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tv   Patrick Christys Tonight  GB News  November 16, 2023 9:00pm-11:01pm GMT

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new home secretary green. our new home secretary wants to outlaw climbing on war memorials . tonight's memorials. tonight's controversial clash features one lady who thinks desecrating war monuments is absolutely fine . is monuments is absolutely fine. is our new foreign secretary david cameron, a national security threat? ann widdecombe gets stuck into that. and prince harry's mouthpiece , ahmed harry's mouthpiece, ahmed scobie's bombshell book, trashing the royal family is picked apart by royal masterminds lady c and phil dampier. and on my sofa tonight, it is the tempestuous trio of alison pearson. we've got lord shaun bailey and lovely lefty amy nicholl. this is patrick christys tonight. and we're live well if you thought yesterday's protest footage was bad , you protest footage was bad, you ain't seen nothing yet. make sure you stay tuned for that. should police do more to protect our monuments, though? gb views
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gbnews.com. get the emails coming in. i'll go to the inbox shortly and get on to us on twitter as well at gb news. we're on after the headlines . we're on after the headlines. >> good evening . we're on after the headlines. >> good evening. i'm we're on after the headlines. >> good evening . i'm ray addison >> good evening. i'm ray addison in the gb newsroom . the in the gb newsroom. the chancellor says the government can't guarantee rwanda deportation flights will begin next year . that's despite the next year. that's despite the prime minister saying he was aiming for the spring. downing street says emergency legislation action will be produced in the coming weeks after the supreme court ruled it unlawful. jeremy hunt says the government is doing all it can to stop the boats . to stop the boats. >> we are hopeful that because of the solutions that the prime minister announced yesterday day, we will be able to get flights off to rwanda next year. we can't guarantee that we have to pass legislation , an to pass legislation, an emergency legislation in the house of commons. we have to sign a new international treaty with rwanda . but our commitment with rwanda. but our commitment to the british people is that
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although the supreme court ruling was a setback , we will ruling was a setback, we will not allow anything to get in the way of delivering the prime minister's pledge to secure our borders by stopping the boats. >> lord cameron has made a surprise visit to ukraine on day two of his first overseas trip as foreign secretary, he travelled to the black sea port of odesa. whilst there, he announced more support, including providing essential winter supplies for people evacuated from frontline areas. downing street has confirmed that civil servants will now need to spend more time in the office. they're required to come in to work for a, quote bare minimum of three days a week. meanwhile more senior managers will have to be in the office for longer. it follows campaigning from former business secretary jacob rees—mogg up to 10 million appointments could be freed up under new government plans . the new health secretary plans. the new health secretary says that pharmacies will be given more powers to help people
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directly . it's part of an nhs directly. it's part of an nhs proposal to cut waiting lists from next month . millions of from next month. millions of women in england will be able to access free contraception without having to see a gp back to the chancellor. and, he says benefit claimants who don't seek employment despite being fit to work , will lose access to free work, will lose access to free prescriptions and legal aid . prescriptions and legal aid. jeremy hunt says the measures are necessary to prevent anyone choosing to coast on the hard work of tax payers, end quote . work of tax payers, end quote. the government crackdown will also see digital tools used to track attendance at job fairs and interviews. however campaigners have described the sanctions as deeply worrying. they're warning that they could worsen mental illness . and the worsen mental illness. and the scottish health secretary has apologised for incurring an £11,000 data bill whilst using his ipad abroad. £11,000 data bill whilst using his ipad abroad . michael his ipad abroad. michael matheson ran up huge roaming charges while on holiday in morocco last year. the falkirk west msp told parliament his
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sons used his ipad to watch football and he admitted that mistakes were made. he says he will pay the money back on tv online, on dab+ radio and on tune in to this is gb views. now let's get straight back to . let's get straight back to. patrick suella braverman was bang on the money when she called these pro—palestine demonstrations, hate marches . demonstrations, hate marches. >> and she was right when she warned about two tier policing. i to see it with my own eyes i got to see it with my own eyes last night at westminster when my cameraman and i were insulted, intimidated and hounded out of a protest that was be calling for was supposed to be calling for peace. was supposed to be calling for peace . i just want to know why peace. i just want to know why you're here today . you're here today. >> go away. go away . >> go away. go away. >> go away. go away. >> you're not wanted. go away. go after you're not wanted. you are saying no one said get away from here. i just want to get away from here. no, go away. you're fascist scum. you're not wanted. want know your wanted. i just want to know your views, all. oh, mate, why views, that's all. oh, mate, why are here today? why
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are you here today? sorry. why are you here today? sorry. why are here today? what do you are you here today? what do you think ? don't talk to them. think? don't talk to them. >> talk to them. >> don't talk to them. >> don't talk to them. >> don't talk to them. >> do you think this is like normal a democracy normal behaviour in a democracy where they talk these people ? where they talk to these people? why don't you believe in the freedom movement? oh freedom of speech. >> what a gb news gb views. wait till you see what i've got coming up shortly and that footage only shows the vicious scenes that we managed to capture yesterday. >> hostility was happening >> the hostility was happening everywhere . from the river everywhere. from the river to the sea. >> i believe it. 3000 dead. £1 million. keith t5 now he's myla . million. keith t5 now he's myla. >> but even though the protests were so clearly reaching boiling point, it was me a member of the free press simply asking people who had attended why they were there, who was told by the
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authorities to move along and to make way for the harmless individuals dressed in balaclavas. the result was as follows . that police officers follows. that police officers here spray printing to guard the cenotaph. the national monument to our country's war dead to stop the mob from descending on it. but the coppers couldn't get or wouldn't get to hyde park corner , where this happened at corner, where this happened at the royal artillery memorial. you just want. the royal artillery memorial. you just want . to round up, keep you just want. to round up, keep respecting the. >> yeah, he is. he is what he does. nothing bro . nothing i can does. nothing bro. nothing i can does. nothing bro. nothing i can do . come come . unbelievable do. come come. unbelievable. >> that is simply horrific. but worse has been the response from
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this country's establishment . this country's establishment. soon after the met put out a statement that said, we know some online have asked why the protests have not been arrested . protests have not been arrested. well, there is no law explicitly making it illegal to climb on a memorial so officers cannot automatically arrest , but they automatically arrest, but they can intervene and make it clear the behaviour isn't acceptable. the shared online can show the video shared online can show them doing that. i'm i'm not sure they do. meanwhile there's been radio silence, predicting only from the failed mayor of london, sadiq khan. well, i wonder if his reaction will be different if the group of thugs had been, say , oh, far right. had been, say, oh, far right. and the new home secretary, james cleverly said that the government could change the law but gave no promises. >> but it is clearly wrong. >> but it is clearly wrong. >> and the police have said that they recognise is deeply they recognise it is deeply disrespectful people to disrespectful for people to climb on war memorials. we have made commitment review the made a commitment to review the legislation around public order policing. we need to take policing. if we need to take action specifically to give the police more powers. we are looking at doing that .
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looking at doing that. >> welcome to 2023. then here in britain , where an autistic kid britain, where an autistic kid can be arrested for saying a police officer looks like a lesbian . but police officer looks like a lesbian. but this kind of police officer looks like a lesbian . but this kind of mayhem lesbian. but this kind of mayhem goes unpunished at two tier policing . no such thing. and policing. no such thing. and just wait until you see what i've got for you later in the show . child indoctrination, show. child indoctrination, intimidation of mps and extremism on the streets . not to extremism on the streets. not to mention, of course, the hounding and silencing of the free press just allowed to happen. but joining me now is the former head of national counter terrorism security office is chris phillips. chris, thank you very much. look, i want to get your initial reactions to the police response last night and so far, two tier policing. is it ? >> well, 7 >> well, there's certainly disappointing that further actions weren't taken, but you do have to ask yourself that the legislators , the mps had a great legislators, the mps had a great chance to make some really strong legislation on this offence and chose not to do so .
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offence and chose not to do so. and you also have to just bear in mind that the police are acting on constraints by the cps and the ministry of justice who are telling them when and when cases shouldn't be taken to court. >> so it's not quite as straightforward as saying that every type of demonstration has a different style of policing. to some extent , maybe that's not to some extent, maybe that's not right, but is it not what happened? >> chris, can i just ask look, is it is it not fair? they're not afraid of dealing with the kind of football hooligan types or, you know, people like me who might be there with a camera and a microphone, but but they are afraid of inciting a mob . afraid of inciting a mob. >> i think society has been afraid of criticising a strict islam. isn't it? i mean, we've got to still got to teach in batley. that's high in hiding because of doing his job properly. >> so i think society generally is fearful about taking on people who have such extreme views. and it's very disappointing. >> and i think what we should do
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as as as a you know, the public, if you like, is make sure that the mps in strict laws to make just the sort of thing that you showed today, actually, and that a specific offence and then the police will have to deal with it. >> okay, look, thank you very, very much for that. as chris phillips there, is the phillips there, who is the former national counter former head of national counter terrorism security office, he makes a series interesting makes a series of interesting points points that points there and points that i will throughout will address throughout the course where i was course of this show where i was tonight in bethnal green was outside office. she outside a labour mps office. she did not vote in favour of a ceasefire and it sparked an uproar amongst the community there. so when he says , okay, there. so when he says, okay, well should mps vote to pass more laws about things if that's the kind of reaction they're going to get, then really are they not going to be intimidated from that's from doing that? and that's before this idea before we start on this idea that, happened a bit that, well, it happened a bit today, but also tomorrow, children are being brought out of school to attend some of these protests and some of these marches. is that not a worrying level indoctrination? level of indoctrination? but let's my let's get their thoughts on my panel let's get their thoughts on my panel. daily telegraph panel. we've got daily telegraph columnist we've
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columnist allison pearson. we've got conservative peer lord shaun bailey and author and broadcaster amy nicholl turner, allison , it does appear that allison, it does appear that there's one rule for one and one rule for the others here. >> yeah. and as you say , patrick >> yeah. and as you say, patrick suella braverman was spot on. she said the met must police without fear or favour. that is a cornerstone of our democracy. if we start suspecting that the police are favours one police are doing favours for one group, everything starts to fall apart and you encourage vigilantes. i was at the armistice day ceremony on saturday. it was not at the cenotaph, was not invaded by far right yobs. it was extreme , right yobs. it was extreme, peaceful and respectful. i did later see a lot of white working class lads, some of them up for a bit of a fight. others veteran ones, former policeman being kettled aggressively by the metropolitan police. i was incredibly shocked. and i then bumped into the pro—palestine march. they were allowed to do what ever they liked and i would say what's going on is the metropolitan police, they're being like the teacher who wants
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to be nice with the bad kids and then is losing control. and these marches should be stopped immediately . immediately. >> okay. now, sean, for me , >> okay. now, sean, for me, there's a really key point here about all of this, which is that i wouldn't go to another country and offend something or desecrate something that clearly meant a lot to the people of that country. i also wouldn't like to go around deliberately causing offence to people of different religions in this country, but we've seen things, incidents where a child was school scuffed a copy of the quran his mum had to go to a local mosque and apologise apparently local apparently to the local community there. but clearly we have people have an issue where people don't mind climbing on our war memorials and causing offence. firstly elianne war memorial is a extreme act of disrespect . a extreme act of disrespect. >> it is disgusting to have something done like that. and there's two important things that happen there. that need to happen there. firstly britain needs to find some respect what some self respect because what we see anything that is we see now, anything that is british, anything that is establishment fair game and
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establishment is fair game and is , is regularly is supported, is regularly attacked guardian, the attacked by the guardian, the bbc, etcetera, the bbc, etcetera, etcetera. the people britain to find a people of britain need to find a way expressing themselves way of expressing themselves against that just against that notion that just because british, it's not because it's british, it's not valuable. needs to be valuable. that needs to be challenged. and when we talk about why the about the police and why the police arrest people, police didn't arrest people, let's be very clear. the police are fault. the police's are not at fault. the police's job to enforce law. if job is to enforce the law. if there's no law enforce, they there's no law to enforce, they cannot that . people cannot do that. the people who need respond are all need to respond to this are all sat in parliament. now. if they decide they want to respond to it, then the police can respond to it. but the important thing here wing, the here is the left wing, the press, guardians , the bbc press, the guardians, the bbc are more vociferous in are much more vociferous in fighting corner. somebody fighting their corner. somebody needs fight the corner of needs to now fight the corner of ordinary because ordinary british people because ultimately the palestinians will lose if people here keep lose support if people here keep misbehaving . misbehaving. >> i mean, there was a whole section dedicated different section dedicated on a different news channel earlier this evening about whether or not i should even be going to these protests and showing what the reality is there, whether or not all of this stuff is my fault .
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all of this stuff is my fault. what i would say is i'm just walking around showing people what i would say is i'm just wal reality)und showing people what i would say is i'm just wal reality of|d showing people what i would say is i'm just wal reality of it showing people what i would say is i'm just wal reality of it all. ning people what i would say is i'm just wal reality of it all. do; people what i would say is i'm just wal reality of it all. do you ople the reality of it all. do you think that people like me should stay away? are we inflaming the situation? >> i think they were out of order to you and they shouldn't have threatened you. obviously but i do think that you have said things to inflame the situation on previous weeks. you have openly referred to them as hate marchers . people have hate marchers. people have probably seen you do that . so probably seen you do that. so it's not surprising to me that you didn't get the warmest of welcome . welcome. >> but i don't want to defend the treatment that you've received. >> but i also want people to understand people are understand why people are marching and get away from this whole which is veering into an undertone of islamophobia constantly throughout the past few weeks, people are marching because of what's happening in gaza. you talk about hostility, 50% of the buildings in gaza have now been flattened . people have now been flattened. people can't get aid. the roads, the infrastructure, baby is are suffocating in their incubators .
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suffocating in their incubators. i'm sorry. >> there are images of babies dying in hospitals. >> can i finish my point? >> can i finish my point? >> for once in my life? >> for once in my life? >> simply it's how come you always can. it's biased because it is not. it is not from the other way. you could show equally wicked pictures . and equally wicked pictures. and let's be very clear about this. the start point of this was an act of terror. it was not the start. it was an act of terror. and if anybody wants to stop this, the first thing people could do if they want a ceasefire the first thing they could do is ask for the hostages to be given they be could do is ask for the hostages to tbeginning. they be could do is ask for the hostages to tbeginning. thereey be could do is ask for the hostages to tbeginning. there are be could do is ask for the hostages to tbeginning. there are plenty , the beginning. there are plenty, plenty acknowledgement to plenty of acknowledgement to those hostages. >> there jews that march. >> there are jews on that march. there are there are young, there are old, there are young, there there are women there are men. there are women in london. there are only. >> alison, earlier , most jews >> alison, earlier, most jews in london too scared to go into london are too scared to go into the centre of london. >> they're a jew. >> so don't say they're a jew. >> so don't say they're a jew. >> only 9% of people >> not most. only 9% of people are favour time. are in favour of time. >> say is islamophobia i >> -- >> as you said, we cannot be prevented from criticising these people who are spreading these people. they are spreading these people. they are spreading these
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people. they are spreading hatred. one banner said. the white side of history with a picture of the union jack and the american flag and the right side of history, which had the palestine flag. these people, they, alison grotesque , they, alison grotesque, anti—semitic. you can take extremes from either side, from your counter—protest. >> there was a man with a swastika tattoo. let's leave that extremes . that leave the extremes. >> i'm not going to get back into it. >> look the centre of this >> look at the centre of this and why people are marching. why is the most widely attended is this the most widely attended march is it is march since 2003? why is it is because are sick of because people are sick of seeing pictures of children dying . dying. >> i'm not that that is not >> i'm not sure that that is not a left wing value. >> the you don't have to >> by the way, you don't have to be a lefty to care about those issues. children are dying on both this. both sides of this. >> because want >> look, just because i want to i want to get something else out of we move of you before we move on, because i'm going to i'm going to clips throughout to show some clips throughout the show. was the course of this show. i was in we'd in bethnal green today. we'd seen brought out seen children being brought out of to attend these of school to attend these marches. very marches. we've seen very intimidating scenes outside an mps they refuse mps office because they refuse to ceasefire. but one to vote for a ceasefire. but one thing, sean, that gets me when i
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whenever turn up to these whenever i turn up to these things and clips coming soon things and clips are coming soon when come these you when i come to these things, you know, very straightforward know, i ask very straightforward questions. you here? and questions. why are you here? and what does free palestine mean ? what does free palestine mean? and they want to shut me down straight away. they won't answer or beyond shouting things like fascist or free palestine or ceasefire. now they've got nothing . nothing. >> and that's the point, isn't it? if these people let's be very clear, there are innocent people who have died in palestine. need palestine. they need humanitarian relief immediately. but you can't get to these things if people are going to be polarised and if people are not going to accept that things are happening incorrectly on their side. statue or side. climbing lviv statue or threatening to off means that threatening to it off means that if you're neutral in this country, you simply won't support them. so they're damaging and damaging their own cause. and here's the thing. if you, patrick, are on the other side of the argument, you've given them an opportunity to make their argument. fact that their argument. the fact that they make you speaks they won't make it to you speaks volumes . i just you three volumes. i just wish you three would listen to the people on the march. >> excuse me. judging.
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>> excuse me. judging. >> me. i'm going to push >> excuse me. i'm going to push back massively because back on that massively because i've two these i've attended two of these marches days. and marches in two days. and what you're about see you're about to see is absolutely staggering. i am there to talk there begging for them to talk to and explain gb news and to me and explain gb news and all i'm getting is just very, very quickly . a gb views. a very quickly. a gb views. a gbnews.com is that inbox. i'm going to just delve in there. patrick criminal damage is taking place in our streets, says neil. he's very, very angry . and we've got a couple here. hate marches , hate marches, says hate marches, hate marches, says alison. hurts me to say it, alison. it hurts me to say it, but i'm glad my but i'm glad that my grandparents longer with grandparents are no longer with us to see what their country has become . gb views gbnews.com get become. gb views gbnews.com get in touch. let me know how you feel. but still to come, the shocking that i witnessed shocking scenes that i witnessed from pro—palestine protesters outside labour office outside a labour mps office earlier . why are you here? >> shame on you . shame on you. >> shame on you. shame on you. shame on you. >> shame on you . >> shame on you. >> shame on you. >> plus , my royal masterminds, >> plus, my royal masterminds, lady c and phil d tackles sussex cheerleader in chief omid scobie's claims that prince william ignored harry's calls while their grandmother lay
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dying. but up next in the clash , dying. but up next in the clash, after shocking scenes of disrespect in central london last night, henry bolton and jenny barnett go head to head asking whether it should be made illegal to scale all our war monuments. one of them, i think you might be able to guess which one it is, thinks it's
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pm. on gb news, the people's channel pm. on gb news, the people's channel, britain's news channel . channel, britain's news channel. >> coming up, the rest of the
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media wants to hide the truth from you about what's really going on at these pro—palestine marches. but i'll you right marches. but i'll take you right into the thick of it very , very into the thick of it very, very shortly. the shocking pro—palestine protest outside the office of labour mp rushanara ali. but now it's time for the clash . following last for the clash. following last night's storming of the royal artillery memorial, home secretary james cleverly is considering making it illegal to climb on war monument s. here's what happened last night. climb on war monument s. here's what happened last night . we what happened last night. we just want to . get him on the just want to. get him on the money runs off. >> keep respecting . yeah, he is . >> keep respecting. yeah, he is. he is what he does . he is what he does. >> right. and speaking a little earlier on on lbc , james earlier on on lbc, james cleverly couldn't deliver any guarantees that the new law would actually come into force . would actually come into force. >> but it is clearly wrong. and the police have said that they recognise deeply recognise it is deeply disrespectful for people to climb on war memorials. we have made a commitment to review the
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legislation around public order policing. we need to take policing. if we need to take action specifically to give the police more powers. we are looking doing that . looking at doing that. >> there we go. exactly. but look what do you think? should we urgently change the law to stop thugs from climbing on our war memorials ? let me know your war memorials? let me know your thoughts. email gbviews@gbnews.com. and the inboxis gbviews@gbnews.com. and the inbox is absolutely on fire in front of me as we speak. patrick, we need a new law right now, says gary. but james just wants the police to enforce the law they've already got. you can tweet us as well at gb news. and while you're there, go and vote in our poll. i'll bring you the results debate results shortly. but to debate this head, i'm joined this go head to head, i'm joined by security expert by national security expert henry presenter jenny henry bolton, tv presenter jenny barney. you, thank you barney. both of you, thank you very, henry, a new very, very much. henry, a new law. should we have a new law to protect our war memorials in a word, patrick. >> yes, i believe that this proves the need for a specific law . however, i would take big
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law. however, i would take big issue with sir mark rowley . issue with sir mark rowley. >> there is a law that could have been used, and that is section five of the public order act 1986, which states quite clearly that it is an offence to use threatening , abusive or use threatening, abusive or insulting words or behaviour or disorderly behaviour . disorderly behaviour. >> and if a police officer in uniform orders you to stop that behaviour and you do not immediately, then you become arrestable. so there is a power. it's slightly weak because i'd like to see one specifically to protect our war memorials. on saturday day i went to visit the cenotaph and i was absolutely outraged because it had a ring of steel around it. these are memorials to soldiers, sailors , memorials to soldiers, sailors, airmen and marines and civilians who gave their lives protecting this country and its way of life. and here we are in london in protecting these memorials. they're memorials from people who are complaining about wars.
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>> i think the point is, well, i think the point do not need conflict from other other parts of the world on our streets. >> we not want it. and if it >> we do not want it. and if it comes here, then we need to deal with it. and we need specific with it. and if we need specific laws, let's do it. the war memorial . memorial. >> way, patrick henry, >> by the way, patrick henry, i'll back bodies. i'll go back to your bodies. >> said earlier, >> as was said earlier, 50,000 dead does dead british servicemen. it does . and it's been treated with the most disrespect that . and it's been treated with the most to disrespect that . and it's been treated with the most to end disrespect that . and it's been treated with the most to end . disrespect that . and it's been treated with the most to end . itisrespect that . and it's been treated with the most to end . it does. act that needs to end. it does. >> henry, i will come back to you, but i really you, don't worry. but i really want the views of jenny want to get the views of jenny on because, i think on this because, jenny, i think you've a radically you've got quite a radically different you different view, haven't you? you think think it's fine think it's you think it's fine for people to climb on them. >> think it's >> it's something i think it's fine monuments, but fine to climb on monuments, but would you tear people off the lines in trafalgar square ? lines in trafalgar square? >> you're arguing that war memorial walls have to be protected . i'm saying stop the protected. i'm saying stop the war or stop having fights and wars and stop defending the edl who were chased by the police and let people protest when you are standing on top of a
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howitzer that was put up in 1925, clearly we've got to a state where the polarisation of what's going on is very , very what's going on is very, very great and whether you're jewish athlete, muslim . athlete, muslim. >> can i get you specifically, though , jenny? though, jenny? >> jenny, i've got i've got i've just got i appreciate your points, but can i get you specifically on this war memorial stuff, though? it's all very good saying stop very well and good saying stop the war. but the war hasn't stopped people climbing stopped and people are climbing on you're you're on memorials. so you're you're you're are you, you're all right, are you, jenny, idea that they jenny, with this idea that they should them? should be able to climb on them? yes >> so i think that when people are bubbling when weak are bubbling over, when weak government is not doing what it should do, when suella braverman was trying to get laws passed , was trying to get laws passed, parliament said we don't want to have this. the police are in the middle of it. i don't know what to do. cleverley is weak as long as you have a weak society, you will have people bubbling over and. all right. okay >> henry. henry, look, jenny.
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jenny thinks jenny clearly saw the kind of footage that many people saw last night. many people saw last night. many people were outraged by it and thinks that's fine . thinks that's fine. >> jenny's got jenny's. jenny's got her opinion. she's entitled to it. of course, my opinion is starkly different . that will starkly different. that will more war memorial is effectively a massive gravestone. and if it was jenny's relative that for some reason their grave got and ihope some reason their grave got and i hope to god it doesn't happen. jenny, i don't mean this personally in any way, but you know, if it was my relative or my friend and i've known people who were killed in war, okay, if it's if it was their grave, their gravestone that was being desecrated and climbed over, i'd expect the police to do something about it. and i think anybody would . now, the thing is anybody would. now, the thing is here that actually, you know, this this is behaviour that is disorderly . really. it is disorderly. really. it is insulting . and the police have insulting. and the police have a power to act and they damn well should do . and i don't take the should do. and i don't take the
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point that this is simply protest because this is a foreign conflict playing out on our streets and we do not want it. >> final, final, final words, jenny, let me ask let me ask you this question as a simple man. just say no , no, henry, we're just say no, no, henry, we're running out of time. we're running out of time. we're running out of time. we're running out of time. henry, i'm going to jenny. so going to go to jenny. right. so do you think you think jenny, do you think do you think jenny, pubuc do you think do you think jenny, public decency? i wouldn't go to a country climb on a foreign country and climb on something clearly felt something that they clearly felt was important almost kind of pseudo religious a way , pseudo religious in a way, right. as a aurora borealis as a simple of common decency. simple matter of common decency. just look , just get off it. no, look, decency doesn't exist in war, as you are looking at in gaza. >> it is not decent for the jews to be doing to the palestinians what the palestinians , the what the palestinians, the palestinians did to the jews . we palestinians did to the jews. we have to level it. we have to say, sorry for the jews to be doing to the palestinians . doing to the palestinians. >> is i mean, is the israeli the israeli defence? i get what you mean. but you know, it's not it's not the jews, is it?
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>> these these soldiers who died, these memorials are the soldiers standing. died, these memorials are the sollstop standing. died, these memorials are the sollstop it standing. died, these memorials are the sollstop it . standing. >> stop it. >> stop it. >> jenny henry. henry, i'm jewish. i lost. right. stop stop, stop. >> both of you have been on telly long enough to know that it's absolutely awful if you're both talking over each so both talking over each other. so can it, please? jenny? can you stop it, please? jenny? jenny, making your point, jenny, finish making your point, and we'll henry. and then we'll go back to henry. >> saying that as a jew, >> i am saying that as a jew, i will be critical of what the jews are doing. we have to stop the polarisation . we have to the polarisation. we have to have a ceasefire . we have to. have a ceasefire. we have to. you're saying we're not involved? henry well, you're saying we're not involved? henry well , the labour involved? henry well, the labour party is just 56 of them have their starmer because it's time now to take a stand for peace. and what those people are doing , and what those people are doing, they're standing on a gun still fighting . fighting. >> both of you, thank you very, very much. it was i mean, it was a clash, which is exactly what we wanted. okay. we'll give you more time. both of more time next time. both of you. very, much. you. thank you very, very much. so agree with? should so who do you agree with? should a be to it a law be passed to make it illegal to on war
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illegal to climb on war memorials? stand x says it's memorials? stand on x says it's already illegal. the police just won't i've won't enforce it. and stan, i've got here, outraging got a list here, outraging pubuc got a list here, outraging public decency, desecration of the memorial act 2020, the war memorial act 2020, breach of the peace . there you breach of the peace. there you go. these are just of go. so these are just some of the that could already be the laws that could already be enforced. says if land enforced. dave says if the land of the the usa can have of the free, the usa can have a law historical law protecting historical monuments , surely the uk can and monuments, surely the uk can and also on x, formerly known as twitter . so also on x, formerly known as twitter. so imagine also on x, formerly known as twitter . so imagine the also on x, formerly known as twitter. so imagine the uproar and threats started and threats if people started climbing and draping climbing up mosques and draping crusader flags all over them . crusader flags all over them. well, i mean, that wouldn't last long only, would it? let's be honest. your verdict is in right now. you agree that it now. so 94% of you agree that it should be made to scale should be made illegal to scale our monuments , while just 6% our war monuments, while just 6% of say that it shouldn't ? of you say that it shouldn't? those of getting in touch as those of you getting in touch as well in the inbox. gb views gbnews.com. i'll go to those very, . is firing up very, very shortly. is firing up in there but coming up find out what happened when confronted what happened when i confronted pro—palestine protesters outside a labour mps office intimidation of politicians much earlier today. of politicians much earlier today . hey. all right. today. hey. all right. >> okay. okay.
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>> okay. okay. >> right . you're killing babies. >> right. you're killing babies. you're killing babies . you're killing babies. >> for the record , i'm not >> for the record, i'm not killing babies. but there we go . killing babies. but there we go. but next with sussex lapdog , but next with sussex lapdog, omid scobie dropping his latest hit piece on the royal family claiming that william ignored brother harry on the day that the queen died. well there is plenty for our royal mastermind to get their teeth stuck into lady colin campbell and phil dampier. me next. dampier. they join me next. don't anywhere
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isabel monday to thursdays from six till 930 .
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six till 930. >> stay tuned for some raw footage of what really goes on just behind the curtain of these pro—palestine protests. i'll bnng pro—palestine protests. i'll bring that to you shortly. but it's bring that to you shortly. but wsfime bring that to you shortly. but it's time now for our royal masterminds, lady colin campbell and phil dampier and the sussexes cheerleader in chief, omid scobie has set the cat amongst the royal pigeons , amongst the royal pigeons, claiming that prince william repeatedly contact from repeatedly ignored contact from his brother, harry, his younger brother, harry, while grandmother while their grandmother lay dying in balmoral. in new dying in balmoral. in his new book end game, scobie makes these bombshell claims . these bombshell claims. >> william, whom charles had just spoken to, was supposedly working on arranging travel. >> harry sent a text message to his brother, asking how he and kate planned to get to scotland and whether they could travel together. no response. it was upsetting to witness, said a source close to the sussexes harry was completely by himself on this when harry sent another text to his brother. nothing thing though there were
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available seats on william's chartered dassault falcon private jet which was leaving in less than an hour. harry was left to fend for himself . left to fend for himself. william ignored him, said a family source. he clearly didn't want to see his brother . want to see his brother. >> well, that's huge , if true. >> well, that's huge, if true. and these claims have gone viral on social media. but ladies, see, you're not sure it's true at all, are you ? well, the at all, are you? well, the reality is , if william was not reality is, if william was not faking his text, the fact of the matter is he could have got in touch with his uncle's because they all went up together and, you know , amid scabies yet again you know, amid scabies yet again is twisting facts to come up with a narrative of that. >> when you examine it, it doesn't make sense . and my doesn't make sense. and my understanding at the time and it's not the only person who
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heard this as well, was that harry wanted to bring meghan harry wanted to bring meghan harry by scabies own account, he had heard the news from his father. so harry, harry had people he could be in touch with. he did. you know william wasn't stymieing him and harry wanted to inflict meghan upon them, and they refused to have meghan . and harry is the one who meghan. and harry is the one who delayed making the flight out and then found himself marooned . and then found himself marooned. having having made them late because there was a two minute time difference between when the queen actually died and when that plane took off. >> okay . now, phil, i'll bring >> okay. now, phil, i'll bring you in because a lot of people just think that omid scobie, when he writes stuff, it's actually prince harry saying it. so is just another attack so is this just another attack by on the royals ? by harry on the royals? >> yeah, good evening,
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by harry on the royals? >> yeah, good evening , patrick. >> yeah, good evening, patrick. >> yeah, good evening, patrick. >> i'm reading tonight online that sources close, close to the sussexes are saying that they've got nothing to do with this book end game. >> but of course, they said that about finding freedom, didn't they? >> omid scobie's first book that he caroline durand he wrote with caroline durand all ago and then all those years ago and then meghan had to admit in court that she had told aides to brief them . so take that with a pinch them. so take that with a pinch of salt. but he's certainly right about thing when he right about one thing when he says regards harry says that william regards harry as defector . says that william regards harry as defector. i says that william regards harry as defector . i think says that william regards harry as defector. i think he's says that william regards harry as defector . i think he's got as a defector. i think he's got that right. you know, for a change, omid has got something right . but, you know , it's right. but, you know, it's pretty it's pretty thin gruel to be honest. i mean, i think we knew all about confusion on knew all about this confusion on the queen died. the day that the queen died. it's not that new. if is it's not that new. if this is the best that book has to the best that the book has to offer, maybe the sussexes offer, then maybe the sussexes didn't anything with didn't have anything to do with it. quite possible it's not it. it's quite possible it's not being serialised over by being serialised over here, by the of. and the way, that we know of. and people have thought the way, that we know of. and pethey've have thought the way, that we know of. and pethey've paid have thought the way, that we know of. and pethey've paid big have thought the way, that we know of. and pethey've paid big bucks thought if they've paid big bucks for this, expected this, they would have expected a bit than a sort of bit bit more than just a sort of bit of confusion about what happened on queen died. on the day the queen died. >> i know that omid >> lady, see, i know that omid scobie really close eye
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scobie really keeps a close eye on we say here at gb news. on what we say here at gb news. what your message to him be? >> well, i hope he keeps on flogging that dead horse and hopesit flogging that dead horse and hopes it wins the race because it's going to make him a lot of money. but it's ruining his reputation. but you know, i mean, harry and meghan can deny till they're blue in the face that they had nothing to do with the book. but of course, their fingerprints are all over it. how would say abbeys have how else would say abbeys have known many of the things that he says unless he's making them up. so our harry and meghan defaming scabies by saying he's a pathological liar or have they been looking in mirrors and maybe seeing reflections that are very oprah ? are very oprah? >> s okay now the prince of wales was out and about up north today. this is our second royal story for you, visiting a food bank and community hub in
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manchester before meeting the large crowds who gathered to greet him. so this comes just two days after king charles lost his own coronation food project, aiming at helping those who go hungry and to reduce food waste. it's all very worthy stuff, right? it's the kind of stuff that the royals do. they go out and about admittedly , most and about admittedly, most people their don't people on their birthday don't essentially end up at a food recycling plant. this the recycling plant. but this is the job king. but phil, are job of a king. but phil, are father and locked in some father and son locked in some kind royal battle here? kind of royal pr battle here? are we going to end up seeing them trying to one up each other left, right and centre? >> i have to be honest, patrick. i don't so. i don't have i don't think so. i don't have a problem this, i problem with this, really. i mean, a years ago, they problem with this, really. i mean, atheyyears ago, they problem with this, really. i mean, athey would|go, they problem with this, really. i mean, athey would try they problem with this, really. i mean, athey would try and! problem with this, really. i mean, athey would try and merge decided they would try and merge their we their press offices. we had buckingham kensington buckingham palace, kensington palace under roof. palace all under the same roof. it really work. i mean, it didn't really work. i mean, sometimes they do have clashes, but in situation but i think we're in a situation now where there's few working now where there's so few working royals, to be honest, that they're not normally trampling royals, to be honest, that they're rother's1ally trampling royals, to be honest, that they're rother's toes. trampling royals, to be honest, that they're rother's toes. and pling on each other's toes. and i think and charles are think william and charles are now so close that, you know, they don't even have to talk to each know roughly each other. they know roughly what i what each other's doing. and i don't think there's any sort of
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one upmanship there. very much joined now they're joined at the hip. now they're singing from the same song sheet. with harry and meghan sheet. and with harry and meghan not there, you know, they are very future of the very much the future of the monarchy. to monarchy. and they've got to look other. so look after each other. so i don't is going to don't think charles is going to be by anything that be upset by anything that william and kate do. yeah, i think likes the fact they william and kate do. yeah, i thini yeah, well, this is it, ladies. know , please tell us ladies. you know, please tell us that going end up that we're not going to end up with another royal here with another royal rift here where end william and where we end up with william and charles out. i mean, charles falling out. i mean, come on. >> no , i agree with phil, >> no, no, i agree with phil, not the king and william have doneis not the king and william have done is they've divided up the alphabet , so done is they've divided up the alphabet, so to speak. so the king is covering a to m and harry's not sorry . william is harry's not sorry. william is covering n to z. you know , it's covering n to z. you know, it's they're they're not really competing with each other. they are complementing each other in this project and they are complementing each other in many
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other projects . there is other projects. there is overlap, but there's also differentiation and there's room for one to be complementary to the other. i think it's as simple as that. >> okay. all right. well thank you very, very much. that was lady c and phil d fantastic royal masterminds. they're just a little bit of time for the inbox. karen's been on gbviews@gbnews.com on this story . let's not forget harry and meghan to the late queen's meghan prior to the late queen's passing, we're not going to call in on the family, but we're going ignore going to ignore them. interesting basically saying that really victims. that they're not really victims. they're lots of reaction now as well the war memorial well to the war memorial discussion that we had with people desecrating war memorials, climbing on them, and whether or not that should be banned. if those whether or not that should be banned. keep if those whether or not that should be banned. keep doinng those whether or not that should be banned. keep doinng thozthey're muppets keep doing what they're doing sacred monuments, doing to our sacred monuments, i wouldn't to see wouldn't be surprised to see a massive , massive social massive, massive social upheaval. that's from deb gb views and gbnews.com. but coming up, social upheaval, up, talking of social upheaval, i reveal the less than warm welcome i received when i rocked up to a pro—palestine rally out outside an east london mps
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office. now, there's a couple of things at play here, a few actually, the intimidation of mps, children being indoctrinated on our streets and the total trampling all over the free press. some people would say they're behaving like fascists . why? why are you here? fascists. why? why are you here? >> shame on you. shame on you. >> shame on you. shame on you. >> shame on you. shame on you. >> shame on you . shame on you. >> shame on you. shame on you. >> shame on you. shame on you. >> yeah. shocking stuff. but next, as the new home secretary james cleverly fails to deny his colourful criticism of the rwanda plan in a car crash, bbc interview can we actually trust this guy to stop the boats? no nonsense . former minister ann nonsense. former minister ann widdecombe gives her unflinching analysis. and that is next. don't
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can i just say thank you to everyone who's emailing in saying, look, please be careful going to these pro palestine protests. people have seen the
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kind of reaction that i've been getting. people are seeing for what really all right. what it really is. all right. but going to keep going . but i am going to keep going. i'm to doing this i'm going to keep doing this because of the media because the rest of the media seem intent on hiding from seem intent on hiding this from you lying to you about you and then lying to you about it. that here you and then lying to you about it. news. that here you and then lying to you about it. news. okay that here you and then lying to you about it. news. okay and 1at here you and then lying to you about it. news. okay and coming up at gb news. okay and coming up just minutes away now is just a few minutes away now is my latest run in with these protesters. you know, i'm pretty sure not all about peace. sure it's not all about peace. but first, it's time for former tory minister ann whittaker. and it's been a baptism of fire this week for new home secretary, week for our new home secretary, james cleverly, perhaps he's week for our new home secretary, jamactuallyrly, perhaps he's week for our new home secretary, jam actually to perhaps he's week for our new home secretary, jamactually to be perhaps he's week for our new home secretary, jamactually to be trifled|ps he's week for our new home secretary, jam actually to be trifled with e's not actually to be trifled with after he did battle on air with the bbc's amol rajan. he's done a huge amount of work to get from that to a position where you're confident you raised the issue morality. issue of morality. >> exactly >> exactly. that's exactly what's you what's happened. and you you raised the issue of morality earlier. >> now, hang on a second. >> now, hang on a second. >> you know, on. >> you know, hang on. >> you know, hang on. >> you've had couple goes >> you know, hang on. >>givinga had couple goes >> you know, hang on. >>giving your couple goes >> you know, hang on. >>giving your speech,.e goes >> you know, hang on. >>giving your speech, which oes at giving your speech, which we've at giving your speech, which we'are asking questions or >> are you asking questions or are making statements? >> are you asking questions or are meyou'retatements? >> are you asking questions or are meyou're justnents? >> are you asking questions or are meyou're just going because if you're just going to make a statement, i can go and get cup of tea. get a cup of tea. >> you're making statements. i'm trying to ask questions. >> because >> you're not answering because i'm you're
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i'm the guest. no, no, you're not questions. not asking questions. >> a of tea here >> you're it's a cup of tea here for you, james, if you fancy it. but anyway, if you're wondering what cleverly's what a ruffle cleverly's feathers, then this line of questioning be clue. feathers, then this line of que describe be clue. feathers, then this line of que describe this be clue. feathers, then this line of que describe this policy clue. feathers, then this line of que describe this policy as:lue. batshit. >> look, you've. you've you've fallen. straight fallen. you've stepped straight into don't mind into the trap. if you don't mind me saying, because, of course, the labour would love us the labour party would love us to this particular issue to discuss this particular issue rather than the gaping vacuum in the labour party's immigration policy . policy. >> and you've you've fallen straight into the trap of not answering the question and just giving about you giving a sermon about how you want the question want to answer the question you've done. >> please just answer question. >> remember if you did >> do you remember if you did use phrase? use that phrase? >> so i don't remember. i don't remember a conversation like i think revealing think that's quite revealing actually. cleverly refused >> so an cleverly refused to deny colourful criticism of deny his colourful criticism of the rwanda i mean, the rwanda plan there. i mean, if has privately to the rwanda plan there. i mean, if as has privately to the rwanda plan there. i mean, if as bat privately to the rwanda plan there. i mean, if as bat faeces, ly to the rwanda plan there. i mean, if as bat faeces, then to the rwanda plan there. i mean, if as bat faeces, then can to the rwanda plan there. i mean, if as bat faeces, then can he it as bat faeces, then can he actually be trusted to stop the boats? do you think? i think he can. >> well, i don't know that he can be trusted because i don't think any of them can be trusted to do it. but what i would say is i don't think that that private comment makes a
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difference one way or to the other to how effective he will be. >> all politicians make comments in private. >> i actually think that the bbc a completely trivialise that interview by trying to focus on that instead of as cleverly said you know the policy. i mean i would have been pushing him on what precisely are you going to do? mind what said . do? never mind what he said. what are you actually going to do you what's the do, james? you know, what's the plan? where is plan what's plan? where is plan b? what's going to happen? when are the first people going to go to rwanda and if they're not, then what going to do what are you going to do instead? that's what amol rajan should have been asking . oh, okay. >> well, have you got any indication of what the answer is to those questions? to any of those questions? ah, because sitting, because from where i'm sitting, it a little bit like rishi it looks a little bit like rishi sunak said, don't worry, sunak has said, don't worry, we've we're going we've got a plan b, we're going to renegotiate with rwanda. all find another country and then just go all the way through the courts again, which obviously will hope we win that will happen and hope we win that time, by which time i think i'll be about 75 years old.
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>> well , that's what i am now, >> well, that's what i am now, so i won't be around in that case. >> oh, no, you're going to live forever, amber. >> carry on. >> carry on. >> i do think that there is no plan b. >> we've known that. now, presumably, when cleverly agreed to take on this job, he must have been given some guarantees, as you know, that some help would be forthcoming , that if would be forthcoming, that if rwanda wasn't going happen, rwanda wasn't going to happen, then the government would, i don't stomp up money for don't know, stomp up money for more secure reception centres or whatever might be. no whatever it might be. i've no idea what they discussed , but if idea what they discussed, but if he's taken this on without that sort of assurance, then i think it's a fool. >> okay, now this is a story, anne, that i don't think has got enough traction yet. you might poo poo this, but our new foreign secretary , david foreign secretary, david cameron, now he's touched down to meet with president zelenskyy fine. but the shadow of boris johnson was looming large. let's take a look at a lesson, shall we? >> i had some disagreements with my friend boris johnson, but we've known each other for 40 years and his support for you
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was the finest thing that he and his government did. >> but, you know, on the serious questions about whether or not david cameron is actually a national security risk is linked to china, what's he been doing for the last seven or so years? >> what do you make of that? >> what do you make of that? >> well, he's only a security risk if there's something that we don't know about. you know, everybody about his past everybody knows about his past deaungs everybody knows about his past dealings with china. and if that's all there is to it, then he's not a security risk. it's like the age old thing. you know, if you're in the intelligence services, you can't be blackmailed about something that everybody knows. that everybody already knows. and it's exactly the same here. we all know his links with china, but what i do think is that when his business interests are fully declared , as they will are fully declared, as they will be now, he's a member of the house of lords, that that will be gone over with fine tooth be gone over with a fine tooth comb by the press. but i don't think one should he's think one should say he's a security risk you've got security risk unless you've got information on that i haven't got. and there's something that you know that the rest of us
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don't, case, he might. >> okay. interesting now, look, i've got i've got to get you on this one, right? because i mean, this one, right? because i mean, this this made me chuckle. okay? i think you know what's coming. don't months after don't you say? just months after their resigned in their bosses resigned in disgrace after de—banking nigel farage due to his political views, coutts the bank right has been named europe's best bank for diversity and inclusion at the global private banking awards in london. and this has got to be a wind up well first of all it makes a complete farce of all it makes a complete farce of the awards because they don't include people who disagree with their own point of view. >> indeed, far from including them. they try and get rid of them, as been amply them, as has been amply demonstrated . so no way are they demonstrated. so no way are they inclusive. but secondly , you inclusive. but secondly, you know, this is the bank that royalty use . isn't it rather royalty use. isn't it rather vulgar to go after these awards . vulgar to go after these awards. >> mhm. mhm. >> mhm. mhm. >> oh so you don't even think they should be at the awards. you see. i'll take any award i can that's partly can get. and that's partly
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because really won because i haven't really won any. you need to get my any. you know, i need to get my hands something. hands on something. >> am i. >> am i. >> that's true. yeah. but, but, but think it but do you not think that it just though doesn't just shows though doesn't it, that lot of that actually what a lot of these about is you these banks care about is you can your ceo or whatever it can have your ceo or whatever it is, in disgrace and is, resigning in disgrace and you they're not getting you know, they're not getting the and massive the big payoff and massive negativity the media and all negativity in the media and all of that stuff. but as long as you win your reward for diversity and inclusion, everything's a—okay. >> can't it. they >> i just can't believe it. they do include people who do not include people who disagree them. mean, disagree with them. i mean, that is statement is a straightforward statement of position , as of their position, as demonstrated in their emails, not something i'm saying. something say about something they say about themselves. you know, who doesn't agree our values? doesn't agree with our values? oh, . okay. that's oh, right. okay. that's inclusive. is it ? inclusive. is it? >> and thank you very, very much. we will always make sure we're inclusive ann we're inclusive for ann widdecombe there we go. widdecombe here. there we go. right. look, loads of emails coming in gbviews@gbnews.com. patrick wear a stab vest at the next one of these protests that you go to. well i'm not sure i really will do that. you shouldn't do that on the shouldn't need to do that on the streets of britain, should you? but up, new series of
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but coming up, a new series of the shows that william and the crown shows that william and harry are missing a call from a distressed princess diana on the day that she died. has netflix now a new low ? princess now reached a new low? princess diana's butler and diana's former butler and confidant paul burrell gives his exclusive reaction. that's in the next but yes, next, the next hour. but yes, next, i bnng the next hour. but yes, next, i bring you the latest shocking pro—palestine protest that saw me mobbed just for asking questions about whether or not they're intimidating mps and indoctrinating children outside of labour mps office. hey all right. >> okay . okay. all right. you're >> okay. okay. all right. you're killing babies. you're killing babies . babies. >> my ears are ringing from that megaphone. but hundreds of young schoolchildren were taken out of schoolchildren were taken out of school to go on a march today, and a tried to intimidate and a mob tried to intimidate a labour mp. i say enough is enough. that's next. >> good evening. alex burkill here again with your latest gb news weather forecast. whilst for many tomorrow is going to be a dry we do have a largely dry day, we do have some to get rid of first some rain to get rid of first this evening. that's in association with a front that's pushing from west to pushing its way from west to east. has already brought
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east. it has already brought some heavy rain across parts of northern earlier today northern ireland earlier today and into western and is now pushing into western parts england parts of scotland, england and across wales, too. some heavy outbreaks as it makes its way eastwards. but the rain should break through the break up somewhat through the night . some northeast night. some parts of northeast scotland will stay largely dry with clear some mist, with clear skies. some mist, some some frost. here some fog and some frost. here elsewhere, clear skies behind the rain will allow temperatures to bit dip. so to take a bit of a dip. so a chilly start on friday morning to take a bit of a dip. so a chilljsome on friday morning to take a bit of a dip. so a chill} some patchesay morning to take a bit of a dip. so a chill} some patches1y|fog1ing to take a bit of a dip. so a chill} some patchesay |fog , ng with some patches of fog, perhaps even some freezing fog in some spots fog should in some spots to any fog should largely clear as we go through the morning. and it should be a mostly fine day. plenty of sunshine, just a few sunshine, too. just a few showers, towards showers, most likely towards western england, western parts of england, perhaps will perhaps wales. but these will ease the ease as we go into the afternoon. notice then some more cloud and some rain pushing its way from the southwest. later way in from the southwest. later on. for many on. temperatures for many a little higher than today. little bit higher than today. still of a chilly still a little bit of a chilly feel the north, turning feel towards the north, turning milder towards southwest. milder towards the southwest. then wet and windy weather spilling across all parts we spilling across all parts as we go overnight into saturday. so it does look like it's going to be unsettled weekend . be a fairly unsettled weekend. the impacts from the
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the greatest impacts from the rain will be south—west rain will be in the south—west where already saturated where we have already saturated ground. then as we go ground. but then as we go through sunday and into monday , through sunday and into monday, it's going to a bit more it's going to be a bit more showery. some drier spells in showery. so some drier spells in between and between the rain and temperatures dipping after a mild the weekend
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here. we go. >> this is patrick christys. tonight all right. >> this is patrick christys. tonight all right . okay. tonight all right. okay. >> okay. right now you're killing babies . you're killing killing babies. you're killing babies . babies. >> the rest of the media wants to cover up the reality of the pro—palestine protest. but the pubuc pro—palestine protest. but the public needs to know so very shortly , i will show you child shortly, i will show you child indoctrination and extremism, the intimidation of mps and the free press in footage that beggars belief . a military beggars belief. a military veteran and a big name tory mp joins me to say why the desecration of our war memorials needs to be stopped. princess
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diana's closest confidante, paul burrell, reacts live to the final episode of the crown . it's final episode of the crown. it's going to use his inside knowledge for us to reveal how harry and william will react to that. and we tuck into the blistering headlines in the most entertaining paper review that you get anywhere there on you will get anywhere there on national television . that's national television. that's a guarantee with fleet street legend kelvin mackenzie . but the legend kelvin mackenzie. but the best action always happens on the sofa. and we've got allison pearson, we've got lord shaun bailey , and we've got the bailey, and we've got the wonderful amy nicholl turner as well . it's patrick christys well. it's patrick christys tonight. if you go to bed, you'll be missing out. all right, look, if you thought that yesterday's protest footage was bad, you ain't seen nothing yet. you've got to stay tuned for that. have pupils as well, who apparently ditched school to go marches has go on pro—palestine marches has been indoctrinated . gb views are been indoctrinated. gb views are gb news dot com is the email.
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get on to us now on twitter at gb news. i want to hear from you. we really are the people's channel. show you channel. that's why we show you stuff media outlets channel. that's why we show you stuff and media outlets channel. that's why we show you stuff and that'sedia outlets channel. that's why we show you stuff and that's cominglets channel. that's why we show you stuff and that's coming your way won't and that's coming your way after headlines . after the headlines. >> thanks , patrick. good >> thanks, patrick. good evening. i'm ray addison in the newsroom. we start with some breaking news. 212 year old boys have been charged with the murder of a 19 year old who was stabbed to death in wolverhampton . soren zahawi was wolverhampton. soren zahawi was attacked on laburnum road on monday night. the boys who can't be named due to their age, will appear at birmingham magistrates court tomorrow. they've also been charged with possession of a bladed article . the chancellor a bladed article. the chancellor says the government can't guarantee rwanda deportation flights will begin next year. that's despite the prime minister saying that he was aiming for the spring. downing street says emergency legislation will be produced in the coming weeks after the supreme court ruled it unlawful . supreme court ruled it unlawful. jeremy hunt says the government
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is doing it all it can to stop the boats. >> we are hopeful that because of the solutions that the prime minister announced yesterday, we will be able to get flights to off rwanda next year. will be able to get flights to off rwanda next year . we can't off rwanda next year. we can't guarantee that we have to pass legislation, emergency legislation, emergency legislation in the house of commons. we have to sign a new international treaty with rwanda. but our commitment to the british people is that although the supreme court ruling was a setback , we will ruling was a setback, we will not allow anything to get in the way of delivering the prime minister's pledge to secure our borders by stopping the boats. >> lord cameron has made a surprise visit to ukraine on day two of his first overseas trip as foreign secretary. he travelled to the black sea port of odesa. whilst there, he announced more support, including providing essential winter supplies for people evacuated from frontline areas up to 10 million gp appointments could be freed up under new
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government plans. the new health secretary says pharmacies will be given more powers to help people directly . it's part of an people directly. it's part of an nhs proposal to cut waiting lists from next month. millions of women in england will be able to access free contraception without having to see a gp. the chancellor says benefit claimants who don't seek employment despite being fit to work, will lose access to free prescriptions and legal aid. jeremy hunt says the measures are necessary to prevent , quote, are necessary to prevent, quote, anyone choosing to coast on the hard work of tax payers, end quote. the government crackdown will also see digital tools used to track attendance at job fairs and interviews. however some campaigners have described the sanctions as deeply worrying. they're warning that it could worsen mental illness and downing street has confirmed that civil servants will now need to spend more time in the office. they're required to come in to work for a bare minimum of three days a week. meanwhile,
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more senior managers will have to be in the office for longer. it follows campaigning from former business secretary jacob rees—mogg. this is gb news across the uk on tv, in your car, on digital radio and on your smart speaker by saying play gb news. now let's get back to . patrick to. patrick >> today saw a worrying new developments in the pro—palestine psychodrama that's gripping britain . in bethnal gripping britain. in bethnal green, east london, hundreds of young school children were taken out of school to go on a march. what new york. >> what do you want ? >> what do you want? >> what do you want? >> well, tomorrow you can expect a lot more of this. why? well because there are calls for school children across the country to go on strike and to take to the streets some of the children in videos that we've seen here at gb news, but chosen not to publish to protect the
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identity of the kids involved. look incredibly young. now, it's not clear whether or not their teachers them these teachers join them on these marches but was a 2nd marches, but there was a 2nd march bethnal green and tower march in bethnal green and tower hamlets this evening because the local mp rushanara ali, voted against a ceasefire . last night against a ceasefire. last night it wasn't long before a wanted style poster of her and being printed and a march was to organised her office. so we have two things going on here, don't we? okay. the possible indoctrination of children poisoning their minds with potentially radical, potentially anti—semitic views dressed up as support for a humanitarian cause and the attempt to intimidate members of parliament. what is interesting is the demographics of russian ali's constituency. they're important here. i think according to the 2021 census, 41.2% of people living in bethnal green and bow are muslim, more than double the amount of the second highest religious group, which is
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christianity. yesterday i went to a demonstration outside westminster , and as we all know, westminster, and as we all know, that got nasty . quick minute westminster, and as we all know, that got nasty. quick minute , that got nasty. quick minute, innit? this guy. that got nasty. quick minute, innit? this guy . wanted to talk. innit? this guy. wanted to talk. >> he approached me . he >> he approached me. he approached me. you know , well, approached me. you know, well, after seeing school children bunking off school and seeing a wanted poster of an mp and i experienced, of course, what happenedin experienced, of course, what happened in westminster yesterday, i thought that i'd check out this protest tonight as well . i just asked why you're as well. i just asked why you're here. don't talk to one. >> why? why shouldn't people sort ? so why ? why are you here? sort? so why? why are you here? >> shame on you. shame on you. shame on you. shame on you . shame on you. shame on you. shame on you. shame on you. shame on you. shame on you. shame on you. shame on me. shame on me . on me. >> we have to end . explain to
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>> we have to end. explain to them why we are here in a civilised manner. rushanara ali. everyone else in the established movement is condoning the genocidal murder of palestinians . shame on you. >> shame on you. shame on you . >> shame on you. shame on you. shame on you . shame on you . shame on you. shame on you. shame on you. shame on you. shame on you. why shame on you . shame on you. why shame on you. tell me why you're not want you're killing babies . you're you're killing babies. you're killing babies. ukip yes. you support killing of babies , which support killing of babies, which is a very sad reality . shame on is a very sad reality. shame on you . shame on you . shame on you. you. shame on you. shame on you. shame on you. need to stop harassing the community as leave. >> you need to go . please. i >> you need to go. please. i know it's a free place, but what it is you're harassing our community. you're promoting in. i'm going to tell you politely . i'm going to tell you politely. you're provoking the community.
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you're provoking the community. you're inciting violence. this is what you do and this is what you're good at. and shame on you. shame on you. you time is. up. >> yeah . >> yeah. >> yeah. >> it's not very peaceful, that is it really interesting to say i'm inside fighting violence there when that was pretty heavy stuff . now i there when that was pretty heavy stuff. now i did manage to find one pretty reasonable chap who i asked about the dangers of indoctrinate ing kids while also disrupting their education because children had marched there earlier and been brought out of school. and we're going to get more of that tomorrow. but when i play you this, can you just see if you can make out what's being sung in the background? >> have as much >> the children have as much right to demonstrate their views as think as anyone else. do you think there a risk? there might be a risk? >> be a risk. should we >> it might be a risk. should we just listen to that more just listen to that one more time? the time? listen closely. the children can have much right children can have as much right to demonstrate their views as anyone in us. do you think anyone else in us. do you think there might be a risk? it might
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be okay well, if you be a risk. okay well, if you couldn't quite make it out in all that chaos, that was the all of that chaos, that was the crowd the river to crowd chanting from the river to the in front of a bank the sea right in front of a bank of police officers. there you know, nothing happens . know, as per nothing happens. and i think that really does say say a lot, doesn't it? but before i get the thoughts of my panel before i get the thoughts of my panel, let bring the panel, let me bring in the former defence panel, let me bring in the formercommittee, defence panel, let me bring in the formercommittee, a)efence panel, let me bring in the formercommittee, a military select committee, a military veteran, ellwood mp. veteran, tobias ellwood mp. tobias thank very, tobias look, thank you very, very for joining tobias look, thank you very, very forjoining me. great very much forjoining me. great to have you on on the show. can i just get your comments quickly on what we've just seen there before you a bit about before i talk to you a bit about about the war heroes and the war memorials desecrated, memorials being desecrated, which close to which i know is very close to your but, you know, this your heart, but, you know, this is the kind of is the reality of the kind of people marching our people we have marching on our streets not an streets right now. it's not an undercurrent yeah . just a undercurrent or yeah. just a quick one on david cameron and odesa. >> just i know you want to talk about the current issues. really welcome him going there. statement of intent by the united to stand with united kingdom to stand with ukraine it's off the headlines now because of other things but i wanted that i just wanted to get that in there . it really is worrying how there. it really is worrying how
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binary this debate is becoming. it's dangerous in the way of where it's actually heading . you where it's actually heading. you know, i support israel's right to defend itself, to destroy hamas . but by the same breath , i hamas. but by the same breath, i also am critical of the tactical utility of force and what it's doing with the number of civilian deaths or likewise , i civilian deaths or likewise, i support the right of palestinians to be able to express their views given what's going on in gaza, people . going on in gaza, people. >> tobias. tobias tobias should. should people be allowed should people be allowed to stand on the streets with anti—semitic signs, chant from the to river the sea? and should a journalist out in a free country , you cut out in a free country, you cut me off with a free press. be hounded like that? that's what i want to know. >> yeah. yeah. no. yeah. you cut me off because i hadn't completed the other part of that is which they should not. then they should then distance themselves from these anti—semitic banners , these anti—semitic banners, these anti—semitic banners, these
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anti—semitic slogans , and anti—semitic slogans, and certainly they should not be taking children out that have yet to understand the wider geopolitical pictures here, taking them out of schools, schools are exactly where you get the education to be able to think for yourselves , not be think for yourselves, not be told what to think. and i do really worry , even on the whole really worry, even on the whole issue of the ceasefire itself, as to how binary that's become in the vote last night, where people are not able to appreciate perhaps the nuance between a ceasefire and a humanitarian pause . and this is humanitarian pause. and this is the danger that we're actually heading towards at the moment, is that it's becoming so simplified . you're either in simplified. you're either in favour of a ceasefire or your favour of a ceasefire or your favour of a ceasefire or your favour of to war continue. that is not only misleading, it's actually provocative . last night actually provocative. last night the un passed a vote last night on a humanitarian pause, not a ceasefire . and yet all that ceasefire. and yet all that you've been describing today, all those demonstrations you've been going for, are calling for a ceasefire that is not going to
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happen. a ceasefire requires a third party to move in between the warring factions. what is that warring party? we haven't agreed that . what are the terms agreed that. what are the terms and conditions? there's no agreement. what happens after hamas have been destroyed. that's also not been determined ehhen that's also not been determined either. there's awful lot of either. there's an awful lot of work before we get work to do before we get anywhere close to ceasefire. anywhere close to a ceasefire. tobias now i just want to get you on the to the assault you on on the to the assault really on our war memorials. >> we showed footage last night of police to to of the police rushing to have to protect etcetera. protect the cenotaph, etcetera. i an issue i know this is an issue that's very, very to your heart. very, very close to your heart. what make of that? what what do you make of that? what does when you see does it mean to you when you see people climbing up on war memorials and waving the palestinian or whatever palestinian flag or whatever they're doing? >> it's such >> you know, it's such a disservice to those who have served in the past or those who have stood up for our freedoms now to have our memorials treated in this way. now to have our memorials treated in this way . you know, treated in this way. you know, it was put to the chief commissioner who came back and said, well, it's actually not illegal to climb on a statue. i
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think that will come to everybody's surprise. really pleased to see the prime minister to step forward, to say we will absolutely look at measures of what needs to be required to give the police the necessary powers they that necessary powers that they that they but astonishing that they need. but astonishing that they need. but astonishing that they don't have those powers already . yes, doesn't already. yes, it doesn't help the of anybody waving the cause of anybody waving those flags to then those palestinian flags to then climb on war memorial, particularly after last weekend and all the tensions that we saw with the armistice day and the remembrance weekend as well. it really doesn't help, you know , really doesn't help, you know, promoting of what they're trying to say . to say. >> tobias, thank you very, very much. tobias ellwood, much. it's tobias ellwood, conservative mp. he says it doesn't help promoting what they're trying to say . you know, they're trying to say. you know, i've been now two days in a row just to go there, just saying to people, you here asking people, why are you here asking very basic questions at people, why are you here asking very ii'mc questions at people, why are you here asking very ii'm getting ons at people, why are you here asking very ii'm getting there at people, why are you here asking very ii'm getting there on at people, why are you here asking very ii'm getting there on the at what i'm getting there on the streets, being being absolutely vilified being at, vilified, being shouted at, being screamed at being pushed around, not me, my, my around, not just me, my, my cameraman, whoever turns up cameraman, and whoever turns up to try act as our security as to try to act as our security as well. but to respond now, i'm joined again by daily telegraph
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columnist pearson columnist allison pearson and conservative shaun conservative peer lord shaun bailey and author and broadcaster amy nicholl. turner allison, i'll start with you. i think we're going to be able to see another couple of clips of what happened at this this protest today . how do you view protest today. how do you view you're a journalist, right? when you're a journalist, right? when you was a teacher, right ? you see i was a teacher, right? >> i started out as a teacher. so we're seeing, patrick, so what we're seeing, patrick, is radicalised indoctrination of kids in that march. it's incredible , highly disturbing. incredible, highly disturbing. and i'm afraid this is the failure of multiculturalism in our society. those kids should not be being taught anything like this in schools. the idea that they're being taken out of school on a strike in support of a sectarian cause on friday is just it's astonishing. we saw what looked like a teacher may not have been one white woman in the long parade of muslim children leading the chanting from the river to the sea, a genocidal chant . so can can genocidal chant. so can can i ask you a question? >> because i feel in all this you're talking about being vilified by the marchers. but i
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think you vilify the marchers as much as they i think it's a mutual thing when i turn up to the marches and see what i see and experience what i see, i don't understand how you want me to react this. this is an to react to this. this is an example you say hear example when you say you hear the the to the the chant from the river to the sea. there are two ways to sea. now there are two ways to interpret that and you know that. can that. and i know that you can hear from river hear that's true from the river to the sea can mean free palestine from israeli occupation. let palestinians have a have equal rights and be a secular if you asked secular state that if you asked a lot of people on that march, i'm sure they would give that definition. i did ask something. >> and if the >> i did ask them. and if the answer was as as that, answer was as clear as that, amy, the course of amy, i asked over the course of last few days, i've asked like 100 question. why 100 people that question. why wouldn't it? wouldn't you just answer it? they're they're afraid wouldn't you just answer it? thwhat they're afraid wouldn't you just answer it? thwhat i they're afraid wouldn't you just answer it? thwhat i willy're afraid wouldn't you just answer it? thwhat i will hear, raid wouldn't you just answer it? thwhat i will hear, which of what they i will hear, which is they shut me up. is why they want to shut me up. >> those are >> children, those children are not brought up in britain. not being brought up in britain. they are being brought up in a sect. were no they don't sect. there were no they don't know. they're british, amy. they don't have access . s no, they don't. >> alison go on. amy my son is nine. >> he goes to school, he listens to the news. he asks me, what
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about what's in the news? now, this is a call from parent. it's organised by to parents express heartbreak at the outrage of the killing children. intent killing of children. the intent is a political ideology. is not a political ideology. thusitis is not a political ideology. thus it is impossible for it to be indoctrination is not indoctrination. tomorrow potentially tens of thousands of kids will have skipped school to go march on our streets, go and march on our streets, whether request of whether it's at the request of parents, teachers, whatever it is. >> sean, your views, it's two things. >> somebody at the education department to the department needs to get to the bottom of this because it is illegal remove from illegal to remove kids from school. and your school. and i bet your bottom dollar happy dollar nobody would be happy about to a march. about them going to a march. there's kinds there's all kinds of safeguarding there. and safeguarding issues there. and let's be clear, if you're a political and doesn't political march and it doesn't matter doesn't matter matter which, it doesn't matter which , which side of which part, which side of the divide stand this is divide you stand on, this is politics. it would be wrong to bnng politics. it would be wrong to bring there . that's the bring children there. that's the first what's really first thing. and what's really important goes back to something. ella we something. tobias ella toone we seem incapable all of seem to be incapable all of having a nuanced debate rate, and if we cannot have that nuanced debate, the people of palestine will continue to palestine will will continue to suffer. on both suffer. so everybody on both sides of the argument and i would argue that the marches are
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particularly egregious in all of this needs to calm down and the last thing the idea that from the to river the sea can be interpreted two ways is utter nonsense. if you ask anybody who's jewish and they'll tell you exactly is, ask you exactly what it is, ask anyone meant to be anyone in occupied meant to be what we should do. we should ask the of hamas what they the leaders of hamas what they think. that's what we should ask i >> -- >> that's precisely, exactly why i'm saying you're going straight to the extremes. >> it's not to the extreme. it's been pointed on. >> and it's because it's so commonly that's commonly misunderstood. that's why people don't want to talk to you. when the day, you. because when the other day, the that's not why the other day, that's not why people the other day people don't. the other day i saw i saw amy. >> i'm sorry. that's somebody replied. rubbish. >> somebody did. somebody didn't interview with news, the interview with with gb news, the headune interview with with gb news, the headline immediately on the website will not condemn hamas. she clearly did condemn hamas. >> i don't think she did. i was there. i was stood right next to that interview that ray addison. and guarantee you right and i can guarantee you right now, gb news has done now, she gb news has done nothing channel wouldn't nothing that channel 4 wouldn't do. so, so we're
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do. okay, look, so, so, so we're going part now because going to part this now because coming i'm to bring coming up, i'm going to bring you entertaining and you the most entertaining and informative press preview anywhere television. informative press preview anyv no re television. informative press preview anyvno doubt television. informative press preview anyvno doubt there's television. informative press preview anyv no doubt there's going sion. informative press preview anyv no doubt there's going ton. informative press preview anyvno doubt there's going to be and no doubt there's going to be some movement on these stories on front and what's on the front pages and what's inside the well. that's inside the book as well. that's inside the book as well. that's in press pack . i will in tonight's press pack. i will analyse all of the very, very biggest headlines. i'll you biggest headlines. i'll play you another couple of clips from that stuff in bethnal that shocking stuff in bethnal green but first, green as well. but first, as netflix their final netflix released their final series crown with highly series of the crown with highly emotional scenes surrounding the death diana , our death of princess diana, our producers scraping the producers now scraping the bottom of the broadcasting barrel. former butler barrel. diana's former butler and the man described as her rock , paul burrell, back. rock, paul burrell, hits back. that's next. you will not want to miss it .
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bbc2's, the people's channel. britain's news channel . britain's news channel. >> well, i'm delighted to welcome to the studio princess diana's former butler and the man she describes as her rock. it's the one and only paul burrell. paul thank you very much for coming on. now, it's a poignant night to speak to you, paul poignant night to speak to you, paul, because after the final series of the netflix show , the series of the netflix show, the crown hit our screens today . the crown hit our screens today. the final focus on events final episodes focus on events leading diana's death, leading up to diana's death, including adding this scene just hours before the tragic car crash . balmoral castle . crash. balmoral castle. >> well, it's diana calling for the boys. >> you've just missed the man . >> you've just missed the man. the prince is waiting for your call. >> but have gone back out again. i'm so sorry, ma'am.
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>> maybe try again at dinner time . time. >> all right. thank you . thank >> all right. thank you. thank you.thank >> all right. thank you. thank you. thank you, ma'am. >> goodbye , paul. >> goodbye, paul. >> goodbye, paul. >> look, your reaction to seeing that portrayed, it's heartbreaking , isn't it? heartbreaking, isn't it? >> it's heartbreaking to think that diana, all she wanted to do was get through to her children. >> she rang me from the yacht most days. >> and she said to me was, >> and what she said to me was, i'm bored here. >> it's freezing cold the air >> it's freezing cold in the air conditioning . conditioning. >> it's roasting hot on deck. >> it's roasting hot on deck. >> all i want to do is get home to my boys. >> and i don't know whether that phone happened. phone call actually happened. >> i know that diana did speak to boys before she i to the boys before she died. i know she did. >> she told me because she rearranged her programme. she said me, i'm going to be a said to me, i'm going to be a day late because dodi has to do work for his father at the ritz hotel i'm the hotel in paris. i'm on the harrods jet. i can't get home any , so i'm going to any other way, so i'm going to have to go with him. she didn't want didn't to want to go. she didn't want to go and that night she go to paris and that night she didn't want to go out. >> she was happy to stay in the
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ritz . ritz. >> she didn't want all that fuss with the paparazzi. >> he persuaded her >> but somehow he persuaded her to go out the chain of events that that led to her death were tragic and, you know, i've lived with it for 26 years. >> i was there with her for ten years. >> so i knew her inside out. >> so i knew her inside out. >> you mentioned that you were there with her for ten years. and i understand that you've been written out of the i'm not there. >> i've been airbrushed out, see history that we. is it weird? well in a way, i think it's the crown isn't factual . there crown isn't factual. there should be a disclaimer across it saying these events may not have happened, which many of them didn't happen there, only to drive the narrative and the character forward . and i'm not character forward. and i'm not there because if i had been there, diana wouldn't have been perceived as a lonely, vulnerable woman who was as
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creating this reckless situation around her. i would have been the stability in it. so i couldn't have been there because , as peter morgan wouldn't have wanted that character for any other way other than vulnerable and wounded and a victim in the way she was portrayed. so >> so your overall take on what you've seen from the crown as it as it comes to its its conclusion, an is what i'm upset by. >> it . i think by. >> it. i think it's by. >> it . i think it's cruel. it's >> it. i think it's cruel. it's cruel to diana's memory. >> it's cruel for the boys to watch. >> i mean , i'm finding it >> i mean, i'm finding it unbearable. >> so i'm sure they won't watch it . i think >> so i'm sure they won't watch it. i think it's >> so i'm sure they won't watch it . i think it's cruel to the it. i think it's cruel to the queen's memory, too, because the way the queen is portrayed in the crown she's very hard, cold woman who doesn't seem to care about anybody or anything that is not the queen that i stood beside for 11 years because i was a lucky guy that stood beside the queen for 11. and then diana for ten. so i know these two characters very well
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and the queen was a very warm, kind and generous woman who looked out for people that doesn't come across in the crown so don't believe the character izations that you're being shown in the crown because they are not the people that i knew. >> and you don't think that either harry or william will watch because harry has said that he does watch. >> i'm surprised that he he would watch it. but then he's in bed with netflix , isn't he? so bed with netflix, isn't he? so maybe watch it because maybe he has to watch it because the is important. maybe the content is important. maybe it's going to reflect on his future projects . yes, i am sure. future projects. yes, i am sure. i can bet you my house that william will not watch it. >> well, why? why do you think? >> well, why? why do you think? >> because william remembers the truth . really? william knows the truth. really? william knows the truth. really? william knows the truth the way it actually did pan out. why should you want to watch some recreation when he knows it and you live with it? >> are you glad that it's coming to an end now? the crown? >> yeah, i am absolutely . >> yeah, i am absolutely. >> yeah, i am absolutely. >> i don't think this series should have been made right. i
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think should have finished. think it should have finished. but they've capitalised . on but they've capitalised. on diana's . they've used diana's popularity. they've used her character to drive this current series through because the first four episodes were all about diana. and she does appear as a ghost it and comes back to the queen which is a little bit weird. but then is it because diana is the ghost that will always haunt the house of windsor? she'll always be there . windsor? she'll always be there. we will always talk about her because she's she's become an icon of our times and because she was a good, kind person, because she was 36, because she was a young mother with two young boys. because she'd been cheated on by her husband. and how many women out there will tell you that happened to me, too. so that's why i followed diana's life . but 36. diana's life. but 36. >> yeah , it's hard to believe. >> yeah, it's hard to believe. >> yeah, it's hard to believe. >> but as i get as i get older now, i'm 31 now. i think, gosh, five years time i'm flipping out. and she crammed so much into that ball very, very quickly. i hadn't actually planned but planned planted asking this, but i sitting i thought, well, he's sitting there. farage in. i'm
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there. nigel farage is in. i'm aslef right. so i thought, aslef yes, right. so i thought, i'm going you get i'm not going to let you get away that without asking away with that without asking you provided you this. you provided the nafion you this. you provided the nation most nation with one of the most iconic right? you iconic moments right? do you think it? i do. think he could win it? i do. >> i think he's going to be a very popular contestant because like marmite . and you like me, he's marmite. and you either or you loathe either like him or you loathe him. you like him or him. but if you like him or loathe him, you'll still watch him. yeah. you still will be entertained and that's entertained by him. and that's what show is about. it's what that show is about. it's not about many trials you not about how many trials you do. how popular you do. it's about how popular you are with the with the public, because it's a public a public popularity because it's a public a public pofquickr of because it's a public a public popquickr of advice for him. >> quick bit of advice for him. quick bit of advice from do everything right. >> just hold your breath. don't don't don't sniff through your nose because you don't want to smell those smells. just just pretend you're going to the dentist and swallow it quick. >> oh, gosh . >> oh, gosh. >> oh, gosh. >> i'll tell you what. >> i'll tell you what. >> paul, thank you very, >> look, paul, thank you very, very pleasure. i very much. absolute pleasure. i must met in person, must say, i've met in person, but feels i've known you but it feels like i've known you for i've been for years because i've been seeing you everywhere. but there for years because i've been see go. you everywhere. but there for years because i've been see go. thatzverywhere. but there for years because i've been see go. that was'where. but there for years because i've been see go. that was the re. but there for years because i've been see go. that was the wonderful re for years because i've been seeg burrough. s the wonderful re for years because i've been seeg burrough. thank/onderful re for years because i've been seeg burrough. thank you erful re for years because i've been seeg burrough. thank you very, re paul burrough. thank you very, very coming fleet very much. now, coming up, fleet street mackenzie
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street legend kelvin mackenzie swings studio to offer swings by the studio to offer his insight. it's his unique insight. it's tomorrow's stories. it's tomorrow's biggest stories. it's going be the most going to be the most entertaining. the entertaining. it always is, the most entertaining newspaper review anywhere on national television. tonight, three man press pack have the first of tomorrow's front pages . they're tomorrow's front pages. they're hot off the press. they're itching to go straight out the traps. but there's some big news as well on benefits claimants. it's not all about the marches, people. and i will be showing you a little bit more footage of what happened me all what happened to me when it all kicked pro—palestine kicked off at that pro—palestine march in
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>> you're listening to gb news radio . radio. >> let's bring you tomorrow's news tonight. now in the most entertaining paper review you will ever see on national telly anywhere. now, the very first front pages have just been delivered for my press pack. shall we have a little look? shall we have a little look? shall we? all right. so we are going in with the metro . so we going in with the metro. so we failed. stalked murder victim.
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that's on the front of the metro. we're also going to be having a look through a couple of the other newspapers now as well, aren't we? so we're looking at the so the eye. looking at the eye. so the eye. we've got new benefits, crackdown if jobless. don't accept it. work thousands of universal credit claims face toughened sanctions regime. so that's going to be an interesting one for us to get stuck into. and they've also got on the right hand side of the page there. it won't be a box of roses. angela rayner on the first days of a labour government , so she's looking government, so she's looking ahead as to what a labour government would actually look ahead as to what a labour goveand ent would actually look ahead as to what a labour goveand nhs/ould actually look ahead as to what a labour goveand nhs nurses:tually look ahead as to what a labour goveand nhs nurses warny look ahead as to what a labour goveand nhs nurses warn theyk like and nhs nurses warn they will carry on strike being if lain labour wins power. so for anyone who is thinking that that wouldn't happen, well it looks like it is. we go to the guardian now and they are obviously having a little look, aren't they, at senior female staff reports sexual assault and harassment at the mod. so it's
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another kind of pestminster story . there that's doing the story. there that's doing the rounds. we'll have a little look at that. now, the telegraph front page is an absolute box office one actually, this one, this one is probably the front page of the day at the moment anyway , which is rishi sunak's anyway, which is rishi sunak's plan to deport migrants to rwanda will fail unless he opts out out of the european human rights law. suella braverman has got the splash out on the telegraph with her plan to get rwanda flights off the ground. okay so this is it. she's publishing here her plan. she's said this in the telegraph in her first article since being sacked, the former home secretary warns that the prime minister's proposed new treaty with rwanda and law declaring it a safe country would not enable the flights to take off before the flights to take off before the election. she's the general election. she's calling for new emergency legislation to block all avenues of legal challenge against the flights by excluding them from the entirety of the european and human rights laws. also, a story
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about david cameron, a council tax rise in suggesting that talking therapy for menopause has flushes. i'm going to bring in my panel now. and alison, i'll start with you. you do a lot for the telegraph. don't you, here. what do you make of this then? then suella, just days being sacked . some days after being sacked. some people, to fair, might say, people, to be fair, might say, well, you were well, suella, you know, you were actually secretary well, suella, you know, you were act|yeah, secretary well, suella, you know, you were act|yeah, look, secretary well, suella, you know, you were act|yeah, look, this etary well, suella, you know, you were act|yeah, look, this isiry well, suella, you know, you were act|yeah, look, this is the >> yeah, but look, this is the big battle now, isn't it? and essentially she is right to smell a wrong and really the supreme court chucked out the rwanda plan rishi sunak came up with a you know, oh, we're just going to tweak here and tweak there . suella braverman, who was there. suella braverman, who was there. suella braverman, who was the home secretary is basically saying, way in the world saying, no way in the world that's going to work. and that's quite right. she is absolutely right. we have to uncouple , right. we have to uncouple, suella braverman from all, suella braverman says from all, you know, the refugee treaty, the european convention on human rights and indeed repeal own rights and indeed repeal our own human rights act. patrick so but this is it looks like my helpful plan. it's actually a
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declaration of war. well, it is a it is a declaration. >> and just on that show, what i wonder if we're going to see in the coming days with one of these actually these paper reviews is actually suella publishing of suella publishing this kind of quote that quote unquote contract that she's got with with sunak. >> i think she's now showing that she's going to be a bit thorn in the prime minister's side. when you when you look at specific this plan, i sense no appetite in the lords for it to go so she's correct. appetite in the lords for it to go probably'>o she's correct. appetite in the lords for it to go probably be he's correct. appetite in the lords for it to go probably be he's corrthere. it'd probably be stopped there. it'd probably be stopped there. it'd be pinging backwards and forwards. a wider forwards. but there's a wider issue. not the only issue. we are not the only country struggling country in europe struggling with immigration, wonder with immigration, and i wonder if we stepped out of the european to convention fix to supposedly fix our immigration plan. would france do ? plan. what would france do? germany, spain? it could be a domino effect. let's see. yeah >> amy, can i can i just get you on what's on the front of the i. is that all right? oh. oh yeah. so? >> so we are going back to 2010, so just refresh people's so let me just refresh people's memories quickly. memories first quickly. >> benefits, new >> so new benefits, new benefits, if benefits, crackdown on if jobless, accept work. jobless, don't accept work. that's the headline on the i go on. >> yeah let's let's punch down as we like to if we are
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as we like to do if we are jeremy hunt it's giving me the scrounger vibes . scrounger benefit britain vibes. i'm not convinced by the stick. i'm not convinced by the stick. i prefer the carrot . i want to i prefer the carrot. i want to know why these people aren't in work. and look at that before punishing them in. because i% i really cannot. i just. i just can't believe that benefits is a is a genuine lifestyle choice. it depends. i can't let me run through. >> before i go to you, sean, let me just run through some of the key bullet points in this story on front of the eye. so on the front of the eye. so thousands of universal credit claimants toughened claimants face toughened sanctions. at sanctions. their attendance at job and interviews will be job fairs and interviews will be tracked using new tools . these tracked using new tools. these measures are part of plans to cut welfare. bill. yeah, obviously claimants could lose free nhs prescriptions, dentistry and help with bills. look, i see. i see the logic here. sure. absolutely i suppose my only issue is if someone just decides they're resolutely not going to work then they are going to work and then they are poor they're benefits and poor and they're on benefits and then make them pay an then you make them pay for an nhs prescription. to be nhs prescription. as well. to be fair, just die? fair, do they just die? >> there's a couple of >> oh, look, there's a couple of
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ways of looking at this. firstly, going to if firstly, if you're going to if you're going to a crackdown firstly, if you're going to if yoton going to a crackdown firstly, if you're going to if yoton go supposed a crackdown firstly, if you're going to if yoton go supposed benefits down on on on supposed benefits scroungers, make you have a scroungers, make sure you have a crackdown other crackdown on people at the other end scale, paying end of the scale, not paying their yeah, there's their taxes. yeah, there's a whole argument about whole big argument about companies let's companies and individuals. let's make do that as well companies and individuals. let's make that do that as well companies and individuals. let's make that would at as well companies and individuals. let's make that would give well companies and individuals. let's make that would give youl companies and individuals. let's make that would give you the because that would give you the right say you can't right to then say you can't expect to skate by for expect to skate by because for everybody home everybody who's at home who could if you're could work. so if you're disabled or you have real disabled or you have a real reason. but our reason. fair enough. but our number of economically inactive people huge . and i remember people is huge. and i remember they are also why they are also living off people who are scraping by. and it's very easy to say, oh, it's rich people. they should pay. of course they should pay. there's other should pay. but there's other poor people who work two and three just to by three jobs just to make it by you more on you mustn't earn more on benefits those people benefits than those people earn at okay, now i'm going to go to >> okay, now i'm going to go to a story that's inside one of the papers tomorrow. cracker. papers tomorrow. it's a cracker. this it's in the this all right. so it's in the telegraph, which is why i'll come on this come to you first on this ellison story. inside the telegraph, lisa nandy has hit back criticism back at criticism. criticism easy say from j.k. easy for me to say from j.k. rowling insisted that the rowling as she insisted that the transgender debate should not be reduced parts. the
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reduced to bodily parts. the harry potter author lambasted ms nandy last month over her past support for sending trans female rapists to female prisons , rapists to female prisons, calling her one of the biggest reasons many women on the left no longer trust labour. alison your thoughts on this? >> well , i your thoughts on this? >> well, i think lisa nandy is really lost the plot and you know, if she's saying that gender critical feminists like her, you know, so gender critical feminists like rowling, who believes that identifying as female is not the same thing as being a born a woman, i mean, it's absolute. this gender identity nonsense. patrick and i'm very much on the on the side of rowling this is a real of jk rowling and this is a real problem actually keir problem actually for keir starmer because, because this is one few weaknesses one of labour's few weaknesses that the tories could exploit is them refusing to say, you know , them refusing to say, you know, that a trans woman is a woman. and this is this is really highlighting it now. and i think lisa nandy is not doing starmer any favours at all. >> the worry what this >> the worry is what does this lead to? this is her start lead to? if this is her start point i'm now point as a parent, i'm now thinking, well, is
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point as a parent, i'm now thinking, well , is this point as a parent, i'm now thinking, well, is this person i vote for? who in nato thinking, well, is this person i vot> putting someone with a penis in a female prison is not that does not put that box again, that extreme example does not characterise this debate . characterise this debate. >> it's happening 66% increase in hate crimes. however does represent this. all right. >> we're going to finish on a slightly different note now just for this before. i for this round before. yes, i do show some more that show you some more of that shocking footage from those protests but protests at bethnal green. but there as kim there is fury, fury as kim kardashian features on the front cover gq's men of the year. cover of gq's men of the year. okay. an and over half a dozen
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of the honourees of men of the year as yeah, are women critics have taken to social media with one saying it's strange and unusual times we're living in. we don't. right. isjust weird. we don't. right. is just weird. what's the anyway isn't a woman of the year there must be a woman. why are we doing this? but kylie jenner won that. >> that's just revenge. they made the woman. so why made a man win the woman. so why not woman? made a man win the woman. so why not caitlyn an? made a man win the woman. so why not caitlyn jenner. kylie jenner >> caitlyn jenner. kylie jenner will confused. they all change. >> kylie jenner. kylie jenner's lawyers are on the phone. right. and they're. but look, and they're. yeah but look, yeah, i mean, this is this is just a ridiculous half of just a ridiculous cover. half of the the or the people on the list or however many was on the list however many it was on the list of the men of the year award are women. why are this to women. why are we doing this to ourselves? right. coming ourselves? right. anyway, coming up farage, up on a rare occasion, farage, a labour is nominated as labour mp is nominated as tonight's britain. yeah tonight's greatest britain. yeah that's right. out why that's right. find out why before the end of the show. but first, the wolf of fleet street, the former editor of the sun, kelvin mackenzie . he's live kelvin mackenzie. he's live in the studio. got some more the studio. we've got some more of tomorrow's front pages for you, a bumper bbc you, including a bumper bbc c deal for gary lineker. stay
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tuned .
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all right. to get stuck into more of tomorrow's front pages , more of tomorrow's front pages, it's free fleet street legend and the former editor of the sun, kelvin mackenzie. you just had a sneak preview of the back of his head there, kelvin, there's a heck of a lot. there's a hacker. it is your best quality. there's a heck a lot quality. there's a heck of a lot on the front. let's start with the okay yeah, i think the sun. okay yeah, i think we're with sun. we're starting with the sun. are we? gone mad . we? we are. it's pc gone mad. cops warned saying policeman is illegal. well it's bizarre. >> the reality is that the police force is . not the dixon police force is. not the dixon of dock green view that everybody thought about. >> the cops. >> the cops. >> they're younger people. >> they're younger people. >> and actually do you know what they by their their they are told by their their their bosses . their bosses. >> told by their their >> they're told by their their anybody in by who employs you.
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you cannot not even say policemen anymore. this this comes out of staffordshire . but comes out of staffordshire. but it won't only be staffordshire, it'll be all over the country if you're if you are a police officer, your job is a nightmare. you discovered that yesterday. you discovered that last yesterday didn't you? in which which they had choice. >> they could either tell a howling mob to clear off or are we going to nick you? or they could tell a journalist who was simply asking a question and was being abused . being abused. >> right. sling your hook. the in truth, the police officers do not want a problem anymore. it is an astonishing moment. not want a problem anymore. it is an astonishing moment . and is an astonishing moment. and you are you're i suspect, your audience now , actually, if they audience now, actually, if they see a problem on the streets. right. they do not want to know about it . they don't think about it. they don't think they'll get support from the police officers and they think that they may end up being nick themselves if they try to break up a fight or they tried to stop a shoplifter. honestly it would be massive how did be a massive issue. so how did you feel about it? you felt
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threatened, didn't you? >> it was well, was >> oh, well, it was well, it was threatening. what? threatening. but you know what? in moment, right? you're in the moment, right? you're kind you. kind of let it wash over you. because, i look at because, look, the way i look at it this . they're exposing it is this. they're exposing themselves. really it is this. they're exposing therand'es. really it is this. they're exposing therand is. really it is this. they're exposing therand i think really it is this. they're exposing therand i think this really it is this. they're exposing therand i think this is really are. and i think this is really important. got a little important. we have got a little clip, if you haven't clip, actually, if you haven't seen it yet, here's some footage from bethnal some from today. bethnal green, some of the just some of reality of the just some of the reality you won't see anywhere else on the these palestine the media about these palestine protest . shame on you . protest. shame on you. >> shame on you. why shame on you . you. >> tell me why, why, why you're here. >> what do you think ? >> what do you think? >> what do you think? >> why do you feel so strongly? you think what do you think ? you think what do you think? >> work it out . you need to stop >> work it out. you need to stop harassing the community as live. >> you need to go. please. i know it's a free place, but what it is, you're harassing our community. so let me ask you a question on that. >> what was the shame on you? was it just being a journalist, being there, being a journalist? yeah. >> because actually, at the one that i was at last night, they
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thought because they said because i was from gb news, this law didn't didn't know where i was fact, they was from. in fact, they mentioned couple news mentioned a couple of other news outlets i was outlets that they thought i was from well. so they didn't from as well. so they didn't know. just me know. so that was just me walking around camera walking around with a camera asking they. asking them why they. >> can i ask you one other >> okay. can i ask you one other question? is were are any of that those protests was that any of those protests was from a community outside the kind of asian community there were or second generation? >> there were a couple of white people there. okay. yes, there were . and i spoke to a couple of them. >> and how were they to you? >> and how were they to you? >> all right. yeah, kind of a bit sceptical, but they're all right. one was one was one was pretty extreme, actually. one was. one was quite sensible . but was. one was quite sensible. but there you know, as there were people, you know, as soon as i got there, there were people don't to people saying, don't talk to them. talking them. and then talking in a different language, obviously to each so that could each other so that i could understand were understand what they were saying was pretty obvious what they were don't, were saying, saying, don't, don't to him. did did you don't talk to him. did did you think if you had think that that if you had stayed there, violence stayed there, that violence would yesterday? stayed there, that violence woul�* if yesterday? stayed there, that violence woul�* if i yesterday? stayed there, that violence woul�* if i had yesterday? stayed there, that violence woul�* if i had not yesterday? stayed there, that violence woul�* if i had not had yesterday? stayed there, that violence woul�* if i had not had aesterday? stayed there, that violence woul�* if i had not had a security? 100? if i had not had a security guard, violence would have happened. can't say. right.
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happened. i can't say. right. okay. you can't say 100. it felt that way tonight. i also think there was a row of police officers there. potentially, potentially . could. can i just potentially. could. can i just get another story out? yeah well, i've got you. >> what about one? what >> what about this one? what about this one back page of the daily mail? take it to be good daily mail? i take it to be good that the bbc to that lineker the bbc want to time down to another contract to be match the day for 1.35 be match of the day for 1.35 million right. here we go. >> come on the lineker >> come on here's the lineker scoop. what is it? go on, go on, go new deal for new go on. it's a new deal for new deal for gary lineker. >> here's >> what about that? so here's a guy actually has got himself guy who actually has got himself in position. don't in a great position. i don't blame lineker, way. blame lineker, by the way. absolutely. blame absolutely. do not blame lineker. political lineker. he has a political view. to push it out. view. he wants to push it out. the bbc can't control him, but not only can't they control him, they actually it's easier they say, actually it's easier for us if we actually write the check for him . why? because check for him. why? because i can only believe that they that they believe he is satisfying . they believe he is satisfying. a percentage of british society . percentage of british society. i, i don't think so. i don't
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think it's the role of a soccer pundh think it's the role of a soccer pundit to, to be involved in the politics. so why don't they just get rid of him and have somebody neutral in there? jermaine jenas i don't care who it is. >> the last time the last >> well, the last time the last time there was there talk time there was there was talk of him being removed. there was a mass walkout, strike, wasn't there? >> well, good, good. get of >> well, good, good. get rid of them all. mean, shearer on them all. i mean, shearer is on for a hundred a year, for a hundred grand a year, saying disappointed saying all he'll be disappointed in that. could for in that. i could do that for about year. right about 120 grand a year. right and mind you , you and i think, mind you, you wouldn't do it for that price. but know, short of but you know, i'm short of money. raising for money. i'm raising money for a new venture. >> i don't out of bed for >> i don't get out of bed for any than half bar. you any less than half a bar. you know that. >> but there go. >> but there we go. >> but there we go. >> no. >> no. >> so new deal for lineker. >> so new deal for lineker. >> so new deal for lineker. >> so bitter down in >> so bbc bitter tie down in £1.35 year. by the way £1.35 million a year. by the way , you i money by the way. >> all your all your panel here we are all complaining that that lady who's running the lady there who's running the studio right. they all contributing gary lineker's contributing to gary lineker's money. what a ridiculous circus stance we got. and he announces various things about his politics. i totally disagree with him. i don't want to pay
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him and i'm not going to pay him. well, that's a liar. i will pay him. well, that's a liar. i will pay him because i don't want to go to jail. how ridiculous is that? yeah. and what about your audience ? they're all sitting audience? they're all sitting there. got any there. they haven't got any money. we're all skint. we're all what's happened? all dying. and what's happened? gary making 1.35 gary lineker is making 1.35 million on our money, i've million based on our money, i've never come across anything so ridiculous in my bloody life. >> kelvin mackenzie, there having a haemorrhage on national television, being unwell . i'm television, being unwell. i'm going to ask you to just. just just have a little drink. yeah. >> i'm sorry. >> i'm sorry. >> i'm sorry about that. there. no, no, not at all. we. we do love it. i promise you the most entertaining newspaper of you is a wonder why the bbc a it's a wonder why the bbc don't you exactly. don't call you back. exactly. but when they do, call me, actually. >> but it's a rude word. they call they do. call me. yeah, they do. >> right. okay. >> yeah, fine. right. okay. thank much. that was thank you very much. that was great. it. right now it's great. love it. right now it's time to reveal today's greatest britain jackass as britain and union jackass as well. let's start with the greatest britain alison, i'll start with you. >> well, i think probably should now be kelvin mackenzie after that fantastic attack on lineker
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. actually, it's going to be rushanara the labour mp for rushanara ali, the labour mp for bethnal green and bow, who showed great courage actually by refusing along with this refusing to go along with this ceasefire is now being ceasefire and is now being assaulted accused of assaulted and accused of genocidal support by her very, very angry and rather horrible constituents . constituents. >> sean might is kemi badenoch mp who's in the sunshine state of florida, signing a trade deals. >> she's linking to us the to the trade over there she's been with desantis signing a deal and these deals are only possible because of brexit. long may she sign any more many more deals . sign any more many more deals. >> okay amy i'm nominating lord greensill . greensill. >> sorry. lord cameron appointment as foreign secretary. no i'm not. that one is. >> that one is still to come. >> that one is still to come. >> this is all about the great britain. don't worry. that's all good. >> my greatest britain is a lady called vivian silva . now she's called vivian silva. now she's been confirmed as one of the victims of the hamas massacre. she's canadian born israeli she's a canadian born israeli activist and she dedicated her
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life to advocating for palestinian rights and peace between israel and palestine. she even volunteered with a group in gaza who needed cancer care so they could visit israeli hospitals and her family have said the events of october the 7th would have absolutely broken her heart . her heart. >> i mean, look, it's well, it's incredibly strong. it's very , incredibly strong. it's very, very strong. three that i have made my decision and i am going in light of today's events for russian alley mp, which i didn't think i would do, which of course is the mp, the labour mp there who has come under massive fire in bethnal green . right. fire in bethnal green. right. we've got time of course now for the union . jack has offered the union. jack has offered a sneak peek at one, but alison, go on. who's yours? >> it's going to be the metropolitan proclaiming >> it's going to be the metrcan't an proclaiming >> it's going to be the metrcan'tan anything»claiming >> it's going to be the metrcan't an anything about ng >> it's going to be the metrcan't an anything about the >> it's going to be the me leftn't an anything about the >> it's going to be the me left thugs anything about the >> it's going to be the me left thugs who 1ing about the >> it's going to be the me left thugs who are about the far left thugs who are assaulting our war monuments and whilst also simultaneously, somehow managing to arrest and crack down on white working class chaps. okay my union jack
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is the fool who climbed the war memorial, the artillery war memorial, the artillery war memorial in hyde park. >> what a disgrace. shameful act. he's such a fool . he should act. he's such a fool. he should be arrested and it should be illegal and he should be in jail right now. >> we've a sneak peek. >> we've had a sneak peek. yours, it yours, amy. go on, keep it quiet. i can't make my little lobbying quiet. i can't make my little lob butg david cameron, isn't >> but this david cameron, isn't it? he's back. he's back, baby. but let's forget austerity . but let's not forget austerity. most people, 300,000 people can't because they're dead. okay all right. >> okay, look, all of you, again. thank you. i mean, another another strong of another another strong set of choices shaun bailey i've choices that shaun bailey i've gone one, though, is gone for yours. one, though, is the that war the protest to scaled that war memorial. can i thank you my absolutely fabulous panel there of alison, sean and amy. i want to thank you as well for watching, for tuning in and for being a real part of this show. patrick christys tonight. i'll see you tomorrow at 900. >> good evening . alex burkill >> good evening. alex burkill here again with your latest gb news forecast. whilst news weather forecast. whilst for many, tomorrow going to for many, tomorrow is going to be dry day, we do have be a largely dry day, we do have some to get rid first some rain to get rid of first this evening. that's in association a front that's
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association with a front that's pushing its way west to pushing its way from west to east. has already brought east. it has already brought some heavy rain across parts of northern ireland today northern ireland earlier today and western and is now pushing into western parts and england parts of scotland and england and wales to some heavy and across wales to some heavy outbreaks as it makes its way eastwards. but the rain should break up somewhat through the night. parts of northeast night. some parts of northeast scotland largely dry scotland will stay largely dry with some mist, with clear skies, some mist, some fog and some frost here. elsewhere clear skies behind the rain will allow temperatures to take a a dip. so a chilly take a bit of a dip. so a chilly start on friday morning with some fog, perhaps some patches of fog, perhaps even fog some some patches of fog, perhaps even to fog some some patches of fog, perhaps even to any fog some some patches of fog, perhaps even to any fog fog some some patches of fog, perhaps even to any fog should some some patches of fog, perhaps even to any fog should largelye spots to any fog should largely clear as we go through the morning. and it should be a mostly fine day. plenty of sunshine a few sunshine too. just a few showers, likely towards showers, most likely towards western england, western parts of england, perhaps but these will western parts of england, perhias but these will western parts of england, perhias we but these will western parts of england, perhias we go but these will western parts of england, perhias we go into these will western parts of england, perhias we go into the afternoon ease as we go into the afternoon . nofice ease as we go into the afternoon . notice some more cloud . notice then some more cloud and some rain pushing its way in from the southwest later on. temperatures many little from the southwest later on. ten higher res many little from the southwest later on. tenhigherthan many little from the southwest later on. ten higher than today.( little from the southwest later on. ten higher than today. stillttle bit higher than today. still a little bit of a chilly feel towards the north, turning milder towards the south—west. then windy weather then wet and windy weather spilling across all parts as we go. overnight saturday. go. overnight into saturday. so
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it look like it's going to it does look like it's going to be a fairly unsettled weekend . be a fairly unsettled weekend. and the greatest impacts from the rain will be in the south—west we have already south—west where we have already saturated we saturated ground. but then as we go through sunday and into monday, going bit monday, it's going to be a bit more showery. some drier more showery. so some drier spells between rain spells in between the rain and temperatures after temperatures dipping after a mild start to the weekend . mild start to the weekend. >> is it? we're here for the show . show. >> welcome to the dinosaur hour. >> welcome to the dinosaur hour. >> with me, john cleese . haha, i >> with me, john cleese. haha, i was married to a therapist and you survived . i thought we were you survived. i thought we were getting hugh laurie. check and best man at least you interviewed saddam hussein. what's that like? i was terrified. i'm playing strip poker with these three. >> oh , no, thank you . >> oh, no, thank you. >> oh, no, thank you. >> cds need to be put in alphabetical order. >> oh, are you going to be problematic again ? the dinosaur, problematic again? the dinosaur, our sundays at 9:00 on .
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gb news. >> good evening. i'm ray addison, headliners is up next. but first, our headline tonight, the former home secretary says rishi sunak's plan to convert the rwanda agreement into a treaty won't work . writing in treaty won't work. writing in the telegraph newspaper, suella braverman says the government's plan b is simply a tweaked version of the failed plan a, however, she did welcome the
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idea of emergency legislation to deport illegal immigrants to rwanda. she urged the government to amend the illegal migration act so that those arriving illegally can be detained and then removed in a matter of days , not months . well, meanwhile, , not months. well, meanwhile, the chancellor says the government can't guarantee rwanda deportation flights will begin next year, despite the prime minister saying he was aiming for the spring. downing street says emergency legislation will be produced in the coming weeks after the supreme court ruled that it was unlawful . to do. 12 year old unlawful. to do. 12 year old boys have been charged with the murder of a 19 year old who was stabbed to death in wolverhampton . sean c zahawi was wolverhampton. sean c zahawi was attacked on laburnum road on monday night. the boys who can't be named due to their age will appear at birmingham magistrates court tomorrow . they've also court tomorrow. they've also been charged with possession of a article up to 10 a bladed article up to 10 million gp appointments could be freed under new government
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plans. the new health

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