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tv   GBN Tonight Replay  GB News  November 14, 2023 3:00am-5:01am GMT

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david cameron in on the left? david cameron in on the pro—eu china loving former prime minister is now our foreign secretary. how do you feel about the return of dave ? dave jarvis. the return of dave? dave jarvis. hey, letters of no confidence. well, they're in as well. andrea jenkins is the first out of the traps and she joins us for a box office exclusive this hour. she wants to lead the charge of mps looking to oust the unelected prime minister. don't miss that. plus, what's in the whatsapps? we've got hold of some leaked whatsapp messages from tory mps revealing what they really think about the reshuffle madness . about the reshuffle madness. we'll bring those to you exclusively . that's happening exclusively. that's happening very, very shortly. i we'll also bnng very, very shortly. i we'll also bring former chancellor bring you former chancellor kwasi kwarteng. tory grandee edwina gets stuck in in edwina currie gets stuck in in the clash and on my sofa tonight we've got the outspoken and controversial trio of carole malone, benjamin butterworth and beunda malone, benjamin butterworth and belinda de lucy. malone, benjamin butterworth and belinda de lucy . what's not to belinda de lucy. what's not to love? hey, strap in for a huge show for a huge day .
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show for a huge day. make sure that you go to at gb news on twitter now and take part in our poll has sunak caved in to the left? get your views in to the left? get your views in as well. gb views is at gbnews.com. look we are the people's channel. we're your channel. and tonight, more than even channel. and tonight, more than ever, we need hear from you . ever, we need to hear from you. i'll see you after the headlines . patrick >> thank you and good evening to you. well, the top story tonight is that after making major changes to his government in a cabinet reshuffle this morning , cabinet reshuffle this morning, the prime minister has this evening given a speech at the annual lord mayor's banquet in london. rishi sunak, outlining his vision for what he's calling a hard headed foreign policy approach . take a listen. approach. take a listen. >> and i'm pleased to have appointed a new foreign
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secretary who will build on everything that we have achieved in the last year , a year in in the last year, a year in which we've gone further than ever to support ukraine as the first g7 country to move on, sending tanks first to send long—range weapons and the first to step up on training pilots as well . well. >> earlier on today, the prime minister said the cabinet reshuffle had built a united team. let's take you through what happened today. first of all, gb news presenter and former housing minister esther mcvey was spotted going into downing street about 6:00 this evening. she left as a minister without portfolio, dubbed the minister for common sense. more details on that still to come. meanwhile, victoria atkins is the new health secretary. she replaces steve barclay , who replaces steve barclay, who takes environment. laura trott steps in as treasury chief secretary and also in the government reshuffle . richard government reshuffle. richard holden is the new conservative
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chair and a former prime minister makes a surprise return to downing street. lord david cameron is the new foreign secretary, seven years after he quit number 10 and he replaces james cleverly, who takes up the home secretary portfolio. and thatis home secretary portfolio. and that is after suella braverman was sacked by the prime minister. we believe in a phone call in the early hours of this morning, ending days of speculation about her job security in government. well the new foreign secretary says he's delighted to be back in government . government. >> i hope that six years as prime minister, ii >> i hope that six years as prime minister, 11 years leading the conservative party, gives me some useful experience and contacts and relationships and knowledge that i can help the prime minister to make sure we build our alliances. we build partnerships with our friends, we deter our enemies, and we keep our country strong . that's keep our country strong. that's why i'm doing the job and i'm delighted to accept lord david cameron speaking there. >> well, his return to
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government isn't without controversy, with some even suggesting he won't be facing regular grillings from mps. lord cameron's position in the house of lords means he's exempt from regular sessions of foreign office questions with junior ministers fielding his questions instead . incidentally, number 10 instead. incidentally, number 10 has confirmed today he won't be drawing an attendance salary for the house of lords whilst he's in the position of foreign secretary . now a news away from secretary. now a news away from politics today. the funeral of sir bobby charlton has taken place at manchester cathedral today. place at manchester cathedral today . in attendance, the prince today. in attendance, the prince of wales, as well as the former manchester united manager, sir alex ferguson , climbing the alex ferguson, climbing the steps of the cathedral there. friends and fans gathered to bid sir bobby farewell . thousands sir bobby farewell. thousands lining the streets near old trafford as the hearse pulled along the football great made 758 appearances for united and won the european cup in 1968, as well as, of course , helping well as, of course, helping england to victory in the world
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cup . of 1966 . on tv england to victory in the world cup . of1966 . on tv online dab+ cup. of1966. on tv online dab+ radio and the tune—in app . this radio and the tune—in app. this is gb news britain's news channel. is gb news britain's news channel . well this is a day that channel. well this is a day that could make or break the conservative party. >> this is a day that the conservatives, led by an unelected prime minister, stand accused of turning their backs on ordinary people. people like you rishi sunak seismic shift to the centre ground has sparked a fresh tory civil war that could prove fatal. suella braverman has annoyed all the right people with this piece in the times last week, accusing the police of bias in their handling of the pro—palestine marches. the evidence, afraid , would evidence, i'm afraid, would suggest that she was right about that. early morning, though that. early this morning, though , the announcement came from downing street and rishi sunak. it was sayonara, suella braverman responded. it has been the greatest privilege of my life to serve as home secretary
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before ominously adding, i will have more to say in due course. i'm sure she will now soon. grand plan after alienating the right of the tory party and the members who of course never voted for him. what was it? ah, well, he turned the clock back seven years and desperately recalled former prime minister, seven years and desperately recepro—eu �*ner prime minister, seven years and desperately recepro—eu �*ner prloving nister, the pro—eu china loving david cameron to frontline politics, handing him the coveted position of foreign secretary remainers and brexiteers both dislike him, but of course dave jarvis well he did know how to win elections i >> -- >> well, i m 514mm >> well, i know it's not usual for a prime minister to come back in this way, but i believe in public service. the prime minister asked me to do this job andifs minister asked me to do this job and it's a time where we have some daunting challenges as a country . see the conflict in the country. see the conflict in the middle east, the war in ukraine and of course, i hope that six years as prime minister, 11 years as prime minister, 11 years leading the conservative party, gives me some useful experience and contacts and relationships and knowledge that
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i can help the prime minister james cleverly, has switched from foreign sector, the home office, and he was quick to reveal his completely , totally reveal his completely, totally unique vision for this role. >> we will stop the boats . >> we will stop the boats. >> we will stop the boats. >> of course you will, mate. okay. elsewhere, vicky atkins replaced steve barclay as health secretary who became environment secretary after the resignation of therese coffey, which will please one gb news presenter . please one gb news presenter. >> but it can't be a promotion , >> but it can't be a promotion, surely. please sack this woman . why? >> what she do that's so bad ? >> what she do that's so bad? >> what she do that's so bad? >> what she do that's so bad? >> what does she do? ever >> what does she do? ever >> yeah. there we go. andrew pierce is the very, very best. well, richard holden also becomes the new party chair with greg hands axed. but in a more eye catching appointment. gb news very own esther mcvey, who i must admit i was actually on the phone to about two hours before she rather sneakily entered downing street there. i think we'll let her off, she was made cabinet minister with the secret mission to ingrain common sense and tackle wokery across
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whitehall. to whitehall. maybe she'll have to start very top . i'm start right at the very top. i'm breaking tonight. dame andrea jenkyns has become the first tory submit a letter of no tory mp to submit a letter of no confidence in prime minister confidence in the prime minister with simply enough with the message simply enough is enough. and very soon she will join me. she'll join us with an exclusive interview to explain her bombshell decision and which, if any mps will follow suit. should the letters of no confidence now go in? i want to hear from you on that. has this reshuffle got you all shook up ? has sunak pulled out shook up? has sunak pulled out pocket aces or now is he a busted flush? look in the words of tory peer big hits of this guy, lord cruddas. the coup is complete. remainers won and democracy has lost. do you agree 7 democracy has lost. do you agree ? let me know. gb views gbnews.com. if you're watching this and you think that maybe your party has turned its back on you, we certainly haven't. okay. vaiews@gbnews.com i will get the views of my panel very very shortly, but i promise you this in the build up and we're going to give you now because
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going to give it you now because before i do go to my esteemed panel tonight, i'm going to before i do go to my esteemed pa|now3night, i'm going to before i do go to my esteemed pa|now is ght, i'm going to before i do go to my esteemed pa|now is reveal i'm going to before i do go to my esteemed pa|now is reveal to i'm going to before i do go to my esteemed pa|now is reveal to you going to before i do go to my esteemed pa|now is reveal to you some to before i do go to my esteemed pa|now is reveal to you some of do now is reveal to you some of the leaked whatsapp and text messages reacting messages from tory mps reacting to today's okay. this to today's reshuffle. okay. this is the real inside track here. and you will not get this anywhere else. it's time for the man his finger on the pulse man with his finger on the pulse so performs open heart so much he performs open heart surgery in the corridors of westminster. it's political reporter express. it's reporter at the express. it's christine. christine, i've got to ask, what's in your whatsapps ? >> 7- >> good. 7_ >> good. good 7 >> good. good evening. >> good. good evening. >> i hope you're doing well . >> i hope you're doing well. >> i hope you're doing well. >> well, to be honest with you , >> well, to be honest with you, it took quite a few hours for westminster observers to pick their jaws up off the floor this morning. >> i was hit with a barrage of texts , as you can imagine, after texts, as you can imagine, after david cameron was seen walking up downing street , many of them up downing street, many of them i wouldn't dare to read out to you on the show this evening, certainly not before the watershed. many of them , dave, watershed. many of them, dave, in number 10. what the actual bleep for example, was the was the tone of those particular messages is the reality is that
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many red wall mps , whilst many red wall mps, whilst i don't think they'll go as far as andrew jenkins in submitting letters of no confidence , are letters of no confidence, are really peeved off by this reshuffle because overall what it has done is it has recast the tory party away from in the words of one conservative mp . words of one conservative mp. the 2019 realignment that boris johnson created that move with red wall voters coming in behind the party and rishi sunak is now essentially stuck two fingers up at them and decided that they're going to focus on the sort of waitrose home county, lib dem type liberal toryism that david cameron won an election off the back of . there's a few other back of. there's a few other quotes. one mp said off the record, it's not good at all. another very senior conservative questioned how on earth can rishi sunak build a cameroon
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style image with less than a year to go at the election ? and year to go at the election? and they also mocked the fact that they also mocked the fact that the tory party chairman , richard the tory party chairman, richard holden, himself, doesn't have a constituency at the next election, which is sort of political metaphors go. it's pretty pretty on the nose . they pretty pretty on the nose. they described the reshuffle as politically confused , dazed, but politically confused, dazed, but very rishi . which i think is one very rishi. which i think is one of the big narratives here, right? rishi sunak came onto the scene, aligned himself with boris, brought down boris was the brexiteer that won remain supporters put suella braverman in his cabinet, went really hard on stop the boats and anti—trans rhetoric and all the rest of it. and now all of a sudden a year before an election, we've pivoted completely the other way. and i think it's left everyone feeling rather carsick . everyone feeling rather carsick. >> so what we've got what we've got there. christine well, you ferret around for a couple of others. all right. i'm going to
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summarise this while you delve back through your phone book for us. cameron, what back through your phone book for us. actual cameron, what back through your phone book for us. actual bleep cameron, what back through your phone book for us. actual bleep was meron, what back through your phone book for us. actual bleep was aeron, what back through your phone book for us. actual bleep was a big, what back through your phone book for us. actual bleep was a big one at the actual bleep was a big one there. the general sense is that rishi is may be alienating rishi sunak is may be alienating the red wall. that's powerful stuff. people but stuff. people there all but confirming many people confirming what many people thought, which is that perhaps rishi doesn't actually rishi sunak doesn't actually have ideology himself. have a sound ideology himself. not was the overriding one not good was the overriding one there just time for 1 or 2 other little ones for us, christine, if you've got them. that's the general flavour, what else? >> yes , can continue. i've got >> yes, can continue. i've got another a conservative mp, northern conservative mp here saying it's mental. none of it makes any sense. leo first of all, david cameron i asked , you all, david cameron i asked, you know, do you think rishi sunak is casting the red wall adrift? and they replied, yep , the red and they replied, yep, the red wall did not vote for david cameron. of course, the red wall stayed solidly labour in 2010 and 2015 and certainly didn't back david cameron in that 2016 referendum. i will for balance
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know that i spoke to one what a so—called blue wall mp in a fairly affluent part of the country whose main challenge is the lib dems and they said that it was both loud and clear and don't hate this and was quite pleased. however, i press that i said, is david cameron going to save your lib dem facing colleagues? and they replied , colleagues? and they replied, doubt it too much water under the bridge. so again , the idea the bridge. so again, the idea that even if this is the right strategy to cast the red wall adrift and focus on that core tory vote, it simply too late. it's like the captain of the titanic trying to move out the way of the iceberg and ultimately, i think most mps think even if they've changed it to the right direction, it's far too close to an election to be doing this. >> christian absolute legend. thank you very much. that is the proper inside track you proper inside track there. you don't than that. don't get better than that. christian county, the express top you very, very top stuff. thank you very, very much. thoughts in much. let's get the thoughts in my we've got daily
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my panel. we've got daily express columnist carole malone. we've journalist and we've got journalist and broadcaster benjamin butterworth, absolutely butterworth, who is absolutely revelling this. and we've got revelling in this. and we've got former brexit party mep belinda deluise. look, carol, i'll start with you. what has been described there from conservative . bear in mind conservative mps. bear in mind we're going to have an mp on shortly who's already handed in a letter of no confidence what they're there , total they're saying there, total alienation the red wall, alienation of the red wall, a betrayal, absolute betrayal . betrayal, absolute betrayal. >> you you know, he might >> you know, you know, he might say soon, i might say he's now got a united cabinet. he sure as hell hasn't got a tory cabinet. and because that that cabinet he's represents the he's put together represents the centre left establishment , but centre left establishment, but it does not represent the people behind the red wall who adored suella because , you know, she, suella because, you know, she, she was the voice of the silent majority. those people who are forgotten about in government . forgotten about in government. and she spoke for them and you know, she spoke for them on crime. she spoke on immigration. she spoke for them on the police and on these marches just recently. and the idea that someone like david cameron, failed idea that someone like david ca his'on, failed idea that someone like david ca his task failed idea that someone like david ca his task when failed idea that someone like david ca his task when he failed idea that someone like david ca his task when he was failed idea that someone like david ca his task when he was primed in his task when he was prime minister, he didn't even see
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brexit coming, god's sake . brexit coming, for god's sake. he to the country never he took us to the country never believing to believing it was going to happen, didn't it coming. happen, didn't see it coming. and have we forgotten that and how have we forgotten that cameron years ago cameron is? only two years ago it revealed his role in the it was revealed his role in the greensill finance company where he earned £7.5 million for lobbying with his political contacts of two contacts over a space of two years. is a guy who, you years. this is a guy who, you know, he says, i want to serve. no, he doesn't. he wants to make multi—millions for himself. and that's benjamin that's what he's benjamin i'll put before i go to belinda. >> so of course, you're very happy about this because suella braverman did actually for braverman did actually speak for that and now the that silent majority and now the tories base tories have lost their base because sunak has caved in because rishi sunak has caved in to luvvies like to metro politan luvvies like you , i mean, tories are you, i mean, the tories are going through leaders so fast that they've go back to that they've had to go back to the beginning again. >> we've got. you >> that's what we've got. you know, cameron was know, david cameron was the future but definitely future once, but it's definitely not now. this is not the future now. this is a guy that kind of like a spoilt kid smashed up the and kid smashed up the house and then soon as that happened, then as soon as that happened, ran didn't want say ran off, didn't want to say anything about it. and maybe he's downstairs to he's finally come downstairs to try the up. but try and clean the mess up. but the truth is, you know, his job as foreign secretary now. right.
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what the big decisions what were the two big decisions that had the eu that he did? he had the eu referendum, which was as far as i'm concerned, a historic i'm concerned, was a historic mistake let that go ahead and mistake to let that go ahead and he up china, is he cosied up to china, which is the enemy the west. the biggest enemy to the west. so idea that his foreign so the idea that his foreign policy credentials qualify him to this time to take over at this time i think ridiculous. but also, think is ridiculous. but also, i would one other thing would just say one other thing quickly, is in the sunday quickly, which is in the sunday papers, there was an mrp poll, which things are which is these things that are much about much more accurate about constituencies and the way they'll vote. and it said there'll be 431 seats. there'll be 431 labour seats. that's than tony blair won. that's more than tony blair won. so logic is the so i think the logic here is the red wall dead, at least try red wall is dead, at least try and keep the blue wall. >> thing is, is i just >> but the thing is, is i just quickly show when he has. oh, that's all right. okay look, rush me there. that's all right. okay look, rusii me there. that's all right. okay look, rusii justthere. that's all right. okay look, rusii just forgot, belinda, that >> i just forgot, belinda, that you maybe more from the you two are maybe more from the to the right of the tory party. certainly brexit backing. how do you feel about of this? you feel about all of this? because suella braverman going, i was pole for i think she was a totem pole for a lot of ordinary people out there. and the idea that she's just been cast aside now, i mean, what does that say? >> well, i don't feel any
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connection to the tory party at all. >> but look, i think i'm almost convinced is a convinced rishi sunak is a secret squirrel the labour secret squirrel for the labour party. mean, his decision has party. i mean, his decision has almost handed keys to almost handed them the keys to downing street. >> must be >> keir starmer must be absolutely thrilled. >> to try pod of >> we've got to try pod of technocratic, chinless wonders who are more concerned now with the international stage and impressing the eu, the un, the w.h.o. impressing the eu, the un, the who. davos, the g7 than they w.h.o. davos, the g7 than they are in appealing to the national audience that they've betrayed so much. all that hope in 2016 and 2019, the conservative party or the machinery behind it have crushed it and they've spat on the faces of voters because suella suella was brave enough to say, i'm just going to break this while we're on. >> yeah, do carry on. just steve double the conservative mp has just in a letter of no just handed in a letter of no confidence, so he now joins andrea jenkins. dame andrea jenkins , who joins us shortly on jenkins, who joins us shortly on this show. she was the first tory mp to hand in a letter of no confidence. they've had a few hours to digest this reshuffle. those letters are going to keep
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coming. is hoping coming. andrea jenkins is hoping that the on that she leads the charge on this. she will join me in a second carol. i'll bring you back in. do you think if you were would you be were a tory mp, would you be handing a letter of no handing in a letter of no confidence completely. confidence now? completely. >> know, there's >> because, you know, there's caroline nokes, she she caroline nokes, the mp. she she says a name for a lot of says there's a name for a lot of tories in the party. they're called name called tino's tories in name only, and they're the people who are now in the cabinet, tories in name only. they're not the people they're people who speak for me. they're not. don't know who not. i mean, i don't know who i'm going to vote for now, seriously. but know, it was seriously. but you know, it was only a few weeks ago that david cameron, rishi called david cameron, that rishi called david cameron the failed status quo and hearing today is and all i'm hearing today is that brought him back into that he's brought him back into the him advice the cabinet to give him advice and and touched it. and help. and you touched on it. he after the brexit he ran away after the brexit vote. he literally scarpered, couldn't face up to his responsibilities, couldn't face running a country. is now running a country. so who is now going said brexit. >> brexit was his biggest regret. >> yes. and who, who and what are chances look after are the chances look after brexit and who gets to question david on this? david cameron on this? >> nobody, because >> basically nobody, because he ain't commons. yeah, absolutely. >> absolutely. look, just a
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reminder can see at reminder for you, you can see at the of your screens now the bottom of your screens now if watching us on telly, if you're watching us on telly, that news that steve that breaking news that steve double the second double has become the second conservative know of conservative mp that we know of to hand in a letter of no confidence. but look coming up has caved to the has rishi sunak caved to the left suella was he left by sacking suella was he simply speaking millions simply speaking for millions of ordinary have ordinary brits? we'll have a look at that, won't we, tory tyson, edwina currie, she takes on campbell—bannerman. on david campbell—bannerman. that's that's on david campbell—bannerman. that'snow, that's on david campbell—bannerman. that'snow, course, hat's on david campbell—bannerman. that's now, course, h want on david campbell—bannerman. that'snow, course, h want all next. now, of course, i want all of your very important views, so email gbviews@gbnews.com email me, gbviews@gbnews.com there's also poll on formerly there's also a poll on formerly twitter for you to go and vote in right now. do you think that the tory party has caved to the left? has sunak caved to the left? has sunak caved to the left? but up next am joined by left? but up next i am joined by tory grandee and rishi supporter. will be supporter. this will be interesting. mellor as he interesting. david mellor as he explains today's monumental explains what today's monumental events mean for the future events could mean for the future of the tories and crucially, the country as well. don't move
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weekend at 3 pm. on gb news, the people's channel. britain's news channel . welcome back. news channel. welcome back. >> well, i'll tell you what, we just want to clarify something that we broke before the break. tory mp for saint austell and newquay. steve, double tell you what, not submitted what, he's not submitted a letter confidence. but get letter of no confidence. but get this, actually resigned this, he's actually resigned from government , so this, he's actually resigned from government, so he's quit government. you he's government. there you go. he's got even bigger. but it's been a monumental day and keeps monumental day and it keeps getting monumental by the getting more monumental by the second british politics. and second in british politics. and it's to get unique and it's time to get the unique and unfiltered of tory unfiltered insight of tory grandee mellor. look, grandee david mellor. look, being a former cabinet minister under john being a former cabinet minister underjohn major, dave is not unfamiliar with some
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conservative chaos and there's no better man, really no man, better placed to tackle our part in creating this chaos bombshell day in political politics. i hope.i day in political politics. i hope. i hope you can hear me there, david. thank you very, very much for i can hear you. >> can you hear can you hear me? >> can you hear can you hear me? >> i've got you. yes. we'll crack on. so look what do you make of this reshuffle, then? so do think that he was right do you think that he was right to sack well to sack suella? well i personally would wish it could have avoided because have been avoided because i think thing about her is think the thing about her is that she's intelligent woman that she's an intelligent woman with determination and she appears to stand for something . appears to stand for something. >> and it's interesting, the polls that i've seen are more than double say she shouldn't have been sacked and should have been. problem been. and of course, the problem for is he what he for rishi sunak is he what he needsis for rishi sunak is he what he needs is a, you know, a transplant of some of the energy and vigour and determination and just sheer guts that she has. i personally think that was a home office minister for five years. i think she's quite reckless sometimes in what she says as a
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home secretary free home secretary is supposed to be, you know, a bit more above the game than that. but what i don't like is, first of all, rishi sunak getting rid of her and then bringing back david cameron . i bringing back david cameron. i mean, bringing back david cameron , who is everything that cameron, who is everything that turned people off, the conservative party. he got it all wrong over brexit. and you know , he's very insouciant as know, he's very insouciant as far i think about david cameron, he's like, really, really matters to him when he's asked about this or australian and this unpleasant, well, i'm not going to go into it. but remember the laws of libel. but with which, of course, as a kc, i'm quite familiar, but it you know, when he's asked about this, what he did for this australian chat , he he says oh, australian chat, he he says oh, that's all taken care of. well i hopeit that's all taken care of. well i hope it is dave , because if it hope it is dave, because if it isn't, you're going to hear a lot more about it and it's going
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to be embarrassing for the party. >> you know, you know what, david? i'm glad that you are well skirting around the edge of this, raising something similar. there i wonder i wonder whether this is a smart move for david cameron and the conservative party to come back. what's he been doing for the last seven years? where has he been making his money last seven his money for the last seven years? is something i think years? this is something i think could to bite him. could come back to bite him. >> do i. and i think he >> yeah. so do i. and i think he deservedly so. but when you look at david cameron, he looks about 20 years older than when he left office. the last few years have not been good for him. and i don't think that, you know , i don't think that, you know, i think that sunak is we're basically in this any port in a storm situation , aren't we, storm situation, aren't we, where it is thought that in order to get rid of suella braverman, he's got to bring back a stable figure like cameron. well you know, i personally think that cameron made a terrible mess of the end of his prime ministership, including, by the way, always saying that he was going to stay
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on in parliament. but the moment parliament ceased to be much used to him, he it. and used to him, he dumped it. and ran away. and i just do not think that cameron brings anything much to the party that, you know, the tories really need at this time . at this time. >> and look, i'm keen to get the views of our viewers and listeners a little bit later on. i personally think there's the over bearing stench of death about this, but suella braverman people might not have liked her language . people might have language. people might have liked to clutch their pearls while to their mates while they chat to their mates around pit in their around the fire pit in their hampstead mansions. but hampstead mansions. okay. but the fact david, think the fact is, david, i think she was right about lot of stuff. was right about a lot of stuff. she right about invasion she was right about an invasion on the south coast. people might not have liked the language, but what call it? she what else do you call it? she was the un having to was right about the un having to change definition of a change their definition of a refugee. if we going to refugee. if we are going to combat a tidal wave of people coming western coming here unto the western world, right about the world, she was right about the threat might to threat that that might pose to our culture and our way of life and security. and i think and our security. and i think she's right we'll she's been proved right as we'll
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come later about some come on to you later about some pretty questionable two tiered policing and some hate marches. has she been sacked for being for being right too often, david, what do you think ? david, what do you think? >> well, i agree with you, actually. i think she's an intelligent woman. i think that her background allows her to appeal to a far wider group than most conservative lawyers. i speak as one myself, most conservative lawyers managed to do. and i think that you know, i was born and brought up in dorset just a few miles away from that notorious portland boat. and i can tell you that that boat is a pretty nice place to be when you think these people turned up uninvited , people turned up uninvited, alighted onto the south coast and there's a lot more of them turning up with monotonous regularity . and if it appears regularity. and if it appears the tories have become too polite to actually deal firmly with this, that why else would
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you vote conservative? you know , you vote conservative? you know, well, this is it. >> what are you voting for now? if you're a conservative, i wonder whether the tories are in danger of trying to appeal to liberal democrats who are never going to vote for them at the expense of alienating a core conservative red wall base that now can't vote for them because what are they voting for? james cleverly doesn't want to leave the echr isn't even willing to threaten it. on wednesday, i believe it is. we have the decision about the rwanda plan. well, that will be fascinating and that will be certainly a big episode of this show. and that will be certainly a big episode of this show . once episode of this show. once you've got david cameron hugely pro—china by definition , very pro—china by definition, very pro—china by definition, very pro eu, some, i think some fascinating business interests in the middle east, which given the fact that we're a slap bang in the middle of an israel—hamas crisis, could end up being quite a tricky situation for him. what are conservative voters going to vote for now ? vote for now? >> well, i mean, i agree with you. and indeed, i didn't feel it helped the conservative cause
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. that probably wasn't his intention anyway, that george osborne even starts effectively interpreting what cameron meant, because cameron muttered 1 or 2 things as he took office and osborne was suggesting, well, of course we didn't really want to go and we that's him. and dave cameron , it appeared to be cameron, it appeared to be implying haven't got the exact quote so i must be careful suggesting that that they could you know they would be in favour for of going back to where they were and where were they in a total mess. what needs to remember what a mess cameron's handung remember what a mess cameron's handling of the end of his premiership was. everything he got wrong , everything just got wrong, everything just david, just very quickly, while i've got you . i've got you. >> okay. we've got andrea jenkins coming on the show in a few moments time. she's handed in a letter of no confidence. she's pretty clear she thinks
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that others should follow suit. we've had steve double, who has handedin we've had steve double, who has handed in his resignation. anne, we've had steve double, who has hanyou in his resignation. anne, we've had steve double, who has hanyou expecting gnation. anne, we've had steve double, who has hanyou expecting to ation. anne, we've had steve double, who has hanyou expecting to seer. anne, we've had steve double, who has hanyou expecting to see letters are you expecting to see letters of no confidence come flooding in tomorrow? of no confidence come flooding in twell,'ow? of no confidence come flooding in twell, in? of no confidence come flooding in twell, i just think that you >> well, i just think that you might as well say to the conservative party for them a circular firing squad and start shooting each other . i circular firing squad and start shooting each other. i mean, this is completely hopeless . this is completely hopeless. this i mean, the conservatives are supposed to be grown up people . there's nothing grown up people. there's nothing grown up about precipitating yet more chaos because if you are a normal, intelligent voter, you look at the tories and what do they for ? stand absolute chaos, they for? stand absolute chaos, you know, it's like the old joke about the about the opinion pollster who says, are you a supporter of an organised conservative party of an organised political party? and the voter says no, i'm a conservative. i mean, it's becoming a disaster. >> yes, well, there you go. look, david, thank you very much. we covered a wide range of the reshuffle there, and i absolutely loved that. so david mellor there, former
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conservative minister there, i think metaphorically head in hands.i think metaphorically head in hands . i don't know about how hands. i don't know about how you home are if you're you at home are if you're listening on your radio, make sure you do get in touch. gb views gb views .com. look views at gb views .com. look coming up, former education minister jenkins said minister andrea jenkins has said enough she's enough is enough and she's handed a bombshell letter handed in a bombshell letter of no rishi sunak. no confidence in rishi sunak. i'm very pleased to that i'm very pleased to say that we've exclusively we've got her exclusively on this show us for that this show joining us for that box exclusive this hour box office exclusive this hour as she tries to lead a charge of mps looking oust mps looking to oust the unelected prime minister. but next, with suella sacked off and david cameron making a shock return significant cabinet return in a significant cabinet reshuffle , how's the prime reshuffle, how's the prime minister giving in to the left, former mep david campbell bannerman and tory stalwart edwina currie. they're going head to head, toe to toe in the clash. you will
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isabel, monday to thursdays from six till 930 . six till 930. >> here's a little flavour of what's coming your way. okay former editor of the sun, kelvin mackenzie, has got his unmissable reaction to tomorrow's newspaper front pages and what's inside the book as well. kwasi kwarteng, former chancellor, joins me and andrea jenkins, who has handed in a letter of no confidence to rishi sunak. she'll be in the hot seat in just but it's time in just a second. but it's time now the clash. so she's been now for the clash. so she's been the enemy of the left , the the enemy of the left, the darling of the right. suella braverman never shied away from controversy during her time as home secretary. shall we take look? >> living in a tent has become a lifestyle choice. >> they are hate marches, the wind of change.
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>> change that carried my own parents across the globe in the 20th century was a mere gust compared led to the hurricane thatis compared led to the hurricane that is coming a front page of the telegraph. the fly, a plane taking off to rwanda . oh, that's taking off to rwanda. oh, that's my dream. which party is serious about stopping the invasion in its the guardian reading tofu eating wokerati well, but while the public meltdown was entirely predictable, many believe that the former home secretary was speaking for ordinary brits. >> people just like you. perhaps even a silent majority . well, even a silent majority. well, conservative mp and rebel backbencher dame andrea jenkins, who has just handed in a letter of no confidence she will join me shortly. but she said today, may i support suella braverman sacked for speaking the truth? bad call by rishi caving in to the left. but do you agree ? has the left. but do you agree? has rishi sunak caved in to the left
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with this cabinet reshuffle ? uh, with this cabinet reshuffle? uh, let me know your thoughts. email gb views and gbnews.com. tweet me at gb news. and while you're there, make sure you go to our poll and i'll bring you the results very, very shortly. but but are joined now by by but we are joined now by by a wonderful edwina curry, of course, who is a tory grandee and david campbell—bannerman, former mep. it's always ladies first, edwina currie , i will first, edwina currie, i will start with you as rishi sunak caved in to the left . caved in to the left. >> absolutely not. and i rather resent people like andrea jenkin calling people like me, the left i >> -- >> i've been a member of the conservative party for over 60 years. i was a member when her own parents were youngsters , for own parents were youngsters, for goodness sake. and what may tell you is this think bringing in david cameron shows that rishi sunakis david cameron shows that rishi sunak is absolutely serious about winning the next election . about winning the next election. it can't be done by just appealing to a faction within the tory party . it has to be
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the tory party. it has to be done by appealing to the electorate at large and that means actually being much more moderate in many ways than i think we have been in the last year or so. and also being a heck of a lot more efficient. um, you know, you put your finger on it a moment ago and you said it's very easy to make speeches and make comments and do twitter and all the rest of it with opinion. actually it with an opinion. but actually the privilege anybody the greatest privilege anybody can have is to be a government minister in this country , in minister in this country, in a party that in a government has got a majority because you can get things done. you have such powers, such levers of power to make things happen . and that was make things happen. and that was the key thing that suella never figured out that she could actually make a lot happen. she never did. she just upset people . i'm a police widow. my never did. she just upset people . i'm a police widow . my husband . i'm a police widow. my husband was in the metropolitan police for over 30 years and she was she managed to do was upset a heck of a lot of decent people in the police who normally normally are our voters . normally are our voters. >> okay. i'll come back to you.
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edwina david, same question to you as rishi sunak caved in to the left. >> well, i think he has , i'm >> well, i think he has, i'm afraid, um, you know , cameron, afraid, um, you know, cameron, i do rate david cameron. don't get me wrong, but he does represent social liberalism in many ways. as a return to of the coalition era as a pre brexit and i don't think that's a healthy message . think that's a healthy message. and there's a lot of people today who, disgusted by this mean driven out the conservative party in the direction of reform and really doesn't help. and that really doesn't help. and the other thing it sends the message on is , you know, is this message on is, you know, is this the end of the brexit government? you know, we were elected on that to get brexit done under boris 2019. is this the end of that? because, you know, we don't seem to have much evidence of those that want to make brexit work and to deliver on it. >> and when are you shaking your head? >> now, that's absolute nonsense . i mean, it's seven years since brexit and i think we all now accept it's done. we would have liked to have seen it done
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better and we would certainly like now to build on that result and to get some greater benefits for the uk . and to get some greater benefits for the uk. but what i think and to get some greater benefits for the uk . but what i think is for the uk. but what i think is being forgotten here is that david cameron has an extraordinary record of success. i mean, he led the tory party for 11 years and he won two election as in the first 1 in 2010. he won something like a hundred seats for the conservatives . he knows how to conservatives. he knows how to win. he knows how to appeal to a much broader electorate than the very narrow right wing . i mean, very narrow right wing. i mean, you know, hear about reform . you know, hear about reform. reform hasn't actually won anything any anywhere . it's not anything any anywhere. it's not done well in any parliamentary elections . it's not done well in elections. it's not done well in by elections . and all those by elections. and all those right wing parties , you all talk right wing parties, you all talk to each other all the time, which means you think everybody thinks the same way as you do, and that absolutely not true. if we're going to win the next election , we have to hold seats election, we have to hold seats all through the country. and that includes in many parts of the country where the alternative of that's very
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tempting people is actually tempting for people is actually to vote. lib dem have to to vote. lib dem so we have to be more sensitive to the be much more sensitive to the issues that they all are concerned about. you can't just government for, for a faction , government for, for a faction, you have to govern for the whole country . country. >> well you've got david shaking his head now, so go on. >> well, look, suella was representing the wider public, you know, the wider public disgusted at these scenes of disorder on the street is order not law and order. >> and they were backing suella and we've had so many messages today through conservative democratic organising and saying, well, i'm off. >> i'm giving up on the conservatives because the last conservative, real conservative suella braverman has been thrown out. and that really doesn't help . and i think wiener's wrong help. and i think wiener's wrong to undermine in well, to say that reform is not a threat there on 7% at the moment that was more than ukip ukip was 3 or 4% and they could get more and more support now because people feel with cameron being brought
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in and braverman being thrown out, that the government's going in the wrong direction, it doesn't help. >> okay, look, both of you, absolute top stuff that. thank you very, very much. edwina currie there, tory grandee . currie there, tory grandee. we've also got former mep as well, david campbell bannerman i think that's the point though, isn't it? this really, and that isn't it? this really, and that is why it's such clash, is why it's such a good clash, because a way to because either this is a way to shore up the blue wall and mop up those soft lib dems or you've completely alienated the red wall and you're completely knackered. i think i know which one this is, but who do you agree with? okay. how's rishi sunak caved in to the left. let's to x, formerly twitter. let's go to x, formerly twitter. chris says yes, he's packed the cabinet with remainers. he sacked the true voice of the people and he's wheeled out a brexit hating fossil out of his crypt . sunak brexit hating fossil out of his crypt. sunak must be brexit hating fossil out of his crypt . sunak must be kicked out crypt. sunak must be kicked out with used like chris. i'll tell you what, be doing my job you what, you'll be doing my job soon, also says on soon, richard also says on x suella sacked his home suella braverman sacked his home secretary. rishi sunak has stood up the right. this is up to the right. this is interesting. has stood up to
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interesting. has he stood up to the though, or has he the right though, or has he quite literally, as we're saying, caved in to the left wing martin on x wing media? martin also on x says braverman must says suella braverman must be the sacked for the first politician sacked for telling she right telling the truth. she was right about met police playing about the met police playing favourites. multiculturalism has failed. the rwanda failed. we all love the rwanda plan, spoke for britain. plan, she spoke for britain. well, look , we asked views well, look, we asked your views and views are in 92% of you and the views are in 92% of you agree. wow that rishi sunak has caved into the left after today's cabinet reshuffle . just today's cabinet reshuffle. just 8% of you feel that he hasn't pretty much about as unanimous as it gets. coming up, we'll suella braverman sacked simply for being right out. i will hit back at sunak rogue reshuffle with my explosive reaction and the explosive reaction of tonight's panel. but now it is, of course, i think the moment that a lot of you have been waiting for. former cabinet minister has sensationally handedin minister has sensationally handed in a vote of no confidence letter in the prime minister earlier today. and they will join me for exclusive will join me for an exclusive interview to why they interview to explain why they think that rishi sunak has to go. former education minister
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dame andrea jenkyns, she joins me in just a matter of seconds
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breaking tonight , former breaking tonight, former education minister dame andrea jenkyns has submitted a letter of no confidence in the prime minister rishi sunak. with further rebellion from the tory backbenchers expected to continue. you let me read you a little bit of an extract from this letter because it could not be stronger for enough is enough if it wasn't bad enough that we have a party leader that the party members rejected the polls demonstrate that public demonstrate that the public reject him and am in full reject him and i am in full agreement. it is time for rishi sunak to go. it goes on rishi's machiavellian involvement in getting rid of our democratically elected leader, bofis democratically elected leader, boris johnson, bravely boris johnson, who bravely fought for brexit when parliament was in deadlock . yes, parliament was in deadlock. yes, boris, who won the boris, the man who won the conservative party, massive conservative party, a massive majority, unforgivable majority, was unforgivable enough. but then to purge the
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centre right from his cabinet that we go, i mean, it goes on here then to purge centre right from his cabinet and then sack suella, who was the only person in the cabinet with the balls to speak the truth of the appalling state of our streets. and a two tier policing system that leaves the jewish community in fear for their and safety. there's their lives and safety. there's a heck of a lot more to it. i'm delighted to say that we are joined by dame andrea right now. look, you start by saying enough is enough. what was the final straw for you . straw for you. >> oh, gosh, where do i start , >> oh, gosh, where do i start, patrick? i mean, i've i've just run out of patience, to be honest with you. i mean , i saw honest with you. i mean, i saw some green shoots where it was rolling back on net zero, which we needed to do. but, you know, the way he treated boris, the way . really the unconservative way. really the unconservative policies that we've got coming through and today, i mean, he
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could have moved suella to a different position. you know, that's always in the prime minister's gift. but he has purged my wing in the party out of cabinet and. and yeah . and of cabinet and. and yeah. and rarely suella she was speaking up for the people. i mean i was at for remembrance services on sunday and god, i lost count of the amount of people who came to me and said that she's speaking up for me on what she's saying about two tier policing about the two tier policing system. >> just drill down on >> let me just drill down on that. >> let me just drill down on that . do you >> let me just drill down on that. do you think that >> let me just drill down on that . do you think that suella that. do you think that suella has been right on basically all of most controversial of her most controversial moments, the invasion the moments, the invasion of the south coast, the hurricane of people coming to the western world, the two tier policing and the hate marches. do you think she was right on all of those things and rishi sunak in sacking her is wrong . sacking her is wrong. >> i'm not going to agree on necessarily every one of those things. and i would have chose the words slightly different if
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i'm honest. but she got a real sense of the frustration of the public. and i mean, what we saw on the streets was just disgusting. patrick and if this is modern day britain, it needs reforming . and she was right. reforming. and she was right. she was the only person to actually stand up and speak out on that who was in the cabinet. obviously we've got fantastic people like pretty and jacob and you know, who was no longer in the who was spoke out, the cabinet, who was spoke out, but the only one who was but she was the only one who was actually in cabinet. so i took my to as rishi sunak my hat off to her as rishi sunak just committed political suicide by getting rid of suella braverman . well, i think if you braverman. well, i think if you look at the cabinet reshuffle, i mean , i do like david cameron, mean, i do like david cameron, by the way, and him and osborne was brilliant with me when i, you know, unseated ed balls. and they came up and gave me lots of support. and i was i was disappointed when he resigned. and he will do a fantastic job as a foreign secretary but to me, it's what it looks like. patrick know, i like i said ,
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patrick you know, i like i said, i like david cameron and i really like david cameron and he'll good job. but it's he'll do a good job. but it's what it looks like when you bnng what it looks like when you bring somebody in a red wall seat like mine, when you bring somebody on board has somebody on board who has actually resigned and because of he didn't agree with the brexit referendum result, it's he didn't agree with the brexit referendum result , it's actually referendum result, it's actually turning people off in seats like mine. and it makes people think, why are the people within the party itself not not good enough to go into cabinet and his decision , you know, who the heck decision, you know, who the heck is advising him? and also, i mean, i'm really get on very well with richard the party chairman patrick but don't forget that, you know, i don't think it's a good look where the new party chairman is, hasn't you know, he's doing a chicken run so he won't have a seat at the next election. he's trying to get a safer seat. what? that's not a good look for a party chairman, patrick. and whoever's advising the prime minister. for god's sake , you minister. for god's sake, you know they need sacking. do you
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think other mps should hand letters of no confidence in. i hope, sir patrick i mean, to me it's bigger than just the party. we're fighting for our country now and we are fighting for not only conservatism , but we're only conservatism, but we're trying to stop the likes of starmer getting in number 10. and we cannot do that with rishi sunak. look we've been a year now of rishi sunak in post and look, we're haemorrhaging votes . look, we're haemorrhaging votes. i've had people resign membership from my constituency and we've seen it up and down the country and it's not a conservative to me. we and i mean, i don't agree with what edwina said , you know, that we edwina said, you know, that we are just a certain group of the party. you know, if you look at the party membership, we, you know, we're more in tune with it. this so—called wing of the party and the general public. so, um , so i agree with disagree so, um, so i agree with disagree with what she said. well, you obviously want rishi sunak out.
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>> who do you want in? >> who do you want in? >> it depends who puts their name forward . and one person i name forward. and one person i don't want is kemi. i mean, among mps , she's known as the among mps, she's known as the great pretender . let's not great pretender. let's not forget how she voted for every one of theresa may's deal . she's one of theresa may's deal. she's known as a great pretender. i've had so many people tell me she's called that in parliament because she makes out she's this woke warrior . yes, she may be on woke warrior. yes, she may be on that issue, but she will she will move to whatever position to get into power, just like mr sunak did. and we don't want an heir to sunak, you know, we want a true conviction in politician. so let's see who puts her name forward. but i will be back in the person who's got true conviction. >> okay. all right. and are you going to openly call for other people to handle letters in in the house of commons in the coming week? do you think? >> well, i'll be having chats with people, patrick, but but let's also be a realist
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let's let's also be a realist here. look, with theresa may um, you know, resigned in the may and ed, we saw boris and david davis and a few others from the july doing all these mass resignation actions. she won a vote of no confidence in the december. and it wasn't until the, um, you know, till the spnng the, um, you know, till the spring that she actually stepped down. so it's a slow process. but the fact is we're running out of time this time and we've got to save we got to save conservatism and we've got to save the country from somebody. you know, starmer who twice tried to get corbyn in number 10. this serious stuff , 10. this is serious stuff, patrick, we need to stop patrick, and we need to stop them . them. >> i mean, it's incredibly strong stuff from yourself. and i you very much i want to thank you very much for on and sticking your for coming on and sticking your head parapet . an head above the parapet. an incredibly thing do. incredibly brave thing to do. that dame andrea jenkins that is dame andrea jenkins there he is, the first conservative mp to hand in a letter of no confidence once other people to do it thinks the tories doomed under rishi tories are doomed under rishi sunak and he's openly calling for a new leader. coming up,
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after a dramatic day in westminster , we will be joined westminster, we will be joined by a no nonsense former chancellor ask if the tory chancellor to ask if the tory party risks unravelling into civil war. that's right, kwasi kwarteng will be here a little bit later on in the show. but next up, it's sacking suella braverman suicide for braverman political suicide for an embattled an increasingly embattled prime minister now caved minister has britain now caved in to two tier policing? i will get stuck right into that with tonight's top panellists , so tonight's top panellists, so don't anywhere. good evening. don't go anywhere. good evening. >> i'm alex deakin and this is your weather update from your latest weather update from the office for gb news. the met office for gb news. tomorrow a case lots tomorrow will be a case of lots of showers gusty winds with of showers and gusty winds with some spells, particularly some sunny spells, particularly in the afternoon across the south today we've been dealing with storm debby heading out now into sea , but it's into the north sea, but it's produced quite a lot of gusty winds through the day. and it's still some weather still producing some wet weather in eastern that will in eastern scotland that will slowly through the night. slowly ease through the night. there'll further there'll be showers further south, spells in south, some clearer spells in between the heavy showers and still a breezy night for most, although the winds , as i say, although the winds, as i say, will be easing down as the storm clears temperatures, as clears through temperatures, as
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the in northern the winds ease in northern scotland. so maybe not far off freezing, actually, most freezing, actually, but most places single places mid to high single figures, 10 11 in the south. figures, 10 or 11 in the south. now south—west some very now in the south—west some very heavy comes in around dawn heavy rain comes in around dawn and this band heavy rain with and this band of heavy rain with thunderstorms works its way across during thunderstorms works its way acrc morning. during thunderstorms works its way acrcmorning. met during thunderstorms works its way acrc morning. met du have the morning. met office do have a warning in place. a lot a yellow warning in place. a lot of rain falling in a short of heavy rain falling in a short space time and some gusty space of time and some gusty winds as well as flashes of lightning and rumbles of thunder. clears , it does thunder. as that clears, it does turn brighter in the south, further north, of cloud and further north, lots of cloud and plenty showers to come plenty more showers to come throughout day. so just throughout the day. so rain just coming going and staying coming and going and staying pretty again on pretty breezy again on wednesday, most wednesday, certainly across most of . northern of scotland. northern england expect showers . there'll be expect more showers. there'll be a feed of showers coming into the north coast of northern ireland, northern scotland ireland, but northern scotland may and drier. may turn brighter and drier. not too many showers the south on too many showers in the south on wednesday, chance a wednesday, a decent chance of a largely here with largely dry day here with temperatures 8 to 10 across the
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it's 10 pm. on this is patrick
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christie's tonight. >> now, today marks a monumental moment in british political history. rishi's reshuffle meant that it was sayonara suella the woman who many people think spoke the truth about hate marches, two tier policing and illegal immigration. well, she was kicked to the kerb, wasn't she? but then we all got a little bit of deja vu. is this the day that the conservative party turned its back on ordinary people on the silent majority people like you, i dare say, and caved in to the snivelling westminster blob and the metropolitan luvvies in the legacy media. i mean, look , just legacy media. i mean, look, just look at how sly news reacted to braverman being booted . braverman being booted. >> government grid is clear. >> government grid is clear. >> this hold on. >> this hold on. >> i'm just hearing a cabinet reshuffle is underway . a reshuffle is underway. a cabinet? oh, thank god. >> oh , on the way is what? >> oh, on the way is what? >> oh, on the way is what? >> i'm just. oh, thank goodness she hasn't slept a wink all night . night. >> yeah. there you go. says it all really doesn't it? former chancellor kwasi kwarteng will join shortly for his join us very shortly for his unmissable take whether he unmissable take on whether he
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will next mp to hand. in will be the next mp to hand. in a letter of no confidence. and i promise to bring you the very best, most entertaining paper review that you will find anywhere national television anywhere on national television as we reveal not just the front pages, but what's the pages, but what's inside the books well . so you'll be bang books as well. so you'll be bang up to date and ahead of the curve. i get the feeling that it's to be bumper news it's going to be a bumper news round, don't you? fleet street legend us legend kelvin mackenzie joins us for hot takes. and on my for his hot takes. and on my sofa tonight, we've got the feisty and fiery trio of carole malone, belinda de lucy and benjamin butterworth suella out can aaron in confidence lost a massive show for a massive day and your voice is always the most important bit in it even if you feel that the government has turned its back on you. we are still the people's channel. we want to hear from you. gb views at news. com if you were an at gb news. com if you were an mp, would you be handing in a letter confidence right letter of no confidence right now? know. i'll get to now? let me know. i'll get to your after the news with your replies after the news with polly . patrick.
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polly. patrick. >> thank you and good evening to you. well, the top story tonight is that after making major changes to his government in a cabinet reshuffle this morning, the prime minister has tonight given a speech at the annual lord mayor's banquet in . london lord mayor's banquet in. london standing for the national anthem, rishi sunak said he would stand up for tolerance and free speech as conflicts overseas created division at home. in a speech on foreign policy , he also praised the work policy, he also praised the work of the former foreign secretary james cleverly, while expressing high expectations for david cameron's return to cabinet. >> and so we've delivered one of the most significant years for british foreign policy in recent times. that's due in no small part to james cleverly, and i know that he'll bring the same vigour to the equally vital job of home secretary . and i am
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of home secretary. and i am pleased to have appointed a new foreign secretary who will build on everything that we have achieved in the last year. >> rishi sunak well, earlier, he said the cabinet reshuffle had built a united team . let's run built a united team. let's run through what happened today. about 6:00 this evening, we saw gb news presenter and former housing minister esther mcvey walking into downing street. she left having been appointed minister without portfolio . the minister without portfolio. the suggestion she will be the minister for common sense apparently. meanwhile victoria atkins was slotted in as the new health secretary replacing steve barclay, who takes the environment portfolio. laura trott steps in as treasury chief secretary. all ipso in that government reshuffle today . government reshuffle today. richard holden is the new chair of the conservative party and as we were saying just now, the former prime minister, lord david cameron, is the new foreign secretary. seven years after he left, number 10, he replaces james cleverly, who takes up the home secretary's
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role and that's after suella braverman, the ex home secretary was sacked by the prime minister earlier on this morning, ending days of speculation about her job security in government . job security in government. well, lord david cameron, the new foreign secretary, says he's delighted to be back in government. hope that six years as prime minister 11 years leading the conservative party, gives me some useful experience and contacts and relationship and contacts and relationship and knowledge that i can help the prime minister to make sure we build our alliances. >> we build partnerships with our friends , we deter our our friends, we deter our enemies , and we keep our country enemies, and we keep our country strong. that's why i'm doing the job and i'm delighted to accept lord cameron well, his return to government isn't without controversy, some suggesting he won't be facing, for example, regular grillings from mps. >> lord cameron's position in the house of lords means he's exempt from regular sessions of foreign office questions , with foreign office questions, with junior ministers fielding questions instead. incidentally,
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number 10 has confirmed today lord cameron won't be drawing an attendance salary for the house of lords whilst he is foreign secretary . he now needs away secretary. he now needs away from politics today . the funeral from politics today. the funeral of sir bobby charlton has taken place at manchester cathedral and in attendance today was his royal highness the prince of wales , as well as the former wales, as well as the former manchester united manager, sir alex ferguson . friends and fans alex ferguson. friends and fans gathered to bid sir bobby farewell . thousands lining the farewell. thousands lining the streets near old trafford as the hearse pulled by the football great made 758 appearances for manchester united and won the european cup in 1968. as well as being part of that world cup squadin being part of that world cup squad in 1966. that saw england win . this is gb news across the win. this is gb news across the uk on tv , in your car, on uk on tv, in your car, on digital radio and on your smart speaker by saying play gb news. this is britain's news channel .
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this is britain's news channel. one suella braverman sacked for being right was she sacked because she refused to toe the namby pamby wishy washy leftie luvvie lies about illegal immigration and crucially, about two tier policing on our streets i >> -- >> as suella braverman was right . right about the hate marches. yes there were bad scenes from some counter—protesters. i absolutely do not condone clashes with police and there were some disgusting things that happened there. but there was a heck of a lot more of this stuff . and this stuff has been going on for weeks. huge numbers of anti—semitic signs like this one that we can see on your screens right now, people saying things like death to all the jews, intimidation of poppy sellers in the run up to remembrance weekend, having to move their stalls as constant chants of from the river to the sea. we all know what that really means . all know what that really means. and that's before we get stuck
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in to the calls forjihad on the in to the calls for jihad on the streets. so, yes, they were and are hate marches . and i tell you are hate marches. and i tell you who'll be happiest with suella sacking those people doing that, chanting. but she was also right about two tiered policing. now, i don't enjoy saying this because the police do a difficult job. i do think that they should be paid more. and a lot of the time i feel incredibly sorry for them. but facts and the facts are facts are fact and the facts are that the police sent forward assistant commissioner matt twist earlier early doors to tell everyone that the counter protesters were essentially violent scumbags and the pro—palestinian march was all fine and dandy, and that simply was not true. this meant that the media reported it as such. like our friends at channel 4 news, who put this tweet out before deleting it. it said, after being branded hate marchers by the home secretary , marchers by the home secretary, a massive pro—palestinian protest passed off peacefully with hundreds of thousands in attendance. the only scuffles on the day involved far right protests . those who clashed with protests. those who clashed with police that that is categorically untrue and it was
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untrue when they tweeted that they must have known that, but they must have known that, but they were helped with that tweet pushing their political agenda , pushing their political agenda, as were other left leaning commentators , because of the commentators, because of the comments that were made by the met police. but also the police's behaviour . the police police's behaviour. the police went in straight away and arrested bad actors within the counter protesters , but then yet counter protesters, but then yet again they just looked to retrospectively arrest people from the pro—palestine march . from the pro—palestine march. they put up appeals for the pubuc they put up appeals for the public like this. by the way, just a just a warning now. okay that the clip that i'm about to play that the clip that i'm about to play for you might offend you . play for you might offend you. >> hitler knew how to deal with these people. they probably made a program so they can create a state of israel in the expense of palestinian muslims . blood of palestinian muslims. blood police were also happy to be pictured with children dressed as novelty hamas terrorists . as novelty hamas terrorists. >> and in a stark contrast from how they handle
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counter—protesters, they stood by and allowed a mass brawl to take place in london. there you go. happening. the police just standing there, mass brawl taking place. we can see it with our own eyes. again, the police retrospect actively say that they might not have handled that correctly. so i put it to you that suella braverman was absolutely right about there being two tiered policing and the police potentially picking a side . i do not think for one side. i do not think for one second that the people among the counter protesters who went there to cause trouble actually did so because of suella braverman . they went there, braverman. they went there, i think because they felt that our police force and our politicians were letting them down. suella was right about there being an invasion on our south coast. she was right about there being a hurricane of illegal immigrants heading to the western world. and people who think that and for people who think that language is a bit and language is a bit spicy and inappropriate, david cameron, once swarm. so, once called them a swarm. so, you have that. back you know, have that. he's back in isn't she was right in now, isn't he? she was right about irreversible impact about the irreversible impact that have on our that that will have on our culture and on our way of life.
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she was right that the international community needed to act now to change the definition of a refugee suella braverman has actually been right about quite a lot . people right about quite a lot. people might not have liked the language she used. they might have moaned their metropolitan mates how she's a horrible mates about how she's a horrible little hate merchant and a racist. i will tell you what racist. but i will tell you what i really they like i really think they didn't like most of all, they couldn't stand that she, especially as an ethnic minority , she was brave ethnic minority, she was brave enough to say what the silent majority of brits are actually thinking, has her finger thinking, and she has her finger on the pulse more than rishi sunak , whose solution to all of sunak, whose solution to all of the issues facing the the major issues facing the country now are are country right now are are banning smoking, changing exams for kids and sitting on elon musk's knee . if rishi sunak musk's knee. if rishi sunak really thinks that suella braverman was the problem and that david cameron, a pro eu china loving obama file , was china loving obama file, was some fascinating business interests in the middle east is the answer then maybe he's more deluded than many people thought. but to respond now,
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it's my panel of top pundits. his daily express columnist carole malone . we've got carole malone. we've got journalist and broadcaster benjamin butterworth. we've got former brexit party mep belinda de lucy carroll. i'll start with you again there, suella. has she been sacked for being right ? been sacked for being right? >> she got sacked for doing her job. oh, you know, she got sacked for speaking her truth . sacked for speaking her truth. she got sacked because there are politicians in government that are too weasely to tell the unpalatable truth that she tells. and she was basically sacked for doing a great job. nothing. she has said you alluded to it, nothing. she the language she use is probably not to everyone's taste, but there's nothing that she's said isn't true. she was dead right about about immigration. she was right about immigration. she was right about she was right about those marches. she was right about the cops. marches. she was right about the cops . you know, there was a very cops. you know, there was a very interesting piece in i think it was the mail on sunday this weekend, anonymous weekend, where an anonymous met police said thank god police officer said thank god for her because she is for her because she has she is saying exactly what we've and he said no copper can. let me
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said now, no copper can. let me just finish this. no copper can patrol a march. now, if it's to do and what he do with ethnicity and what he was saying was that all the just stop all marches if it's to do with what's seen as a just cause, they have to have cause, they have to be have a soft touch. they were told to police the pro—palestinian marchers with soft touch. he marchers with a soft touch. he said. at the said. however, look at the lockdown protector protesters. we in full riot gear we were out in full riot gear for those where we didn't need to but these courses, these to be. but these courses, these good and causes, no, just good and just causes, no, just just before i go to you, benjamin, because i want to give you a bit of time on this. >> you were talking to me a bit off air, belinda, and you actually saw firsthand a bit of two policing the two tier policing at the weekend, didn't you? >> well, very interesting. >> well, it's very interesting. after minute silence after the two minute silence on the i around to the saturday, i hung around to have of tea for about an have a cup of tea for about an hour or so on parliament square and couple of hundred maximum and a couple of hundred maximum men were singing football songs. >> the >> so i presume they're the football been football guys that have been talked about. >> that's all they were doing. >> that's all they were doing. >> chanting football >> they were chanting football songs saw songs at each other and i saw almost hundred and i filmed almost a hundred and i filmed it on my phone. riot police head
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towards and shocked. towards them and i was shocked. i there's nothing i was thinking, there's nothing going there that's going on down there that's troublesome there's one troublesome or there's no one fighting. yet there they fighting. and yet there they were all geared up. i mean, if only could have seen that only we could have seen that kind reaction action around kind of reaction action around some splintered some of the more splintered groups scenes groups and the horrific scenes we've seen the we've seen in the pro—palestinian march. we've seen in the pro yeah.stinian march. we've seen in the pro yeah. benjamin rch. a >> yeah. benjamin and just a reminder, we've got reminder, by the way, we've got quasi coming up very, very quasi quiet coming up very, very shortly on this. going to be fascinating see whether or fascinating to see whether or not queuing up hand in not he's queuing up to hand in his letter of no confidence in rishi but rishi sunak, isn't it? but benjamin on now with suella benjamin on this now with suella going, well and going, it's all very well and good saying things like the yougov 75% people yougov poll says 75% of people think sunak's made think that rishi sunak's made the but then the right decision. but then you drill things drill down on things and a majority of people think she was right about things like hate marches. a majority people marches. a majority of people think she right things think she was right about things like mean, like rhiannon yeah. i mean, today majority was today the silent majority was finally twice as finally heard because twice as many it was right to many people said it was right to sack suella than to keep her. >> and i couldn't. >> and i couldn't. >> was one all right. >> week, a poll found that >> last week, a poll found that she least popular she was the least popular politician in cabinet. and you know she wasn't sacked for know what? she wasn't sacked for doing because she didn't know what? she wasn't sacked for doingthe because she didn't
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know what? she wasn't sacked for doingthe marches.iuse she didn't know what? she wasn't sacked for doingthe marches. she she didn't know what? she wasn't sacked for doingthe marches. she didn'tdn't stop the marches. she didn't toughen laws were toughen the laws that were seeing anti—semitism our seeing anti—semitism on our streets. stop the streets. she didn't stop the boats. cut the cost boats. she didn't cut the cost of hotels where migrants are being she do being hosted. she didn't do anything. thing anything. the only thing she achieved was inflame racial achieved was to inflame racial tensions on the streets. she couldn't stop . couldn't stop. >> the only the cops had the power to stop. she has the legal power to stop. she has the legal power doesn't. power to she doesn't. >> does. under the 1980. >> she does. under the 1980. >> she does. under the 1980. >> if she didn't, if she >> but if she didn't, if she didn't have the backing of the prime minister or the met police didn't have the backing of the primemarkster or the met police didn't have the backing of the prime mark rowley,1e met police didn't have the backing of the prime mark rowley,1e mewhatice chief mark rowley, then what could do? and i'm sorry, can could she do? and i'm sorry, can we also point out the telegraph did a poll today of 85,000 people. >> i'd like how many the >> i'd like to know how many the yougov poll that 64% yougov poll was. that said, 64% said be. said she shouldn't be. >> the pro—hamas >> and actually the pro—hamas mobs we've seen on our streets every day and in our stations prove suella was right. >> proving and >> they're proving it. and now they've been emboldened. now her she's doesn't she's got your argument doesn't work. pro—hamas work. islamists and pro—hamas mob have been emboldened by she did it. mob have been emboldened by she did and it. mob have been emboldened by she did and sorry, it. mob have been emboldened by she did and sorry, patrick, but i >> and i'm sorry, patrick, but i think what you said was disgraceful when you said that those were attacking disgraceful when you said that thorcenotaph were attacking disgraceful when you said that thorcenotaph and were attacking disgraceful when you said that thorcenotaph and around:tacking the cenotaph and around the cenotaph standing cenotaph were standing up because politicians because they thought politicians and it wrong, and police had got it wrong, they weren't. >> think why they were
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there. >> they weren't. >> they weren't. >> that's why they were there. they were thugs who stand they were just thugs who stand for nothing. what i will say to thatis for nothing. what i will say to that is this overarching that is this my overarching point don't think point there is i don't think they because they they were there because they feel suella braverman told feel like suella braverman told them to be there. i think they were they felt as were there because they felt as though they were being let down. i'm what did was i'm not saying what they did was right. saying that's why right. i'm saying that's why i think were and i think they were there. and i think they were there. and i think i'm right about look, look, say, no, those look, i just say, no, those people can't spell senator people can't even spell senator for three weeks when there weren't right protesters weren't any far right protesters and the amount of and there was the same amount of bother was this week. bother as there was this week. >> can't blame it on the >> so you can't blame it on the far right. you can't i mean, 126 people from the far right were arrested, which is a massive proportion those protesters. proportion of those protesters. >> only holding >> the only people holding swastika placards up with a pro—palestinians, right. >> right. look, just a >> right. okay, look, just a straw poll. >> there was a far right protester with a swastika tattoo. >> no, that was actually banners. >> yeah. i mean, again, i'm not defending the far right. can i just say at risk of anyone clipping this and sounding like i'm going into babylon with the swastika tattoo? with swastika tattoo? that man with the was from the swastika tattoo was from 2016. n0,
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the swastika tattoo was from 2016. no, i do take 2016. but yes. no, i do take your point and look very quick. straw before to straw poll before we go to kwasi. here. do you kwasi. kwarteng here. do you think braverman think suella braverman ann should the leader the should now be the leader of the tory party? >> i'm not sure about that, susanna. sure, but susanna. i'm not sure, but i think i think been treated think i think she's been treated incredibly think i think she's been treated inc|do bly think i think she's been treated inc|do you think she will be the >> do you think she will be the next leader of the tory party? benjamin i want ask you if benjamin i want to ask you if you she's desperate, but you think she's desperate, but it'll never happen. >> the tory >> belinda the tory party is a dud. leader, they dud. even if she's leader, they won't she be won't work for her. she won't be able anything done. able to get anything done. >> another flyer. right. okay. i've this for quite >> another flyer. right. okay. i"long this for quite >> another flyer. right. okay. i"long time, this for quite >> another flyer. right. okay. i"long time, but this for quite >> another flyer. right. okay. i"long time, but it's s for quite >> another flyer. right. okay. i"long time, but it's aboutjuite >> another flyer. right. okay. i"long time, but it's about to e a long time, but it's about to come kwasi kwarteng. come your way. kwasi kwarteng. but as well, we've got but coming up as well, we've got tomorrow's newspaper front pages. explosive tomorrow's newspaper front pagy in explosive tomorrow's newspaper front pagy in british explosive tomorrow's newspaper front pagyin british politics.3losive tomorrow's newspaper front pagyin british politics. okay,e day in british politics. okay, papers and papers are reporting. and in fact, couple here papers are reporting. and in fact, doors couple here papers are reporting. and in fact, doors and:ouple here papers are reporting. and in fact, doors and you're here papers are reporting. and in fact, doors and you're note papers are reporting. and in fact, doors and you're not going early doors and you're not going to to miss them because to want to miss them because they are reporting rishi they are reporting on rishi sunak's, to bring sunak's, quote, gamble to bring back who back david cameron, who is reportedly tonight offered a job in before suella in government before suella braverman was even sacked. i am also hearing that he wasn't even rishi sunaks first i will rishi sunaks first pick. i will tell you who i believe was tell you who i believe that was and you but and it will make you laugh. but there top panel will there we go. my top panel will get into all of the big get stuck into all of the big stories. way stories. that's coming your way very but first, yeah,
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very shortly. but first, yeah, look, he's almost the last man standing when it comes to conservative values in the conservative or is he conservative party or is he former chancellor kwarteng conservative party or is he forngivesancellor kwarteng conservative party or is he forngives hisellor kwarteng conservative party or is he forngives his exclusive kwarteng conservative party or is he forngives his exclusive reaction 1g and gives his exclusive reaction to sacking and to suella braverman sacking and his bombshell insight into whether the party now dead whether the party is now dead and buried at the ballot box. that's coming your way. don't move
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pm. on gb views, the people's channel. britain's news channel . channel. britain's news channel. fleet street legend kelvin mackenzie is here very, very soon with a feisty review of
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today's news. >> i promise you the most entertaining paper review anywhere on national television. and i will deliver that. but time now for one of the few remaining right of centre politicians bit of politicians with a little bit of conviction the conservative conviction in the conservative party. the mp, former chancellor kwasi kwarteng kwasi, thank you. >> hello. thank you very, very much. >> just before go to you like >> just before we go to you like suella kwasi suella bravermans kwasi supporters say that he too was the victim of an internal tory party coup. he was sensationally sacked by liz truss. he won't like me reminding him of that over that controversial budget in september last year, thinking throwing kwasi under the bus would save her job. truss was would save herjob. truss was sacked just nine days later and rishi sunak swept into power. it's been chaos since then, so who does sunak think can steady the boat? ladies and gentlemen, this . this is his new foreign secretary >> her majesty, the queen has asked me to form a new government. and i have accepted. >> there are all sorts of mad allegations involving pigs heads and weird bits of one's body and
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affairs and so . we are affairs and so. we are approaching one of the biggest decisions this country will face in our lifetime is whether to remain in a reformed european union or to leave. >> let june the 23rd go down in our history as our independence day, i love this country and i feel honoured to have served it . feel honoured to have served it. >> and i will do everything i can in future to help this great country succeed . thank you very country succeed. thank you very much . much. >> kwasi kwarteng joins me now . >> kwasi kwarteng joins me now. braverman now cameron inaya sunak cocked it up. look time will tell. >> i mean , i have to say that >> i mean, i have to say that every single person i spoke to was very surprised at the appointment of david cameron suella sacking. >> less surprising given what had happened. >> but clearly, i think from a lot of the right wing, the old brexit coalition i think there
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is unease. >> i think there is concern that suella who was, you know, she spoke her mind very much on the right, the centre right of the party. and lots of people are saying to me , well, she said it saying to me, well, she said it how it is. and i think she spoke truth to power. that's the perception. so she was out and i understand those reasons. but of course, david cameron's appointment took everybody by surprise . and i think the gamble surprise. and i think the gamble is that somehow david will give gravity and heft and statesmanship . and i understand statesmanship. and i understand that. and i think he's a capable man. but it is odd. having said that, you're going to be the change candidate after 30 years of, you know , failed politics to of, you know, failed politics to bnng of, you know, failed politics to bring someone back who was prime minister 11 years ago. i mean, do you find it offensive that rishi sunak doesn't think he's got a serving mp capable of. no. look, you know, i've been there. i've been in cabinet. i think there are lots of things that he has consider. i think it is
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has to consider. i think it is unusual to have a foreign secretary in the house of lords. i that we haven't i have to say that we haven't had one for 41 years and of course, when things happen around the world, incident ice pieces of, you know, outrageous atrocities, whatever happens , of atrocities, whatever happens, of course, the foreign secretary will be in the house of lords. so mps won't be able to scrutinise him. >> well, that's i think, for many people they would regard that as a problem. would you have suella? have sack suella? >> i was surprised that she i mean, it was difficult because on the one hand she was sort of freelancing effectively and quite literally the articles weren't being cleared. so there was a challenge to rishi s authority, the prime minister's authority, the prime minister's authority , but at the same time authority, but at the same time she spoke for very many conservative voters. and so it was a very finely balanced decision. and i'm not sure what i would have done . i probably i would have done. i probably would have kept her, but i think fully understand why rishi sacked her. >> will you be submitting a
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letter of. >> no, no. i mean, as a rule of thumb, and i've been on gb news a number of times, i've always believed that you've got to be loyal to the leader because the one way we're going to actually be wiped out is if we be be totally wiped out is if we are fractured and we have all these different factions . and i these different factions. and i backed every leader . i backed backed every leader. i backed david cameron, i backed theresa may. i was a minister under theresa may. i was in boris's time. i was in cabinet. liz i backed, of course, until i was sacked. and i've always said publicly that i will back rishi sunak and i intend to do so. but i think, you know, he's he's navigating very choppy waters at the moment and only time will tell if this, you know, essentially you're bringing back someone who's been off the bench for seven years and actually david cameron since idolises a politics that was very much of yesterday i mean he hasn't been in government for seven years. >> yeah, absolutely . and you >> yeah, absolutely. and you know, his final act really i suppose a loss was yes. suppose was was a loss was yes. >> yes. >> yes. >> he got people are questioning
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how long it will be before george osborne's back for goodness sake. we'll have to wait think michael heseltine >> i think michael heseltine said bring back said we should bring back osborne. sure he did. i osborne. i'm sure he did. i think that was. osborne. i'm sure he did. i thirthatat was. osborne. i'm sure he did. i thirthat was. 5. osborne. i'm sure he did. i thirthat was. of course he did. >> that was. of course he did. yeah the ghost of the. >> was. that's right. >> that was. that's right. >> that was. that's right. >> what do you say to red >> look, what do you say to red wall feel completely, wall voters who feel completely, utterly betrayed? >> that we've >> so, look, i think that we've got i mean, and got to we've got i mean, and i think david has to say very early on that he accepts brexit because otherwise suspicion because otherwise the suspicion is that somehow he's going to be close the eu. i think that's close to the eu. i think that's wrong. but there is there is a feeling because feeling that somehow because he's know he's a remainer, they all know him, that our attitude him, that somehow our attitude to brexit has softened and he's got he's got think, got he's got to, i think, do a speech or do say something to, to, to say signal that he's accepted brexit. and of course, james cleverly, a friend of mine good friend of mine was was was a brexiteer. he was a strong brexiteer. he was always someone i want to leave the echr though, does he? >> public about >> he's been very public about that and we've got the rwanda ruling coming the next ruling coming over the next couple think couple of days. and i think whether or not was a hollow whether or not this was a hollow threat, final threat, the kind of final bullet in chamber the in the chamber for the
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conservatives for lot conservatives for a lot of people, that threat, people, was that that threat, we'll echr. that's we'll pull out the echr. that's gone isn't it? gone now, isn't it? >> off the table for now. >> it's off the table for now. and not sure . look, i've and i'm not sure. look, i've always felt that you've got to have your full quiver in order to kind of negotiate properly. you shouldn't taking things you shouldn't be taking things off. that was one of the problems theresa off. that was one of the problshe theresa off. that was one of the problshe said theresa off. that was one of the problshe said no theresa off. that was one of the problshe said no is eresa may. she said no deal is unacceptable. and then she expected to negotiate expected people to negotiate with her. yeah, so i think i don't know what james's position is on that and he'll get advice and he'll, you know, he's, he's and he'll, you know, he's, he's a fresh pair of eyes and he will consider , you know, his views consider, you know, his views when he's been properly briefed and he's only been in the in office ten hours. >> he has i mean he's gone on record before saying that he absolutely would. yeah. >> and he had a let's see, i think home has think the home office has a slightly different perspective from the foreign office. i think he'll he'll be he'll learn things. he'll be aware issues , issues that aware of issues, issues that perhaps hasn't been aware of perhaps he hasn't been aware of as foreign secretary particularly regarding domestic threat and domestic crime. the foreign secretary has no oversight on that. and i think i
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think it's a shrewd appointment. i think he's a very capable politician, likeable , very politician, likeable, very straightforward. and let's see what he says. >> okay. all right. i mean , >> okay. all right. i mean, there is the gamble, isn't there? now that rishi sunak who arguably, instead of tackling some of the more pressing issues of the country, has decided to that his legacy wants to be banning changing that his legacy wants to be banniiresults changing that his legacy wants to be banniiresults for changing that his legacy wants to be banniiresults for kids changing that his legacy wants to be banniiresults for kids and nging that his legacy wants to be banniiresults for kids and dare| exam results for kids and dare i say, sitting on elon musk's knee every again . okay, you every now and again. okay, you know, what would you say to people look, people who say, look, the conservative the minute conservative party at the minute is absolute chaos . is just it's absolute chaos. we're rearranging the decking on the look, is very long time >> look, he is a very long time in politics. yes. i think we're in politics. yes. i think we're in difficult now. but in a difficult place now. but the i remember the one thing i remember thinking autumn, we thinking last autumn, we shouldn't panic. i mean , i agree shouldn't panic. i mean, i agree that it's a difficult situation, but we'll it worse if we but we'll make it worse if we panic and start chopping and changing and that sounds to me a bit like you're you're urging your colleagues to not hand in letters of no confidence. look, i don't i don't i don't think they'll get enough numbers right. and don't see how right. and i don't see how changing leader now is going changing a leader now is going to shift the dial.
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to is going to shift the dial. i mean, may be regrettable to mean, that may be regrettable to some colleagues, but you've got to practical and actually, to be practical and actually, when you look at the parliament, july will be the end of the parliament. i mean, whether the elections in november or december or whenever , december or whenever, essentially the campaign will all kick off in the summer. yeah. and so essentially he's the prime minister has got, what, 6 or 7 months and i don't think having a whole new leadership contest and a whole new set of elections for the prime minister, for the leader , prime minister, for the leader, this makes sense now. okay kwasi thank you very much. >> really appreciate you coming on. great to have you on the show. very good to see you. and hopefully chat again. i hopefully we'll chat again. i hopefully we'll chat again. i hope soon. hope so. very soon. >> enjoyed it. >> really enjoyed it. >> really enjoyed it. >> so kwasi kwasi, >> thank you so kwasi kwasi, former what former chancellor look, what do you of comments? make you make of his comments? make sure in touch with me. sure you get in touch with me. gb views and gbnews.com i'll see you very, very soon. now coming up on cancelled fleet street icon mackenzie. well he's icon kelvin mackenzie. well he's seen and the fall seen the rise and the fall of a few home secretaries in his time. but what does he make of suella sensational the
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suella sensational sacking the former also cast his former sun editor? also cast his expert over nigel farage expert eye over nigel farage heading into the jungle. and the big man is here. very, very shortly. but next, tomorrow's newspaper front page is the hot off press. my panel, the off the press. my panel, the fired they're to give fired up. they're going to give their it's not their reaction. but it's not just front pages. it's just the front pages. it's what's the book well. just the front pages. it's whethe the book well. just the front pages. it's whethe of|e book well. just the front pages. it's whethe of entertainingall. it's the kind of entertaining paper that frankly paper of you that you frankly will anywhere else. i'll will not get anywhere else. i'll be right back. see
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radio. >> well , it is time to radio. >> well, it is time to dive into tomorrow's front pages tonight with my panel, i've tomorrow's front pages tonight with my panel , i've got tomorrow's front pages tonight with my panel, i've got daily express columnist carole malone. i've got journalist and broadcaster benjamin butterworth. i'm former brexit party mep belinda de lucy. well tomorrow's newspapers have just been delivered shall we have a look ? here we go . right. well, look? here we go. right. well, we're starting with the metro. wham, bam . in comes kam suella wham, bam. in comes kam suella sacked in rishi reshuffle. they also say farewell to sir bobby.
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up also say farewell to sir bobby. up next, we have got the daily mail rishi's big throw of the dice that seems to be the interpretation estimate . he interpretation estimate. he makes it on to the front there as well, doesn't she? as does david cameron . we're nipping david cameron. we're nipping over now to the guardian. why? well, because we have to. cameron shock return in high stakes reshuffle. former pm named foreign secretary after being made life peer tory right enrage raged as braverman sacked from the home office after that we're going to the independent. look who's back as rishi sacks suella in right wing cull and that i think says it all will be returning to that big picture of david cameron there soon at risk civil war as he finally fires braverman and shocks mps with a sensational recall for david cameron. that line there, right wing cull. how does that make some of our viewers feel? next telegraph there we go. which is the last one of our little round up today. they've got a massive
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picture of cameron on the front cover there. cameron's return sparks brexiteer backlash reshuffle prompts mps on the party's right to turn to sunak after has been sacked. now there's another story on the front of the telegraph that we're going to get stuck into shortly. rwanda must shortly. rwanda plan must go ahead even if it means leaving the echr r that's from robert jenrick . now it's worth thinking jenrick. now it's worth thinking about the fact that our current home secretary does not want to leave the echr right, right. okay. so where should we start? i'm going to start with the independent. okay, look who's back as rishi sunak suella in right wing co bill. enda, i'll start with you. is this a right wing cull? >> it's not a right wing cull. it's a conservative cull . i it's a conservative cull. i mean, my goodness me. all you have to do to be right wing these days is just be centre ground . you're called right ground. you're called right wing. and so anyone who's genuinely conservative is, is getting a culling . i think it's getting a culling. i think it's the lib dems have taken over.
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i've also think the new rishi government have decided to court the lib dems over the sort of vulgar brexity types like myself that they call right wing and they've changed their voter base. now they're not interested in us anymore. they want the lib dems . dems. >> f i wonder whether dems. >> i wonder whether the >> i mean, i wonder whether the independent the independent has actually hit the nail head here, it nail on the head here, that it is a wing cull . is a right wing cull. >> well, i mean, i suppose if in a way you can't deny that it is. but that's intentional but i think that's intentional because are won and because elections are won and lost from the centre ground. but this report says lost from the centre ground. but this there report says lost from the centre ground. but this there are report says lost from the centre ground. but this there are 54 report says lost from the centre ground. but this there are 54 toryrt says lost from the centre ground. but this there are 54 tory mps's lost from the centre ground. but this there are 54 tory mps who that there are 54 tory mps who call themselves allies of suella braverman, and they've said, quote unquote, prepare for war. now, that says that this endless tory infighting thing that seems to exist in perpetuity after the last couple of years is only going to be stepped up a notch and maybe that explains, you know, the letter from dame andrea jenkyns , the steve double andrea jenkyns, the steve double resignation. it certainly hints that we're going to get more of that we're going to get more of that in the coming days. >> yeah. look, i want just >> yeah. look, i want to just turn i'll turn to our attention. i'll start on this, carol, start with you on this, carol, to one of the stories that you
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will find on inside of the will find on the inside of the newspapers and newspapers tomorrow. okay. and this cameron had this is david cameron had already offered already been offered a job before accused already been offered a job bef(police accused already been offered a job bef(police of accused already been offered a job bef(police of bias. accused already been offered a job bef(police of bias. i've accused already been offered a job bef(police of bias. i've spoken.ed the police of bias. i've spoken to a couple of people today who who say that they are of the view that william hague was sounded out first for the job as forensic. he said no call dave and they called dave. but i'll throw it to you, carol, here. this is this is a story that's going to be big on the inside tomorrow. so cameron already off a before braverman a job before suella braverman accused police bias. the job accused police of bias. the job offer stunned westminster offer that stunned westminster was to face face last was made to face face last tuesday evening in the flat at number 11 downing street. rishi sunak and david cameron were alone . do you believe this? alone. do you believe this? because that would be a coup, wouldn't it? yeah i do believe it. >> and i think, you know, i think this shows how desperate sunak is, how how floundering he currently is all about currently is. this is all about desperate nation, not innovation. of all, innovation. first of to all, approach who approach william hague, who appeals more. and appeals to nobody any more. and then to meet with cameron. they said that they had this in private because they didn't want tongues wag was tongues would wag if he was
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seen. most interesting seen. but the most interesting about so tuesday, about this is so that tuesday, this before suella this was the day before suella times article appeared in which they were being told that this was the pre—empting her sacking where she had a go at the cops. so they he had planned to sucker and i think you know i think he sacked her today and i think i think the reason is rwanda comes the rwanda ruling comes on wednesday. if that goes against the government, if the supreme court rules against the government and suella would have been much harder to sack at that point she would have point because she would have demanded we leave the echr . demanded we leave the echr. >> and that leads me >> yeah, and that leads me perfectly onto the story perfectly onto the next story here, which is rwanda migrants plan must go ahead. no ifs, no buts, says robert jenrick. now, i think this story deserves a lot more attention and we know what we're going to be talking about on wednesday, don't we? this telegraph. so this is in the telegraph. so again, leading this is in the telegraph. so agafront leading this is in the telegraph. so agafront pages, leading this is in the telegraph. so agafront pages, but leading this is in the telegraph. so agafront pages, but it'saading this is in the telegraph. so agafront pages, but it's there| the front pages, but it's there or there abouts. this benjamin we home secretary who we now have a home secretary who does not want to leave the echr . does not want to leave the echr. a home secretary who did has
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just been sacked and we're about to get a rwanda ruling on wednesday. good grief, this starts to look a little bit like a concerted effort to make sure that cannot leave a concerted effort to make sure thatechr. cannot leave the echr. >> there's no chance >> i mean, there's no chance that the uk is leaving the echr first there's almost first of all, there's almost certainly not the before certainly not the time before a general comes. also certainly not the time before a gen
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even suggesting it a year ago they're going to and politics across europe. >> let just get you on this >> let me just get you on this quickly. okay. which is i think that cat's the bag. that the cat's out of the bag. now. old dave. ja now. call me dave, old dave. ja vu . he going to be in there vu. he is going to be in there with every single major government decision despite not being in the house of commons. oh, yeah. i mean, is this what rishi sunak has just done ? david rishi sunak has just done? david cameron the country? cameron running the country? >> reflect, carol >> it does reflect, as carol said, he's floundering , said, he's he's floundering, he's wobbling. he's an empty shell no purpose. now shell with no purpose. and now they've daddy back they've brought big daddy back in the room to take the in the room to take care of the creche. daddy away. creche. big daddy will run away. he away. who couldn't even he ran away. who couldn't even convince to them convince the eu to offer them a small breadcrumbs before the eu referendum ? so i think it's referendum? so i think it's a funny time right now. but what's scaring me is that this is a definite reject of any idea of leaving the echr that is dead duck. >> now look, this it. so what >> now look, this is it. so what you've got so far from this particular glimpse the papers particular glimpse of the papers is obvious is that you've got the obvious noises, is it's a right noises, which is it's a right wing cull. we've got this idea that david cameron was offered the before suella braverman the job before suella braverman even wrote that infamous article
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in the times about two tier policing and all of that. you've got the idea that david cameron might not have been first might not have even been first choice job. the fact choice for that job. the fact that cameron now is going that david cameron now is going to involved with all of the to be involved with all of the decisions there decisions that were there as well, an well, that we now have an immigration minister wants immigration minister who wants to potentially leave echr. to potentially leave the echr. but a secretary that but a home secretary that potentially want to potentially doesn't want to leave out of a rwanda leave the echr out of a rwanda ruling . ruling. >> so shouldn't it also be pointed cleverly pointed out that james cleverly as well, the only reason he's in that job is because he doesn't want rishi's job. useless want rishi's job. he's useless now very, very quickly. >> very quickly . i've also got a >> very quickly. i've also got a story for you that's inside one of books today, which is of the books today, which is greta joining greta thunberg joining anti—fossil fuel activist is outside the lord mayor's banquet in london. and i've not just gone and got the story for you. we've got a clip as well. >> we have not been listening . >> we have not been listening. >> we have not been listening. >> the people in power have not been listening. >> i've here for a climate >> i've come here for a climate demonstrate political demonstrate, not a political view . view. >> this is time for calm down.
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>> this is time for calm down. >> she enraged people. that was a little clip from greta thunberg yesterday calling for no climate justice on stolen land and someone piping up and saying , hang on land and someone piping up and saying, hang on a land and someone piping up and saying , hang on a minute, land and someone piping up and saying, hang on a minute, i'm here for a climate rally. i'm not here for a political protest. and, you know, good for you. okay. thank you very you. right. okay. thank you very much. is the start what much. that is the start of what is, i think can safely say, is, i think we can safely say, given dross that given some of the dross that served the other channels, served up on the other channels, the most entertaining newspaper review see review that you will see anywhere when i come back, anywhere. but when i come back, we're also going to be having kelvin mackenzie, aren't we, because guy well, look, he because this guy well, look, he has sold more newspapers than a fish and chip shop. this guy and kelvin mackenzie will be be on the way. and we'll also pay tribute to sir bobby charlton, footballing royalty. sadly passed away, will pay tribute to him shortly. and our greatest britain and union jackass but yes, a spicy review of tomorrow's newspapers with fleet street legend kelvin mackenzie, including news that rupert murdoch's son has now officially taken over the reins at news
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murdoch's son has now officially taken hey, the reins at news murdoch's son has now officially taken hey, look,ains at news murdoch's son has now officially taken hey, look, isis at news murdoch's son has now officially taken hey, look, is het news murdoch's son has now officially taken hey, look, is he anews murdoch's son has now officially taken hey, look, is he a right corp. hey, look, is he a right winger like his old man or is he a day lefty? all of that a modern day lefty? all of that coming way with man who coming your way with the man who is box office than anybody is more box office than anybody else, kelvin
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welcome back to patrick christie tonight and what has been a seismic day for british politics. and i'm joined now by the former editor of the sun , the former editor of the sun, kelvin mackenzie, his kelvin mackenzie, for his reaction to tomorrow's newspapers. front pages . kelvin, newspapers. front pages. kelvin, let's start with your old employer, shall we? it's the sun. recall me, dave it's a witty headline. kelvin what do you make of that ? you make of that? >> not much good, actually . i >> not much good, actually. i preferred mine, which was wham , preferred mine, which was wham, bam. they they've dug up cam, so i >> -- >> but anyway, look, there's lots of headlines that could be written and that's a pretty average one. >> the truth about the matter is this is a disastrous appointment. >> this is a guy who wouldn't
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even hang around when he heard the will of the people. >> he said, i'm out of here right . right. >> fl right. >> on earth have they ? what >> what on earth have they? what political mortuary have they found? >> this man ? >> this man? >> this man? >> what? >> what? >> what? >> what are they? they've looked in some refrigerator and pulled him out. this is a guy mired in scandal. >> the greensill scandal and absolute , absolute shocker where absolute, absolute shocker where he was a former prime minister ringing up his mates saying, you should see this guy because he's got a great ideas about money. >> right. and in fact, he cost the country a fortune and is in big trouble himself. so you know, i, i can't understand why are we so desperate? is the country so desperate? is the conservative party so desperate that they have to go back to somebody ? actually, when the somebody? actually, when the when the when the when the pubuc when the when the when the public was asked the big question, they rejected his ideas. and instead of him going out and then fighting for the majority of the country said, i'm out of here and i'm going to
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go and sit in some rather obscure caravan and write a book that nobody but nobody has ever read or found interesting . the read or found interesting. the fact is that the tory party is imploding before us, before our very eyes. >> yeah. i'll tell you what. we're going to move on to the times now. right. so similar theme here. sunak brings cameron back from the wilderness king grants. ex—pm peerage should be conjoined cabinet sacking braverman risks. revolt of the right. you've mentioned david cameron there. let's deal with that little bit of the sub deck sacking braverman risks revolt of the right one. there are no confidence at least has gone in. we had her on earlier on dame andrea jenkins do you think that we are going to see a revolt in the coming days ? the coming days? >> well , yes, the coming days? >> well, yes, i do. and it's going to it's going to be another for year. so a year when you wanted people all to be together. right. and in fact , together. right. and in fact, braverman was speaking on behalf of the country when she wrote
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that times article, that times article when they carried out polling on it, 75% of tories agreed with it. so what happens to her? she gets slung out, all right , she to her? she gets slung out, all right, she may to her? she gets slung out, all right , she may have crossed the right, she may have crossed the line, but that's about politics. there's tension , right? but if there's tension, right? but if you've got somebody in there who actually represents what you're thinking, why do you keep her? you bring out this guy here. what does he think? i dislike cameron when he was in power. and i tell you why. he was always downplaying what his background was . his father was background was. his father was the chairman whites club, the chairman of whites club, right? was right? his father was a stockbroker. that's not his problem . he went to eton. it problem. he went to eton. it doesn't matter . it's what you doesn't matter. it's what you are. and yet he would pretend all the time that he was call me dave on one of the people. he wasn't one of the people. and he's one of the people he's not one of the people today. idea i want today. and the idea that i want today. and the idea that i want to carry out public service is a load of old cobblers. he thought he going to a billion he was going to make a billion out greensill in fact, what out of greensill in fact, what happened cost the happened was he cost the investors a billion. was investors a billion. it was ridiculous . and i find the whole
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ridiculous. and i find the whole thing pathetic . and the point thing pathetic. and the point that it makes about china is 100% right. him and his useless mate. osborne right. we're going to say china's the greatest right now. we're discovering that china actually wants to own all our tech and all our telecoms and is spying on us. >> look, we've got a foreign secretary who reportedly has done some rather fascinating business in the middle east, in the middle of an israel conflict . right. right. so this is happening. we've also we've also got, you know, a guy who is massively pro—china when china is making all the wrong noises at the moment. it is a remarkable choice for foreign secretary given the current political climate . but cameron, political climate. but cameron, of course, you know, allegedly with his business interests. there we go. look very quickly before i move on to a story that i want to get you on, i am just going to tell our viewers and listeners of listeners what's on the front of the mirror back where we began. same tories quotes same old tories and then quotes quite literally 13 years after david number david cameron walked into number 10 age of 10 to unleash the age of
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austerity. back. but look, austerity. he's back. but look, kevin, on kevin, i'm going to whizz us on now to do the metro right? because able to because what we will be able to see shortly on the metro is, is a bit of nigel farage on a little bit of nigel farage on the left of the screen there. why you may ask? well, nigel farage is coining it in, isn't he? he's going to be going into the kelvin, do you think the jungle. kelvin, do you think he'll the jungle? >> i think he's he's going to have an extended period in there . it's going to be very good for nigel. nigel is, as you know, you're friendly with him. i'm pretty friendly with i've been around him for 25, 30 years or something. right. he's a very engaging rather clever guy. not as concerned , heated as most as concerned, heated as most politicians . and when you think politicians. and when you think what he's achieved , i mean, what he's achieved, i mean, after all, he achieved kicking cameron out of office, didn't he mean cameron was going around saying remain is the answer remains the future. nigel came along and said, no, he's not. tip him out . so actually when tip him out. so actually when people see what he's really like , the my bet my bet. if you want
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to have a winning conservative party, get a nigel in there . party, get a nigel in there. don't get a cameron in there. the cameron appointment is a ocean going disaster which will turn out to be the most divisive appointment that could possibly be made. and my bet is that sunak knows it's all up and he wants to blow the whole bloody thing up before he goes . it's thing up before he goes. it's a shocker, kelvin love it. >> kelvin mackenzie , their >> kelvin mackenzie, their former editor of the sun . former editor of the sun. absolutely top drawer. i told you we'd have the most interesting and entertaining paper of you anywhere on the telly. and i wasn't wrong, was i? it's now to reveal i? but it's time now to reveal today's greatest britain and union jackass right with me to reveal theirs. we're going with carole malone first, aren't we? we're starting with greatest britain. >> okay. mine suella braverman. this is the one who was sacked for doing her job. she spoke for doing herjob. she spoke for the majority on the silent majority on immigration, crime and on the immigration, on crime and on the police in her police and the traitors in her own party have been saying for months now how dangerous is months now how dangerous she is when people and down this when the people up and down this country heard who was
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country heard a woman who was speaking in voice that they speaking in a voice that they understand that understand about issues that affect . affect their lives. >> benjamin, it's >> all right, benjamin, it's dame patricia routledge. >> yesterday , she was on stage >> yesterday, she was on stage at the oxford playhouse, and i saw her at 94 years old. she was still exceptional . well, okay. still exceptional. well, okay. >> belinda mine is football legend sir bobby charlton . legend sir bobby charlton. >> yes. thousands lined the street in manchester today to say farewell to their beloved sir bobby. thank you, rip darling. legend, national treasure . thank you for all your service. >> all right. okay look, i mean, it is an incredibly tough one, especially as a manchester united but the greatest united fan. but the greatest britain today is suella braverman. go . now braverman. there we go. now we're going to go over to union jackass. snappy jackass. carol, keep your snappy mine a spineless, gutless mine is a spineless, gutless rishi sunak who listen to the left of his party and sacked suella. >> the only woman, if he had half of the cronies that suella has the country would be in much better shape. benjamin mine is the appalling suella braverman as jackass , she achieved as union jackass, she achieved nothing but stirring hatred. >> okay . all right, belinda.
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>> okay. all right, belinda. >> okay. all right, belinda. >> mine is mark rowley for letting the pro—palestinian protest go ahead on armistice day. absolutely terrible mistake. >> you know what this one i find incredibly troubling. he's obviously not going to be suella, is it? but i'm very conflicted when it comes to mark rowley. but i am going to go for rishi sunak. hey, maybe we'll be proved wrong on all of this. maybe we'll end up with a situation where this turns out to be a masterstroke and the kind blue wall seats come out kind of blue wall seats come out in force they don't go in force and they don't go yellow red wall still yellow and the red wall still stays blue. i am not stays blue. but i am not convince . can i just say convince. can i just say a massive, great big thank you to my panel tonight, carole malone, benjamin butterworth belinda my panel tonight, carole malone, beilucy.�*| butterworth belinda my panel tonight, carole malone, beilucy. buttterworth belinda my panel tonight, carole malone, beilucy. but of rworth belinda my panel tonight, carole malone, beilucy. but of course, belinda my panel tonight, carole malone, beilucy. but of course, my belinda de lucy. but of course, my biggest has to go to you biggest thanks has to go to you wonderful people who've been listening , who've been tuning in listening, who've been tuning in and been getting touch and who've been getting in touch via twitter and every single other way as well. this has been patrick christys tonight. up next, it's headliners. i will see you tomorrow at 9 pm. let's do it all again. good evening. >> i'm alex deakin and this is
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your latest weather update from the met office. four gb news tomorrow will be a case of lots of showers gusty winds with of showers and gusty winds with some sunny spells, particularly in the afternoon across the south today we've been dealing with storm debby heading out now into the north sea, but it's produced quite a lot of gusty winds through the day and it's still some weather still producing some wet weather in that'll in eastern scotland. that'll slowly through the night. slowly ease through the night. there'll showers further there'll be showers further south, clearer spells in south, some clearer spells in between the heavy showers and still a breezy night for most, although the winds, as say, although the winds, as i say, will be easing down as the storm clears through temperatures, as the ease northern the winds ease in northern scotland, off scotland, maybe not far off freezing, but most freezing, actually, but most places to high single places mid to high single figures, 10 or 11 in the south. now the south—west, some very now in the south—west, some very heavy comes around dawn now in the south—west, some very heaythis comes around dawn now in the south—west, some very heaythis band nes around dawn now in the south—west, some very heaythis band of; around dawn now in the south—west, some very heaythis band of heavyyund dawn now in the south—west, some very heaythis band of heavy rain dawn now in the south—west, some very heaythis band of heavy rain with] and this band of heavy rain with thunderstorms, works its thunderstorms, arms works its way counties way across southern counties dunng way across southern counties during the met office during the morning. met office do warning do have a yellow warning in place. of rain place. a lot of heavy rain falling in a short space of time and gusty as well as and some gusty winds as well as flashes of lightning rumbles flashes of lightning and rumbles of . as that clears, it of thunder. as that clears, it does turn brighter in the south,
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further north, lots of cloud and plenty to come plenty more showers to come throughout so rain just throughout the day. so rain just coming and going and staying pretty again on pretty breezy again on wednesday, across most wednesday, certainly across most of northern england wednesday, certainly across most of more northern england wednesday, certainly across most of more showersn england wednesday, certainly across most of more showers as ngland wednesday, certainly across most of more showers as there'll expect more showers as there'll be a feed of showers coming into the north coast northern the north coast of northern ireland. scotland ireland. but northern scotland may turn brighter drier, not may turn brighter and drier, not too the south too many showers in the south on wednesday a decent of wednesday, a decent chance of a largely dry day here with temperatures across the temperatures 8 to 10 across the north, 11 to 13 been further south. goodbye . south. goodbye. >> who is it ? >> who is it? >> who is it? >> we're here for the show . >> we're here for the show. >> we're here for the show. >> welcome to the dinosaur hour with me, john cleese . haha, that with me, john cleese. haha, that was married to a therapist and you survived. i thought we were getting hugh laurie, second best man bellissima. you interviewed saddam hussein. what's that like? >> i was terrified. i'm playing strip poker with these three. >> oh, no thank you. cds need to be put in alphabetical order. >> are are you going to be problematic again , the dinosaur
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problematic again, the dinosaur our sundays at 9:00 on gb news is
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good evening here with gb news and our top story. >> after making major changes today to his government in a cabinet reshuffle, the prime minister has given a speech at the annual lord mayor's banquet
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in london . in being upstanding in london. in being upstanding for the national anthem, rishi sunak vowed to stand up for tolerance and free speech as conflicts overseas . he's created conflicts overseas. he's created division at home, he said in a speech on foreign policy . he speech on foreign policy. he also praised the work of the former foreign secretary james cleverly, while expressing high expectations for the return of lord david cameron to cabinet and so we've delivered one of the most significant years for british foreign policy in recent times . times. >> that's due in no small part to james cleverly and i know that he'll bring the same vigour to the equally vital job of home secretary . and i am pleased to secretary. and i am pleased to have appointed a new foreign secretary who will build on everything that we have achieved in the last year as well . in the last year as well. >> earlier, the prime minister said the cabinet reshuffle had built a united team . let's take

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