that in each of his photographs and I think it’s really really important as we make legislation going forward that we have that front and center in our minds and Matt homelessness Rising again according to analysis 14% higher than last year

    Why is it going up is it as simple as the cost of living crisis or is it something more complex than that well the cost of living crisis is certainly making things worse but homelessness is going up because the causes of homelessness aren’t being dealt with um

    The you know the really high rents that people experience the fact that there’s simply enough not enough housing to go around so the causes are not being dealt with and and the consequences are being badly served to and this exhibition is especially timely because this year the government

    Are planning to legislate to actually criminalize people who are homeless um and that’s something that’s completely unacceptable from our perspective and you know instead of punishing people U for their homelessness what we really need to see is those causes dealt with Paula do you think MP see an inverted commers homeless people

    I mean you know just here in Westminster you know there are the homeless people on the streets all over London do you think MPS are guilty as perhaps lots of other people are of of not seeing homeless people of them becoming invisible yes absolutely I think that’s

    Uh absolutely um a pertinent comment to make and I think we have to deal as mass has already said with the reasons why people become homeless I want to see services that are trauma informed and LED as it’s very hard and I want to be

    Able to um give people not just hope but a future and I think that this exhibition is really important in doing that and hopefully will focus all colleagues Minds on how we can make things better mat what would you like to see the government do to make

    Homelessness better to reduce it to help those on the streets well first and foremost there’s there’s no time like the present to say that the the way out of all forms of homelessness is a to have enough homes to go around so that you know people have somewhere to live

    And then if people do have support needs that as Paula says they get trauma informed high quality care that’s it that’s you know every case of homelessness is different but at its heart everyone needs somewhere to live and if you need help you get that help

    And really what that means is you need a strategy to deliver that right across the board and and to stop sort of short-term or or misplaced initiatives like the criminal justice bill that’s saying that people should be punished and and fined or imprisoned for their homelessness Paul do you think in an

    Election year as we anticipate it is that there is the political will to focus on this subject I think one of the things that concerns me is that when you look back to Suella Bran’s time in in office she talked about homelessness being a choice and she uh spoke about

    You know getting rid rid of tents and the criminal justice bill as mass has already said will criminalize people who are living on the streets I think you know our Comm commitment from a Labor’s point of view is that we will build 300,000 homes uh initially per year and

    Of course we would want to see that be much much more for me there has to be a fully cross- departmental strategy um and when labor left office in 2010 we had practically eradicated homelessness and of sleeping and I think that be is definitely um you know a concerted e eff

    And a will to be able to do that again and finally Matt these images that we’re seeing they’re on display in the houses of Parliament of course unless you’ve got access and a parliamentary pass or a visitor you can’t see them but they are going to go out around the country at

    Some point aren’t they yeah i’ I’d urge everyone to to look online and to even buy the book Mark’s Mark’s Work is absolutely vital as far as I’m concerned because it does something we all need to do it’s just to see people who are homeless as equals as people with

    Potential and not simply those people who you might walk past on the street Matt Dany from crisis and Paula Barker at Labor MP and chair of the all part of group on ending homelessness thank you both a lot for coming in and talking to us right let’s take a quick look at this

    Morning’s sports news and Liverpool are through to the fourth round of the FA Cup Final they beat Arsenal 2-n after dominating the first half Arsenal fell behind late in the second half Trent Alexander Arnold’s free kick headed into his own goal by Arsenal Defender yakob kol and then deep into stoppage time

    Liverpool broke away to make it 2-n l Diaz scoring to seal the win the result means it’s now three consecutive defeats for Mel Etta side and they’re without a win in four FA cup holders Man City booked their place in the fourth round AN emphatic star pep guardiola’s side

    Trashed Huddersfield 5 nil with two goals coming from England midfielder Phil foden and Chelsea Striker Sam Kerr is to miss the rest of the season after picking up a serious knee injury in training and should we take a look at some of the back pites let’s wam bam says the sun after Patrick

    Bamford’s stunner during lead’s 3-0 FA Cup victory over Peter the eye has leis Diaz celebrating Liverpool’s win away at Arsenal despite their defeat the misfiring Gunners may not be shopping for a new Striker after all it says and the times also features Arsenal’s FA Cup exit with a quote from

    Mel artetta we must get our heads right warm memories wherever you go the weather sponsored by Kata Airways well the weather conditions quiet and cold this week with a freshening Breeze bringing a significant wind chill to Southern parts of the country this morning there’ll be a widespread Frost overnight temperatures

    Having dropped close to or below freezing patches of dense freezing fog over parts of Ireland Scotland and Northwest England will be slow to clear some may linger throughout the day showers and the southeast will turn wintry Over The High Ground as they spread Westward the weather sponsored by kataar Airways

    Coming up on Sky News breakfast a rocket to the moon has been launched in Florida the first since the Apollo missions more than 50 years Ago Hello good morning it’s 8 o00 if you’re going out this morning even us Northerners might need our big coats after a week of storms torrential rain and floods get ready for the big chill we’re told there’s snow coming but the weather was good in Florida good enough

    In fact to launch a rocket to the moon it’s Monday the 8th of January and liftoff of the first United la lach Alliance Vulcan rocket launching a new era in space us Luna mission in more than 50 years lits off from Cape canaval hundreds of flood warnings are

    Still in place and the Met Office says that snow could cause Rush Hour chaos across the southeast an Amber warning for cold weather a yellow warning for ice all this comes just days after hundreds of communities were flooded also ahead ministers meet this morning to consider how post office branch

    Officers who were the victims of a miscarriage of Justice can be cleared the door that blew off an Alaska Airlines jet in midair is found by a school teacher and and the Golden Globe goes to [Applause] Oppenheimer Christopher nin’s Blockbuster about the father of the atomic bomb winds big at the golden G

    [Applause] Well good morning and thanks a lot for joining us Rob and Steph are here with the headlines Rob the MPS are back after a Christmas break what’s on their agenda today yeah morning Jane I think the big story today May well be the post office Horizon Scandal there’s going to be a

    Meeting involving the Justice secretary he’s looking at potentially ways to speed up quashing those convictions you had a former Tor MP current Tor Pier who’s campaigned on the issue saying that they should all just be set aside on mass and that Parliament should intervene I think we might likely see

    Something covered on this on the floor of the house today as well uh and Steph we’re all going to be wrapping up warmer that’s right the cold weather is here some places will see some snow but it’s not going to be Everyone by any stretch of the imagination so we’ll be looking

    At exactly where is going to see some snow and how much okay Steph thank you both very much but first let’s remind you that at exactly 18 minutes past 7 the US launched its first rocket to the moon since the Apollo missions more than 50 years ago beond well our science correspondent

    Thomas ma was watching the launch and joins us now Thomas just remind us what is the point of what they’re trying to achieve here yeah look this wasn’t just another space launch this was really significant not just because it’s the first time since Apollo 17 back in 1972

    But this is the first commercial Venture from the United state so NASA is on board but it’s not at the controlled and that’s a big gear shift a new era in space exploration why well it brings down the cost NASA hopes that private companies uh getting involved will lead

    To Innovation that brings down the cost of getting to the moon and it really wants to go back there because it sees the moon as a staging post for going Beyond perhaps to Mars deeper into the solar system and it’s the water on the moon that will allow them to do do that

    Not just to hydrate uh astronauts but also to provide oxygen and even rocket fuel in a really cheap way and that is the interest so one of the experiments on board has been designed by the open University in the UK that will be looking at the movement of water

    Molecules within the very thin atmosphere of the Moon uh but it is this commercial Venture they’re paying just $18 million uh and that should keep the price down for for future missions that’s the excitement but it has led to slight controversy because there are other commercial payloads on board

    Including human remains that have been cremated and also a marketing Stunt by sports drink manufacturer and some scientists feel that their experiments shouldn’t be going to space alongside what they would see as rather trivial cargos okay thas thanks very much well let’s bring you back down to

    Earth and weather in the UK now and after the floods comes the freeze over the past week we’ve seen storms and torrential rain cause rivers to burst their Banks from gler to nire the environment agency says more than 1,800 properties have been flooded and communities are still mopping up it has

    Happened before but it’s all been thoroughly repaired and tanked since then we were not expecting it because we had a lot of work done on it and we’ve had it all checked and maintained it’s just although it’s not high nevertheless it’s it’s getting everything wet and

    It’s seeping in as if it’s got under the floor so bull stti stream goes right up into our yard uh there’s a there’s a kind of toe path that walks that we walk behind there usually that’s of course completely underwater now uh the flood water has came up very quickly uh since

    Friday it been stable but it’s right up to our back patio almost almost to our back door we have a neighborhood WhatsApp group and it was I’ve never seen it this active in the three years we’ve moved here uh some of our neighbors are dealing with a little bit

    Of flooding in their kitchen um we’ve been pretty stressed out uh on Friday since I as I said it’s stabilized since Friday right now we’re okay kind of hoping for the best well in England there are still 169 flood warnings and 159 flood alerts in place but attention is already turning

    To what is coming next that is snow ice and freezing temperatures well let’s cross live to our west of England and Wales correspondent Dan Whitehead who’s in Longford in gloustershire they’re preparing for the cold weather there Dan but they’re still very much mopping up aren’t

    They yeah it was only at the week end that the High Street that I’m just Stood Beside here in Longford and Gloucester was underwater the hous is bailing out water from their their homes um that has now receded that water but you can still see uh that the flood planes right

    Behind me and the fields and stuff are underwater and that is the concern for those communities it’s the UK Health Security Agency and the Met Office uh which has issued this Amber warning for cold weather it lasts right through until midday on Friday it affects not

    Only where I am here in the southwest but also the West Midlands the northwest of England the East Midlands and as I say it’s going to last all week what does an Amber warning mean well uh the government says that it could have an extended impact on Health Services

    Informing people to check on those vulnerable people over 65 uh to check that they are okay and that actually keeping homes uh warm 18° and above could be more difficult for vulnerable uh people so that’s the Amber warning in place but we’ve had another fresh warning today from the Met Office

    Specifically that’s a yellow weather warning for ice and that affects London it affects parts of the southeast of England and also parts of Northern Ireland but all this comes on top of the fact as you mentioned still 169 flood warnings in in place and in parts of uh

    The middle of England and the south east of England uh where those communities are still mopping up the last thing they need now are these freezing temperatures because the concern is that that low-lying water and the water that’s still on some of the roads in those flooded communities could freeze and

    Turn to ice create even more dangerous conditions okay Dan thanks a lot well let’s bring in uh Steph gter Steph how cold is it going to get well currently it’s minus 7 and a half in parts of Scotland so that’s a little bit chilly I think we could agree um but it’s going

    To be the southeast which has the biggest shock because we’ve got our temperatures lower than average compared to elsewhere and it’s also been so mild here recently um for Scandinavia they’ve had some really really exceptionally cold conditions and we’re sort of tapping into that now fortunately it’s

    Diluted a little bit by the time it reaches us but it does mean the weather over the southeast is kind of of most concern in the next 24 hours or so we’re already seeing some showers the showers at the moment that I’m seeing reported are rain rather than sleet or snow but

    That’s not to say over the higher ground later on we could see some snow now I think mostly it’s going to be the north Downs that see the the wintry weather if we see any but it’s not going to be everybody and even over this week we’re

    Not going to have a complete blanket of snow covering the whole of Britain and Ireland it is going to be cold we’re all going to see that but only a few of us mostly over Higher Ground And in the East are going to see any wintry weather

    At all okay so those of us affected definitely wrap up warm the rest of you just but don’t panic consider yourself lucky Don’t Panic okay reassuring uh right let’s take a look at some of the day’s other headlines now and Ukraine’s military says Russia has launched a large scale missile attack on several

    Ukrainian regions in the early hours of the morning military officials say the capital KV is under threat from ballistic missiles and have urged people to find shelter they say areas including saaria and H are also under attack a new National Drive to get pupils back into the classroom is being

    Launched today the department for education is promising 18 new attendance hubs across six regions in England bringing the total of 32 it says it’ll help nearly 2,000 schools tackle persistent absences new research has found the UK is the only country in the G7 where household budgets have not recovered to

    Pre-pandemic levels the TU claimed that families would be £750 a year better off if incomes had grown in line with other leading economies aler has accused Israel of deliberately targeting journalists after two of its staff were killed in an air strike near Rafa in southern Gaza our Middle East correspondent alist bankle

    Is in Jerusalem aliser serious charges from Al jazer has Israel [Applause] responded said that they did strike a vehicle in southern Gaza that was containing number of people and they said one of those was some they believe to be a terror operative in their words who was operating a drone now there are

    Some contrary report saying that uh the drone’s been operated for journalistic purposes to gather pictures not for um any kind of fighting or or or Terror purposes but in that strike uh two journalists were killed uh one of them the son of the AL jazer bureau chief in

    Gaza well Al dud who’s already lost his wife two of his other children uh and his one of his grandchildren as well um so not only personally is he paid An Almighty price um during the war in Gaza but actually journalists and the journalistic community there too um at

    Least 79 journalists are calculated to have been killed during the fighting Palestinian journalists I should say foreign journalists like myself are not allowed uh into Gaza at least not unilaterally sometimes there are opportunities to go in on Israeli military embeds but there is no access being allowed in for foreign journalists

    And so the Palestinian journalists uh who work for channels like our own uh and others around the world are doing so under immense risk of being killed as was uh evident yesterday okay Ali thanks very much now ministers will meet this morning to consider how to clear the

    Names of hundreds of post office branch managers who were wrongly convicted of fraud The Horizon it system was introduced by the post office in 1999 almost immediately losses in the system emerged with the post office taking legal action by 2015 736 people had been criminally prosecuted with 700 convicted

    A public inquiry into the Scandal was established in 2020 to date 93 convictions have been overturned with around 138 million pounds paid in compensation well a little earlier the conservative peer Lord bunot told this program that postmasters had been failed by every section of society and that Parliament should step in to overturn

    Their convictions one of the greatest problems is that there have been between 700 and 900 convictions of sub postmasters and only 93 of those convictions have been overturned that’s a an awfully small pathetically small number and I think that this is a mass problem which has

    Got to be dealt with in a mass way and I think that Parliament has got to step in and say that post office convictions are not safe we’ve seen the way that investigat has behaved and they behaved in a way which was contrary to the rule of law and they’ve these convictions

    Have got to be set aside well nodding long to that labor Shadow environment sector Steve Reed is here uh Steve what do you think should be done well good morning well I mean certainly this is one of the gravest miscarriages of Justice we’ve seen in British legal history and it’s been

    Dragging on for in excess of two decades now and I’ve spoken to sub postmasters in my own constituency who are victims of this Scandal people have lost their livelihoods their reputations their savings their pensions some people have even died of old age this has gone on

    For so long so I completely agree that those individuals who have still got convictions for crimes for which they were not responsible need to be exonerated they need to be compensated and that needs to happen quickly now as I understand it the Justice secretary is looking at whether there’s a legislative

    Route for this to be done through par par rather than expecting either the public inquiry to do it peace meal or each of those individuals to have to go to court one by one to seek um to seek exoneration uh and their conviction being overturned we will look at what

    The government brings forward constitutionally it’s very unusual to do it that way but I think the gravity of the crisis uh and the level of the Injustice does mean that we have to look at doing something to support these people two decades many of them are very elderly now they deserve their

    Reputations back and they deserve what remains of their Futures back while these prosecutions were going through uh the director of public prosecutions at the time was K starmer of course did he take his eye off the ball does he have questions to answer do you think well

    The the the the CPS doesn’t work like that it’s not the guy at the top that takes the decisions they have individual officers that will be taking decisions but from what we can see the post office was blatantly lying to people about their role in all of this and there are

    Huge questions for the Post Office to answer about their role the the public inquiry the investigation that’s underway will give us more evidence that we can use there but surely I think the priority right now is to get Justice for those people whose lives were utterly destroyed by this they deserve support

    They exer deserve exoneration and they deserve compensation and in terms of of the Horizon it system that that the post office had it was it was Tony Blair who was the leader while that was signed off no one is covering themselves in glory particular over this have they over the years well

    I I think there are lessons for everybody to to learn from this you know as a somebody who hopes to become a minister if labor wins the next general election but ministers currently and certainly in the past as well the job of a minister should always be to ask

    Questions it should be to listen to dissenting voices and give them due Credence to inform decision making it should not be that ministers are simply the mouthpiece for their officials or organizations like the post office who quite clearly were covering things up you talked about the election uh K

    Arm told sky yesterday the people want change they must vote for labor what change do you think labor represents well labor represents the Only Hope for Change that this country’s got we I mean if you look at what’s going on at the moment the big problem that people come

    To me about is the cost of living crisis and the reason that’s happening is we’ve had 25 different tax Rises under this government as they’ve made working people pay for their for their disastrous crack ing of the economy which sent mortgages prices in the shops rents all soaring the only way that we

    Can get this country back to working for everybody who lives here again is to grow the economy labor has a plan for growth you don’t have to take my word for that we’ve had captains of industry like the former chairman of Tesco saying there’s only one player on the pitch

    When it comes to economic growth but if we don’t get that change You’re simply going to have this conservative government continuing to do the same they’ve done for these past 14 years now and if you ask people do you feel better off or worse off after 14 years of

    Conservative government people all feel far worse off the UK as you say currently has the highest tax burden in more than 70 years but also crumbling Public Services you say you want to bring taxes down but how is it possible to do that and also fix Public Services

    What we don’t want to do is be increasing the tax burden on working people in the way that we’ve seen this conservative government do inre there are a number of tax loopholes that labor could close that would get us additional funding for some of those Public Services I mean one of the most

    Egregious for me is the non-dom tax loophole that’s a system by which uh foreign billionaires who are living in this country get away with paying less tax than the guy that cuts my hair that is simply unfair by making those people pay their fair share of tax you can

    Raise three billion pounds that would make a big impact on schools that are crying out for funding on the National Health Service that is crying out for funding that would help but for the long term we need to look at how we can grow the economy and economic growth was 50%

    Bigger on average every single year in the 13 years of Labor government that preceded these 13 years of conservative government hasn’t Richi suak though started to turn things around we’ve seen interest rates uh start to fall from some of the mortgage companies inflation has fallen as he said it would are you

    Not worried that you know if the elections not for another eight nine months things economically might be feeling a little bit sunnier for a lot of people well if you look at what the government’s doing right now let’s let’s take tax since that that was something

    We were just we were just discussing the government is just playing cynical pre-election tricks they’re talking about a tax cut that comes into Force this month but what’s really going on is we’ve had 25 different Tory tax hikes since they won the last general election in 2019 they’re now proposing to give

    Back just two pounds out of every1 extra they’ve taken off people they’re trying to pretend that that is some kind of benefit for people actually people are far worse off and the reason there’s a cost of living crisis the reason it’s hitting people so hard is this conservative government crashed the

    Economy and they decided to make working people pay the price that is simply not fair Steve re had a secretary state for environment food and Rural Affairs thank you thank you well let’s take a look at the papers this morning and the mail is leading with the post office Scandal it

    Says pressure is growing on the government to compensate the thousands of sub poost Masters who were wrongly convicted as part of the Horizon it Scandal elsewhere the guardian claims a senior conservative MP has warned his party faces obliteration at the next election the times warns That official government forecasts predict 2 million

    More people will be claiming disability benefits by the end of the decade meanwhile the telegraph says the mayor of London sadik Khan has bowed to rail unions by offering a bumper pay aler to avoid a week of strikes on the London Underground and the Daily Star has a

    Weather warning for us saying a 12 Day chill and white outs are on the way from Scandinavia well let’s just mop up some of the political reaction with our political correspondent Rob poell on the sofa here with me Rob the Justice secretary looking into how the government can help uh victims the sub

    Poost Masters yeah and you had Lord Arnot former Tor MP Tory Pier now who’s worked with a lot of these sub postmasters on earlier saying that what he wants to see is is not so much the post office being stripped of its role in how these convictions are appealed

    But something bigger than that essentially Parliament legislating to on mass exonerate all the sub postmasters that have still got convictions on their name now Steve Reid for the labor front bench there said that that would be constitutionally unusual but I thought on the whole suggested labor would be

    Pretty open to supporting an idea it does sound doesn’t it they I think they you know they they clearly think that this is a a massive public issue that people are are really exercised about it they’re not going to push back on that all they if the government comes up with

    A plan and I think both sides want to show that something can be done quickly because there has been so many uh sort of bureaucratic hurdles to get over what with the inquiry and all of the court cases if they can show that something can be done a little bit more quickly

    And get something for everyone in a shorter time frame then I don’t think anyone will necessarily stand in the way of that clearly it’s for government lawyers the Justice secretary and the cabinet to hammer out practically how that would actually work then of course

    There is also um some of uh the kind of looking back if you like to the Coalition years to ministers that were in post then and whether enough was done back then Lord r bunot said that he wrote to all MPS including David Cameron the then prime minister to ask if they

    Hadd seen any issues with this post office system that he had been seeing cropping up in his constituency said he didn’t know if the issue made it to his desk in his capacity as prime minister but interesting nonetheless that he says he wrote to the then prime minister who

    Is of course now the foreign secretary s ed Davy as well the libdem leader was from 2010 for a couple of years the minister with responsibility for the post office as well so I think you can expect some MPS to try and turn the heat

    Up on him today as well okay Rob thanks very much now Christopher Nolan’s Blockbuster biopic about the father of the atomic bomb took home the top gong at the Golden Globes overnight and there were wins for the Oppenheimer director as well as his leading man selan Murphy but

    There was upset for fan favorite Barbie as poor things pipped it to the best comedy musical our arts and entertainment correspondent Katie Spencer reports and the Golden Globe goes to Barbie pitched as the Battle of barbon Heimer this year’s Golden Globes dominated by two films that when combined made over two billion

    While Barbie was recognized for its box office achievement thank you we would like to dedicate this to every single person on the planet who dressed up and went to the greatest place on Earth the movie theaters this was Christopher Nolan’s night his nuclear arms race Thriller taking home best film Best

    Director as well as a win for its leading man a first question do I have lipstick all over my nose I’m just going to leave it I was in the hands of a Visionary director a master and I want to thank Chris and Emma Amy are you

    Okay y as for TV while chaotic road rage Thriller beef and frenetic kitchen drama the bear both went away with three Globes each perhaps more predictable the coldblooded power plays of the final season of Sky Atlantic succession sweeping the board with wins for Sarah snook this is really heavy um Matty

    Mcfaden I just adored every second playing um the weird and wonderful human grease stain that is Tom WS um and Kieran culin rather fittingly lording it up over his Rivals this is a nice moment suck it Pedro sorry British showrunner Jesse Armstrong admitting it hadn’t been an easy

    Decision to end the series we decided this was the right time to end the show and um that was very Bittersweet and the golden Globe goes to Oppenheimer the first big Awards event of the Year recognizing the huge cultural impact of some of the most critically acclaimed drama we’ve seen in

    A long time Kat Spencer Sky News looks like a good night let’s get a look now at the weather Warm memories wherever you go to fly to fly the weather sponsored by katar Airways well it’s going to be cold this week with a freshening Breeze bringing a significant wind chill to Southern parts

    Of the country this morning there’ll be a widespread Frost overnight temperatures having dropped close to or below freezing patches of dense freezing fog over parts of Ireland Scotland and Northwest England will be slow to clear some may linger throughout the day showers in the Southeast will turn

    Wintry over the High Ground as they spread Westward for much of the country it’ll be a dry morning with variable amounts of cloud and some Sunny spells temperatures will remain in low single figures but it’ll feel much colder in the windy South showers will reach Central Southern England by early

    Evening overnight the showers will clear Southwestern areas to leave a largely dry night there’ll be another widespread Frost with patchy fog likely over Central and Northern Scotland tomorrow Cloud over Southern parts will clear from the East despite increased amounts of sunshine it’ll remain cold with temperatures reaching four or 5° C for

    Most the weather sponsored by katar Airways well if the chilly weather wasn’t making you feel wintry enough take a look at these this image of Autumn Leaves resting on a snowy landscape has won the annual photographic competition run by the South Downs National Park the shot is called snow on wenbury and was taken

    By Matt godod the theme of this year’s content was New Perspectives you’re watching Sky News breakfast still to come the New Year signals the start of what could be the most important months in rushi Sudan’s political career but what did Jack and Sam make of it they’re going to join us

    Next to discuss what’s on their Podcast breakfast is becoming even brighter here on Sky News there’s a new studio a new start time of 6:00 a.m. and some new faces okay yes we’ll bring you all the top stories from around the globe and here in Westminster as we count down to an election B look ahead

    To the stories that’ll be making headlines on Sky News throughout the day that’s your new look breakfast show weekdays 6: to 10:00 a.m. here on Sky News so the Taliban government have been in power since 2021 and in that time they have built Bridges and built roads and infrastructure and the country is coming to a point of Peace but they just don’t recognize women women’s education after the sixth grade doesn’t exist uh women are not allowed

    To go to Beauty parlers which have been closed there are um Parks or clothes that can’t work for Nos and at this current day and age that is unacceptable that’s 20 million Afghan women who are being treated as second class citizens and that’s what I Tred to highlight with

    My film well Afghanistan has such a unique history in the sense that in my life time the country’s flag has changed 19 times it’s just a a a chaotic time of Government after government and every single time the women have always been victims to all these new different

    Regimes um and they’ve always been impacted and it’s just it’s just enough there is no excuse for women not to be able to study 3,000 Afghan women were meant to join the Afghan Service as doctors but the board examinations were cancelled and they are just at home

    Doing nothing those as a country we need stability and our economy to rise we need all the help we can get so it just doesn’t make sense that this policy set forth by the aan government is in place it’s it’s completely ridiculous the world is at a time where there’s just

    Chaos and and upsetting uh events happening everywhere but at the same time the Afghan women are being forgotten and this is what I’ve tried to do with my film yellow and it’s resonated so much around the world I get messages every day from people who’ve seen it and feel that it’s a message

    That needs to be told women are becoming invisible again and as an Afghan myself I can’t let that happen it’s my duty as an artist and as a filmmaker to try to bring that to Life Welcome back to Sky News breakfast our top stories this morning the first US Luna mission in more than 50 years has successfully launched in Florida marking an important step towards commercial space travel hundreds of flood alerts are still in place across England with yellow warnings for ice in the Southeast and Northern

    Ireland and ministers will meet this morning to consider how post office branch managers who were wrongly convicted of fraud can be cleared well the first uh week back of term for MPS it means there’s another episode of course of politics at Jack and Sam’s one of the pair dug up in

    Westminster over the weekend nice to see you both thanks very much for coming in um so Jack to you first of all we’re gearing up for this year what do you think the big themes are going to be well this is the week that politics sort of returns properly all the MPS come

    Back to Parliament this afternoon richy suck has his first big political event of the Year this morning up in Lancashire um and as you say this is when all the framing is going to be about the election we don’t know when it’s coming yet could be in May more

    Likely going to be towards the end of the year uh as Rich Zak has suggested and the themes are going to be well it depends which party you talk to the Tories want to talk about tax they want to talk about cutting tax and they say

    La will raise your taxes labor wants to talk about the NHS and The Parlor state of the Health Service um and we’ll hear those messages from the two leaders today and probably tomorrow and probably on Wednesday and probably for the very many weeks and months to come but Sam

    Dominating the headlines today and and dominating a lot of people’s thoughts and conversations over the last few days has been what’s happening with the postmasters Scandal and finally it seems to have taken an ITV drama series to to get politicians to actually do something about this which has been rumbling away

    In the background for years and years yeah I I I I sort of think that the post office Scandal and there’s no doubt that it is an absolute Scandal um has not only been bubbling along for years but he’s an absolute testimony to sort of medium to long-term political failure

    Right it was a system that was wrong the checks and balances didn’t work there were miscarriages of D Justice there were suicides and only many many years later as a result of the media it’s really has it really come back and you know I think there’s a question about is

    There enough urgency inside government about doing this we understand there will be no announcements today uh about what’s going to happen we sort of know what the government are considering they’re considering maybe passing a law to um uh which would simply exonerate those that were wrongly convicted uh

    They’re looking at taking away the powers of the post office to uh launch uh prosecutions um but I think I think there’s a bigger Point Jane which is you know this kind of thing happens when your political system isn’t working very well and and I think it’s hard to argue

    That over the last few years the British political system has been working particularly well this is the first probably normalist general election campaign we’ll have had since 2015 post the brexit referendum Britain has tumbled through all sorts of big moments and and episodes of chaos and that means that Downing Street cabinet ministers

    Have not been focused on things that they should have been does 2024 Mark a sort of return to normality as far as we can manage that’s one of the big questions of the year and Jack in terms of Richi sunak of course he announces five priorities in January last year how

    Would you say he’s done on those as we start a new year and move on to an election year yeah it’s almost exactly a year ago today that he made his big first big speech to 2023 and he set out very clearly these are the five things I

    Want to focus on um the only one he put a time limit on was cutting inflation and that is the thing that he would say has gone best in fact it definitely is the thing that’s gone best inflation is now coming down even quicker even than

    Dowy Street had hoped it would but I’m afraid on all of the other priorities that he set out things are not going nearly so well you know cutting NHS waiting lists that just hasn’t happened sparking growth in the UK economy that just hasn’t happened we’re going to see

    GDP stats coming on Friday which are going to show at best the UK economy is flat as a pancake um immigration he promised to stop the boats he has reduced the number of uh boats coming across the channel but he’s far from stop them uh and in terms of getting

    Debt falling that feels like some way off as well so you know he he made big bold promises he said he would be judged on them a year on it’s kind of one out of five so far and and Sam is tax going to be the primary Battle Ground do you

    Think during the election we spoke to labor about it a little earlier well as Jack was say ear it will be if if the Tores get their way uh if they can convince people uh of of their Narrative of their claims uh yes on Saturday there

    Was a two pence cut to People’s National Insurance uh but as labor point out there has been a very big increase in people’s personal taxes uh the equivalent of uh 10p uh so really you’re sort of net 8p down overall uh they would argue um but but there’s also just

    A general question about whether tax is the biggest thing that people notice uh in their monthly finances given that despite mortgage re uh sort of renewal rates coming down that’s still much more expensive energy costs still uh High inflation has come down but you know we

    Had a year of you know 8 n 10% inflation last year and it’s still going up uh so can you sort of crunch that through um it it strikes me there are always going to be three things in this election of which tax and economy is one uh uh

    Another big one will be migration and that’s still a fight that particularly the Tory party need to uh have with itself but labor need to spell out more about what they would do but also the NHS and you’ve got I mean I think if you talk to Downing Street they would

    Concede that of of the issues in their five priorities um the NHS is probably the trickiest uh with those waiting lists to deal to deal with but but there’s one solution I think they’re not really looking at at the moment Let’s uh let’s hear about that I’ve been talking

    To people in Downing Street people next door in the treasury uh to other uh figures and um and and there’s nobody almost no in government who thinks that the answer is a big further injection of cash into the NHS now it had been a theory of conservative politics that you

    Need to neutralize the issue of the NHS by using the last kind of in the last few months up an election put a big dollop of cash in order to sort of neuter uh the uh labor attack on the NHS but that hasn’t happened actually Labor’s commitments on the NHS and

    Funding are much much more measured this time compared to say what Jeremy Corbin offered in in 2019 and so there feels like there’s this will be the first election in a Years first election possibly in my lifetime where there isn’t a bit of cash arms race about the

    NHS enormously enjoying the chinos there by the way thank you very much indeed uh you have to look stylish in Jack’s house uh it’s a little bit more free flow in my house um uh no it’s interesting on the NHS because I think the NHS probably depends uh on politicians wanting to

    Give it more money in the run up to an election that’s just that’s just been part of our electoral cycle so if if if this election doesn’t see that I wonder what the impact is uh uh on our Health Service and of course one of the other

    Things coming up this week the doctor strike the current Junior doctor strike finally comes to end Tuesday Morning um that’s that’s a six- day strike of half the doctors in NHS England that’s a big big impact on the health service for a prime minister who is trying to get

    Waiting this down in fact who’s promised to get waiting this down very very hard to do that while you have this ongoing very very extreme industrial action and there’s no sign of that ending this strike is coming to an end I expect there’ll be more also a headache for the

    Prime Minister Jack on on this vote in the Commons on Drilling in the North Sea we’ already seen another resignation that’s right a big piece of uh Flagship government legislation about increasing uh the opportunities to drill for oil and gas in the North Sea where there’s a

    Big vote happening in the House of Commons this evening um there are some very unhappy Tory MPS about it Tory MPS who think that green issues are the most important things facing the planet do not think we we shall be uh further exploring the North Sea for more oil and

    Gas and yeah Chris gmmore who was the prime minister’s advisor on uh on green issues resigned as an MP on Friday or announced he would do so uh the prime minister’s uh cop Envoy Alex Sharma also spoke out very strongly against it on Saturday so although he’ll win the vote

    Tonight I’m sure it’s not a good look for richy sunak to have these big high-profile Tory politicians attacking his key policies and Sam Foreign Affairs also big today David Cameron in front of the on select committee that’s right and I know it’s a long way away I know it’s

    Kind of uh doesn’t always feel relevant but there’s a huge decision for Britain about what happens in the Red Sea because all our trade depends on on these key shipping routes uh some of which go up through the Red Sea next to Yemen where these uh hoti Rebels uh are

    Launching attacks on container ships now they say they’re doing it because they want to stop ships reaching Israel this is about what’s going on in uh in the Middle East in Israel with um with Hamas and in Gaza uh but it’s also having a massive impact on the basically trade

    Flows and every time one of those ships that would have gone up through the Red Sea goes around the bottom of South Africa around the Cape of Good Hope that adds a million pounds to the cost of that um of of that cargo uh being transported and takes 20 extra days that

    Has an impact on things like inflation and our trade and our ability to Source goods and I think that the government is worried the big decision is whether or not to follow America and start launching missiles we’ve got ships in the region we could Downing Street of

    Got to decide whether we will so potentially a massive escalation is is on the horizon finally before we let you go Jack um you know we the Prime Minister said last week that uh he was looking towards the end of the year for an election I mean in your head have you

    Ruled out April May more or less um me and Sam don’t necessarily agree on this but I’m I just think the prime minister is so far behind in the polls he hasn’t been in Downing Street very long he will want to cling on as long as humanly possible and he’ll just pray that

    Something turns up you know we’ve seen it before the last few years big events can suddenly happen and things can change so my my working assumption has always been he will hang on as long as he can which means probably an election at the end of November I mean it’s more

    Likely than not definitely more likely than not it’ll be in November but that does presuppose that Rishi sunak keeps control of when you call an election uh as we saw from 20203 there are just so many imponderables not least with the conservative party I think signs at that

    Rebellion on the Rwanda bill is is decreasing but you’ve never been able to say that it’s a happy party after the events the last 3 four years so uh his timing probably relies on waiting a bit longer hoping the economy improves uh and seeing if something bluntly just

    Comes along to in previous uh in previous fortunes but who can say that the conservative party will let him do that okay Jack Blanchard sub coach thank you both very much and if you want to listen to Jack and Sam’s podcast you can scan the QR code on your screen right

    Right now there they are and they fetching uh off air podcast clothes also still to come on Sky News breakfast and liftoff of the first United launch Alliance Vulcan rocket launching a new era the parag mission War blasts into space its destination the surface of the Moon we’ll have more

    On the successful Luna launch next morning everybody it is 8:00 you’re very welcome to join us on Sky News wherever you’re watching us Chancellor will be joining us in just a few moments time evidence of the cost of living crisis and we’ll start with breaking news one

    Place to start this morning is the dollar ever was like night F it’s 5:00 this is the newsour I’m Mark Austin coming up in the next 60 Minutes Welcome to the pter on the UK tonight throughout the course of the week still to come this is a a piece of uh Hardware

    Built at the O University in metal kees it it’s called a mass spectrometer but what that is is a device that will land on the surface of the Moon on this Mission and it will measure the composition of the lunar atmosphere very very thin lunar atmosphere less than a

    Millionth of a millionth of the thickness of the atmosphere on Earth and it will basically it acts like a wng scales so it separates the atmospheric molecules account according to how heavy they are and we know that water molecules weigh 18 nitrogen weighs 28 so we can identify what those molecules are

    When when we did land on the moon we put you know humans on there and and um you know the initial idea was that the moon was quite dry it seemed to be a dry Barron bust dusty place but more recently in the last 10 years or so

    We’ve had orbitas going around the Moon which is starting to reveal a different picture and and we’re getting suggestions that there’s actually a a very tenuous water cycle going on on the moon with with kind of water molecules moving around the surface maybe getting stuck at the poles and Frozen down as

    Ice where it’s very very cold and also techniques have improved so the last time an instrument like this went to the moon 50 years ago you know technology moves on so you know this mission is the first time to go and do this kind of science again after 50 years I mean the

    Moon is a real it’s getting to be a busy place with missions you know you you probably seen on your on your coverage um what’s different about this mission is that it’s commercially LED so it’s kind of there’s a global feeling that the best way to explore space and the

    Moon is the the nearest place to go so this is where you’re going to go and try this out in the first place is to get everybody involved so it’s not just a kind of a national agency Endeavor but it’s involving commercial companies and universities and and trying to bring

    That all together to make it more sustainable and a cheaper way to explore one of the reasons people are really interested in water on the moon is that it might help sustain exploration there so if we want to put astronauts on the moon if we want to take a bottle of

    Water up to them which weighs you know half a kilogram for a bottle of water it’s going to take about half a million pounds to do that because of lifting it through thece Earth’s gravity field so one of the ideas that if you can find appreciable quantity of water on the

    Moon and purify it bottle it sell it for less than half a million pounds then you’ve got a business case now that’s not my bag but you can see how using resources locally and not having to take everything with you in a massive spacecraft can make space exploration more Agile Now the missing doll that blew off an Alaskan Airlines flight in midair has been found by a school teacher in his garden let’s talk to sabba chowri who’s got more on this uh Sabah I’m smiling but you know this is a really serious story for those on this plane an

    Absolutely terrifying experience and but they have at least found the found the door yeah so the incident took took place on Friday last week just minutes after the aircraft left Portland International Airport so uh the pilots on board were forced to perform an emergency uh Landing it was the Boeing

    737 plane and Alaska Airlines flight uh and like I say they were forced to perform an emergency landing on that plane after a massive hle tore through the side of that aircraft absolutely terrifying I I’m sure uh a terrifying ordeal for passengers but luckily no one was seriously hurt and also the pilots

    Were able to skillfully uh land the plane in a safe and secure way now this was a lucky Escape really for the 171 passengers on board that plane and also the six members of the cabin crewp but it really could have been so much worse

    Not just for them but also the people on the ground because of inevitable debris that would have fallen from that plane and it just so happens uh that one piece of debris so a door plug from the missing door was found in the garden of an American teacher in Portland a man

    Called Bob in his garden of all places now without a doubt this piece of debris will be used uh in the ongoing investigation to determine what exactly happened on the Boeing 737 Max 9 plane last week because at the moment the cause is still unknown now uh this

    Without a doubt is you know a huge cause of concern for regular Flyers the damage arguably is done this is not the first time we are seeing a reported incident with these planes this is in fact the fourth in a matter of two months and also Optics 197 of these planes have

    Been temporarily grounded while the investigations are taking place so uh a worrying time indeed for regular passengers okay Saba thanks very much now at exactly 18 minutes past 7 this morning the US successfully launched its first rocket to the moon since the Apollo missions more than 50 years

    Ago two good srbs hitting Peak pressure on the srbs everything looking good well joining me is space journalist Kate Aras gray Kate lovely to see you um so why is this Mission exciting there are so many reasons that this is an exciting Mission um firstly it was the the first time

    This particular rocket had ever launched and it went off very smoothly there’ll be a lot of very relieved people at the United launch Alliance who are potentially going to go out of business if this had failed um it’s also potentially the first commercial lunar Landing that’s being uh taken uh taken

    To the Moon uh it’s astrobotic is an American company from Pittsburgh which is not the usual place that you would imagine for a space company usually you’d think Houston or uh Florida for a space company um but as you saying it’s it would be the first time that America

    Has soft landed on the moon since 1972 which is when the Apollo 17 Landing happened so it’s a very exciting time for them I mean has it got over the tricky bit it’s launched successfully but there are other tricky bits to come aren’t there before it successfully lands

    Absolutely um landing on the moon is not easy in any way in fact in just the last well since 2019 there have been four failed Luna uh missions a couple of those did start out much like astrobotic as competitors in uh the Google Luna X prize which offered a big prize pull

    About $30 million to to try and land a commercial mission on the on the moon nobody won that prize a few of the teams did try still to get their missions out there but the the Japanese and the Israeli Mission both both failed by you know they crashing into the moon and

    Just last year a few days before India successfully landed on the moon uh the Russian Luna Mission as they said in their press release ceased to exist after a collision with the Luna surface so in terms of of what it’s carrying on board tell us a little bit

    About the kind of stuff that’s on there so this Mission has got a real wide range of things on it um for NASA so the important thing is they’ve got five payloads that are under the commercial lunar um delivery services program and they’re doing things they’ve got scientific experiments to check out

    Radiation to analyze the uh lunar soil see how hydrated that is they’ also be looking at um the exosphere of the Moon and trying to find out how much water there might be on on the moon um but there are also these commercial payloads so they’ve got 16 customers from seven

    Different countries and it’s anything from archives and artworks and Humanities projects through to some human remains There’s an actual Bitcoin a physical Bitcoin is being sent up there by the sells I’m not sure why they decided that would be their their first um the point of bitco Bitcoins was that

    They weren’t physical well indeed indeed but they they have produced a unique physical coin which on on onto which is loaded a real Bitcoin why send DNA up there why send human remains up there well that’s um it’s an interesting one uh for one for one uh side of it you’ve

    Got sending DNA is is part of a kind of archive of human you know what humans are and you know much like the the Voyager gold dis had information about Humanity but on the other side on the commercial side there are Services there are two companies offering services for

    Space memorials where they’ll send like a proportion of your remains or DNA or messages up and into space at the Navajo um nation in the US have been a little bit upset about the idea of of putting human remains on the the moon because they you know they don’t feel that

    That’s respectful of of the Moon and in terms of of the the possibility of people going to the Moon I suppose that’s what a lot of people would be really interested in and the idea that you know we could see man or woman walking on the moon again quite

    Soon does this Mission bring us closer to that becoming a reality yes absolutely um there are some radiation detectors on on this Mission and that’s all there to help us work out what sort of radiation astronauts would be subject to on the journey to and on the surface

    Of the Moon and we’re hoping that later this year we’ll see the uh emis 2 mission which will send humans around the Moon they won’t land on it not yet but it will be the first time that a woman will have gone around the Moon fantastic stuff well we’ll keep an eye

    On it and all of the next stages is the 23rd of it’s going to land is that the day that’s what we’re hoping for there are also to watch out for uh in January there’s a Japanese mission that might be landing on the moon and there should be

    A second American Mission uh if it launches in mid-February that should be landing around the same time as astrobotic okay we shall wait and see which one gets there first Kate alas gry space journalist good to talk to you thanks very much well let’s take a look

    At the morning’s sports news now and Liverpool are through to the fourth round of the FA Cup they beat Arsenal 2-n yesterday after dominating the first half Arsenal fell behind late in the second half Trent Alexander Arnold’s free kick headed into his own goal by Arsenal Defender yakob

    K and then deep into stoppage time Liverpool broke away to make it two n leis Diaz scoring to seal the the result means it’s now three consecutive defeats for Mel Etta’s side and they’re without a win in four extra touches Tes FA cup holders Manchester City booked their place in the fourth round

    In emphatic style pep guardiola’s side thrashed Huddersfield 5- nil with two goals coming from England midfielder Phil foden and Chelsea Striker Sam Kerr is set to miss the rest of the season after picking up a serious knee injury in training well let’s see how the back pages are shaping up this

    Morning wam bam says the sun after Patrick bamford’s stunner during leeds’s 3-0 FA Cup victory over Peterborough the eye has Lis Diaz celebrating Liverpool’s win away at Arsenal despite their defeat misfiring the misfiring Gunners may not be shopping for a new Striker though it says after all the times also features Arsenal’s FA

    Cup exit with a quote from Mel Etta we must get our heads Right feet right too are also important time for the weather now warm memories wherever you go the weather sponsored by kataar Airways conditions will be quiet and cold this week with a freshening Breeze bringing a significant wind chill to

    Southern parts of the country this morning there’ll be a widespread Frost overnight temperatures having dropped close to or below freezing patches of dense freezing fog over parts of Ireland Scotland and Northwestern England will be slow to clear some may linger throughout the day showers in the Southeast will turn wintry Over The High

    Ground as they spread Westward for much of the country it’s going to be a dry morning the weather sponsored by katar Airways coming up on Sky News breakfast after the floods comes the freeze warnings still in place for a lot of wet weather but the Met Office says it is

    Snow which could potentially cause yet more chaos to come time to wrap up War Hello everyone it’s 9:00 if you’re going out this morning even us Northerners might need our big coats after a week of storms torrential rains and floods get ready for the big chill we’re told that there is snow coming but the weather was good in Florida good enough in fact to

    Launch a rocket to the moon it’s Monday the 8th of January and liftoff of the first United launch Alliance Vulcan rocket launching a new era in space flight to the moon and Beyond the first US Luna mission in more than 5050 years lifts off from Cape canav s deep

    Pressure hundreds of flood warnings are still in place and the Met Office says that snow could cause Rush Hour chaos across the southeast an Amber warning in for cold weather a yellow warning for ice and all this comes just days after flooded communities also ahead ministers meet

    This morning to consider how post office branch officers who were the victims of a miscarriage of Justice can be cleared the door that blew off an Alaska Airlines jet in midair is found by a school teacher and and the Golden Globe goes to [Applause] Oppenheimer Christen Nolan’s Blockbuster

    About the father of the atomic bomb winds big at the Golden Gloves thanks so much for joining us while Rob and Steph are here with the headlines politically Rob yeah morning Jane I I think the post office story is probably going to dominate the first day back at term for MPS today we’ll have a meeting involving the Justice secretary

    Calls for there to be legislation passed to basically set aside on mass these wrongful convictions that many sub postmasters um were subject to awkward questions potentially as well for those who are ministers back in the Coalition years including one Ed Davey the current leader of the lib Dems and Steph it’s

    Flipping chilly out there isn’t it really rather brisk yes and down in the Southeast we’ve also got a keen wind to make that feels like temperature that little bit lower than it might be and there’s also the of seeing a little bit of snow but not many people will see it

    We’ll find out exactly where later okay thank you both so much but first at exactly 18 minutes P 7 this morning the US launched its first rocket to the moon since the Apollo missions more than 50 years ago Los sence correspondent Thomas mo was watching the footage watching this

    That happen live uh Thomas tell us why why is this important and why has it taken 50 years yeah look I mean this looks like a a pretty regular space launch we used to seeing these now but this is anything but NASA wasn’t at the controls it has a ticket to ride it’s

    Got five experiments on board but it has commissioned a private American startup to develop not just this rocket but also the the Luna Lander which sits in in the nose cone at the moment uh and will be heading towards the moon to land they hope on February the 23rd now why do

    They want to go back to the Moon while it’s all about water because uh we know that the Americans have got Ambitions to send humans back there uh they they hope that water will obviously hydrate astronauts but also provide their oxygen and perhaps even uh Rocket Fuel to go uh

    Further into the solar system that’s why you’re seeing this revival of the Space Race the moon race uh but it is commercial companies in charge this time because they NASA hopes that will bring down the costs to really deliver value for money and make regular lunar Miss

    Missions much more practical but it does mean that this commercial company is not only taking science experiments but it’s also taking other commercial payloads including the ashes and DNA from human beings which has really angered some indigenous Americans who feel that the Moon is a sacred Place uh but also there

    Is a marketing Stunt by a sports drink manufacturer that sending up a can of its drink in a powdered form so that future astronauts can mix it with with lunar water and enjoy now this is perhaps um a new way of thinking about the moon and and many people are

    Unhappy Thomas thanks very much well it’s the weather here on land in the UK now and after the floods comes the freeze over the past week we’ve seen storms and torrential rain caus rivers to burst their Banks from gleria to notans Shire the environment agency says that more than 1,800 properties have

    Been flooded and communities are still mopping up it has happened before but it’s all been thoroughly repaired and tanked since then we were not expecting it because we had a lot of work done on it and we’ve had it all checked and maintained it’s just although it’s not high nevertheless it’s getting

    Everything wet and it’s seeping in as if it’s got under the floor so bull Stak stream goes right up into our yard uh there’s a there’s a kind of toe path that walks that we walked behind in there usually that’s of course completely underwater now uh the flood

    Wat has came up very quickly uh since Friday they been stable but it’s right up to our back patio almost almost to our back door we have a neighborhood WhatsApp group and it was I’ve never seen it this active in the three years we’ve moved here uh some of our

    Neighbors are dealing with a little bit of flooding in their kitchen um we’ve been pretty stressed out uh on Friday since I as I said it’s stabilized since Friday right now we’re okay kind of hoping for the best well in England there are still uh there are now 15 52 flood warnings and

    152 flood alerts in place but attention is already turning to what is coming next that is snow ice and freezing temperatures well let’s cross live to our west of England and Wales correspondent down Whitehead who’s in Longford in gloucestershire and and Dan clearly it’s been enormously wet there they could do without freezing

    Temperatures on top couldn’t they yeah they really could the flood uh Waters in Longford have receded from the houses now a street cleaning team just drove past cleaning up some of the debris but you can see behind me that there is still plenty of low lining low-lying flood water uh in the

    Surrounding areas here in Gloucester and in communities right across sort of the middle and southern England that were impacted last week following those storms and they saw their properties uh flooded what they now are facing is a week of freezing weather which could make the conditions even more difficult

    For them the mes office and the UK Health Security Agency uh the weekend issued this umbrella for cold weather eventually that is in place until midday on Friday not only here in the southwest of England but also in the Northwest the West Midlands and uh the East Midlands

    Uh and what that means is it could put stresses uh for a significant period of time on health services so the advice is to check on elderly people uh vulnerable people uh and actually that Amber Alert means that it could be particularly difficult for some to keep their

    Properties warm which is class as 18° and above um and it could be difficult for to do so so check in on those vulnerable people but we’ve had another warning this morning from the Met Office itself and that is a yellow weather warning this time for ice specifically

    That actually affects London it affects the southeast and it also affects parts of Northern Ireland so a difficult week ahead and it comes as you say as there are still around 150 uh flood warnings and alerts in place there are still high uh River levels as you can see so the

    Concern is that that low-lying water in those communities that are still uh facing floods and a stor mopping up that could turn to ice creating more dangerous conditions okay Dan thanks very much uh well let’s bring in Steph in the studio here so Seth how cold is

    It going to get well it got down to minus 7.5 last night so really quite chilly um and it’s going to stay cold for most of the week and into the weekend as well uh there’s slight differences on exactly where the high pressure is going to be and that will

    Direct the wind towards us from slightly different places which will bring us slightly different temperature of air and that sort of thing so there’s SL discrepancies but essentially really cold in the Southeast for today and tomorrow and then slightly less cold more Cloud around but if you’re thinking

    Of a winter wonderland Jane get that out your head it’s not going to be snow for everybody we’ve all got the cold weather yes but not the snow the snow they’re going to get days off school no um in the Southeast where we’ve got the snow warning at the moment it’s for ice

    Really but there could be some snow there as well there are some showers currently they are of rain rather than snow at the moment but that could change but what’s happening is the winds are sort of channeling together so they’re funneling these clouds and the shower is

    Into a long line and that’s why we could end up with like one patch just having these showers Trail over them and they could have 1 to three centimeters of snow where about a mile down the road they’ll see nothing that’s why it’s so regionalized this snow we’re not all

    Going to see it Jan okay thanks for clearing that up St well let’s take a look at some of the day’s other headlines now and Ukrainian authorities say at least two people have been killed after Russ launched a large-scale missile attack in the early hours of the morning military officials say the

    Capital Kev is under threat from ballistic missiles and have urged people to find shelter they say areas including zapia and H are also under attack a shopping center and two dozen other buildings were damaged in the city of Crea a new National Drive to get pupils back into the classroom is being

    Launched today the department for education is promising 18 new attendance hubs across six regions in England bringing the total to 32 it says it’ll help nearly 2,000 schools tackle persistent absences new research has found the UK is the only country in the G7 where household budgets have not recovered to

    Prepandemic levels the TU claim families would be £750 a year better off if incomes had grown in line with other leading economies now ministers will meet today to consider how to clear the names of hundreds of post office branch managers who were wrongly convicted of fraud The

    Horizon it system was introduced by the post office in 1999 almost immediately losses in the system emerged with the post office taking legal action by 2015 736 people had been criminally prosecuted with 700 convicted did a public inquiry into the Scandal was established in 2020 to date 93 convictions have been overturned with

    Around1 138 million pound paid in compensation a little earlier the conservative peer lorda bunot told us that postmasters had been failed by every section of society and that Parliament should step in to overturn their convictions 10900 conviction of sub postmasters and only 93 of those convictions have been overturned that’s

    An awfully small pathetically small number and I think that this is a mass problem which has got to be dealt with in a mass way and I think that Parliament has got to step in and say that post office convictions are not safe we’ve seen the way that investigators behaved and they behaved

    In a way which was contrary to the rule of law and they’ve these convictions have got to be set aside well our political correspondent Rob Powell has more on this Rob the Justice secretary looking into how the government can help these victims yeah Alex chalk the Justice secretary will

    Meet with um the business Minister who’s responsible for the post office now Kevin hollinrake that B that meeting will take place later today a number of options being considered one of them how to strip the post office out of the process by which people that were wrongfully convicted can appeal those convictions

    I think it’s clear though listening to people like lorda bunot who was heavily involved in this campaign when he was an MP in Hampshire um many years ago um that actually there is a desire among some and certainly among campaigners for a kind of more widespread solution possibly even legislation passed by

    Parliament that would set aside all of these wrongful convictions on mass so all of the individuals don’t have to go through this legal process um individually and take the time to do that something that could be done in a much more widespread fashion now you had

    Labor front bench Steve Reed on a little bit earlier um and he I thought gave the impression that labor wouldn’t necessarily stand in the way of that have a listened to what he said I completely agree that those individuals who have still got convictions for crimes for which they

    Were not responsible need to be exonerated as I understand it the Justice secretary is looking at whether there’s a legislative route for this to be done through Parliament rather than expecting either the public inquiry to do it peace meal or each of those individuals to have to go to court one

    By one to seek um to seek exoneration uh and their conviction being overturned we will look at what the government brings forward constitutionally it’s very unusual to do it that way but I think the gravity of the crisis uh and the level of the Injustice does mean that we

    Have to look at doing something to support these people is taking place today um in government I don’t think we necessarily should expect any formal announcement on what the government plans to do today there may be an attempt by backbenches though to bring a minister to the

    Commons to answer questions on this I think a lot of concern that’s been raised since that drama was aired last week maybe also focus on how ministers acted when some of these concerns were initially raised during the Cameron Le Coalition Years sir Ed Davy now the libdem leader was a business Minister

    Back then a lot of focus has been put on how his Communications with one of the lead campaign from the subm postmaster group and a lot of people pointing out that sir Ed Davy is someone who is rather fond of calling for other people to resign and be held to account for

    Indiscretions and failings and I think for that reason they will probably want to subject him to a little bit of heat today as well okay Rob thanks a lot now Al jaaz has accused Israel of deliberately targeting journalists after two of its staff were killed in an air

    Strike near Rafa in southern Gaza well our Middle East correspondent alist bule is in jerus Jerusalem alist tell us about what happened and what kind of reaction there’s been from Israel well this air strike happened on a car that was in very deep into the

    South of the Gaza Strip um Al jazer said that the three men were working for uh the network um but the IDF when asked about it last night said that at least one of them was using an aerial object we think a drone uh and that it was

    Posing a threat to Israeli forces and so they fired on the vehicle um killing two journalists inside including one of the sons of while aladu who is the bureau chief for Al jazer in Gaza now he’s already lost his wife two of his other children and one of his grandchildren in

    A in a previous air strikes he’s paid a very heavy toll uh during this conflict he’s become something the face of uh the uh the news in the in the Arab world because of course it is only Palestinian journalists who can operate in Gaza at the moment freely we as International

    Journalists cannot get in so we rely uh on our Palestinian colleagues in the G strip to provide us with uh imagery and interviews from there and they do so under great great risk as was demonstrated yesterday when um these two journalists were killed aler have very strongly condemned The Killing um but

    They are at odds with the IDF who claim that it was because there was some sort of threat to Israeli forces but there are reports that these journalists could have been using drones in order just to film the scene rather than trying to attack the uh any Israeli soldiers but

    Now 79 at least 79 journalists have been killed in Gaza since the War Began just over 3 months ago alist thanks very much the missing door the blew off and Alaskan Airlines flight in midair has been found by a school teacher in his garden well sabba chowri has more on

    This sabba just remind us what happened here it was a terrifying incident for passengers yes the incident took place on Friday just last week and it happened minutes after takeoff from Portland International Airport pilots on board the Boeing 737 aircraft and Alaska Airlines flight were forced to perform

    An emergency landing after a massive hole ripped into the side of the plane now luckily no one was seriously hurt and the plane landed safely but it could have been so much worse not just for those 171 passengers on the plane all the six members of the cabin crew but

    Also for people on the ground because of inevitable debris now it just so happens that piece of debris was today found uh in the garden of an American teacher an individual called Bob and this was the missing door plug from the door uh just we can see see the the Gap in the

    Picture there now it’s uh we can determine that this piece of debris will be used in the ongoing investigations to determine what exactly happened on the Boeing 737 uh aircraft because at the this moment in time it’s not known the cause of the incident is not yet known

    And it’s going to cause a lot of concern for regular passengers about 197 of these planes uh currently have been suspended they’re on the ground they’re not going anywhere and also this isn’t the first time that we seeing an incident of this nature with the Boeing

    737 this is in fact the fourth time in a matter of just two months that there has been a reported issue so this most recent incident will uh likely add to the anxiety amongst those regular passengers sa thanks a lot coming up on Sky News breakfast I’m

    Going to be joined by the conservative MP David Davis who’s calling on the government to do more to hold accountable those responsible for the Post Office Scandal breakfast is becoming even brighter here on Sky News there’s a new studio a new start time of 6:00 a.m. and some new faces I okay yes we’ll bring bring you all the top stories from around the globe and here in Westminster as we count down to an election plus a

    Look ahead to the stories that’ll be making headlines on Sky News throughout the day that’s your new look breakfast show weekdays 6: to 10:00 a.m. here on Sky News so the talian government have been in power since 2021 and in that time they have built Bridges and built roads and infrastructure and the country is coming to a point of Peace but they just don’t recognize women women’s education after the sixth grade doesn’t exist uh women are not

    Allowed to go to Beauty parlers which have been closed there are um parks are clothed they can’t work for Nos and at this current day and age that is unacceptable that’s 20 million Afghan women who are being treated as second class citizens and that’s what I tried to highlight with my film well

    Afghanistan has such a unique history in the sense that in my lifetime the country’s flag has changed 19 times it’s just a a a chaotic time of Government after government and every single time the women have always been victims to all these new different regimes um and they’ve always been impacted and it’s

    Just it’s just enough there is no excuse for women not to be able to study 3,000 Afghan women were meant to join the Afghan service of doctors but the board examinations were cancelled and they are just at home doing nothing those as a country we need stability and our

    Economy to rise we need all the help we can get so just doesn’t make sense that this policy set forth by the Avan government is in place it’s it’s completely ridiculous the world is at a time where there’s just chaos and and upsetting uh events happening everywhere

    But at the same time the Afghan women are being forgotten and this is what I’ve tried to do with my film yellow and it’s resonated so much around the world I get messages every day from people who’ve seen it and feel that it’s a message that needs to be told women are

    Becoming invisible again and as an Afghan myself I can’t let that happen it’s my duty as an artist and as a filmmaker to try to bring that to life Welcome back while ministers will meet this morning to consider how to clear the names of hundreds of post office branch managers who were wrongly convicted of fraud well one of those leading the calls to make sure that the right people are held responsible is the conservative MP David Davis he joins me

    In the studio now the Prime Minister says he’s considering exonerating all victims of the post office Scandal it’s it’s going to be a tricky thing to get through legally yes you confident it could it could happen oh I think it can be done and I think it will get done I

    Mean how quickly though huge well it’s got to be months not years put it that way I mean at the moment if we carry on at the current Pace it’ll be years because we’ve got what 10% of them cleared so far and one of the reasons for that is because the authorities have

    Challenged every appeal well what they doing you know so so that’s the first thing to stop that that process but I think you know there is a single fact that underpins every single case and that is that the Post Office lied about who had access to those accounts who had

    Access to those computers that fact makes every single conviction well technically unsafe just wrong you know and I think we can use that fact to turn them all over that’s what we should be doing why is it taken so long to get to this point do you think well I mean you

    You’ve got the problem exoneration you got the problem on compensation and so on and this is because the bodies involved are still resisting I mean the post office is still although it says publicly it’s uh it accepts there’s been a massive Injustice in in the way it behaves you

    Know employs expensive lawyers to challenge all the compensation claims uh as I say I think it’s the post office authorities who actually challenging the cases when they come to appeal we’ve got to stop that the state the government is the single shareholder for the post office and we should be giving them a

    Very simple instruction you know start behaving properly the manager responsible for this do do you know who they are and and do you think they should be prosecuted well I’ve got a good idea but you know I’m not I don’t want to replace one Injustice with

    Another one I think there should be a proper investigation a criminal investigation and it should Encompass the behavior of the post office and a Fujitsu uh and then and see who lied basically that’s what it comes down to it’s simply who who lied who made the decisions to say for example that uh

    There was no access to the uh post office computers individual post office computers who made that decision somebody must have done you know they represented that case in court as it were as well so you once we identify who lied not who made a mistake but who lied

    Those are the people who should face criminal charges what about Paula venel ven of course she was the chief executive of the post office 2012 to 2019 a petition calling for her to be stripped of her CV has uh now reached over a million signatures do you think

    She should face personal sanctions well uh well again the the investigation’s got to do that and look if I were her I’d have given up my CBE I would have given it back you know um but if if that’s going to happen it’s got to be a

    Proper process as I say don’t replace one Injustice with another one I think the odds are she’ll lose it um the forfeiture committee will no doubt look at it at some point there’s a special committee to look at these things uh and they know they know what to look look at

    You know whether or not she misrepresented whether or not she allowed uh miscarriages to go on you know so uh that will happen I’m pretty sure but it’s got to be done properly what changes would you like to see at the post office generally well for a

    Start uh we should take away from them the right to police themselves you know I mean you shouldn’t be in the business of marking your own homework even if you’re a state body I think you know because they’re a state were a state body they were given this their own

    Police force and we can see from what’s happened we see from that docu drama uh precisely how badly that worked that ended up uh oppressing people of convicting of things they never did you know so that’s got to go that’s got to go straight away uh beyond that I mean

    In more immediate terms we’ve got to get them exonerated and we’ve got to get the Compensation Program accelerated because at the moment it’s being it’s being bogged down by the post office itself so all of those things got to be done and then we’ll get a glimmer of Justice at

    The end of this are there any other public bodies like the post office that have the capabilities to carry out these private prosecutions there are some others I don’t have the list in my mind at the moment but there are some others but should questions be raised about all

    Of those also yes indeed exactly right I think you know at some point we’re going to have to uh do some legislation to to change that because you know we’re going to have to take the police force as it were away from the post office and put

    It somewhere else the met or some other police agency probably um and when we do that we should go down down the list I mean one of the problems here which this characterizes I’m afraid uh is that big not just big state bodies but big uh bureaucracies are very very bad at

    Handling issues of Justice we saw it as well with the tainted blood Scandal how long that took to get resolved we’ve seen it with things like the shinuk um crash where it took the RAF fought off for 10 years attempts to exonerate the pilots this is a generic problem and

    We’ve got to find a better way of dealing with it David Davis conservative good to talk you thank you very much by right let’s get a look at the weather now warm memories wherever you go the weather sponsored by katar Airways well conditions really cold this week with a freshening Breeze bringing a

    Significant wind chill to Southern parts of the country this morning there’ll be a widespread Frost overnight temperatures having dropped close to or below freezing patches of dense freezing fog over parts of Ireland Scotland and Northwestern England will be slow to clear some may linger throughout the day showers in the Southeast will turn

    Wintry Over The High Ground as they spread Westward for much of the country it’ll be a dry morning with variable amounts of cloud the weather sponsored by katar Airways coming up on Sky News breakfast success for success success session even put my teeth back in but who came out top in the Battle of barbin Heimer at the Golden Globes plus as MPS return to Westminster I’ll be joined by Katie Bulls political editor at The Spectator and indant colas

    At the eye to discuss what will be a very busy year in Politics For Welcome back you’re watching Sky News breakfast our top stories this morning the first US Luna mission in more than 50 years is successfully launched in Florida marking an important step towards commercial space travel hundreds of flood alerts are still in place across England with yellow warnings for ice in the Southeast and Northern

    Ireland and ministers will meet this morning to consider how post office branch managers who are wrongly convicted of fraud can be cleared well MPS are back in Westminster today after the New Year break and the next few months are likely to be crucially important as the country gears up for a

    General election I’m joined Now by ktie balls political editor at The Spectator and Ian dun columnist for the eye and Katie to you first of all I mean first day back there’s lots to discuss but do you think the post office Scandal is going to be the thing that dominates the

    First few days I think it is in the sense that both parties really pushing uh for movement on this obviously you could say better late than never if you think about how that ITV drama has brought the sense of urgency for something that really dates back to the

    ’90s um has been bubbling away since then um questions I think for the Tories for the government in terms of what they’ll do questions for Ed Davey the leader of the liberal Democrats his role in the Coalition at the time and I think labor wanting to make the most of that

    And appear as though they are on the side of you know those who who want to see some form of justice so how far can the Tories go and will they get cross-party backing which is a possibility or does it become Point scoring I mean Ian talking to Lord of

    Bunner earlier who who who’s been involved in this from the very beginning I mean he he makes the point that that MPS have let down the sub post Masters they’ve been let down by pretty much every sector of society um you know it’s all well and good the Prime Minister

    Saying it’s an appalling miscarriage of justice but the politicians should have done more shouldn’t they yes I think journalists could take a little bit of the blame as well actually we’re not great on these when something really story hasn’t been covered though no no the story has been covered and also question documentaries

    About it channels questions have been asked in the Commons as well so you can obviously find individual cases we’re talking about as a group you know how much ferocity of attention was there and usually when you get these cases they can be um they can seem sort of

    Instinctively kind of boring in the same way that building regulation might seem kind of boring before um Gro fell It And yet when something kicks off once the emotions about it are suddenly brought up questions raised by why we’re not discussing these things in a more ferocious manner nevertheless generally

    As a political culture we’re quite bad at looking at issues like this and we’re quite good at looking at personalities and scal duggery and sort of you know Court Intrigue around politics less good on the policy a heartbreak of of little people’s lives and inverted Commerce

    Isn’t it it just doesn’t perhaps make as good Telly as good journalism I think that’s perhaps why it has come to the point that it’s a dramatization that has suddenly metant people do feel that uh you know attachment to the story which means it’s now getting that Focus

    Because as you say there has been lots of great journalism on this topic it just hasn’t taken off in that way so H you can say better late than never I think for some who have been affected by this it’s going to feel a lot too late

    Um but there is a chance still to you know do some good things here yeah um so 2024 an election year Ian we’ve already had Party leaders out on the rounds doing the interviews out meeting the public already fast out the traps how do you see the year playing out um I think

    Soon is entirely correct when he says that it’s going to be happening in the Autumn there was a lot because we saw his statement last week sort of prevaricate rather obviously and be like Oh almost suddenly the Autumn but you know leaving the door open for a May

    Election at the same time I think it’s very unlikely to be May for the simple reason that he thinks he’s going to lose and he doesn’t want to not be prime minister so the later he can push out that date the more likely he is to do so

    He will push it I think to the Autumn and I doubt it will do him any good at all when you look at even the way this year has begun done already we’re just in I mean Parliament hasn’t even come back yet and we’re already dealing with resignations with byelections building

    Up with rebellions over legislation there are very few indicators that suggest that his fate will improve when do you think the election will be KY I mean I think Autumn’s always been the most likely um I think there been you know for them to choose to go early

    Would have been the statement move I think Rich didn’t had to put a lid on it because the speculation was getting to such a point you could see even they lab did last week you could see it getting to a point where if he you know didn’t

    Go in the spring and he hadn’t done anything to cool it every so you know he he’s frit he’s lost his nerve um I still think you know it hasn’t come from nowhere this idea of a spring election there are people around Rishi sunak who would prefer to go in the spring or

    That’s been the thinking in places I don’t it’s completely impossible but I do think probably the reality it’s quite easy to have these theories about you know almost 5D chess where it’s smart to go in a certain time even though it goes against the odds with the polls they are

    I think as you get closer probably uh the laws of gravity suggest that you are more likely to push it back if if something hasn’t shown up so Tim most likely but but you know if things go wrong his hand could be forced in and

    And he’s got a lot on his agenda hasn’t he as you say we’ve already had resignations this year we’ve got the ra over Rwanda and a possible Rebellion over North Sea oil and gas that’s back in the Commons today yeah and I I don’t think we’re likely to see that collapse

    In on itself and I have to say persistently what we see from moderate conservatives is quite a lot of bark and very little bite when it comes down to it so you look realistically who’s really going to vote against this thing who’s even likely necessarily to abstain

    I think those numbers will be relatively small however we’ve now seen a resignation we’ve now seen another by elction that’s going to come up in the early part of this year as a result of what is taking place with that bill but will it stop the bill from getting

    Through I very much doubt it what about Labor Katie what are the challenges K Arma faces I think there’s always something about uh being so priced in as the party that’s ahead I think that you know it’s very hard to find someone who doesn’t really think that K currently is

    On the path to winning the next election if you look at the polling uh if you look at where the Tories are and therefore that does create a space where I think you have greater scrutiny for the election and I think during the election campaign it would be a lot more

    About what are Labor’s plans is that realistic um because we were saying well what if you have this majority of 80 100 um and I think that that can be quite difficult something some and labor are worried about and then also you know where are their weaknesses and I think

    You’ve seen all the rise about the Green Spending the 28 billion in the past few weeks we know the Tories want to ramp up Low’s attacks so can kir starma find a line where he yes he said he’s going to go along with it but it still feels when

    Different members of The Shadow cabinets speak they say slightly different things on it so are they going to be able to hold the line or find a position that all comfortable with and of course not just here that we’re seeing elections loads of countries around the world of

    Course not at least including America Ian uh are we going to see a comeback for Trump definitely do you think I mean I’m certainly going to run in that election whether he wins is another matter but actually you know what you can look at the US and you can look at

    The European parliamentary elections this year in quite similar ways that there are real chances for right-wing populists authoritarian right-wing populists to try and secure quite extraordinary degrees of power in the US I think almost indicating the end of the us as a functioning Democratic State I mean at that point you really are

    Talking about a very dangerous moment in American history but also in Europe you’re looking at a parliament that has you know influence over the entirety of the continent and right-wing populists are very likely to make quite strong gains in that election and and Katie you know we heard from Mike Pence on Sky

    News yesterday he said that the US needs new leadership but he thinks the Republicans could come up with a better candidate than Trump I mean do you think there’s anyone who can take him on than the Republican party I mean it’s hard to see at the moment I mean there’s some

    Attention that Nikki Haley is getting um but then some saying oh is that so through her criticism she almost being his running partner um so like that I think at the moment it does feel as though Donald Trump is the most likely but of course you have all the legal

    Issues relating to Donald Trump so it could be that they are forced into different candidate I think the risk for those who don’t want Trump to succeed though is H you know the sense of uh people not being allowed to back for him in certain areas almost helps his you

    Know rallying Cry of everyone’s trying to stop me the establishment and he still does find a way for you and it’s boosted his support okay Katy balls the spectator and indan colist at the eye thank you both so much for taking us through the week’s politics now Christopher Nolan’s

    Blockbuster biopic about the father of the atomic bomb took home the top gong at the Golden Globes overnight uh winners to uh for the Oppenheimer director and his leading man selan Murphy but upset for some fans of Barbie poor things pipped it to the best comedy

    Musical but Barbie did win an honor arts and entertainment correspondent Katie Spencer reports and the Golden Globe goes to to Barbie pitched as the Battle of barbon Heimer this year’s Golden Globes dominated by two films that when combined made over two billion while Barbie was recognized for its box office

    Achievement thank you we would like to dedicate this to every single person on the planet who dressed up and went to the greatest place on Earth the movie theaters this was Christopher Nolan’s night his nuclear arms race thrill taking home best film Best Director as

    Well as a win for its leading man first question do I have lipstick all over my nose I’m just going to leave it I was in the hands of a Visionary director a master and I want to thank Chris and Emma Amy are you okay y as for TV while chaotic road rage

    Thriller beef and frenetic kitchen drama the bear both went away with three Globes each perhaps more predictable the cold blooded power plays of the final season of Sky Atlantic succession sweeping the board with wins for Sarah snook this is really heavy um mat mcfaden I just adored every second

    Playing um the weird and wonderful Human greas Stain that is Tom W um and Kieran culin rather fittingly loing it up over his Rivals this is a nice moment suck it Pedro sorry British showrunner Jesse Armstrong admitting it hadn’t been an easy decision to end the series we decided

    This was the right time to end the show and um that was very Bittersweet and the Golden Globe goes to Oppenheimer the first big Awards event of the Year recognizing the huge cultural impact of some of the most critically acclaimed drama we’ve seen in a long time Kate Spencer Sky [Applause]

    News now you might have heard Sky News breakfast is getting a fresh new look K bly’s here and also weird sitting here yeah it must be weird I’m same I hate being interviewed it’s fine asking the questions exactly exactly good morning good morning this Garrett let me

    Introduce g j j morning hello and welcome thank you K tell us first of all uh what’s happening with this relaunch it’s very exciting so the first thing to note is that we start at 6 o’clock in the morning uh well Gareth does with uh

    Mari and then I come on at 7 we’ve got a brand new state-of-the-art studio which is amazing cost us quite a lot of money looks amazing uh you’ll see it for yourself on uh Monday um and we were I often felt as I was sort of on sit you

    Know sitting on my own not having anyone to chat to I’ve got some new friends including G Gare tell us about your role Gare kicking things off from six I’ve got I’ve got the early start me and Mari 6 till 7 and then K 7 till 10 and

    There’s so much news to get through as well is especially this year us coming up there’s the UK election on the horizon 2 so we’ve got more capacity more space more cameras incredible new set Newsroom as well lots of people coming and going so that kind of

    Breakfast family yeah exactly and I to we the new set allows me to eye to eye eyeball the minister much more than you can sitting here literally straight opposite them so that will be entertaining especially with as you say a general election coming up prime minister saying second half of the Year

    Let’s see let’s see and just looking at the news said are are the ministers going to have to stand or are you going to let them sit down we’ll let them sit down unless they’re very naughty and then of course they’ll have to stand up

    But in the in the fullness of time we’ll be moving back into this studio to do those sort of interviews as well so yeah we’re taking over the whole of this floor well it’s going to be really exciting here to come isn’t it K yeah

    Most certainly is can we have a look at the picture of the team yeah we show it before let’s show did we oh let’s they are we go yeah there you are ah yes uh in the middle uh Mario of course everybody knows and Wilfred who many of

    Our viewers will know as well he will also uh be part of the new Breakfast family won’t he popping up each hour between 7: and 10: showing us what’s coming up later in the day there’s a rate review for example looking ahead to the big events that going to happen

    Throughout the course of the day coming to us live mostley and we want our viewers morning everybody to get involved as well with your thoughts at the end whatever the talking point of the day is to uh send in their thoughts either uh I don’t think we’ve decided

    Yet how we’re going to do that no it’s work in progress yeah I think we should give them your phone number my phone number it’s 07 that’s quite scary thought well listen best of luck with it looking forward to it it’s launching Monday Monday the 15th

    6 till 10 every weekday of course Anna joining us on Fridays Saturday Sundays as well absolutely and I’ll be around when when you guys are off so fantastic fantastic well for us you’re very welcome still to come on Sky News breakfast today a call from the rspca

    For people to do more to help animals as the charity marks its 200th birthday Breakfast is becoming even brighter here on Sky News there’s a new studio a new start time of 6:00 a.m. and some new faces okay yes we’ll bring you all the top stories from around the globe and here in Westminster as we countdown to an election f a look ahead to the

    Stories that will be making headlines on Sky News throughout the day that’s your new look breakfast show weekdays 6: to 10:00 a.m. here on Sky News so the Taliban government have been in power since 2021 and in that time they have built Bridges and built roads and infrastructure and the country is coming to a point of Peace but they just don’t recognize women women’s education after the sixth grade doesn’t exist uh women are not

    Allowed to go to Beauty parlers which have been closed there are um parks are closed they can’t work for Nos and at this current day and age that is unacceptable that’s 20 million Afghan women who are being treated as second class citizens and that’s what I tried to highlight with my film well

    Afghanistan has such a unique history in the sense that in my lifetime the country’s flag has changed 19 times it’s just a a a chaotic time of Government after government and every single time the women have always been victims to all these new different regimes um and they’ve always been impacted and it’s

    Just it’s just enough there is no excuse for women not to be able to study 3,000 Afghan women were meant to join the Afghan Services doctors but the board examinations were cancelled and they are just at home doing nothing those as a country we need stability and our

    Economy to rise we need all the help we can get so it just doesn’t make sense that this PO policy set forth by the Afghan government is in place it’s it’s completely ridiculous the world is at a time where there’s just chaos and and upsetting uh events happening everywhere

    But at the same time the Afghan women are being forgotten and this is what I’ve tried to do with my film yellow and it’s resonated so much around the world I get messages every day from people who’ve seen it and feel that it’s a message that needs to be told women are

    Becoming invisible again and as an Afghan myself I can’t let that happen and it’s my duty as an artist and as a filmmaker to try to bring that to Life It’s SL it’s like Better Fly Emirates fly better now this year marks 200 years of the rspca and to celebrate the occasion the UK’s oldest and largest animal welfare charity is urging more people than ever to take action to change the lives of animals new figures show that in the last 10 years alone the Charities

    Found homes for more than 400,000 pets in need but now it wants to go further well here to talk more about this is Joe Toscano from the rspca Joe uh lovely to talk to you looking back over the over the 200 years You’ obviously not been

    There for that long but what has the rspca achieved do you think well you know 200 years is a really long time as you said we’re the oldest animal charity so it’s also when we were founded it’s sparked a global Animal Welfare movement as you said these amazing rehoming

    Figures we’ve helped millions of animals find homes be reh rehabilitated and rescued but also we’ve changed 400 laws and we do a lot of Education work as well we were founded to prevent cruelty and change minds and that’s really been the backbone of everything we’ve done uh

    Since we were founded when it was founded what what was the era like and what were the kind of concerns that people had about animal welfare in those days I imagine they’re enormously different to what they are now well different in some ways and still shamefully some things are the same so

    Back then um it there’s a lot of working animals so the very first law that was passed was um two years before we were founded the cattal act so that was the first time animals were ever protected but then 11 years after we were founded

    In 1835 there was an act to um ban bull baiting and bear baiting and fighting so these things were just day-to-day entertainment for people so attitudes have changed hugely but we are still facing massive challenges you know industrial farming is a big issue from the extent of suffering that we see um

    On our farms and so building a more compassionate farming system is a real Focus for us and is was that you say would you say that was where the rspca’s focus is now that it’s moving more to things like farming rather than than people being cruel to their own pets I

    Mean our rescue work is vital and it’s crucial to what we do and that will always be a key part of the RS PCA but as I say we’ve changed 400 laws I don’t think people realize how much campaigning we do and how much law changing we do and that affects millions

    Of animals not just here but around the world so doing that work we can’t do it alone we need people to support us we need other organizations and other big Charities these are huge challenges that we’re facing and the more people that join us uh the more real and Lasting

    Change we can make for Animals I mean do you think it’s right that I mean obviously you know not to denigra the rspca at all but here in the UK more money goes to animal Charities than it does to Charities that help children um and I and I wonder how you feel about

    That do you think that that that that’s the right kind of emphasis that we have in the UK what does it say about Society well do you know what it’s all about being compassionate and that is a big part of the work that we do we go into

    Schools and we teach children to be compassionate to animals and we believe that that helps them be a more compassionate person all around it helps them understand how their actions affect other people so you know people are animal lovers but there’s space for everyone how has the cost of living affected

    Animal Welfare has has there been a big issue I mean we know that during Co for example so many people got pets what’s happened since then well that’s it we’ve seen the long effects of that that lots of people there are far more pets in our

    Society and we have seen uh neglect and abandonment figures rise to a three-year high this year so more people are sadly abandoning their pets people are struggling with the cost of living we have a cost of living Hub on our website which offers Vice to help cut the cost

    While not compromising welfare we have a a pep Food Bank scheme as well which has delivered 1.5 million meals to needy pets this year so that really helps keep you know loving families together with their animals so we looked back on the 200 years what are the changes of the

    Rspca would still like to see looking to the Future well I think as I’ve mentioned industrial farming is a massive issue for us and it’s not just an issue for Animals it’s an issue for the planet it’s an issue for human health as well often what is good for

    Animals is good for for us so one particular issue probably the biggest um welfare issue we see in this country is the suffering of meat chickens so they have short brutal lives but it’s all Bes behind the scenes people don’t realize this the sheer numbers a billion

    Slaughtered each year in this um country and many of them just don’t have a life worth living so we want to build a more compassionate farming system in this country okay Joe Tuscano uh from the rspca marking 200 years of existing good to see you thank you for coming in thank you

    Let’s take a look at the weather now warm memories wherever you go the weather sponsored by Kata Airways well the conditions are going to be quiet and cold this week with a freshening Breeze bringing a significant chill to Southern parts of the country this morning there’ll be a widespread Frost overnight temperatures have

    Dropped close to or below freezing patches of dense freezing fog over parts of Island Scotland and Northwestern England will be slow to clear some may linger throughout the day showers in the Southeast will turn wintry Over The High Ground as they spread Westward for much of the country it’ll be a dry morning

    With variable amounts of cloud and some Sunny spells temperatures will remain in low single figures but it’s going to feel much much colder in the windy South showers will reach Central Southern England by early evening and then overnight the showers will clear the southwest of the UK to leave a largely

    Dry night but there’s going to be another widespread Frost with patchy fog likely over Central and Northern Scotland the weather sponsored by Kata Airways that was Sky News breakfast thanks so much for joining us I’ll be back from 7 o’clock tomorrow but do stay with us Bel

    Dinti has got all the headlines coming up for you next here on Sky News don’t go Anywhere

    16 Comments

    1. chemical rockets is a bit like Petrol vs Electric cars in that it is old technology with a limited use. Gravity Control is the next propulsion system.

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