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Is it fair that Andrew Malkinson, who spent 17 years in prison for a crime he did not commit,ย has to deduct legal fees from his compensation?
Justice Secretary David Lammy says he would like to meet Malkinson and is 'open to looking at the detail of his case'.
"For some reason, apprenticeship has started to become a dirty word."
Former England manager Sir Gareth Southgate tells @amolrajan young men are facing a crisis and a lack of vocational training is part of the problem.
โIf we all peel off into our separate identities, it can lead to a position in which a country is far less than united."
David Lammy responds to @annaefoster about comments in a new BBC documentary from Kemi Badenoch on conflict over identity.
The Attorney General says some people who want to remove human rights law for small boat migrants seem to want to 'let people drown in the waterโ.
Lord Hermer tells @bbcnickrobinson 'some of the rhetoric is deeply, deeply concerningโ.
"The invisible enemy could be more impactful."
Head of the WHO, Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, makes the case for increased spending on global health security which he says is 'so small' compared to defence.
Can you imagine being sanctioned by a country at 17?
Alex Browder, who is suspected to be the youngest person ever sanctioned by Russia, talks about the moment he found out he was banned from entering the country.
NHS staff should not wear branded scrubs to 'political marches' says Lord Mann, as he publishes aย review on antisemitism.
The government's independent adviser says it is 'perfectly valid' for staff to be politically active, but 'taking the NHS into that is a problem'.
Sir Keir Starmer has accused Nigel Farage of 'pretending' to have respect for Henry Nowak's family in a PMQs exchange, which the Reform UK leader denies.
Chief political correspondent @HZeffman explains more.
"It's really cool to see the imaginative ideas that are cropping up."
Jackie Jantos, CEO of dating app Hinge, talks about the rise of daytime dates in response to the cost of living crisis.
๐ Listen to the Big Boss Interview: https://t.co/E5ILivJX3P
Nigel Toon from British AI firm Graphcore and the Trades Union Congress' Kate Bell discuss the benefits on using AI in the workplace - and its impact on employees.
๐ Today Debate: Is there a crisis of control in AI?
"We're worrying about how they should use AI. And they're saying, 'we don't want it thank you very much'."
Computer scientist Dame Wendy Hall talks about a 'growing resistance' against the use of AI from young people.
๐ The Today Debate - listen back on BBC Sounds.
"We could get to a situation where Chernobyl will look like the best case scenario."
Prof Stuart Russell, from the University of California, says governments need to listen about lack of AI control to 'protect people'.
๐ Today Debate: Is there a crisis of control in AI?
"Do you feel that you can say, today here this morning with confidence, that there is no two-tier policing in this country?"
@annaefoster asks Policing Minister Sarah Jones following protests in Southampton over the murder of Henry Nowak.
"Our software has helped... the NHS to deliver 110,000 operations that would not otherwise have happened."
CEO of Palantir UK Louis Mosley responds to MPs who say that the UK is too dependent on the American data giant.
"I do not accept that at all."
Parm Sandhu, director of the London Policing College and former chief superintendent at the Met Police, rejects accusations of a 'two-tier' justice system, and says the police officers involved in the Henry Nowak case made a 'tragic mistake'.
Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood has condemned 'unacceptable' violence against police at protests over Henry Nowak's murder in Southampton.
Chief political correspondent @HZeffman talks about the wider implications of the incident.
Join us tonight for The Today Debate chaired by @annaefoster which asks: Is there a crisis of control in AI?
See our panel belowโฌ๏ธ
Listen live from 8PM on Radio 4 and BBC Sounds.
Nigel Farage says 'the rights and privileges of white people matter less than those of ethnic minorities' after bodycam footage showed police speaking to the man who murdered Henry Nowak whilst officers handcuffed his victim.
Cabinet minister Nick Thomas Symonds is asked whether he agrees with the Reform UK leader.
"What happens to the physiology of someone with a limb missing in space?"
John McFall explains why he hopes to become the first man with a physical disability to go to space.