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Dilma Rousseff is elected to succeed Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, becoming Brazil's first female president.

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Friday 29 October 2010 at 10.30pm on BBC Two
Presented by Gavin Esler



David Cameron says he has "succeeded spectacularly" in seeing off a potential 6% EU budget increase. He has been accused of "grandstanding" after saying he wanted the 2011 budget frozen, then agreeing to a rise that will cost the UK an extra £450m a year.

Our Political editor Michael Crick is at the EU leaders' summit in Brussels and confronted the PM during a press conference earlier - asking him if he thought the British public might find it difficult to accept that he's agreed to an EU budget rise just one week after the Chancellor George Osborne announced a package of £6bn austerity cuts that will affect almost all sectors.

Watch the exchange here and hear more from Michael on the programme later.

The Mayor of London Boris Johnson has been criticised for saying he would not allow "Kosovo-style social cleansing" in London, amid the row over the proposed housing benefit cap that critics say will force low earners out of big cities.

Matt Prodger has been asking Kosovans living in London how they feel about Boris' comments, and we'll debate what cultural impact the planned changes might have on Britain's big cities with a panel including John Prescott.

And Peter Marshall's gone stateside ahead of Tuesday's mid term elections - we'll hear how the final few days of campaigning are going.

Join Gavin at 10.30pm on BBC Two.





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US authorities search cargo planes at separate airports after suspicious package intercepted on US-bound cargo plane.

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Thursday 28 October 2010 at 10.30pm on BBC Two
Presented by Kirsty Wark



Tonight we have an exclusive interview with one of the first soldiers on the scene of the now infamous "Crazyhorse" helicopter attack in Iraq, cockpit video footage of which became the first major leak of Iraq war material on the Wikileaks website.

In a moving interview, Ethan McCord - who has now left the army - describes how he saved a child from the wreckage of the vehicle, and the lasting effect the events have had on his life.

And we'll hear what one of the world's most influential experts on counterinsurgency and modern warfare, David Kilcullen, who served as an adviser to General David Petraeus, thinks about the phenomenon of Wikileaks.

Head of MI6 Sir John Sawers has become the first serving MI6 chief to make a televised speech. We'll be joined by a former senior intelligence chief to discuss its significance.

And, as the 50th anniversary of the end of the Lady Chatterley obscenity trial at the Old Bailey approaches, we get exclusive access to unpublished documents from the case against Penguin Books - who published the uncensored version of the controversial novel. And we'll debate the impact the novel had on the way authors write explicit material.

Do we have D H Lawrence to thank for the Bad Sex Awards?

Join Kirsty at 10.30pm on BBC Two.





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Wednesday 27 October 2010 at 10.30pm on BBC Two
Presented by Gavin Esler



Tonight, we examine the impact of the proposed cap on housing benefit.

Despite some Tory and Lib Dem MPs joining opposition calls for it to be dropped, Prime Minister David Cameron has said that the government is sticking to the introduction of a £400 per week limit, insisting in PMQs that it was not fair for working people to see their taxes used to fund homes "they couldn't even dream of".

Jackie Long has been talking to people on the sharp end, who could lose their homes as a result of the changes, and we will be discussing the reform with a panel including Big Issue magazine founder John Bird.

We look ahead to Prime Minister David Cameron's first European Union summit on Thursday.

In the wake of Greece's financial troubles and continued fears of instability in Europe, Germany is leading calls for an amendment to the 2009 Lisbon Treaty to tighten the rules on EU nations' borrowing and to impose tougher budget discipline in future.

What will Britain's position be on such powers shifting to Brussels?

Katty Kay has report on how the big money involved in US elections has become even bigger in the run up to next week's Mid Terms.

And Switzerland's biggest bank UBS wants the lift that country's cap on bonuses. We'll be looking at why a $1m bonus could leave investment bankers struggling to make ends meet.

Join Gavin at 10.30pm on BBC Two.




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