tv Patrick Christys Tonight Replay GB News December 5, 2023 3:00am-5:01am GMT
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side of the headlines. >> patrick thank you and good evening to you all. we start this bulletin with some breaking news. we've received the news within the last hour that a british—israeli teenager has been gaza while been killed in gaza while fighting for the israel defence forces. 19 year old binyamin needham died yesterday, having only been in the gaza strip for two days. he was killed in action. the idf had promoted him to the rank of sergeant . after to the rank of sergeant. after his death, israeli media is reporting at the moment he was born in england but moved to israel with his family when he was eight years . old now, the was eight years. old now, the main story today across the uk is that the home secretary stood up in the house of commons today saying 300,000 fewer people will be able to come to the country each year under new plans to bnng each year under new plans to bring down legal migration overseas. workers and students will be stopped from bringing their family with them. and the minimum salary required for a skilled worker will also rise to
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£38,700 from next spring. james cleverly said the measures are the best way forward for british taxpayers. >> it's about making sure that we control immigration, that we stop abuses of the system, but we also protect the economics that underpin our society and our country. and also, of course , support the people who work in our health and social care sectors . sectors. >> james cleverly well, the shadow environment secretary, steve reed, hit back saying taxpayers have heard it all before . before. >> how many times have we heard a succession of conservative home secretaries stand up in the chamber of the house of commons and tell us how much they're going to decrease migration by only to see it soar in the following the following few months? now, the figure that james cleverly is talking about there, even if he manages to cut it by the amount that just it by the amount that he's just said, doubt that given said, and i doubt that given their record even then, their track record even then, migration would be around double the level that it was in
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december 2019, when they told us it was going, they were going to cut it. >> steve reed speaking there. now, the north of england is said to get extra money to improve its rail services. ministers have promised today to invest almost £4 billion to upgrade the trans pennine route connecting manchester to huddersfield, leeds and york . huddersfield, leeds and york. that's after the prime minister scrapped the northern leg of hs2 between manchester and birmingham earlier on this year. pfices birmingham earlier on this year. prices of petrol and diesel continue to fall, but fuel retailers are refusing to pass on the full savings to motorists , according to the rac . motoring , according to the rac. motoring organisations saying the average price of petrol fell by seven and a half pence a litre in november. but the rac believes that's still £0.10 more per litre than it should be. and lastly, the majority of pupils don't think they'll need modern languages for their jobs when they leave school . that's they leave school. that's according to a british council survey which questioned more
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than 2000 pupils from 36 schools across the uk . nearly half said across the uk. nearly half said they enjoyed learning languages, but only 20% of them planned to opt for languages when choosing their gcses . entries for german their gcses. entries for german and french have fallen considerably, but there is a slight uptick. people choosing spanish push on tv online dab+ radio and the tune—in app. this is gb news, britain's news channel. >> welcome along. now, today the government officially took the knee over net migration and they're happy with net migration figures of 372 to 445,000 people a year. that is a manifesto pledge shattered. that's our infrastructure . we're shattered. infrastructure. we're shattered. that's more than the population of coventry every single year welcomed in with open arms, treated like it's a good thing . treated like it's a good thing. what james cleverly, our home secretary tries to do today, in my view , was polish excrement. my view, was polish excrement. but the british public can see
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through that and i'll be going big on the big immigration betrayal shortly. but first, i think this is quite important. if you think it's bad now, wait and see what keir starmers labour government looks like . labour government looks like. this guy has gone through more faces than madonna on the charts of the labour leader's lengthy list of contradictions coming into bat for conservative hero margaret thatcher is right up there attempting to woo tory voters . in a there attempting to woo tory voters. in a piece for there attempting to woo tory voters . in a piece for the voters. in a piece for the telegraph, starmer writes that she brought meaningful change to british politics, adding that margaret thatcher sought to drag britain out of its stupor by setting loose our natural entrepreneurial ism . but how entrepreneurial ism. but how exactly did she do that , sir exactly did she do that, sir keir by facing down the union barons that were holding this country to ransom by squaring off against your paymasters. that's bravery that takes guts. keir isn't going to do that. labour takes millions from the unions. in return, they elect 13 of the 39 members of labour's national executive committee and
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50% of the delegates to labour party conference. and it looks like some of sir keir's mps haven't got the thatcher memo. here we go. pictures have emerged of labour mps attending a glitzy christmas bash with rail union bosses. the same policy imposing strike chaos on the rest of us throughout the week. and there was no ambiguity as to why they were there. backbencher kate osborne posted on social media. get this great to be with aslef union comrades in a wonderfully christmas venue and solidarity to those taking strike action today . as she strike action today. as she wrote that her party leader was penning his praise for thatcher. i mean, you just couldn't make this up, but starmer's been doing well in scotland recently. what does this thatcher comment do voters who do for scottish voters who frankly would have been happy to see maggie's a spike see maggie's head on a spike after tax fiasco while after the poll tax fiasco while first minister humza yousaf quickly weighed in? he said what thatcher did to mining and industrial communities not industrial communities was not entrepreneurial ism. it was vandalism . starmer, praising vandalism. starmer, praising thatcher is an insult to those
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communities in scotland and across the uk who still bear the scars of her disastrous policies . look, starmer praise . look, starmer can't praise thatcher scotland thatcher and keep scotland happy, continuing his poundland thatcher act today thatcher tribute act today promised that he would not turn on the public spending taps, instead going for big growth if we are privileged enough to be elected next year , the quack elected next year, the quack diagnosis , the search for diagnosis, the search for distractions and excuses, all of that ends because was the defining purpose of the next labour government . labour government. >> the mission that stands above all others will be raising britain's productivity growth , a britain's productivity growth, a goal that for my labor party will become an obsession , an will become an obsession, an okay, so he's not going to turn the public spending taps on. >> so when the nurses and doctors are on strike, when the teachers out, when the teachers walk out, when the ambulance drivers take day ambulance drivers take the day off they're demanding off and they're all demanding higher starmer's own higher wages and starmer's own mps are there on the picket mps are out there on the picket lines. solidarity comrades, what
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happens to sir keir then? what happens to sir keir then? what happens to sir keir then? what happens to the labour party? then he'll have to either turn the spending taps on tax will go up even more, or he'll face internal revolt. he would be pred internal revolt. he would be ripped apart. talking of internal revolt, labour will be massively split on foreign policy. if keir starmer was prime minister. now a whole swathe of the labour cabinet ministers and backbench mps would have been sacked or lost. the whip over his refusal to call for a ceasefire. indeed, star is so out of tune with his base at anas sarwar has been forced into singing from a different hymn sheet. last month, the scottish labour leader slammed his boss for having quotes, muslin having hurt quotes, hurt muslin communities with some of his comments about israel's action in gaza. oh, and because it can never be highlighted enough times, this is the guy that he tried to install into downing street. >> you're also so political in the sense that you're quite rightly speaking out against what's happening in in gaza at the present time. let's not kid
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ourselves and say that this started in october 7th. >> you know , no, of course, >> you know, no, of course, people believe that this all started on october 7th because of the, you know, the resistance or whatever. >> jeremy corbyn, they're failing to condemn hamas for the october seventh atrocities with a man wearing a gimp mask or balaclava who is part of an irish hip hop group called kneecap. irish hip hop group called kneecap . keir starmer said kneecap. keir starmer said corbyn was his friend. now he says that he was never his friend. my point is this we haven't really got a clue about who the real keir starmer is or what he believes and the internal divisions that have ravaged the labour party still exist. and what does that look like when they're actually in government that does not get spoken about enough? indeed would a labour government mean utter chaos for the uk to respond now? is my panel. daily express columnist carole malone. we've got journalist and broadcaster benjamin butterworth and former brexit party mep beunda and former brexit party mep belinda de lucy, carole , i'll
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belinda de lucy, carole, i'll start with you on this . do you start with you on this. do you think that it is about time that we fronted up to the utter chaos that a labour government would actually be, but i think a lot of people already understand that. >> i really do. >> i really do. >> i really do. >> i mean, the thing about thatcher today was was a naked pitch by him. it's a joke really. he's praising a woman that kept his party out of power for 18 years, it it was a for 18 years, but it it was a naked pitch to get disillusioned vote voters to say, you vote tory voters to say, you know, labour with your know, trust labour with your vote. got a lot of vote. he knows he's got a lot of tory voters already but he that's that this was a pitch to get rest. that's what this get the rest. that's what this was about. but will be was all about. but it will be utter because he has, utter chaos because he has, you know, listen him about an know, you listen to him about an economic policy. you listen to rachel who a rachel reeves, who hasn't had a decent original on on on decent original thought on on on economic since was economic policy since god was a lad. everything she talks about is stability, stability. this country need stability. is stability, stability. this councountry need stability. is stability, stability. this councountry needszd stability. is stability, stability. this councountry needs a stability. is stability, stability. this councountry needs a complete this country needs a complete radical change. as far as the economy concerned. labour economy is concerned. but labour keeps stability keeps on talking about stability . to introduce . they're not going to introduce that radical plan. have no that radical plan. they have no plan on immigration. on their plan on immigration. on their plan for is to just open plan for that is to just open all borders. they want it
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all the borders. they want it their closer ties with their plan is closer ties with brussels they've said we're brussels. they've said we're going to take of europe's going to take 30% of europe's migrants here, which is kind of, you , about 25% more than you know, about 25% more than we've got now. so basically, they no plan on anything . they have no plan on anything. look gaza situation now. look at the gaza situation now. huge vote will get labour huge muslim vote will get labour into power, 40 of their seats depend on the muslim vote. muslims aren't going to be happy with starmer stand on this and they're going to be happy with what the backbenchers are saying who revolting, they're who are revolting, but they're not. they're the ones who who are revolting, but they're not. tthe re the ones who who are revolting, but they're not. tthe point. the ones who make the point. >> benjamin single time >> benjamin every single time there's key issue. so when it there's a key issue. so when it comes like strike comes to things like strike action, it comes to things action, when it comes to things like foreign policy, it like foreign policy, when it comes know, obviously he comes to, you know, obviously he his issues there with jeremy corbyn comes to, corbyn or whether it comes to, you know, the things he's been saying about thatcher and tax and reforming our public services. party is services. the labour party is split on every single one of those if they're in those things. and if they're in government we'd be seeing government now, we'd be seeing that, wouldn't we? >> mean, there seems to be no >> i mean, there seems to be no end nonsense tonight. end to your nonsense tonight. >> that on >> you said that the split on jeremy corbyn, kicked him out jeremy corbyn, he kicked him out of parliamentary party and
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of the parliamentary party and there resignations. you there was no resignations. you said were split on said that they were split on foreign . defiantly foreign policy. he defiantly backed and quit on backed israel and had no quit on that. backed israel and had no quit on that . you said was split on that. you said he was split on strikes and he opposed the strike. there is no split and you can't deal with it. people line this show. tory mps, line up on this show. tory mps, to attack tory government if to attack the tory government if that's chaos, i don't know that's not chaos, i don't know what party is split on it. >> his party is split on it. we've got labour mps attending a rail union barons christmas dinner . they're, rail union barons christmas dinner. they're, you rail union barons christmas dinner . they're, you know, dinner. they're, you know, having drinks probably having some drinks and probably a little of turkey. while a little bit of turkey. while there's misery millions. a little bit of turkey. while there's got .ery millions. a little bit of turkey. while there's got his millions. a little bit of turkey. while there's got his own nillions. a little bit of turkey. while there's got his own mpsns. a little bit of turkey. while there's got his own mps coming you've got his own mps coming out revolt on the gaza out in revolt on the gaza ceasefire stuff. he have ceasefire stuff. he would have lost shadow cabinet on lost half his shadow cabinet on that if he'd have been in government. >> hang on. they didn't resign en masse. most people stayed there. handfuls of there. you have handfuls of mps know you had no, no, know the issue. you had no, no, you don't have handfuls there, but have 50 labour who but you have 50 labour mps who have opposed this and you have 250 who have labour 250 councillors who have labour councillors 250 council councillors who have 250 council out than 7000 out of, i think more than 7000 labour councillors . hang on, labour councillors. hang on, hang on, you talk about those splits, the splits in the tory party and the chaos that we have had, the laughable lack of
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self—awareness from a group of people who endorse liz truss , a people who endorse liz truss, a woman who gave us the worst economic crash since the 1970s, a party that isn't even in the tories gave us three prime ministers in months and ministers in three months and four chancellors a split, and four chancellors in a split, and they're even there. they're not even there. >> belinda. views >> you too, belinda. your views on that? >> there's no question. >> there's no question. >> starmer he's a >> keir starmer he's a shapeshifter. a political shapeshifter. he's a political chameleon just changed chameleon and that just changed his whatever group he's his face to whatever group he's talking try get their talking to try and get their votes. course he'll votes. of course he'll go back on the went against on it the day he went against his pledge to respect the brexit referendum should have a referendum should have been a signal, message to everyone signal, a message to everyone that has principles that this man has no principles and will change mind. just and will change his mind. just to whatever group to please whatever group he's he's to to. the he's trying to appeal to. the other i would say, look at other thing i would say, look at what do . don't what labour mps do. don't forget, this sort of forget, you know, this sort of tough talk, suddenly trying to compare, trying reduce compare, trying to reduce immigration that was immigration to 200,000. that was his 170, nearly 70 labour his latest 170, nearly 70 labour mps signed that letter to stop violent criminals being deported on the plane. this is the nature of their party. keir may be a different captain, but crew different captain, but the crew on ship so strange from
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on the ship is so strange from keir right now who's going to be pulling the strings once it's in power, his party and power, it will be his party and just corbyn's come just watch corbyn's lot come back. momentum they've already >> the momentum they've already they're rearing they're already rearing their head the ashes. did head out of the ashes. they did it a couple of weeks ago. they're they're waiting to come the likes o'donnell. they're the likes of o'donnell. they're they're waiting. that's they're waiting. and that's going party going to split the party even more. the blueprint. more. wales is the blueprint. >> it's preposterous. >> i mean, it's preposterous. >> i mean, it's preposterous. >> it's preposterous. >> i mean, it's preposterous. >> stop, �*eposterous. >> i mean, it's preposterous. >> stop, stop. erous. >> i mean, it's preposterous. >> benjamin�*. erous. >> i mean, it's preposterous. >> benjamin jeremy and >> benjamin jeremy corbyn and diane abbott are no longer labour mps. number of people labour mps. the number of people that selected that that have been selected that supported corbyn supported jeremy corbyn corbyn on now on on the telly right now talking these people still, talking to these people still, i don't what corbyn don't care what jeremy corbyn says. jeremy corbyn isn't in the labour jeremy corbyn labour party. jeremy corbyn is an in the labour an idiot who's not in the labour party me say, how party and let me just say, how many candidates who supported jeremy been selected jeremy corbyn have been selected to labour in to be labour candidates in winnable seats? that is how winnable seats? one that is how much starmer has changed winnable seats? one that is how mu has not, because the >> no, he has not, because the labour party still labour party is still anti—semitic and we've seen that of we've them of late. we've seen them out there is not fair at all. it is, it is absolute. >> would tell that >> people would tell you that they think done a good job they think he's done a good job changing the labour party. and they think he's done a good job cha|sorry the labour party. and they think he's done a good job cha|sorry thitelloour party. and they think he's done a good job cha|sorry thitell a ur party. and they think he's done a good job cha|sorryth1tell a man rty. and they think he's done a good job cha|sorryth1tell a man all and they think he's done a good job
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cha|sorryth1tell a man all thei i'm sorry to tell a man all the time to tell a man whose family is jewish that he's an anti—semite completely anti—semite is completely unacceptable. sorry. his wife and jewish. are and kids are jewish. what are we talking keir starmer talking about? keir starmer and to say that he leads an anti—semitic party is completely unreasonable. >> no, it's not reasonable because himself >> no, it's not reasonable bectyears himself >> no, it's not reasonable bectyears when himself >> no, it's not reasonable bectyears when he himself >> no, it's not reasonable bectyears when he gotnself >> no, it's not reasonable bectyears when he got into: two years ago when he got into power that it was an anti—semitic party and now he's been power years. been in power for two years. >> you can see how different it is. he has a that is. he has a party that steadfastly stands by israel. and just say, no, you and can i just say, no, you can't for backbench mps that go to christmas dinner as to a union christmas dinner as your labour is your excuse to say labour is divided, think shows how divided, i think that shows how weak is. okay, i'm weak your argument is. okay, i'm completely disagree because i think stands, belinda, completely disagree because i thiniif stands, belinda, completely disagree because i thiniif he stands, belinda, completely disagree because i thiniif he was stands, belinda, completely disagree because i thiniif he was actually belinda, completely disagree because i thiniif he was actually inalinda, that if he was actually in government, which course he's government, which of course he's not moment, but may well not at the moment, but may well end up a matter of time end up being a matter of time and will have to and then he will have to confront some of these things head on when it comes to internal party issues on matters of policy. >> and i don't think enough gets said that the moment said about that at the moment because i will agree because a point i will agree with the tories have with benjamin on the tories have been but i think it's been so naff, but i think it's important to point out important to point things out when it. when you say it. >> well, totally. and we are
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talking about a party that wants to children the vote when to give children the vote when they're that to they're in power, that wants to imprison people misgendering imprison people for misgendering most policies most of their policies. policies seem written on the back seem to be written on the back of beer mats a student of beer mats at a student union. and this silly attempt to and now this silly attempt to try appeal to tory voters try and appeal to tory voters with his thatcher comment. it's absolutely nonsense. thatcher once said, if you set out to be liked, compromise at liked, you will compromise at any time, anywhere and will any time, anywhere and you will achieve that's achieve nothing. and that's exactly what's going to happen. >> can i also just >> this shows no can i also just say he was talking say as well, when he was talking about comparing to about comparing himself to thatcher not thatcher today, he's not the first labour leader to have done that. has done it. brown's that. blair has done it. brown's done miliband's done it. done it. ed miliband's done it. and all it for one and they all do it for one reason one reason only to reason and one reason only to get tory voters who they get the tory voters who they think they admired her. and that is just nakedly cynical. they don't jot. don't admire her. not one jot. he's purpose. he's got no purpose. >> does he stand for? he's >> what does he stand for? he's an mr sir flip flop. an empty suit, mr sir flip flop. >> he's caught. and you know, the other thing you the other thing with you compared himself to that. he tried to he had the same tried to say he had the same qualities of strength and leadership as her. joke. leadership as her. he's a joke. that's call him mr flip. >> the difficulty is benjamin and our pose. the final question here on this difficulty i
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here on this difficulty is, i think many voters, think for many voters, myself included, many voters included, is not many voters actually, the country actually, half the country intends to vote labour as the pollster. difficulty is for pollster. the difficulty is for many keir starmer pollster. the difficulty is for man bloke keir starmer pollster. the difficulty is for man bloke would eir starmer pollster. the difficulty is for manbloke would havearmer pollster. the difficulty is for manbloke would have been is a bloke who would have been perfectly happy to have jeremy corbyn power now i know corbyn in power twice now i know that he's changed the party, but he been happy with he would have been happy with that. also a man who that. he he also is a man who has flip flopped quite lot has flip flopped quite a lot over over brexit. whether or not has flip flopped quite a lot ovecan'er brexit. whether or not has flip flopped quite a lot ovecan be brexit. whether or not has flip flopped quite a lot ovecan be trusted vhether or not has flip flopped quite a lot ovecan be trusted onether or not has flip flopped quite a lot ovecan be trusted on things not has flip flopped quite a lot ovecan be trusted on things like he can be trusted on things like that. courting the left of that. he's courting the left of his moment, he's his party. one moment, he's courting tories, the courting tories, basically. the other is difficult to other moment it is difficult to know this guy stands on know where this guy stands on stuff, isn't it? >> no, he's a listener. >> no, i think he's a listener. and what seen the fact and what you've seen is the fact that few people in the that very few people in the labour party would have had the confidence completely remove confidence to completely remove their predecessor, which was jeremy corbyn, not when he did it without flinching and you know what? when he stood up against israel, you said just against israel, you said he just wants well, it was wants to be liked. well, it was very uncomfortable for lots of people labour party that people in the labour party that he israel. he defiantly stood by israel. when he didn't even when was it? and he didn't even flinch because he didn't even flinch. it why was it really >> why was it why was it really uncomfortable? because there were are were people because there are many muslim many people in the muslim community that's not
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community for whom that's not the conclusion. >> to the labour >> they came to the labour party. he didn't he didn't flinch, i think. when your flinch, i think. well, when your evidence 250 councillors evidence there's 250 councillors out the evidence out of 7000, the evidence is he's struggling that majority. >> so he didn't oppose corbyn because a bad man. because corbyn was a bad man. he did it because he wanted his job. as that. job. simple as that. >> right, well, i'll tell >> all right, well, i'll tell you what, we're off to a feisty start i loved every start and i have loved every second of so far. still to second of it so far. still to come, james, it's not going to calm after this. james calm down after this. james cleverly's a big five cleverly's revealed a big five point net legal point plan to bring net legal migration below half a migration down below half a million. it still sounds million. but it still sounds like massive to me. is like a massive total to me. is that really acceptable? i'll get answers leader of answers from the leader of reform talking reform uk. straight talking richard up next in the richard tice. but up next in the clash, after president of clash, after the president of cop rogue, is he right cop 28 goes rogue, is he right that fossil ban would that a fossil fuels ban would take world back caves? take the world back to caves? director watch director of net zero watch andrew montford head to andrew montford goes head to head leader of the head with the leader of the climate gamble. who's climate party, ed gamble. who's science believe ? see you science do you believe? see you in a.
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weekend at 3 pm. on gb news, the people's channel, britain's news channel . welcome back. news channel. welcome back. >> my royal mastermind, lady colin campbell and phil dampier, they're on the way because it looks as though prince harry has been snubbed by his own child godfather. but now it's time for the clash . so as world leaders the clash. so as world leaders gather at cop28 for global warming talks, it's been a wintry weekend across the uk and europe. the largest snow storm in nearly 100 years. grounded private jets intended to fly. the german delegation to the climate summit in dubai. you
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couldn't make this stuff up, but overin couldn't make this stuff up, but over in the oil rich state, the cop, 28, president sultan al jaber, cop, 28, president sultan al jaber , has hit the headlines jaber, has hit the headlines with comments made during a fringe event threatening to overshadow the entire conference. take a look and listen . listen. >> there's no science out there or no scenario out there that says that the phase out of fossil fuel is what's going to achieve. 1.5. show me a roadmap for a phase out of fossil fuels that will allow that will allow for socio for sustainable socio economic development unless you want to take the world back into caves. >> okay. so what do you think ? >> okay. so what do you think? as the president of cop 28 says, that a fossil fuels ban would take the world back to caves? is the climate summit a complete and utter farce ? let me know and utter farce? let me know your thoughts. email me, gbviews@gbnews.com. tweet me at gb news. while you're there, go and take part in our poll. i'll bnng and take part in our poll. i'll bring you the results very, very shortly. but to duke this one
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out, i'm joined the director out, i'm joined by the director of net zero. watch andrew mumford and the leader of the climate ed gamble . i'm climate party, ed gamble. i'm looking to this one, looking forward to this one, shapps. i'll start with you. shapps. ed, i'll start with you. do you think that stopping fossil fuels would us back fossil fuels would take us back to caves ? to caves? >> oh, no. i mean, obviously absolutely ridiculous. i mean, we're out of fossil we're on a phase out of fossil fuels gradually anyway . so this fuels gradually anyway. so this is coming at a where we've is coming at a point where we've already on it. already started on it. and whether here or in other whether that's here or in other countries, people are gradually weaning it, weaning themselves off it, ramping and ramping up their renewables and getting a lot other getting into a lot of other things. but also it's where the future's going. see that future's going. we can see that all countries are actually all the countries are actually going at the moment. going there at the moment. they've plans how to they've all got plans on how to get some of are not get there. some of them are not doing very well, but it's doing it very well, but it's definitely not taking us back to the caves. >> andrew, ask you >> okay, andrew, can i ask you one the other things that one of the other things that sultan there was sultan al—jaber said there was that stopping fossil fuels is not to any impact not going to have any impact when lowering global when it comes to lowering global temperatures. obviously temperatures. you're obviously director what do i director of net zero. what do i mean? presumably agree with mean? presumably you agree with him. have do have him. do you have do you have facts to back this up? >> i think it's i think he
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probably went a bit too far. i think if carbon dioxide emissions continue , then other emissions continue, then other things being equal, we would expect a small amount of warming. i think the idea that we are going to go back to caves was also probably hyperbole. but there is there is a thread of truth going through there. i mean, what what ed says is right. everyone seems to be putting in more renewables, but the fact remains that we have no no technology for that will allow us to have power when the wind isn't blowing and the sun isn't shining. you know, people talk about batteries. that's a joke . they're far too expensive joke. they're far too expensive by at least an order of magnitude. hydrogen is going to be too expensive , too, because be too expensive, too, because it's too inefficient . so at the it's too inefficient. so at the moment we are we are going down this road, but we don't have the technologies to get us to the destination . so eventually we're destination. so eventually we're going to run into trouble. at the moment we are just stuck with fossil fuels . if we phase
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with fossil fuels. if we phase them out, then yeah , the lights them out, then yeah, the lights will go out and we'll be stuck. >> okay, okay. the lights will go out and we'll be stuck. >> i mean, look what we should have been doing is investing in actually right things. so actually the right things. so about years ago, we pulled about 20 years ago, we pulled our investment in tide and wind and whole lot areas the our investment in tide and wind ancand'hole lot areas the our investment in tide and wind anc and that lot areas the our investment in tide and wind anc and that would areas the our investment in tide and wind ancand that would have the our investment in tide and wind ancand that would have beene uk and that would have been doing whole lot for us when doing a whole lot for us when the wind and the sun wasn't haven't that and have we. haven't done that and have we. >> so we are where we are, as they middle management. they say in middle management. so we do now? because if so what do we do now? because if the lights go out and everyone you dies horrible death you know, dies a horrible death as of all of as a result of all of that stuff, then know, we are stuff, then you know, we are knackered, we? knackered, aren't we? >> if we're coming to >> i think if we're coming to the uk, then absolutely it's the opposite you're saying. opposite of what you're saying. we're global we're talking about the global perspective slightly perspective in cop 28, slightly different, but talking uk, look, there's this massive opportunity coming we've coming down the track and we've been all our been offshoring all of our industry so years. industry for so many years. we're spiral we're seeing a downward spiral at moment with us in 10% of at the moment with us in 10% of our gdp being created from our manufacturing and all manufacturing industries and all of climate change manufacturing industries and all of the climate change manufacturing industries and all of the direction.imate change manufacturing industries and all of the direction of ate change manufacturing industries and all of the direction of the change manufacturing industries and all of the direction of the entire and the direction of the entire 82% of the world's gdp in
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82% of the world's gdp is in that direction, we can make that direction, then we can make a money there. we can get a lot of money there. we can get our going. and even as our industry going. and even as rishi is talking about it, rishi sunak is talking about it, unleash power city to unleash the power of the city to invest it. invest in it. >> okay, andrew, are shaking >> okay, andrew, you are shaking your head. why >> we have no >> because we have no competitive advantage in any of these farms these technologies. wind farms are uk. they're are not made in the uk. they're made solar panels are made overseas. solar panels are made overseas. solar panels are made as so, you made overseas as well. so, you know, we've all our know, we've exported all our industry over there. lost industry over there. we've lost our blast furnace in the our last blast furnace in the last month. we've lost we've lost one of our six oil refineries in the last month. we've lost our last fertiliser factories in the last couple of years. our last aluminium smelter. we've shipped all that industry off to china and then the goods are coming back here with added carbon emissions and, and yeah, it's, it's been a disaster. okay. and the fact remains we still have no nothing. no way to deal with what happens when the wind doesn't blow. >> you leave us at the mercy of china add but absolutely right. >> andrew said it. we've offshored china >> andrew said it. we've ofstthey're china >> andrew said it. we've ofstthey're controlling china >> andrew said it. we've ofstthey're controlling it.|ina and they're controlling it. they're making the money. they're making all the money. 88% the batteries, 60 to 70%
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88% of the batteries, 60 to 70% of all the wind and all the solar. they're controlling the rare earth elements that go into the panels and into the the solar panels and into the batteries completely. in some cases, and cases, we're ceding it away. and the way we get control is the only way we get control is pull it back , roll up our pull it back, roll up our sleeves, get on with the work, and make this a national mission in the uk. >> okay, fine. but then andrew, people look at things like snowstorm forms across europe. the ambleside have the people of ambleside have been their been snowed into their own homes. people parts of homes. the people in parts of germany. the irony of germany. i mean, the irony of private on way to cop private jets on their way to cop 28 grounded as a of 28 being grounded as a result of snowstorms, you couldn't write that kind of stuff. so, andrew ed talks about rolling his sleeves up and getting stuck in and a bit of term and maybe a bit of short term pain for lot of long term pain for a lot of long term gain. people might be looking at the weather conditions now and thinking there's absolutely no point i mean, it's weather >> yeah, i mean, it's weather not isn't it? but, you not climate isn't it? but, you know, we were told some years ago that children weren't going to know what what snow was . so, to know what what snow was. so, you clearly that's not you know, clearly that's not happened. you know, clearly that's not happened . and, you know, the happened. and, you know, the fact you go and look at fact is, if you go and look at the ipcc report, you know, the
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official reports on the of official reports on the state of the climate, there's very little change of these these change in any of these these things. they think there's a little bit heat waves, snow little bit more heat waves, snow cover in the world hasn't cover in in the world hasn't changed decades . you know, changed for decades. you know, it's just most things are just carrying on very much as they were. the idea that there's some sort of a climate emergency is a myth. again, the official science doesn't mention an emergency or a crisis. rubbish in the report is that the actual fact of the matter? >> right. >> right. >> this is good. why is that rubbish? go on. >> oh for goodness sake. i mean, the biggest scientific body in the biggest scientific body in the world, the ipcc brings out reports with several hundred scientists creating it. it's then by countries then doctored by 200 countries where watered where it comes out and watered down. these reports that down. and these reports that come the last one at cop26 come out, the last one at cop26 was saying that we run out of carbon budget staying under carbon budget for staying under 1.5 2028. you know, 1.5 degrees in 2028. you know, i mean, honestly, the science has all been done. anybody who said anything scientists, anything about these scientists, they're . they're just contrarians. >> it's a nonsense. >> go on. andrew >> go on. andrew >> nothing bad happens at 1.5 degrees. if you read the ipcc
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special report on 1.5 degrees, it says that the impacts of climate change at 1.5 degrees will be a little bit less than they would be at two degrees. where's the emergency? there is no emergency . no emergency. >> okay. all right. well we are we're going to leave it there. we're out of time, i'm afraid, charles. but i can understand that you both have very, very differing views on all of that. that the director of net that was the director of net zero. mountford and zero. watch andrew mountford and the the climate party the leader of the climate party at gomel, who had they both in the would have the studio, i think would have continued conversation in continued that conversation in the speaking the car park. so speaking yesterday, secretary—general yesterday, the secretary—general of antonio of the united nations, antonio guterres, the science guterres, said this the science is clear. we need phase out is clear. we need to phase out fossil within a timeframe fossil fuels within a timeframe compatible global compatible with limiting global warming to do warming to 1.5 celsius. to do that, gas emissions that, greenhouse gas emissions must fall 45% by 2030. delayed action means quite simply, more deadly extreme weather events, more deaths, more destruction and less ability to recover. right. let's go to the inbox, shall we? who do you agree with as the president of cop 28 says,
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that if we got rid of fossil fuels, will we be back in caves? sean says it is a summit full of hypocrisy. political leaders in private jets going to dubai, preaching to us to look after the planet. it is all kidology what i will say to that, sean, is i completely agree with you. and do think that and i actually do think that most activists think most climate activists think that well. that is point of that as well. that is a point of agreement, think, between agreement, i think, between people don't think is people who don't think there is a climate emergency and people who think there is climate who do think there is a climate emergency. the way emergency. the idea that the way that cop 28 is being handled is ridiculous. web on twitter says if believed impact if they believed we impact climate change, they would have not. sorry they would have met over teams and zoom et cetera. not flown there in over 100 jets.i not flown there in over 100 jets. i get that. i think that it can look like, well, where's the emergency if you're doing that? more quick one. was i that? one more quick one. was i correct? says wes. i think it's wes. i wes. no. will says. was i correct that the correct in saying that the summit a good old fashioned summit was a good old fashioned boys i saw was men on boys club? all i saw was men on the stage in audience the stage in the audience walking around. i'm not walking around. well, i'm not quite i wasn't there. your quite sure i wasn't there. your verdict is now in. 96% of you
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agree that cop 28 a complete agree that cop 28 is a complete farce. 4% of you say that it's not. there we go. look. not. well there we go. look. coming tory bob seely, coming up, a tory mp, bob seely, bnngs a coming up, a tory mp, bob seely, brings a bill to strip brings forward a bill to strip the sussexes of their royal titles. parliament step titles. should parliament step to the harry and meghan to in take the harry and meghan down peg. my royal down a peg. now, my royal masterminds, lady colin campbell and dampier, their and phil dampier, deliver their unrivalled analysis. that's very soon. cleverly soon. but next, james cleverly gloats in the house of commons today he'd bring down net migration to circa about 400,000 double 2019 levels. so how have we fallen so far ? i will ask the we fallen so far? i will ask the leader of reform uk richard tice . he'll react to a channel migrants spraying his hotel room full of 20 and i think maybe £50 notes. you will not believe this clip. don't
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thursday from six till 930 . thursday from six till 930. >> big royal news heading your way because our royal mastermind is are waiting in the wings. but right now it's time for the leader of reform uk richard tice. i've got three big tice. and i've got three big topics get through tonight, topics to get through tonight, including little gb news including a little gb news scoop, but we'll get to that . scoop, but we'll get to that. and james cleverly has promised to slash legal migration with a new five point plan. so the home secretary will introduce care workers banned from bringing dependents , the minimum skilled dependents, the minimum skilled worker raised to 38 grand worker salary raised to 38 grand and adding the 20% discount on minimum salaries for foreign workers and the occupation shortage list to be reviewed and the minimum income requirement for bringing in dependents will go for bringing in dependents will 9° up for bringing in dependents will go up to £38,000. of course,
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there will also be a review of there will also be a review of the graduate visa route. now, i know that sounds like more than five things, but they've rolled a couple of them into one there. well, this may sound promising. it's a little it's important to dig a little bit because cleverly says bit deeper because cleverly says his measures reduce his measures will reduce net migration a year. migration by 300,000 a year. well, you take 300,000 away well, if you take 300,000 away from year's net migration from last year's net migration figure of 745,000, we're figure of 745,000, well, we're still left, aren't we, with a whopping great big net migration levels nearly half a million, levels of nearly half a million, almost double the pre brexit levels. tice what do you levels. richard tice what do you make of that? >> that's that's massive migration and that 300,000 figure patrick that he's mentioned, that's 50% more than what they promised the nation back in their december 19 manifesto. it's an absolute shambles and that list, if it happens at all and what no one is asking the right question, when's this going to take place? home secretary he said spring well , spring covers three well, spring covers three months. so the back end of spnng months. so the back end of spring is five months away. i promise you there will be a surge of immigration visas
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between now and then. there'll between now and then. there'll be an extra . 6 to 700,000 people be an extra. 6 to 700,000 people granted visas between now and then. that's what will happen. and what he hasn't touched he touched about a review about graduate workers. there'll be a huge influx and lots of the tory party want more and more into national students. it's not going to change a thing. >> suella braverman has hit back.in >> suella braverman has hit back. in fact, just before i came on air suella braverman, i welcome the measures, but we need to be honest. the package is too late. the government, she agrees. further, she says if the salary threshold rise only takes effect won't effect in spring, we won't realistically see its impact until the 2025. she agrees with me. so realistically, for the british public, we've got another of on paper another year of on paper incredibly high net migration and then being told just wait a bit more and you'll see the results. >> so the next immigration numbers come out in may, which is why i think you could have an early may election and it will be as high or higher than this yeah >> okay. >> okay. >> well, you've got your predictions in early there. now, look, despite sunak's
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look, despite rishi sunak's pledge small boats, pledge to stop the small boats, britain is porous. borders continue breached with continue to be breached with a channel sudan in channel migrant from sudan in mocking the government by spraying cash around spraying a wad of cash around his room . his taxpayer funded hotel room. are things you things you love to see, richard, with the cost of migrant hotels recently rising to £8 million a day, i mean, is this just an absolute mockery? people love lost their jobs at these migrant hotels and now there's someone in there living off the taxpayers dime spraying 50s all over the. >> he's one of hundreds in that midlands hotel that i visited. i've spoken to someone who actually in hotel. actually works in that hotel. the is , is that there is the reality is, is that there is a vast amount of illegal working for cash, primarily through the fast food delivery companies is through renting what they call substitute accounts. i talked about it earlier. this is a massive , massive scandal. the massive, massive scandal. the delivery companies are making huge sums. they won't stop it. so he's he's making off very pretty like many others. no costs there . even charging the
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costs there. even charging the batteries on their e—bikes. costs there. even charging the batteries on their e—bikes . yes. batteries on their e—bikes. yes. on the electricity in the hotels at our expense. you couldn't make it up. free electricity to go and earn earn cash and it's an absolute outrage. and omar is literally laughing all the way to the cash in his in his bedroom. >> it does appear so, doesn't it? look, let me know what you think on either of those two migration things. do you think the tories have got their hands tied on all this? do you tied on all of this? do you think nothing more that think there's nothing more that they do? think they could do? do you think labour will be worse? look, let me know. vaiews@gbnews.com. but get mp is get this because the tory mp is aiming legislation aiming to introduce legislation that give government that would give government the power to overturn the wildly unpopular of the ulez unpopular expansion of the ulez emissions is gareth emissions stuff. here is gareth johnson his private member's johnson on his private member's bill, first bill, which has its first reading commons. our reading in the commons. our political christopher political editor christopher hope brought this . hope brought us this. >> we've been constantly talking to transport ministers throughout this whole process, frankly, and the government and conservative party hates the ulez expansion. i don't know of a colleague that will not support this . we're waiting to support this. we're waiting to see whether or not the
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opposition try and talk opposition will try and talk this they then this out. if they don't, then this out. if they don't, then this bill will go through. it will become law and i hope by the summer next year we'll see this ulez expansion overturned. >> tories on a sticky wicket here, though, because. yeah. all right. might be openly right. they might not be openly pro ulez , but on numerous pro ulez, but on numerous occasions encouraged occasions they've encouraged councils things like road councils to do things like road charges variety of charges for a variety of different guises . how do they different guises. how do they deal with this? >> fascinating or >> fascinating. whether or not they support private they support that private member's because if they member's bill, because if they don't, of don't, it's got no chance of going through. the going through. but here's the point. the government's already got ability to stop ulez it got the ability to stop ulez it can issue a regulation based on the original gla rules and it's chosen not to mark harper has declined to do so. so they're on a sticky wicket, but i suspect as usual, because they're weak , as usual, because they're weak, they'll bottle it. they won't support him and it'll disappear beneath the table. >> so you think that he might be hung out to dry? >> be hung out to dry? >> he'll be hung out to dry? absolutely sure. because this government got absolutely sure. because this gov courage got absolutely sure. because this gov courage to got absolutely sure. because this gov courage to do got absolutely sure. because this gov courage to do right ot the courage to do the right thing on behalf of decent,
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ordinary, working families ordinary, hard working families who need a car or a van to get to work to earn some money to pay the bills. >> now, quite >> right now, look, quite quickly, richard, as i understand james cleverly, understand it, james cleverly, our home secretary, will be going to rwanda at some point. very, very soon. okay. and tomorrow , go around that cabinet tomorrow, go around that cabinet table . we're going to be seeing table. we're going to be seeing a discussion about an updated version of this rwanda policy. there are strong rumours that something on that something that might be on that table essentially table is essentially removing the human rights of people who have come to this country illegally we understand illegally as we understand them. and therefore that they and therefore meaning that they could then be deported to rwanda for processing . do you think for processing. do you think they would bottle do they would have the bottle to do that? be morally that? would it be morally unconscionable that? would it be morally uncit'scionable that? would it be morally uncit's a)nable that? would it be morally uncit's a complete red herring. >> it's a complete red herring. herring it's what they call a dead cat to try and distract everybody from the this everybody from the reality. this is make a blind bit is not going to make a blind bit of difference. it's not going to happen.the of difference. it's not going to happen. the lawyers are going to take have done take over as they have done before, end up with the before, which end up with the supreme it's not supreme court. it's just not going to happen. focus on focus on reality. you only stop on the reality. you only stop the you pick them
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the boats when you pick them up and them back to calais and you take them back to calais and dunkirk. >> right. well, look, strong >> all right. well, look, strong views that. richard, thank views on that. richard, thank you very, very much. that's richard say. he's the richard tice. i say. he's the leader reform i just have leader of reform uk. i just have a of reply from a a right of reply from a spokesperson for sadiq khan. this ulez stuff. we're this is on the ulez stuff. we're talking about the mayor has been clear decision to clear that the decision to expand emission expand the ultra low emission zone not an easy zone london wide was not an easy one, was necessary to tackle one, but was necessary to tackle toxic pollution protect toxic air pollution and protect londoners thank londoners health. richard, thank you much. now coming you very, very much. now coming up, reaction cleverly up, more reaction to cleverly supposed migration supposed net migration clampdown. it's got you all going the inbox. go to going in the inbox. i'll go to that shortly, gbviews@gbnews.com. thank you for i will try for all your views. i will try and some of in, but and get some of those in, but doesit and get some of those in, but does it go far enough for cleverly? my panel returned for a but next, as a a feisty debate. but next, as a tory mp declares against the tory mp declares war against the sussexes attempting to have parliament them their parliament strip them of their royal he fighting the royal titles. is he fighting the good fight? my royal master minds lady colin campbell and phil they weigh in with phil dampier. they weigh in with their their life in their own views, their life in mere
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you might have seen headlines in recent days about rishi sunak leaving the door open to nigel farage rejoining the conservative party well, i've gone and got one better a serving tory mp will join me shortly on the return of nigel farage, potentially to the conservatives and even potentially sticking him in the house of lords. a serving tory mp on record saying that. what does that mean for that party? but as the controversy over the naming of the so—called royal racists in the dutch translation of omid scobie's book, end game runs falls on harry and meghan's silence has been deafening. but, but, but this is this is the today line. everyone's been banging about that for the banging on about that for the last and i'm sick of last week or so, and i'm sick of it. but tory bob seely has it. but tory mp bob seely has taken matters into his own hands by law change to strip by seeking a law change to strip harry and meghan of their royal titles and enraged seely said they should not keep the titles and privileges if they trash an institution that plays an important part in our nation's
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life . if sources close to the life. if sources close to the sussexes have stressed that harry and meghan are not behind claims made in scobie's book, but suspect that few people but i suspect that few people believe such denials essentially , this is invoking quite an old law that could fifth them of their titles. law that could fifth them of theirtitles. i'm law that could fifth them of their titles. i'm joined now by my royal master mind, lady colin campbell and phil dampier. thank you very much , lady. see, this you very much, lady. see, this is an interesting development in this story. should mps now step in and take the duke and duchess down a peg, quite literally . i down a peg, quite literally. i well think someone has to. >> i was actually approached nearly two years ago by one of the former private secretaries and asked to start a petition to get parliament to strip them of their titles and i get parliament to strip them of theirtitles and i said i get parliament to strip them of their titles and i said i wasn't going to do it because i thought it was a dangerous precedent to set . and there is a dangerous set. and there is a dangerous precedent involved with this. but the fact of the matter is
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they they are being they will be they they are being they will be the amendment is tabled on the what is really a traitor's amendment . and there is a there amendment. and there is a there is a feeling that harry and meghan have betrayed the interests of the monarchy and the country and the commonwealth. and i think, you know , if the family doesn't do know, if the family doesn't do something, there's no good reason why parliament doesn't do something. and so i actually basically am in favour of it. i think this amid scabies nonsense has been the final straw because there's absolutely no doubt in my mind, and i don't think there's any doubt in anybody with a brain that meghan is behind it. i also understand, in fact, that she wrongfooted harry that harry didn't realise that any of this was coming and that there's all hell to be paying at there's all hell to be paying at the moment in montecito . but the moment in montecito. but that's another matter altogether i >> rather well, well, well. i
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will be returning to that lady c as you can imagine. no doubt. meghan markle will the fact there is no doubt because she does deny having anything to do with this, as did harry. but i'll bring you in now. phil, do you think the mps should step in and try to strip them of their titles or is this just a bit pathetic? yeah >> good evening, patrick. >> good evening, patrick. >> traitors. send them to the tower. that's what we should do. listen, i think a lot of people will sympathise with bob seely. a lot of people were thinking will sympathise with bob seely. a lotshould ple were thinking will sympathise with bob seely. a lotshould be were thinking will sympathise with bob seely. a lotshould be stripped nking will sympathise with bob seely. a lotshould be stripped nkitheir titles. >> they should be removed from the website and all sorts of other things. unfortunately i don't got enough don't think he's got enough parliamentary this parliamentary time to get this through consulted through and dungarees consulted with palace or not. but with the palace or not. but i assume that even did get assume that even if he did get this through parliament in some sort private bill sort of private member's bill using obscure it would using this obscure law, it would have be signed by the have to be signed off by the king. don't think the king king. and i don't think the king would to this because it would want to do this because it go against precedent. >> phil, you the king >> phil, you can't the king can't pick and choose on can't just pick and choose on what he gives royal assent to. surely >> well, ultimately , i think he
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>> well, ultimately, i think he probably can actually mean hasn't been signed off by the king of england. >> i don't think i don't think this is going to get through. i think it's grandstanding by bob seely, although a lot of people will agree with him. >> right now, this >> okay. right now, look, this a couple other royal things i couple of other royal things i want stuck into. so we're want to get stuck into. so we're going the activist and going to the activist and granddaughter nelson mandela granddaughter of nelson mandela who's the row with who's waded into the row with well, with this message . well, with this message. >> i believe harry and meghan had to find their own voice in a similar way that granddad had to find his own voice when he was he had had to run away from an arranged marriage. so they should be given like any other person in room to voice out whatever their misgivings are . whatever their misgivings are. >> lady says in dilerkot mandela. right. do the couple need space to find their voice? just just like nelson mandela ? just just like nelson mandela? we >> well, i'm afraid that president mandela's granddaughter has totally missed
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the point. he was advocating for a cause with justice and against apartheid . harry and meghan are apartheid. harry and meghan are advocating fighting for a cause of greed, injustice , case of greed, injustice, case against the royal family against the british nation . there is the british nation. there is absolutely no doubt that they have fabricated an awful lot of this nonsense for their own financial and reputational gain , financial and reputational gain, and it is mischief making of the highest order. and i do wish that people like nelson mandela's granddaughter would bearin mandela's granddaughter would bear in mind that just because meghan wants to play the race card doesn't mean that people of a similar background should be supporting her. the problem with with that attitude , dude, is with that attitude, dude, is that's why mugabe and zuma were able to enjoy abusing their people for the length of time
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that they did . i mean, her her that they did. i mean, her her hypothesis is totally untenable . hypothesis is totally untenable. >> all right. now, look, i just want to just very quickly, phil, get your view on this, because the king and queen, prince and princess of wales, they're on the invitation list to a wedding of prince harry's best pal, hugh groves snr. i believe he's also the the godfather , i the godchild, the godfather, i should say. yes. of archie . but should say. yes. of archie. but harry and meghan aren't invited at what's going on here. is this at what's going on here. is this a snub to harry and meghan? what's all this about, phil? >> yes, great story, actually broke over the weekend in a couple of the papers, the duke of westminster, who is one of the britain's richest men he's decided not to invite, according to and meghan, to to reports, harry and meghan, to his wedding next june . the his wedding next june. the saying on online tonight that it might be because it brings back memories of his sister when she got married in 2004. and it was very embarrassing for all concerned because charles wasn't really allowed to take camilla because the and prince because the queen and prince philip and so he
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philip were going. and so he doesn't want a repeat of that. and embarrassing for and it's very embarrassing for him he's one of the few him because he's one of the few people who's stayed in contact with meghan with with harry and meghan and with william he's william and kate. but he's obviously it's obviously decided that it's going wedding into going to turn his wedding into a circus. they out . circus. so they are out. >> well, there we go. look, both of you, another sparkling edition royal edition there at the royal masterminds colin masterminds as lady colin campbell dampier. thank campbell and phil dampier. thank you , very much. now, coming you very, very much. now, coming up , we cross live to australia up, we cross live to australia to find out if nigel farage remains . as in the i'm remains. as in the i'm a celebrity jungle, but also when he does come home, would he be an asset to a new look conservative party red wall tory mp jonathan gillis says that he won't only welcome nigel back to the party, he actually thinks he should be admitted to the house of lords. standby for that rather explosive interview. but next, james cleverly has pledged to reduce net migration by 300,000, hold the confetti . i 300,000, hold the confetti. i say it needs to be aiming for at least double that figure . big least double that figure. big views from myself, big debate from my panel. don't go anywhere. have we sold britain
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down the river that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers sponsors of weather on . gb news. sponsors of weather on. gb news. >> hi there. it's aidan mcgivern here from the met office with the gb news forecast. it's been a bit of a grim day for many parts of the uk. the rain eases over the next 24 hours only gradually. however and then clearer weather clearer and colder weather returns uk, albeit returns to the uk, albeit briefly, before further areas of low pressure come our way later this week. so the first area of low pressure is clearing. it's clearing to the southeast, wrapped around it a number of occluded fronts. means occluded fronts. that means bands continue for bands of rain continue for southern scotland. northern england into the midlands , parts england into the midlands, parts of wales and the south—west. also seeing a number of showers overnight. but the more persistent rain is gradually easing . northern scotland, easing. northern scotland, meanwhile, sees quite low temperatures overnight temperatures overnight temperatures down to minus five celsius in places and with some showers feeding in overnight as well, there'll be a few slippery
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surfaces. first thing on tuesday to watch out for. but that's where the brightest weather will be and that brighter weather will spread into southern scotland . much of northern scotland. much of northern ireland, england and ireland, western england and wales by the afternoon. central and eastern england still subject to outbreaks of rain or showers. even into the afternoon. and staying cool here with from the north sea. with breeze from the north sea. but then the rain clears widely and an overnight frost returns to many places by the start of wednesday. some freezing fog patches as well. but actually it's a bright day for in it's a bright day for many in the east with wetter weather returning by the afternoon on into west. that wet weather into the west. that wet weather turns to snow over northern hills overnight. but milder conditions return to all later. >> looks like things are heating up . boxt boilers spot answers of up. boxt boilers spot answers of weather on gb news as
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well. >> it's 10 pm. and this is patrick christys tonight. wow we've got illegal immigrants throwing wads of cash around taxpayer funded hotels. and today the government has admitted that it's happy with net migration at around 400,000 people a year. it's a cock up of epic proportions. the fallout will be massive, but elsewhere, sunak says that nigel farage could rejoin the tory party and now serving tory mps are queuing up to follow him into battle . up to follow him into battle. >> i do hope that he comes forward and he joins and i'd be very happy to welcome him. >> i mean, it sounds like you think might make quite a good think he might make quite a good leader. lots more that . leader. yes, lots more of that. plus, i will take you live to australia with our man on the ground, adam cherry. will, nigel survive another night in the jungle? i've got tomorrow's newspaper pages today newspaper front pages today and some inside the some stories from inside the book you as well. so you'll book for you as well. so you'll be ahead of the game with my press pack. carole malone benjamin butterworth and belinda de legend de lucy. now fleet street legend kelvin mackenzie also joins to
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us get stuck into whether the bbc licence fee should go up. this is patrick christys tonight and . and we're live. get the emails coming in gbviews@gbnews.com has mass migration made britain better or worse at gb news on twitter we get stuck into that after your headunes. headlines. >> patrick thank you and good evening to you. well, let's bnng evening to you. well, let's bring you some breaking news that's come to us in last that's come to us in the last half hour or so. mps have voted in the house commons tonight in the house of commons tonight at 246 to 242, narrowly in favour of establishing a new body to help compensate infected blood victims from the 70s and 80s, a cheer rang out as the government was narrowly defeated by just four votes to help
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thousands of people who contracted hiv and hepatitis. having been given contaminated blood products in the 70s and 80s, the department of health saying it was sympathetic to the strength of feeling, but weighed up it wouldn't be right to pre—empt the findings of the ongoing inquiry into the infected blood scandal. but nevertheless, that has been voted in a new body to handle those compensation claims for people affected by the infected blood scandal. people affected by the infected blood scandal . now, the people affected by the infected blood scandal. now, the home secretary said today 300,000 fewer people will be able to come to the uk each year under his new plans to bring down legal migration overseas workers and students will be stopped from bringing their family members to the uk with them. the minimum salary required for a skilled worker will also rise to £38,700. and that comes in next spring. jane james cleverly stood up in the house of commons this afternoon, saying the measures are the best way forward for the british taxpayer. >> it's about making sure that
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we control immigration in that we control immigration in that we stop abuses of the system , we stop abuses of the system, but we also protect the economics that underpin our society and our country. and also of course, support the people who work in our health and social care sectors. >> james cleverly. but the shadow environment secretary, steve reed, hit back. he said tax payers have heard it all before . before. >> how many times have we heard a succession of conservative home secretaries stand up in the chamber of the house of commons and tell us how much they're going decrease migration by going to decrease migration by only see it soar in the only to see it soar in the following the following few months? now the figure that james cleverly is talking about there, even if he manages to cut it the amount that he's just it by the amount that he's just said, and i doubt that given their track record, even then migration would be around double the level that it was in december 2019 when they told us it was going, they were going to cut it. >> steve reed speaking there now news came through to us a couple
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of ago that a british of hours ago that a british israeli had been killed israeli teenager had been killed in while fighting for the in gaza while fighting for the israel defence forces . 19 year israel defence forces. 19 year old binyamin needham died yesterday after only being in the gaza strip for two days. the idf says he was killed in action and they promoted him to the rank of sergeant after his death. is saying death. israeli media is saying he was born in england but moved to israel with his family when he eight years . old prices he was eight years. old prices of petrol and diesel continue to fall, but fuel retailers are refusing to pass on the full savings to motorists . that's savings to motorists. that's according to the rac . the according to the rac. the motoring organisation says the average price of petrol fell by seven and a half pence a litre in november. but the rac believes it's still £0.10 a litre more than it should be now. the uk's only giant pandas are currently on their way back to china after spending 12 years in scotland . edinburgh zoo's in scotland. edinburgh zoo's star attraction is yang guang
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and tian tian, also known as sunshine and sweetie came to edinburgh zoo in 2011. it was hoped they'd breed while at the zoo, but they didn't produce a cub . visitors were given a final cub. visitors were given a final chance to say farewell to the bears on thursday. bon voyage . bears on thursday. bon voyage. this is gb news across the uk on tv in your car , on digital tv in your car, on digital radio, and on your smart speaker by saying play gb news. this is britain's news channel . britain's news channel. >> well, the government is happy with net migration . of between with net migration. of between 372,000 and 445,000 a year. that's the story. okay. that's the line that people seem to have missed today with james cleverly's speech. that's a broken manifesto pledge. that's another broken promise. that is another broken promise. that is a broken country. the home secretary unveiled a five point plan to cut net migration . some plan to cut net migration. some elements of this were put
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forward by suella braverman more than a year ago . some were than a year ago. some were put forward immigration forward by our immigration minister, robert jenrick a year ago. so here go. here's the ago. so here we go. here's the grand plan to rearrange the decking the titanic. care decking on the titanic. care workers bringing workers banned from bringing dependents, the minimum skilled worker salary raised to £38,000, ending the 20% discount on minimum salaries for foreign workers and the occupation sources list to be reviewed. the minimum income requirement for bringing in dependents will go up to 38 grand, and there will be a review of the graduate visa route, a review just a review. nothing actually taking place , nothing actually taking place, but a review. good. he says this will reduce net migration by 300,000. but crucially , reducing 300,000. but crucially, reducing 672,000 by 300,000 is still 372,000 net every single year. if we take the previous figures of 745,000, then that's 445,000. in the 2019 manifesto, the tories promised to reduce net migration . at the time, net
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migration. at the time, net migration. at the time, net migration stood at 226,000, giving an effect of target to hit during this parliament. but now clearly the government has said it is willing to accept somewhere in the region of 400,000, possibly not even that shy of half a million. that is more than the city of coventry. every single year. that is not a victory. that is not being tough on immigration. the fact is that we have politicians who have the balls to lie to the public, to break promises to the public, and to make the public poorer. per capita, a result of the giant net migration ponzi scheme that we're all involved in. but they do not have the balls to build houses on the green build more houses on the green belt to accommodate people. they don't the balls to do big don't have the balls to do big infrastructure projects. they don't to confront don't have the balls to confront the changes that are the cultural changes that we are all seeing. the net migration in 1992 was 49,000. 30 years later, it's 750,000. polling data shows that 53% of brits want an immediate five year freeze on
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immigration. so we can better absorb the numbers we've got 42% of all brits think immigration is making britain worse . you is making britain worse. you look at videos a bit like this on social media, don't you? summertime seen in 1950s britain, you see a lot of these kind of videos online, don't you? there we go. just drink that in people. pump that into my veins. hey, now even left wing activists and commentate actors are pointing out brits is general decline like paul embry, a regular on this channel very much of the left, a unionist, an activist. there was quite a bit about the 50s that was pretty dismal. but it's hard to watch old films like this. the order, calmness and general civility and not conclude have and not conclude that we have fallen quite a bit. i look at james cleverly's announcement today and i'll tell you what's happened. our politicians have lined themselves up at britain's border and they've taken the knee. but to respond now, i'm joined again by daily express columnist carole malone, journalist and broadcaster
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benjamin butterworth, former brexit party mep belinda de lucy, belinda , i'll start with lucy, belinda, i'll start with you. do you think we have taken the knee when it comes to mass migration? >> completely. i think both the labour and the conservative party have hooked our party have have hooked our businesses onto cheap labour, so they're now so addicted to it. it's reset our country on a path of utter and total dependence andifs of utter and total dependence and it's a failure of the conservative government that we have to have high immigration for our national health and our care homes because they fail to invest their own invest and train their own domestic . yes, they've domestic workforce. yes, they've thrown scrapheap and thrown brits on a scrapheap and further them by further immobilised them by having this endless supply of cheap labour and i don't think many people realise how scandalous the conservative policies were on dependence. 120,000 dependents came in last year 70, 75% of which didn't don't work . they rely on don't work. they rely on resources provided for them. it's only 25. they're just dependents of those coming in. and it's scandalous that businesses were allowed to pay
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less than 20% of the going rate to foreign labour, undercut , to foreign labour, undercut, undercutting british jobs. this is conserved native policies, they've created it and now they think it's a win by saying, oh, we'll reduce it down to about 400,000. it's lying, it's deceitful. i think it's incredibly arrogant to not stand up and apologise to the british people . james cleverly should people. james cleverly should have stood up and said, have stood up today and said, i am sorry, this is us. it is am sorry, this is on us. it is our fault. we've betrayed you and made far more stronger policy decisions. and made far more stronger pol benjamin,1s. and made far more stronger polbenjamin,1s. you feel >> benjamin, do you feel betrayed? and on the scrapheap? no >> no, i don't. i think the one thing that government has thing that the government has been pragmatic about is the need for workers. what's for migrant workers. what's often in this conversation often lost in this conversation is have a quite swiftly is that we have a quite swiftly reducing size of our workforce in this country, a much bigger proportion of the population is a pensioner and we have a very low birth rate, which means it's only going to fall faster and faster if we don't have enough workers. we don't have a big enough economy to fund things like the and to fund like the nhs and to fund pensions. have have pensions. we have when we have plenty of workers. >> benjamin we do not. we have a
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million vacancies, 1.2 million job vacancies in this country that a lot of brits don't want to take. we have 2.5 million people on sickness and disability benefits, a large number of whom should not be on those benefits. and i tell you what, you'd have far more people on sickness benefits and too ill to if we didn't have all to work if we didn't have all the migrants in our the migrants working in our health service and they announced keep raping announced we can't keep raping other countries of their workforce and bringing them into this country, it's morally wrong to take them away from poorer countries them here. countries and bring them here. >> now that cheap labour. let me ask you this question. >> you it sound like i >> you make it sound like i never make one. patrick no, no, of course. >> interesting point . >> that's an interesting point. >> that's an interesting point. >> for the country. >> how do you how do you feel about the idea that britain is essentially pillaging the world because a lazy and because we've got a lazy and we want cheap? because we've got a lazy and we warfirst cheap? because we've got a lazy and we warfirst of1eap? because we've got a lazy and we warfirst of all, ? because we've got a lazy and we warfirst of all, we don't have >> first of all, we don't have a lazy population. i don't think you policy. you should do lazy policy. >> we have we have a what? >> we have we have a what? >> she said it anyway. what we have 1 million nobody have 1 million jobs that nobody wants. the fact is that i think it's unavoidable that country
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it's unavoidable that a country like going to have like britain is going to have much higher salaries than the sorts of countries middle sorts of countries in the middle east you're east and africa that you're thinking they from. thinking of that they come from. but the fact is, had say but the fact is, if you had say that every has to earn that every migrant has to earn 38 30 8500 pounds, then that 38 or 30 8500 pounds, then that means have no nurses, no means we'll have no nurses, no midwives, junior doctors midwives, no junior doctors coming country. and coming into this country. and can add one fact on this can i just add one fact on this debate can i just add one fact on this detbecause because you did this >> because because you did this before. no got a word before. no one got a word in edgeways. let's talk what edgeways. let's talk about what was done today. this is was actually done today. this is too too late. is too little, too late. this is all about the tories panic over the election. suella the upcoming election. suella has telling two has been telling us for two years that this has got to happen. is cleverly's happen. this is cleverly's policy patrick mentioned policy as patrick mentioned before, haven't done it before, and they haven't done it and panicking and what before, and they haven't done it an yeah, there needs to be a hard because we simply don't hard cap because we simply don't have the houses or the infrastructure. we have never had people in this had so many people in this country and our country ever. and yet our economy we economy is still sluggish. we still poor waiting lists. still have poor waiting lists. things getting better things aren't getting better because we've got millions more people country. people in this country. something is disconnected and
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it's government's failure it's this government's failure to train and invest in our own and the other point, karel made it very good. one, we are it very, very good. one, we are literally stripping poorer countries of their nurses and doctors. so these bleeding heart liberals are like open the doors. actually cruel doors. they are actually cruel ling preventing ling cruelly preventing developing countries from developing countries from developing they can't be developing because they can't be bothered to change the culture in this country. >> can i say how the guts to have a freeze on migration for two years, three years, five years? >> why not? so that we can assimilate the people we already had housed, get them had get them housed, get them in? integration start in? no integration policy, start again. say put again. can i just say if i put that same argument back to beunda that same argument back to belinda with what britain did when starved countries of when it starved countries of workers money in the workers and of money in the empire, say the exact opposite. >> go the empire would opposite. >> the the empire would opposite. >> the exact the empire would opposite. >> the exact opposite 3ire would opposite. >> the exact opposite aboutyuld say the exact opposite about that same situation. >> so i can take that with a pinch salt. let say one pinch of salt. let me say one other point, which is that this policy about 38 grand you have to to stay here. this to earn to stay here. this appues to earn to stay here. this applies british who applies to british people who fall with a foreign fall in love with a foreign national. if you're a national. so if you're in a relationship right now with someone a british someone who's not a british citizen don't earn citizen and they don't earn 38,500 they won't be
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38,500 pounds, they won't be allowed so i think allowed to live here. so i think that an ugly policy. benjamin that is an ugly policy. benjamin when you're married, you will have privilege. >> that is not enough. >> benjamin. i am married to a foreigner, and that's just not. what if he didn't earn 38? k he wouldn't be entitled to british. >> he didn't earn 26 k so there you are. >> you're ruining the policy. you support would have stopped your would very your own husband. it would very much everybody. >> coming the uk's most >> wow. coming up, the uk's most entertaining paper of you with this okay. and you won't be this lot. okay. and you won't be bored. my panel of news experts will through latest will chew through the latest headlines, the press. headlines, hot off the press. but next, we go down under gb news. reporter adam cherry, who will reveal if nigel farage will remain leave the i'm remain or leave in the i'm a celebrity jungle. plus, should nigel get the david cameron treatment become as treatment and become a lord as part sensational return part of the sensational return to the tories? don't you dare move. that's not my opinion. that's the opinion tory mp that's the opinion of tory mp jonathan my interview jonathan gullis. my interview with him is coming up shortly when go under .
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weekend at 3 pm. on gb news, the people's channel, britain's news channel . news channel. >> victory. okay now we can cross live to gb news. reporter adam cherry with the latest from nigel farage in the i'm a celebrity jungle. adam. i think we might have some good news. >> yeah, big news from the jungle. patrick nella rose has become the next person to leave the jungle. so nigel has survived another day in camp. it
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is nella who is going home today . it turns out when you're offended by some everyone sneezing in the camp, eventually the public get tired of it. in the public get tired of it. in the last few minutes, nella has been reacting to her own elimination and she had this to say to ant and dec . quite a say to ant and dec. quite a revealing moment. i'm not usually put in situations where people don't come from the same walk of life as me. i think nigel is an amazing person until he speaks about what he really believes in. well, eventually people just get a little bit exhausted of it. patrick so she's the second contestant after frankie yesterday to go home. so all eyes on nigel for the next few days. you might have noticed actually in today's episode again, he barely got any airtime. he was. it was a blink and you miss it episode for nigel. so again, very interesting. but nonetheless, he survives and we keep our eye on on tonight's and tomorrow's episode excuse me. >> yeah absolutely. he might >> yeah absolutely. and he might not got much airtime, but not have got much airtime, but adam, a little birdie tells me
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that in light of nigel not doing any bushtucker trials and not doing anything like that , you doing anything like that, you were, you were thinking of doing something. am i right? here what's going . on what's going. on >> sorry, patrick, can you just repeat that again for me? i couldn't quite hear you say that again. i think you were thinking. >> i think. i think you were. you were considering taking part in some kind of bushtucker trial yourself, weren't you? >> i, i was, yes. >> patrick, absolutely. and if i can just get my prop over here to me now, nick, behind the camera is to to feed camera is going to going to feed it me. now, this is it to me. now, this this is live. this right in front of live. this is right in front of you . so here we go. we're going you. so here we go. we're going to a creepy crawly live on to eat a creepy crawly live on camera. a cricket . here camera. this is a cricket. here we lovely stuff. i've heard we go. lovely stuff. i've heard these are great delicacies . these are great delicacies. >> oh, he's gone for it. that he's gone for it. he's chewing away for it. it looks awful dry , away for it. it looks awful dry, i think, isn't it, adam? oh, my. yeah yeah, that was delicious. >> fantastic . >> fantastic. >> fantastic. >> good stuff, mate. fantastic.
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you were no stars for the camp, andifs you were no stars for the camp, and it's only come at the expense of your own dignity on national television. adam cherry there, ladies and gentlemen, a man quite literally nothing man with quite literally nothing to lose. adam, i will see you man with quite literally nothing to lo:on.\dam, i will see you man with quite literally nothing to loson. thanki will see you man with quite literally nothing to loson. thank youl see you man with quite literally nothing to loson. thank you very you man with quite literally nothing to loson. thank you very much . later on. thank you very much. i'll go. we go now. back in blighty, a new poll has shown that rishi is lowest that rishi sunak is lowest satisfaction rating. can i just say hang on a minute. faith restored in the british public. nella you pop this gen z nella off you pop this gen z stuff about being permanently offended everything and being offended by everything and being so self entitled and even down to deciding that the best thing for the camp would be to get rid of the two people who know how to cook and put them on pot washing duty so she could, you know, square a grudge with fred and with nigel. i just think this what happens, right? this is what happens, right? this happens when, you this is what happens when, you know, a kind of entitled closeted gen is meat the real closeted gen z is meat the real world. so. done. british world. so. well done. british public. nigel survives another day back blighty. a new poll public. nigel survives another day shown blighty. a new poll public. nigel survives another day shown thatjhty. a new poll public. nigel survives another day shown that rishia new poll public. nigel survives another day shown that rishi sunakpoll public. nigel survives another day shown that rishi sunak asl has shown that rishi sunak as his rating his lowest satisfaction rating to . he's refused to rule to date. he's refused to rule out the possibility of nigel farage joining the tory party
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when he comes out the jungle. when he comes out of the jungle. this after political this comes after political stalwarts stanley johnson insisted that the former ukip leader could help turn around the party's flagging fortunes. so with nigel's imaceleb stint continuing for another day, at least i caught up with the tory mp, jonathan gullies earlier and asked if gb news is very own brexit broker could be the man to save the future of the conservative party. lots of talk about nigel farage joining the conservative party do you think he should? i'd love to see it. patrick. >> personally, i think nigel has an awful lot to offer. number one, he is a big voice on the key issues like immigration that we know are a huge number one, if not number two issue for conservative voters, particularly those in 2019, and particularly those in 2019, and particularly those in the red wall like stoke on trent kidsgrove and talk. i'm proud to serve. secondly, i think he's actually an asset across the blue wall and the red wall. in essence, he's able to communicate in a way that many politicians aren't able to probably having
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probably no one closer to having the ability other than boris johnson able to get johnson to be able to get a message across, across clearly and concisely. so i really do hope that he comes forward and he joins. and i'd be very happy to welcome him. >> i mean, it sounds like you think he might make quite a good leader. look nigel lot. leader. look like nigel a lot. >> course, wants to >> and of course, if he wants to become of the become leader of the conservative party, he's got a long way to go. got to become a member, to find member, got to find a constituency, run elected. constituency, run to be elected. >> he's then got to get through the first of electorate, the first round of electorate, which party and which is the party mps and then he's got the membership, he's got to win the membership, although think that would although i think that would probably easier than probably be an easier one than the mps round personally, but i've got no gripes i've certainly got no gripes about nigel. >> say, joining the >> as i say, joining the conservative i also conservative party, but i also respect we've got respect the fact that we've got rishi as the leader of our rishi sunak as the leader of our party right now. >> okay. i mean, would you like to see him even not as as to see him maybe even not as as prime but a couple prime minister but in a couple of positions that you of other positions that you mentioned, migration, for example, today with mentioned, migration, for exampcleverly today with mentioned, migration, for exampcleverly saying:oday with mentioned, migration, for exampcleverly saying he'd with mentioned, migration, for exampcleverly saying he'd be :h james cleverly saying he'd be quite happy to see net migration reduce mean, reduce by 300,000. i mean, i think would still us at think that would still put us at around the 372,000 a year. mark.
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i think it's fair to say that nigel wouldn't settle that nigel wouldn't settle for that kind would you kind of stuff. how would you feel that? feel about that? >> well, first of all, i'd be delighted with fact that delighted with the fact that james cleverly has announced the announcements the announcements he made today. the new conservatives, which i co—founded with kruger and co—founded with danny kruger and miriam for 12 miriam cates for a 12 point plan. some those have been plan. some of those have been adopted the government today. adopted by the government today. so know that we're so i'm glad to know that we're being listened to in that regard so i'm glad to know that we're bbuti listened to in that regard so i'm glad to know that we're bbut of stened to in that regard so i'm glad to know that we're bbut of course to in that regard so i'm glad to know that we're bbut of course wen that regard so i'm glad to know that we're bbut of course we can't regard so i'm glad to know that we're bbut of course we can't allowd . but of course we can't allow 300 plus stores to be net migration. we do need to actually deliver tens of actually deliver on the tens of thousands and maybe just thousands and maybe maybe just maybe, the conservatives put nigel farage in house of nigel farage in the house of lords we've now got lord lords and we've now got lord cameron as foreign secretary. so i've got no issue lord i've got no issue with lord farage home secretary the farage as home secretary in the future any other future or in any other department, that was department, if that was an easier to get into easier way to get him into government because government quicker, because i think take no nonsense. think he would take no nonsense. he would take no prisoners, he would the civil service would call out the civil service for at times, for what they are at times, which are blockers to actual government policy and make sure that the that we deliver on the priorities british priorities of the british public. priorities of the british putyou mentioned that there >> you mentioned that there might a bit pushback when might be a bit of pushback when it comes to you becoming leader of conservative maybe
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of the conservative party. maybe from mps. why do from conservative mps. why do you think that is ? you think that is? >> i think it's fair to say, patrick, the one nation caucus in the conservative party is probably the largest caucus within the conservative parliament party. and whilst i've got many friends who are very good conservative lives in that area, i do find that they tend to fall into believing that centrism is everything and that centrism is everything and that centrism is everything and that centrism is where we should remain. and my big issue with thatis remain. and my big issue with that is that centrism more that is that centrism is more about tinkering actually about tinkering than actually radical and radical radical change and radical progress, which is what the british public voted for in 2016 when they voted for brexit and what they voted for under boris johnson it came to johnson in 2019. when it came to the levelling up agenda and really bringing about new really bringing about a new way forward, public forward, investing in our public services, also giving people services, but also giving people tough law and order and tough border control to really demonstrate that britain is a mighty nation once again. so i think, sadly, too many of my colleagues fall into what i call apologetic conservatism , you apologetic conservatism, you know, almost feeling that we have to be liked nice all the have to be liked or nice all the time . and ultimately in time. and ultimately in politics, make tough
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politics, you have to make tough decisions. can't always decisions. you can't always be liked you won't make the liked. you won't always make the popular decision . but most of popular decision. but most of the you're trying to make the time you're trying to make the time you're trying to make the think the right one. and i think that's what unafraid to do. >> do you think nigel could win you a general election? >> i think as we fare against sir keir starmer, i think that we could win an election with nigel. with rishi sunak out with whoever. because ultimately i think we've got a labour think that we've got a labour party incredibly weak, party that's incredibly weak, that policies . you that has no actual policies. you know, watched yvette cooper know, i've watched yvette cooper today, talk today, patrick trying to talk tough immigration. ian tough about immigration. ian trying to, i suppose , bring her trying to, i suppose, bring her thatcherite credentials like sir keir shamelessly at keir starmer did shamelessly at the . but you those the weekend. but you watch those back benches, they were squirming all over the place because don't want to talk because they don't want to talk about they about immigration because they actually it, actually have no issue with it, because they support free because they still support free movement. something sir because they still support free mov starmer'yomething sir because they still support free movstarmer campaigned sir because they still support free movstarmer campaigned fbring keir starmer campaigned to bring back leader of the labour back as leader of the labour party back in 2020. so you know, at the end the day, i think at the end of the day, i think we've huge opportunity we've got a huge opportunity here on a labour party here to pounce on a labour party that very much that is still just very much saying we're not the conservatives offering conservatives without offering any the big any solutions to the big problems day. and problems of the day. and
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effectively find problems of the day. and e1way vely find problems of the day. and e1way of .y find problems of the day. and e1way of trying find problems of the day. and e1way of trying to find problems of the day. and e1way of trying to rejoin find problems of the day. and e1way of trying to rejoin lheid problems of the day. and e1way of trying to rejoin the eu a way of trying to rejoin the eu through the back door in order to try window dress and make to try and window dress and make us believe that they're doing something else. you know, something else. so, you know, i think that you know, we're in a really against really good spot against the labour is weak, labour party that is very weak, but we haven't done enough but we just haven't done enough things to convince the british pubuc things to convince the british public and public that we're credible and we're deliver. that we're able to deliver. that is the of my frustration right how. >> now. >> well, well, well, well. nigel farage end up the lords farage end up in the lords assembly where he now. assembly where he is now. if you're joining he's you're just joining us, he's still in the jungle. nella rose booted out. absolute shame. oh well, was tory well, never mind. that was tory mp jonathan gillis coming up with an increase to the bbc licence fee in the offing. would you be to prepared pay £173 a year services from our state year for services from our state broadcaster , our fleet street broadcaster, our fleet street icon kelvin mackenzie? he certainly isn't , although i went certainly isn't, although i went to the bar with him once and isn't willing to pay for anything. but next the uk's liveliest pay review. my panel are ready and waiting to tear into the front some of into the front pages. some of them landed here them have just landed here in front it's quite front of me and it's quite spicy. has keir starmer made yet another certainly
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radio. >> let's bring you tomorrow's news tonight now in the most entertaining paper review anywhere on telly , the very anywhere on telly, the very first front pages have just been delivered in my press pack . we delivered in my press pack. we go in with the metro. richie raises the bar. tories fight net migration crisis , earn £38,700 migration crisis, earn £38,700 or no visa for care staff can earn less by not but cannot bnng earn less by not but cannot bring families. new rwanda deal promised by spring to stop channel boats and tomorrow i will have a big update for you on that rwanda plan. we go to the express now. tougher rules will slash migration by 300,000. enoughis will slash migration by 300,000. enough is enough, says home secretary. skilled worker visa rises to £38,700. there's also some guff from adrian chiles . we some guff from adrian chiles. we go to the telegraph migrant kerbs to cut arrivals by quarter
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cleverly tackles crisis. yep, fine . some of the stories on fine. some of the stories on there as well on the telegraph. hamas traders make millions shorting israel investors with pnor shorting israel investors with prior knowledge of october the 7th acted. it's quite interesting report that actually and basically made millions out of the conflict starmer admits £28 billion green vow may not be affordable and we've spoken a heck of a lot tonight about the net migration stuff. so i'm going to focus on the news story, the story that will no doubt be leading on breakfast tomorrow and stuff like that. this starmer admitting the this is starmer admitting the £28 billion green vow a bit more detail for you this sir keir detail for you on this sir keir starmer he starmer has signalled that he may a flagship pledge may not meet a flagship pledge to invest £28 billion a year in green projects within the first five years in number 10, and that's according to, of course, the telegraph. the labour leader said the plan to spend the vast sum of money on clean energy projects will only happen if economic growth is strong enough carol. another keir starmer flip
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flop. >> this is par for the course for mr flip flop. what do you doesis for mr flip flop. what do you does is he puts a policy out there. he gauges what the reaction is going to to be it. and if it's not very good and people have made it really clear in this country that while they support policies, they support green policies, they do not kind of money not support the kind of money that and the tories that labour and the tories had said they going to spend. said they were going to spend. so course he's just adjusted so of course he's just adjusted his now. is what he his policy now. this is what he always he i mean, he did always does. he i mean, he did the same nationalisation. the same about nationalisation. he does it with every policy. it's called mr flip it's why he's called mr flip flop. you know, he's only saying this because he's trying to this because he's he's trying to gauge mood every gauge the public mood on every subject. the subject subject. and this is the subject that really, really annoys people. so but the their fiscal policy policy is policy labour's fiscal policy is spend. policy labour's fiscal policy is spend . that's what he said six spend. that's what he said six months ago. >> i mean benjamin this is i mean, it's beyond a joke now. is it just beyond a joke? everything he says, he then comes out and does the opposite of it all over your face. comes out and does the opposite of ihisl over your face. comes out and does the opposite of i his facer your face. comes out and does the opposite of ihis face is our face. comes out and does the opposite of ihis face is what'se. comes out and does the opposite of ihis face is what's happening >> his face is what's happening is the wind in your finally is the wind in your face finally had the it looks had a stroke at the it looks like you have on this show. >> look, carol says his policy
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is while while criticising is spend while while criticising him won't spend him for saying he won't spend i'm six months ago. i'm sorry six months ago. >> he's said policy but >> he's said his policy but extended a question extended look, it's a question of now he's saying extended look, it's a question ofis now he's saying extended look, it's a question ofis now now he's saying extended look, it's a question ofis now he'siow he's saying extended look, it's a question ofis now he's saying s saying extended look, it's a question ofis now he's saying he's'ing extended look, it's a question ofis now he's saying he's not it is now he's saying he's not going to turn the spending taps on because he knows that's what frightens people. >> question of >> it is a question of credibility. when he says credibility. and when he says that to debt down, that he has to get debt down, which what we desperately which is what we desperately need country, saying need as a country, he's saying that don't grow the that if we don't grow the economy enough, then there might not available to not be £28 billion available to borrow to invest. you borrow in order to invest. you tell me this isn't what other planets should you be on say planets should you be on to say that a man vying to be prime minister says if we don't get the growing enough, the economy growing enough, we won't to money won't have as much to money spend isn't that what spend for that? isn't that what his for? his plan for? >> we've asked him >> because we've asked him a million times and he doesn't have his non—dom cut have one. what's his non—dom cut the status and stop kids the non—dom status and stop kids going to private school? >> going to >> that's that's going to frankly, pay for everything frankly, i'll pay for everything non—dom. having frankly, i'll pay for everything non-starmer having frankly, i'll pay for everything non-starmer over having frankly, i'll pay for everything non-starmer over chaosng keir starmer over the chaos we've the past we've experienced in the past practice that one very good actually on actually come up with these on the overestimate my the spot. you overestimate my research. no, but look, you know, last year, liz truss borrowed billions pounds borrowed billions of pounds for tax cuts wealthiest and
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tax cuts for the wealthiest and didn't as her didn't so much as inform her cabinet advance. rather cabinet in advance. i'd rather have minister that says have a prime minister that says we be careful with we have to be careful with borrowing. liz truss that borrowing. then. liz truss that tanked economy tanked the entire economy because she borrowed left, right and she on and centre like she was on a spending you talk about spending benjamin you talk about careful borrowing. careful about borrowing. >> was labour who wanted >> it was labour who wanted longer, harder lockdowns, which would economy would have crucified our economy even than it is now. even worse than it is now. >> tories, their actions, >> the tories, their actions, not theirs. >> got diarrhoea. >> we've got diarrhoea. >> we've got diarrhoea. >> got time for another >> we've got time for another front wallop. comes front page wallop. here comes the mirror. farage the mirror. okay, so farage george kip . this is on george makes you kip. this is on the front the mirror. i'm the front of the mirror. i'm a celeb insiders brand. no personality waste personality politician. a waste of money. nigel farage has been dubbed one of the army celebrities most boring ever contestants , a waste of £1.5 contestants, a waste of £1.5 million. this is according to the mirror show. team say he's too dull. i'm going to pour a bucket of cold urine over this mate because as i'm sure they must know, we here at gb news are more than aware of a few things going on behind the scenes, which we'll be fascinating to see whether or not nigel farage comes out and reveals all of this. we know for
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a fact that there are things being spoken about in the jungle that are not making onto air that are not making it onto air on and i can't wait for the on itv, and i can't wait for the mirror to end up finding out all about that. but it does appear that this mirror, daily that this mirror, the daily mirror , carol, the same paper mirror, carol, the same paper that had to, you know, kind of nobody, labour mps calling for nigel to be booted out of the jungle for his views. they also ran a poll in the mirror not so long ago that made nigel one of the favourites amongst their readers. maybe they just can't accept actually all accept that he's actually all right. well the thing is, we're not people don't know him not people who don't know him and we know what he's like. >> people who don't know that i'm saying it because the editing on editing going on on i'm a celebrity ferocious. know editing going on on i'm a celetwe ferocious. know editing going on on i'm a celetwe knowocious. know editing going on on i'm a celetwe know thatis. know editing going on on i'm a celetwe know that if know editing going on on i'm a celetwe know that if he know editing going on on i'm a celetwe know that if he saysn that. we know that if he says something outrageous or controversial about brexit or politics, cut politics, they're going to cut it the people, it because the people, the people signed up for people who signed him up for a million and a half quid are different from the people who are editing. so are doing the editing. so the people the editing don't people doing the editing don't like it's a bit like his politics. it's a bit like his politics. it's a bit like the coutts bank scenario all over again. making all over again. people making political him.
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political judgements on him. >> you just think >> i mean, do you just think they got him to on try and make him out to be this kind of like kooky little closeted racist? and turns out he's and actually it turns out he's all and everyone all right and everyone they're hiding farage cost hiding it you know farage cost them with promises of them a fortune with promises of a future, it turned a great future, and it turned out to useless. out to be useless. >> brexit all over again. >> it's brexit all over again. oh, please, linda. >> what do you make what do you make this? these calls that make of this? these calls that nigel being given airtime nigel simply being given airtime on dangerous on itv right. it's so dangerous to of british to the fabric of british society. people might see him and like him and vote for him and like him and vote for him and have that. and we can't have that. >> can't have anyone with >> you can't have anyone with common policies being common sense policies being listened that is why listened to. and that is why leftists so scared. but i've been watching. i'm a celeb and it's very clear that a lot of the contestants have their personal aired. i've personal stories aired. i've heard all about josie's and heard all about josie's life and sam's life . but nigel, i never sam's life. but nigel, i never hear about anything to do with him because he's never given the time. you're paranoid . time. god, you're so paranoid. >> look. they look. they >> they look. they look. they literally paid the bloke one half million quid to be the half million quid to be on the show. you think it's a conspiracy? >> he no control over the. >> he has no control over the. is there anything you can do to
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satisfy your lust for nigel farage? >> he is a very charismatic and very, funny man. all very, very funny man. we all know an absolutely know that he's an absolutely brilliant politician and a great presenter. >> no, no, look , look, look, >> no, no, look, look, look, look, look. it's been a wintry few days for much of the country with warning that people with the rac warning that people should work from home or off the civil service in their way out of the game, as some areas could experience rink experience an ice rink monday. that's that these that's a warning that these unlucky adventurers didn't pay any attention to watch this . what kind of evil, sadistic person doesn't go out and say,
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watch out , there's black ice watch out, there's black ice over there, right? they say you can see the light changes in that clip as well. so he's been there all day. that bloke filming people on their backsides, nobody got backsides, hopefully nobody got hurt. funny or evil. >> belinda i think that is a bit mean. i'd have gone out and put a bit of salt on benjamin. >> why did you do that? well, funny or anything for the views. funny, funny, funny . two, two, funny, funny, funny. two, two, one. all right. okay. well there we now. okay there's still we go now. okay there's still loads to come here because i've got some more front pages for you . former prime minister you. and former prime minister liz bravely stands up for liz truss bravely stands up for women's rights against the extreme trans lobby. do single—sex spaces need to be protected by law? are we talking about that? when i crown my greatest britain and union jackass? but next, would you be prepared to pay £173 a year to watch the bbc? you know, the ones that had a trans conversation with an alien on doctor who? you know, the ones that make isaac newton black on doctor there's a theme here doctor who. there's a theme here kelvin mackenzie unleashes on
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i'm delighted to welcome back to the studio former editor of the sun, kelvin mackenzie . now, sun, kelvin mackenzie. now, kelvin we have more of tomorrow's front pages to look at. we start with the sun, don't we. so access denied it says plan to slash influx to 300 k's. another migration story there the old net migration cuts we go on to the daily mail. yes we do at some point soon. biggest ever clampdown will slash net migration by 300,000. the guardian also says cellophane sealed nuclear site hacked by groups linked to china and russia fears that confidential
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data was accessed in attacks first detected in 2015. the uk's most hazardous nuclear site , most hazardous nuclear site, sellafield, has been hacked into by cyber groups . yeah, just by cyber groups. yeah, just quickly returned to that mail. bnng quickly returned to that mail. bring it up on the screen there. it's not net migration story again. we've got the times again. we've also got the times and i a here as well. kevin and the i a here as well. kevin i'll get stuck into the one on the sun with you. access you know what i can't understand? >> i don't understand why they're all celebrating this. i they're all celebrating this. i the tories have been in for 13, 13 years right. i'm on labour's side on this. why on earth haven't they done something about this before? or why do we have to get to three quarters of 1 million million and 1 million or1 million and a quarter over two years before somebody, somebody the somebody, somebody in the conservative i conservative party says hello? i don't think is good don't think this is good politics. it's absolutely shocking. beyond shocking. the most story there is most interesting story there is a story about have you a telegraph story about have you read about the hamas trading on the tel aviv stock exchange stock exchange ? now, that is stock exchange? now, that is beyond terrible. so somebody had inside knowledge or within
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within the within an investor in trading before you go on, i'll recap this is on the front of the front of the daily telegraph tomorrow. >> okay. hamas traders make millions shorting israel. so go on. okay >> e w— on. okay >> they knew somebody >> so what? they knew somebody knew either investors or the traders themselves or somebody knew that this was going to happen. so what did they do? they shorted which shorted out the stocks. now, this is a way of buying of renting something and then buying it back when it's lower. they knew that october the 7th was going to happen. they did it over a jewish holiday when there was no financial news and no news of almost any kind. it's called sukkot ka . ott right. they got sukkot ka. ott right. they got on now. so this research is done by two two researchers from new york law school and the columbia law school . it's a 60 page law school. it's a 60 page dossier. they said that they made somewhere around about 100 million us, right. they didn't identify it, nor has anybody identified who made this money. right whoever made the money,
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honestly , they are in the most honestly, they are in the most incredible trouble. were they to be, i presume that they're not they're not israeli citizens . they're not israeli citizens. but there are. but who else would actually imagine? i can't icannot would actually imagine? i can't i cannot imagine. i've never read anything quite like that, actually . it's beyond beyond actually. it's beyond beyond shocking . and the other major shocking. and the other major story, which i see is not on the front page is that at least rishi, he can be tough about things where nobody can fight back. so the bbc we want to put up there, they license fee from 159 to 173 or whatever it is, £15. and so suddenly out comes the big strong dcms leader and says, we're going to stop this and eventually it will be 5 or e6 and eventually it will be 5 or £6 and. right. but they don't do anything strong like for instance, attack this two years ago, the 300, the 749,000 were coming in. honestly, this government is completely shot . government is completely shot. and the only thing that i know is that unfortunately for the
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tories not are they going to get wiped out? is the reform for them that party is likely to move up from? i see it's 11 points right now. my bet when nigel takes over round about september ahead of the november election, that number will go up to 18 or 19. it will devastate the tories. >> let's just return to the bbc licence fee story that you raised there so it will be inside. read the book of one of the papers tomorrow. probably see? so it looks as though it's going to go up. yes by about 15 or £16. why do you think that's not value for money? i mean, you know, inflation, they've got i don't want to i don't want to be taxed at all to watch television. >> if i want to watch netflix or apple or or i want to watch free to air itv or the i'm a celebrity or something like that, that's fair enough. nobody should be forced with the threat of in the background to of jail in the background to actually pay for television that day . honestly, it was a great day. honestly, it was a great idea.50 day. honestly, it was a great idea. 50 or 60 years ago. it's a
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bit like the nhs. great idea. time has passed, right? we should should be given the should we should be given the option. actually pay if should we should be given the orwas. actually pay if should we should be given the orwas subscription ually pay if should we should be given the orwas subscription ,ally pay if should we should be given the orwas subscription , right?y if it was subscription, right? after all, it works out around about £13 a month, doesn't it? at the moment. right. and i might say actually that's not too bad value. i would like to make that decision. i quite like i the bbc radio. okay, i like the bbc radio. okay, fine. that's what like. i'm fine. that's what i like. i'm prepared pay for it. i don't prepared to pay for it. i don't want to be forced by the threat of jail to pay for something. >> of the concerns for me >> one of the concerns for me with is that you look with this is that you look at the kind people who might say the kind of people who might say struggle pay this, you know , struggle to pay this, you know, let's say old age let's say let's say old age pensioners , right? let's say let's say old age perpeople , right? let's say let's say old age per people like ht? let's say let's say old age perpeople like me and old people >> people like me and old people like you, i would pity the magistrate kelvin who decides that they're going to send you down kicking and screaming good lecture go. lecture before they go. >> mackenzie was seen >> mr mackenzie was seen spitting at the glass in the in the courthouse in the weybridge area as they muzzled him and shackled into cell block shackled him into two cell block c, but no, you know the bless them. you know, i don't want to generalise too much here, but you know, dorothy number 42,
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you know, dorothy at number 42, who's her 80s or 90s, who's maybe in her 80s or 90s, who's maybe in her 80s or 90s, who doing that well who isn't doing that well financially, turns telly financially, who turns the telly on a company in the on for a bit of company in the day. know, she's the one day. you know, she's the one who's dragged before a magistrate with all this. it just wrong. just seems wrong. >> completely wrong and >> you it's completely wrong and should can't should end. and what i can't understand why don't the tories do favour say do themselves a favour and say we're going to you into a we're going to turn you into a subscription model and actually, the has we the director general has said we would under those would do well under those circumstances. not as circumstances. liz it's not as though they're going be though they're going to be financially they financially damaged. they wouldn't revenue wouldn't take more less revenue than do now . so why than they do right now. so why don't say the world has don't they say the world has changed, bbc is going to changed, the bbc is going to change. we're still going to try and down middle if it's and bat down the middle if it's at possible. it at all possible. i think it would them force would make them possibly force them into a situation where they wouldn't necessarily feel as comfortable doing what many people as being people would regard as being complete nuttery like complete and utter nuttery like the who trans alien stuff the doctor who trans alien stuff or, you we've got a black or, you know, we've got a black isaac newton now and all of these things. >> you know, there's nothing inherently but inherently wrong with that, but it's be a push it's just seems to be a push towards a certain type of incredibly woke ideology. maybe they with that they couldn't get away with that if were forced stand on
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if they were forced to stand on their feet in the open their own two feet in the open market. their own two feet in the open ma well, possible. okay. >> well, that's possible. okay. let's with one last point. let's deal with one last point. nila rose being kicked out. yes, right. still so right. and nigel still there. so despite all the criticism, the truth matter is the truth about the matter is the beating heart of britain lies with farage and not with nella. >> so you don't buy what's on the front of the mirror, which is that farage is a snooze fest and everyone's turning off. that's front of the that's on the front of the mirror. same paper that on mirror. the same paper that on friday labour mps saying friday had two labour mps saying that needed to him out that they needed to get him out of the camp. they also the same paper that a poll showing paper that ran a poll showing that was actually very that he was actually very popular with their readers. >> truth about the >> i think the truth about the matter is the daily mirror has been wrong about almost everything for the my entire career. so they'll wrong career. and so they'll be wrong about that. nigel farage turns out beating, the out to be the beating, the beating of i'm a beating heart of i'm a celebrity, we viewers anyway. and nella rose, who seemed to aggravate i don't aggravate everybody. i don't know a know why she wanted to have a row nigel. i'm sure there's know why she wanted to have a rogood nigel. i'm sure there's know why she wanted to have a rogood reason. i'm sure there's know why she wanted to have a rogood reason forn sure there's know why she wanted to have a re good reason for it.;ure there's know why she wanted to have a re good reason for it. turned re's know why she wanted to have a rogood reason for it. turned out a good reason for it. turned out to we'd rather do without to be. we'd rather do without you. actually out. you. she actually came out. >> apparently, she came off >> apparently, when she came off air, she came out said she air, she came out and said she quite she quite liked him
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quite liked she quite liked him from can gather. so, you from what i can gather. so, you know, is a bit of frankie know, there is a bit of frankie dettori also has come out and was asked about nigel farage and said, a great guy. to 1. said, he's a great guy. 1 to 1. it's almost like there's bit it's almost like there's a bit of a theme here, isn't there? >> there is, but nella >> well, there is, but nella rose's friend of mine rose's agent is a friend of mine called jonathan shalit, i'm called jonathan shalit, and i'm sure would said to her, sure he would have said to her, nella, play the card here. nella, play the good card here. don't anything don't don't say anything controversial. don't don't say anything con charlotte don't don't say anything concharlotte is nella rose's >> charlotte is nella rose's agent. >> yeah. he, the agent. >> yeah. the >> yeah. is he, by the way, very clever bloke. >> nice man, the way. >> very nice man, by the way. >> very nice man, by the way. >> fantastic. well, there >> oh, fantastic. well, there you go. i wonder how many people in aslef he the in the aslef camp he is the agent for you want to go round to charlotte's christmas? to charlotte's for christmas? i'll covid. i'll tell you anyway. covid. thank very much. let's thank you very, very much. let's go with mckenzie. there. the fleet well, wolf fleet street. well, the wolf of fleet i'm fleet street himself. i'm delighted welcome back delighted to welcome back my panel into proceedings now, because is time greatest because it is time for greatest britain union jack as right. britain and union jack as right. okay. so who do i start with? carol am i starting with union jack or greatest britain what shall we start with? people greatest britain go greatest. >> britain greatest britain. >> britain greatest britain. >> on. >> go on. »- >> go on. >> okay, so mine is liz truss
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for introducing draft law that for introducing a draft law that will biological males from will ban biological males from entering single—sex and entering single—sex spaces and it prevent children from it will prevent children from changing she's bringing changing gender. she's bringing forward a member's bill forward a private member's bill that propose single—sex forward a private member's bill that are'opose single—sex forward a private member's bill that are protected gle—sex forward a private member's bill that are protected by—sex forward a private member's bill that are protected by law. forward a private member's bill that are protected by law and spaces are protected by law and trans women can't enter areas like female toilets and changing rooms. more importantly , it rooms. more importantly, it would prevent youngsters under 18 taking hormone ins. that could change their bodies forever. >> okay, we're off to a strong start, and belinda likes it. benjamin, your greatest britain >> my greatest britons are the lionesses as i went to wembley stadium on friday night, i thought wembley had been built for the spice girls reunion. but apparently they also do football. there and i watched them beat netherlands . and them beat the netherlands. and honestly, been honestly, i hadn't been to a football match since i was about ten, they were absolutely fantastic. >> benjamin did you ever play football? position? >> benjamin did you ever play foothe l? position? >> benjamin did you ever play foothe primary position? >> benjamin did you ever play foothe primary schooln? >> benjamin did you ever play foothe primary school football on the primary school football team. you well, yeah. team. you were? well, yeah. >> you get kicked off on >> i bet you get kicked off on game two. >> alderley edge primary had never seen such talent. yes. >> remarkable given >> no. which is remarkable given that of footballers kids that loads of footballers kids go but anyway. right. go
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go there. but anyway. right. go on, carl. sorry, not on, carol. carl. sorry, not carol. don't carol. belinda. sorry we don't want mine is a learner driver >> my. mine is a learner driver who made the papers today for passing . i don't know if it's a passing. i don't know if it's a man or a woman. they're unnamed and they're test theory driving test for the six on the 60th. go and i just think they deserve a mention because that is that's commitment . it i failed my test commitment. it i failed my test twice and then never tried again. they shouldn't be on the road. all right. but i think never give up if at first you don't succeed, try try again today is today's greatest britain is the complete and utter numpty who passed their driving the theory test. >> there . theory test on the >> there. theory test on the 60th attempt. there we go. right. we're going to have to rattle through this now, carol. union jackass keir starmer. >> there's nothing this man won't get elected. and won't say to get elected. and this weekend he's saying how fantastic thatcher is fantastic margaret thatcher is because wants the of because he wants the votes of the who admire her. he's the people who admire her. he's a he's a dummy and a coward and he's a dummy and he's hypocrite. and anyway , he's a hypocrite. and anyway, that's it. >> all right.
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>> all right. >> strong stuff, benjamin. here's jackass. here's your union jackass. >> cardiff university >> mine's cardiff university students union . because this students union. because this week, week, they said they week, last week, they said they should teach students to spot lies propaganda from israel. lies and propaganda from israel. and jewish and then intimidated jewish students speaking on that students from speaking on that motion debated . i just motion being debated. i just thought it was a deplorable reflection, reflection those reflection, reflection on those students those jewish and students and those jewish and israeli who that israeli students who know that most then. most of us back then. >> yeah, well , quite yes. >> yeah, well, quite yes. beunda >> yeah, well, quite yes. belinda minus david lammy for saying when and if he gets into power, his first top priority will be to forge closer ties with the eu in the dark corridors of brussels. >> david lammy get off your knees and stop selling the country out to a un democratic cartel. why is it? >> oh, there we go. right. today's winner of the union jackass is sir keir starmer. and i feel vindicated because he's on the front of the telegraph tomorrow with potentially yet another flop, time another flip flop, this time over billion worth of over 28 billion quid's worth of green this has been green stuff. this has been patrick christys tonight. thank you, tomorrow you, everybody. see you tomorrow at brighter outlook at nine for a brighter outlook with boxt solar sponsor of
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weather on . gb news. weather on. gb news. >> hi there . it's aidan mcgivern >> hi there. it's aidan mcgivern here from the metaverse. with the gb news forecast. it's been a bit of a grim day for many parts of the uk. the rain eases over the next 24 hours only gradually. however and then clearer and colder weather returns to the uk, albeit briefly , before further areas of briefly, before further areas of low pressure come our way later this week. so the first area of low pressure is clearing. it's clearing to the southeast , clearing to the southeast, wrapped around it a number of occluded fronts. that means bands rain continuing for bands of rain continuing for southern scotland. northern england into the midlands , parts england into the midlands, parts of wales and the south—west. also seeing a number showers also seeing a number of showers overnight. but the more persistent is gradually persistent rain is gradually easing . northern scotland, easing. northern scotland, meanwhile, sees quite low temperatures overnight temperatures overnight temperatures down to minus five celsius in places and with some showers feeding in overnight as well, there'll be a few slippery surfaces first thing on tuesday to watch out for. but that's where the brightest weather will be and that brighter weather
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will into southern will spread into southern scotland . much of northern scotland. much of northern ireland, england and ireland, western england and wales. the afternoon . central wales. by the afternoon. central and england still and eastern england still subject to outbreaks of rain or showers even into the afternoon and staying cool here with breeze from the north sea. but then the rain clears widely and an overnight frost returns to many places by the start of wednesday, some freezing fog patches as well. but actually it's a bright for many in it's a bright day for many in the east, with wetter weather returning by the afternoon into the west , that wet weather turns the west, that wet weather turns to snow over northern hills overnight. milder conditions overnight. but milder conditions return to all later . return to all later. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers sponsors of weather on . gb news. on. gb news. >> who is it? we're here for the show . welcome to the dinosaur show. welcome to the dinosaur hour with me. john cleese . haha, hour with me. john cleese. haha, that was married to a therapist and you survived. i thought we
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were getting hugh laurie , second were getting hugh laurie, second best man. at least . you best man. at least. you interviewed saddam hussein . interviewed saddam hussein. what's that like? i was terrified. i'm playing strip poker with these three. oh, no, thank you. >> my cds need to be put in alphabetical order. >> oh, are you going to be problematic again? >> the dinosaur hour, sundays on
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gb news. >> good evening. i'm polly middlehurst with your 11:00 news and the top story today, the home secretary said 300,000 fewer people will be able to come to the uk each year under new plans to bring down legal migration overseas workers, he said, and students will be stopped from bringing family and dependants and the minimum salary required for a skilled worker will rise to £38,700 from next spring. james cleverly says the measures are the best way forward for british taxpayers . forward for british taxpayers. but shadow environment secretary steve reed says taxpayers have
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heard it all before. how many times have we heard a succession of conservative home secretaries stand up in the chamber of the house of commons and tell us how much they're going to decrease migration by only to see it soar in the following the following few months? >> now, the figure that james cleverly there, cleverly is talking about there, even if he manages to cut it by the amount that just said, the amount that he's just said, and doubt that given their and i doubt that given their track record even then, migration would be around double the level that it was in december 2019, when they told us it was going, they were going to cut it. >> steve reed now a british israeli teenager, has been killed in gaza while fighting for the israel defence forces . for the israel defence forces. 19 year old binyamin needham died yesterday after only being in the gaza strip for two days. he was killed in action. the idf promoted him to the rank of sergeant after his death and israeli media said he was born in england but moved to israel with his family when he was eight years old. mps were voting
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in the house of commons tonight . in the house of commons tonight. and 246 to 242 voted in favour of establishing a new body to help compensate infected blood victims. a cheer rang out as the government was narrowly defeated by just four votes to help thousands of people who contracted hiv and hepatitis . contracted hiv and hepatitis. having been given contaminated blood products in the 70s and 80s, the department of health said it was sympathetic to the strength of feeling on the matter, but weighed up that it wouldn't be right to pre—empt the findings of the ongoing inquiry into the infected blood scandal . the president of the scandal. the president of the cop 28 climate summit being held in dubai , says he's surprised by in dubai, says he's surprised by reports suggesting that he denied a key aspect of climate science. sultan al jaber was criticised in november after he said there was no scientific bafis said there was no scientific basis for limiting a rise in global temperatures to 1.5. he speaking at the summit earlier,
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