tv Patrick Christys Tonight Replay GB News December 6, 2023 3:00am-5:01am GMT
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gb news. >> it's 9 pm. and this is patrick christys tonight . and patrick christys tonight. and there's only one story on every patriot british person's lips . patriot british person's lips. >> i see no reason why there should be any more impairments to doing the right thing , right how. >> now. >> pro rwanda plan . tory mps are >> pro rwanda plan. tory mps are locked in crunch meetings with top legal experts to determine if that new rwanda deal is going to be workable. if it's not, they'll revolt and it could bnng they'll revolt and it could bring sunak down. i will make sure you're right on the inside of this with our own legal expert and a prominent member of the erg, the group scrutinising cleverly's new deal. this is the show to watch for rwanda plan fans and do whinge and ginge need armed protection when they come to the uk. harry is challenging the home office. i say if you don't feel safe here then don't bother coming you massive traitor and 91 year old woman died because a foreign care home worker who never passed an english exam . ironic
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passed an english exam. ironic couldn't communicate with 999 call handlers. is it racist to expect care home workers to speak fluent english? what's wrong? as well with this picture 7 wrong? as well with this picture ? yeah two blokes have come first in un second in a women's cycling event. i discussed that and whether or not people with a penis and a history of violence should be allowed into women's prisons because it's happening up in scotland. on the sofa tonight, i got susan evans. tonight, i have got susan evans. i've got amankona and i've got albie amankona and rebecca reid. this is patrick christys tonight. and it's all go . go. email me gbviews@gbnews.com should illegal immigrants have human rights? tweet us at gb news. i'll see you after the headunes. headlines. >> patrick thank you and good
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evening. will the top story from the newsroom tonight is that a 28 year old man has been arrested on suspicion of attempted murder following the stabbing of a 29 year old woman in aberfan in south wales today . in aberfan in south wales today. the pregnant woman was subjected to a knife attack on the street this morning. the victim was taken to hospital and is believed to be in a stable condition. her wounds are not thought to be life threatening. chief inspector rob miles from south police gave this south wales police gave this update . update. >> the man is known to the victim and is currently in police custody . i appreciate police custody. i appreciate there will be a real sense of shock within the local community with the attack having happened in broad daylight. local schools activated their lockdown protocols to keep people safe near board officers have been in the area to ensure ensure pupils have been able to leave the school safely at the normal time. this was done as a precaution and schools will reopen tomorrow as normal . reopen tomorrow as normal. >> well, in other news today, the home secretary said he's uncovered suitable with some of
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the criticism being directed at rwanda as he unveiled a new asylum treaty in kigali. it's understood new british laws are to be expedited through parliament, declaring rwanda a safe country for the processing of asylum seekers arriving in the uk . mr cleverly praised the uk. mr cleverly praised rwanda for being part of the british solution . but the shadow british solution. but the shadow home secretary, yvette cooper, cast doubt on the plans as they sent more home secretary liz than they have asylum seekers to rwanda. >> and this scheme is badly failing. they still won't tell us how much it will cost, even though we've already know that we've spent £140 million and more on this scheme . and what more on this scheme. and what they could be doing is putting that money into going after the criminal smuggler gangs and taking action there instead . taking action there instead. >> yvette cooper now junior doctors in england are set to stage the long missed strike in nhs history after talks on an improved pay offer with the government broke down. ministers and the british medical association. the union
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representing junior doctors have been locked in negotiations for five weeks now, trying to find a solution. the bma says the government has offered a pay increase of 3, which it says amounts to a pay cut for some doctors . the first walkouts are doctors. the first walkouts are due to start across england from 7 am. on the 20th of december for the high court was told today that the impact of a successful attack on the duke of sussex should have been considered when his security arrangements were changed in 2020. prince harry was stripped of special protections. normally afforded to royals when he stepped back from his royal dufies stepped back from his royal duties and went to america. his lawyers say a failure to carry out a full risk assessment meant he was treated in an unlawful and unfair way when he was provided with a weaker kind of security while visiting the uk . security while visiting the uk. and lastly , sir paul mccartney and lastly, sir paul mccartney has led tributes for wings and moody blues musician denny laine
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, who has died at the age of 79. his wife said he died after a long battle with lung disease. denny laine sang on the moody blues, multi—million selling track go now and co—wrote the wings hit mull of kintyre. paul mccartney described him as an outstanding vocalist and guitar player, saying it was a pleasure to know him and micky dolenz of the monkees said he was a wonderful person and that his music would be sorely missed . music would be sorely missed. denny laine, who died today on tv online, dab+ radio and the tune—in app. this is gb news, britain's news channel . britain's news channel. >> well, come along now. today, james cleverly became the third home secretary in under two years to do this . travelled to years to do this. travelled to rwanda to sign a new migration deal rwanda to sign a new migration deal. yes, that's right. so we've sent three ministers and zero migrants, but according to the new home secretary, this agreement is more robust than
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the previous ones. he thinks that this time round the government addressed the government has addressed all the legal concerns and that they have the measure of those lefty lawyers. listen. lawyers. take a listen. >> no reason why there >> i see no reason why there should be any more impediments to the right thing to to doing the right thing to break the business model of these people smuggling gangs. and for the humane and professional treatment of refugees. the rwanda is offering i >> -- >> well, emma >> well, let's hope it is third time lucky. we've already paid the rwandan government £140 million for a few photo ops, not even posh and becks got that for their wedding pics. but how long ago does this feel? april last yeah ago does this feel? april last year. priti patel signing the migration and economic development partnership two months later. the first deportation flight was halted at the 11th hour due to a foreign judge in a foreign country sticking their nose in. it was a sign of the banging headache to come that day is the closest this country has ever come to establishing a proper deterrent that would stop the boats. and remember braverman remember when suella braverman said i would love to be
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said this i would love to be here saying , well, claiming victory. >> i would love to be having a front page of the telegraph with a fly, a plane taking off to rwanda. thats my dream. that's my dream. when will that happen? >> even for the straight talking suella that dream became a nightmare. the courts blocked her every single turn. and if you believe her resignation letter, so did rishi sunak. and now we're expected to believe that that james, let's not leave the echr and the rwanda plan is batshit cleverly has got it over the line. sunak didn't back suella he stands accused of ignonng suella he stands accused of ignoring immigration minister robert jenrick this robert jenrick law says you can't enter the country illegally . the country illegally. >> if you or i crossed an international border or literally broke into another country, we would expect to be treated very seriously. >> he broke into another country. you the who country. are you the people who come country. are you the people who con la country. are you the people who coni am, yeah. that's the phraseology. >> are you happy to use? >> are you happy to use? >> somebody if somebody >> i am. if somebody if somebody comes our country on a comes into our country on a small boat are breaking into our
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country. yes. they're coming into and flagrant into our country and flagrant breach rules . breach of our immigration rules. thatis breach of our immigration rules. that is wrong. i think it's doing untold damage to our country. yeah. i mean , listen to country. yeah. i mean, listen to the faux outrage over there at sky news. >> the clutching of pearls from people who just don't live in the real world like you and i. gerry moynihan spot on. except illegal migrants aren't just breaking in afterwards. illegal migrants aren't just breaking in afterwards . they're breaking in afterwards. they're getting the four star hotel treatment bed and it's treatment bed and board. it's like catching a burglar in your house and offering them tea and biscuits letting sleep biscuits and letting them sleep in your marital bed. all the while was reported today that while it was reported today that a military a third of our military personnel living in personnel are living in deficient with black deficient housing with black mould boilers. right mould and broken boilers. right now, as we speak, the pro rwanda eurosceptic wing of the tory party has set a team of lawyers onto whether or not the new rwanda treaty will actually work. the one nation group of conservatives has said they'll oppose any part of the legislation that they deem unworkable or doomed to fail. so it's a bit of blue on blue already here. but today , on the already here. but today, on the day that james cleverly went to
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rwanda, was cabinet rwanda, there was a cabinet meeting it was rumoured meeting. now, it was rumoured that at cabinet meeting that at that cabinet meeting they discuss this they were going to discuss this disapplying human rights laws to people who come to britain illegally. maybe they didn't do that apparently illegally. maybe they didn't do that didn't apparently illegally. maybe they didn't do that didn't even apparently illegally. maybe they didn't do that didn't even talk)arently illegally. maybe they didn't do that didn't even talk abouty they didn't even talk about rwanda. they ignored it. but we won't now , before i go to my won't now, before i go to my panel won't now, before i go to my panel, i want to actually find out, get the inside track as to whether or not this supposed rwanda deal update is legal. is it going to work ? maybe we can it going to work? maybe we can just put this to bed early doors. let's cross over to the acclaimed lawyer known as mr loophole. is nick freeman, loophole. it is nick freeman, who's over who's been looking over the finer a little bit here. finer details a little bit here. nick, thank you very, very nick, look, thank you very, very much . so is this a winner, do we much. so is this a winner, do we think this particular version of this rwanda deal is actually going to have a basis in law? is it going work? it going to work? >> , it's not going to work. >> no, it's not going to work. >> no, it's not going to work. >> the supreme court three weeks ago upheld the court of appeal . ago upheld the court of appeal. >> and what the government is doing now is what they should have before, before this have done before, before this case court of appeal. >> so they're closing the gate after the horse has bolted.
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>> so they're closing the gate aftethee horse has bolted. >> so they're closing the gate aftethe measures|s bolted. >> so they're closing the gate aftethe measures they'rei >> so they're closing the gate aftethe measures they're putting >> the measures they're putting in place are admirable. the whole sending asylum whole purpose of sending asylum seekers is act as seekers to rwanda is to act as a deterrent and i'm not suggesting that maybe 2 or 3 years down the road this may work, but of course prime minister is course the prime minister is under he under enormous pressure. he wants the first flights to be in the air by, i think, march or april of next year, and that's simply isn't going to happen because even if they're going to send lawyers over to rwanda. rwanda has an appalling record on human rights. the asylum system doesn't work properly. israel had an experiment with that and it didn't didn't work. so what the government have said, what the supreme court has said, what the supreme court has said is, look, they are incentivised to make it work . incentivised to make it work. and with these proposals , if the and with these proposals, if the government goes back in 2 or 3 years time, it may get there. but at the moment it is bound by the supreme court ruling . and the supreme court ruling. and the supreme court ruling. and the government can't just wolf, that aside, by putting different labels and plugging the gaps like that, it it simply isn't going to work.
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like that, it it simply isn't going to work . okay. the going to work. okay. the government's got a play to there's two parts to the plan. one, to fill in the loop. the holes. and the second is to actually stop any appeal to any court on this particular subject . so it's actually trying to stifle the judiciary, which of course is against the rule of law. it's a significant point and the government is not going to get away with it. it's an independent the judiciary is completely independent. >> think this just >> so you think this is just a complete and even complete non—starter and even just quickly, even just just quickly, nick, even with signing is with rwanda signing up, which is what today, what they've done today, supposedly to having an essentially an international tribunal in their country overseeing the law and the administration of their asylum policy. and their guarantee. they're not going to send anyone back to an unsafe country. and the very strong right to appeal despite all of that . you don't despite all of that. you don't think that our supreme court is going to say that's enough? i mean, what more do we have to do? >> well, then it needs to see it working. it needs to see it working. it needs to see it working. three weeks ago, it ruled it was unsafe. it's not
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going to become safe tomorrow, two years down the road. it may be safe when after a period of time, the steps that have been put in place have found to put in place have been found to work. government are already work. the government are already committed fortunes at committed spending fortunes at the staff. they're the moment on staff. they're training that's training them. that's the problem. money problem. there's a lot of money that's being wasted . so that's being wasted. so the government to this government has to get this through is there's through. but my view is there's not chance of going through not a chance of it going through by it'll be much longer. >> okay, look, nick, thank you very, very much. it's nick freeman. who's legal freeman. there who's a top legal eagle for i am going to get eagle for us. i am going to get the thoughts of my panel now, political suzanne political commentator suzanne evans, contributor, evans, gb news, contributor, abby and author and abby amankona and author and journalist rebecca reed. suzanne i'll start with you . i think the i'll start with you. i think the majority of the public want this to work. okay. there was talk about whether or the cabinet about whether or not the cabinet today were going to discuss essentially trying to make it so that if anyone comes into britain illegally, into britain illegally, breaks into britain, as robert jenrick would say, not really say, then they will not really be classed as having human rights therefore they can rights and therefore they can just be sent to rwanda. do you think they should that? just be sent to rwanda. do you thirwell,y should that? just be sent to rwanda. do you thirwell,y sho shouldn'tit? just be sent to rwanda. do you thirwell,y sho shouldn't really. >> well, they shouldn't really. >> well, they shouldn't really. >> i mean, you know, somebody
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like say breaks into your like you say breaks into your home. their rights. home. they lose their rights. they any rights to they don't have any rights to stay that in that home. and stay in that in that home. and whilst can't strip people of whilst you can't strip people of human because are human rights because they are universal, there are universal, well, there are certainly to me certainly fairly obvious to me that here that if somebody comes here illegally, then they should be sent it's rocket sent back. it's not rocket science, but plan has science, but this plan has always been a disaster right from the start. and nick from the start. and as nick freeman the supreme freeman points out, the supreme court rwanda was court ruled that rwanda was unsafe a couple weeks ago . unsafe a couple of weeks ago. what's changed? nothing has changed that, but changed when you say that, but there been some quite there have been some quite significant, would some significant, i would argue, some quite changes to quite significant changes to thisyou know, that >> you know, the idea that rwanda, which a sovereign rwanda, which is a sovereign country, he is going allow an country, he is going to allow an international tribunal of people to scrutinise absolutely every single thing that it does when it comes to making its decisions. a guarantee that they're not going sent they're not going to be sent back unsafe countries . and on back to unsafe countries. and on top of that, a fervent right to appeal. as far as i can tell, we're paying rwanda to be in the situation we're in now, which is that somebody comes to that even if somebody comes to your about your country and lies about where and who where they're from and who they are, still to stay ipp are, they still have to stay ipp look, i would like the rwanda
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plan to work. >> i wish could say i think in >> i wish i could say i think in 12 months time the next 12 months time before the next general when plane general election when a plane will off. but i don't will have taken off. but i don't think a plane will have taken for off the reasons that nick has said at. and just seems has said at. and it just seems to that whilst the whole idea to me that whilst the whole idea of immigrants a third of sending immigrants to a third country for processing is perfectly our perfectly reasonable, even our supreme said it's lawful supreme court said it's lawful to immigrants third to send immigrants to third countries processing . rwanda countries for processing. rwanda is country and the is the wrong country and the government will have known about all of these roadblocks that were coming up. they didn't do anything it. we're in anything about it. and we're in this what, 12 months this position, what, 12 months out a general election out from a general election and no flights to take off no flights are going to take off total waste of time. >> rebecca, your view >> rebecca, what was your view on this? i mean, on all of this? i mean, personally, i think that if the lawyers the supreme court lawyers and the supreme court want to get in the way of something like this, that the will people is behind, will of the people is behind, then problem is with the law then the problem is with the law and not the policy . and not the policy. >> i'm very nervous about the idea of playing around with human they don't human rights because they don't suit one issue. because if suit us on one issue. because if you do it for one thing, you can do other things. do it for other things. >> i personally really love
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>> and i personally really love human rights. i'm a big fan of them. think maybe all humans them. i think maybe all humans should them. i think maybe all humans shou think issue with this >> i think the issue with this is that they're chasing what feels like an easy win. and it's a like when been a bit like when you've been dating somebody awful for dating somebody who's awful for six and you think, well, six months and you think, well, i've dated for six months, i've dated them for six months, might well just them might as well just marry them now a bad plan. but now and this is a bad plan. but they've invested time and effort in actually think she's in it. i actually think she's lovely. i think that this is about fact that james about the fact that james cleverly to the person cleverly wants to be the person who line and who gets over the line and i think that suella wanted to be. and is a sense of and i think there is a sense of pride about it and they know they're probably lose they're probably going to lose they're probably going to lose the election. if you can the next election. so if you can get out get some wins before you're out for your career, it makes for your next career, it makes you look good for your public speaking you speaking career. it makes you look good. is not look good. but this is not a sensible plan and it's detracting coming detracting from coming up with a sensible plan which realistically, just think, realistically, i just think, sorry, such sorry, i do think there is such a thing. >> em- e me out on em— e me out on this as >> now hear me out on this as potentially human potentially too much human rights. if you've got rights. okay, so if you've got no seriously, if you've got people who have come here out, if who have if you've got people who have come country illegally, come to a country illegally, that a criminal that potentially have a criminal record, could know record, that we could know nothing record, that we could know nothi|tell who they are or don't tell you who they are or
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where they're from, and you absolutely them absolutely cannot get them out of even a safe of your country, even to a safe third country. what's third country. then what's the point of anything? >> limits to >> there are there are limits to human >> there are there are limits to hurthere always limits >> there always are limits to human rights. >> human rights don't >> you know, human rights don't apply war. >> you know, human rights don't appyou've war. >> you know, human rights don't appyou've got war. >> you know, human rights don't appyou've got you've. >> you know, human rights don't appyou've got you've got people >> you've got you've got people can war crimes. can be tried for war crimes. >> different >> and that's a different matter. but clearly, if you're going into in your award going into battle in your award and every to and you have every right to shoot under shoot somebody, if you're under attack. a to attack. so there is a limit to human rights. and think human rights. and i think in this should be. this case, there should be. i agree but agree with you. but like rebecca, nervous about rebecca, i am nervous about kicking the baby out with the bathwater, know bathwater, really. but, you know that something that there's something seriously wrong plan somebody wrong with a plan when somebody like agree with the like me starts to agree with the dark alastair dark lord of politics. alastair campbell. and he pointed out this this, this morning that this, this, these two trips, not including james cleverly's latest one, two trips have cost £50 million. three home office secretary, home secretaries have gone. no migrants there . and what migrants there. and what happens, when these happens, patrick, when these international tribunals start sending people back from here? the optics then are going to be interesting. >> very quick, very quick. >> very quick, very quick. >> what happens if somebody gets hurt when they're there and then >> what happens if somebody gets hungovernmentre there and then >> what happens if somebody gets hungovernmentre ticulpable:hen >> what happens if somebody gets hungovernmentre ticulpable for| the government are culpable for that and there's a massive lawsuit? we it's lawsuit? why should we be? it's not plan. lawsuit? why should we be? it's not absolutely n. lawsuit? why should we be? it's not absolutely everything. we're lawsuit? why should we be? it's not culpabley everything. we're lawsuit? why should we be? it's not culpable y e�*absolutely ve're not culpable for absolutely
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everything. have everything. and if people have made a decision that then themselves to lend themselves to be way, then themselves to lend themselves to be everybody way, then themselves to lend themselves to be everybody is way, then themselves to lend themselves to be everybody is responsiblezn themselves to lend themselves to be everybody is responsible for not everybody is responsible for all of that. but. but, but, not everybody is responsible for all obutat. but. but, but, not everybody is responsible for all obut but but. but, but, not everybody is responsible for all obut but on but. but, but, not everybody is responsible for all obut but on tomorrow but, not everybody is responsible for all obut but on tomorrow ,»ut, not everybody is responsible for all obut but on tomorrow , on but, but but on tomorrow, on thursday's show, we will be revealing exclusive footage and information that frankly, blows the lid off the government's claims that they are on top of the channel migrant crisis. okay here is a little flavour of what we're going to reveal. >> us tomorrow night and >> join us tomorrow night and thursday night as we report from northern france . northern france. >> and despite rishi sunak continued optimism that his stop the boats policy is working, we've uncovered evidence that the migrant crisis here is as bad as it's ever been. yeah absolutely. >> we have. we knew this rwanda stuff was coming up. we knew that it stuff was coming up. we knew thatitis stuff was coming up. we knew that it is an issue that you guys really, really, really care about. and so we sent over mark white to northern france. he's going to be reporting back from there this show there exclusively for this show tomorrow and thursday . i've had tomorrow and thursday. i've had advanced sight of some of the
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stuff that he is seeing and caught on camera, and it completely blows the lid off the government's they government's claims that they are small boats are on top of the small boats crisis. that you're crisis. make sure that you're tuning in tomorrow, 11 pm. tuning in tomorrow, 9 to 11 pm. for first instalment for that first instalment of that and eye opening that shocking and eye opening exclusive report from mark white in calais. still to come in calais. but still to come this 91 year this evening, after a 91 year old patient sadly died old dementia patient sadly died because foreign care staff were unable to explain her condition to 999. operators should english language tests be made tougher for medical staff? that's the view of the coroner who led the inquest into barbara raymond's tragic death and the former big brother star and director of care campaign for the vulnerable, jayne connery, hits out at the system. that's all happening very shortly . but happening very shortly. but first, clash, as prince first, in the clash, as prince harry claims that he's been treated should treated unfairly, should the taxpayer for bill armed taxpayer foot the for bill armed police the runaway police to protect the runaway royal when he visits britain? that's what he wants. margaret thatcher's aide, nigel thatcher's former aide, nigel gardiner, on showbiz gardiner, takes on showbiz reporter rebecca that's
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weekend at 3 pm. on gb news, the people's channel, britain's news channel . news channel. >> no nonsense nana akua joins me very, very soon on the ongoing scandal in scotland about violent men being allowed to just rampage through women's prisons when will the madness end? but first, it's time for the clash and prince harry is surprise, surprise back in court , this time challenging a 2020 home office decision that removed his automatic entitlement to armed police
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protection when he visits the uk. the duke's lawyers argued today that there had been unfairness in how his decision was reached, despite the fact that the runaway royal will still have access to publicly funded police security in britain on a case by case basis . britain on a case by case basis. the home office decision only downgraded harry's automatic entitlement to protection at the same level as a working royal after he withdrew from his official duties and resettled in the states. many people think that's absolutely fair enough. here's what the good people of birmingham think the duke of birmingham think of the duke of delusions for taxpayer delusions demands for taxpayer funded protection. we asked funded protection. when we asked them today, sir, them earlier today, sir, you should pay for his own should normally pay for his own private security out of his own funds. >> so if he pays for it himself, he's welcome back. but not for us to pay. >> at the end of the day, he's still the king's son, so why shouldn't he be looked after? >> i don't any taxpayer >> i don't think any taxpayer should the should be paying for the monarchy anymore. decided that he part the he didn't want to be part of the royal anymore . so no , but royal family anymore. so no, but what do you think ? what do you think? >> as his lawyers challenged the
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home office decision , should home office decision, should prince harry be entitled to armed guards armed police guards when he visits let me know your visits britain? let me know your thoughts. us, thoughts. email us, gbviews@gbnews.com. tweet me at gb news. why are you there? go and vote in our poll. i'll bring you those results shortly . you those results very shortly. but now, i'm but to debate this now, i'm joined by the director of washington dc's heritage foundation, man foundation, nile gardiner, a man who actually who i think is actually campaigning to get prince harry deported america , and deported from america, and showbiz journalist rebekah toomey well. now i'll toomey as well. and now i'll start with you. should prince harry have of taxpayer funded police protection when he's in the uk ? the uk? >> patrick, great to be on the show today . prince harry should show today. prince harry should not be receiving a british taxpayers funding for a security in the uk. he's not a working royal. he basically abandoned the royal family. he and meghan markle, of course launched consistent attacks against the british royal family from their , british royal family from their, uh, their mansion in montecito in california. i think it's absolutely outrageous, the idea that the british public should be subsidising prince harry and
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meghan markle for their protection in the uk this is not the job of the british taxpayer to be to be subsidising somebody who doesn't do any work whatsoever. as far as i can tell, for the royal family or for the british people. so absolutely not. not penny . absolutely not. not a penny. >> okay. now, rebekah, i understand think that understand that you think that if visiting his family , if harry is visiting his family, so anything connected with the if harry is visiting his family, so anjfamily:onnected with the if harry is visiting his family, so an} family he 1ected with the if harry is visiting his family, so an} family he should nith the if harry is visiting his family, so anjfamily he should have he royal family he should have police protection is that right ? police protection is that right? >> yep. i do think we have to remember that, harry didn't choose to be member the choose to be a member of the royal certainly chose to >> he certainly chose not to be. but was. but he was. >> oh , well, i'll tell you what, >> oh, well, i'll tell you what, we'll just go back to niall then. okay. unfortunately, we lost her. rebekah there. we'll get to her. look, let me get back to her. look, let me know what think in the know what you think in the inbox. already flooding in inbox. it is already flooding in gbviews@gbnews.com. harry if he gets allowed to have us pay for security when he visits the uk, then will start to argue that then he will start to argue that we security for we should supply security for him . he tries him in america. he tries to do that canada. that's what dave that in canada. that's what dave says in the inbox . this country says in the inbox. this country should should tell him to pay for the security himself but
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still stay away, says colin. rebecca, i'm going to go for take two on this you take two on this one. so you think he's visiting the royal think if he's visiting the royal family, should family, he should get protection? . i think if he's protection? yes. i think if he's doing something connected to the royals , he's visiting family, royals, he's visiting family, doing something with invictus games, one of his charities, then think perhaps we should then i think perhaps we should support this. support him in this. >> let's just remember >> and let's just remember princess she left >> and let's just remember prin royal she left >> and let's just remember prin royal family, she left >> and let's just remember prin royal family, she she left >> and let's just remember prin royal family, she still left >> and let's just remember prinroyal family, she still did the royal family, she still did have protection when she have british protection when she travelled with her sons. so i think really we should do like for like so harry's for like so if harry's travelling children, travelling with his children, i think we should honour that and do same. but if he's do the same. but if he's promoting netflix then promoting a netflix show, then perhaps cough perhaps he can, you know, cough up own private security. >> yeah. so private security is one option, niall. another one is that i believe in the past he said, i'll pay for police said, well i'll pay for police protection. well, i'm sorry, harry, a stab a thon harry, we've got a stab a thon going on central london and harry, we've got a stab a thon goingmajor central london and harry, we've got a stab a thon goingmajor cities|l london and harry, we've got a stab a thon goingmajor cities in.ondon and harry, we've got a stab a thon goingmajor cities in the on and harry, we've got a stab a thon goingmajor cities in the on iati most major cities in the uk at the moment. got loads of the moment. we've got loads of crime. turning crime. police aren't turning up to shoplifting . why to things like shoplifting. why should you allowed to pay should you be allowed to pay to take off beat? yeah exactly. >> it's fundamentally wrong , i >> it's fundamentally wrong, i think, for prince harry to be
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demanding that he have police protection that he can that he can pay for because this would give him a very privileged status. he can pay for his own private security . in fact, harry private security. in fact, harry and meghan have earned an estimated $100 million from the netflix deal, about 20 million through spotify , 20 million through spotify, 20 million through spotify, 20 million through the book deal. so they are vastly wealthy indeed . st are vastly wealthy indeed. st giles' they can afford private security. and the idea the that the british government should be providing special royal protection officers for them , protection officers for them, even if harry and meghan are paying even if harry and meghan are paving, even if harry and meghan are paying , that is fundamentally paying, that is fundamentally wrong because that's not the same service given to the british members of the public who are facing soaring levels of crime. and so i do think with harry and meghan, they are extremely narcissistic , arrogant extremely narcissistic, arrogant individuals . they do nothing individuals. they do nothing whatsoever, frankly , for the whatsoever, frankly, for the british people, and they don't deserve preferential treatment . deserve preferential treatment. >> okay. i mean, rebecca, just just come back to that. i mean,
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thatis just come back to that. i mean, that is quite widely held that is a quite widely held view, really, that turned his back family, potentially back on his family, potentially turned back on country, turned his back on his country, made his bed. he can lie in it. >> i understand . and why people >> i understand. and why people feel the way they do . but i feel the way they do. but i think we have to remember, as i just mentioned, i'm not sure if i got cut off about how he was born family. he born into the royal family. he didn't be in the royal born into the royal family. he didn't he be in the royal born into the royal family. he didn't he certainlyin the royal born into the royal family. he didn't he certainly chose royal born into the royal family. he didn't he certainly chose notal family. he certainly chose not to be. we to remember to be. but we have to remember that, know, we to that, you know, we have to protect some of our vulnerable people, whoever they are . and people, whoever they are. and let's the amount of let's face it, the amount of vitriol there is being spat at. harry and meghan, i'm sure their security is probably needs to be much higher than ever before. and think what would it take and i think what would it take for us to actually think , let's for us to actually think, let's protect this, this life just because harry and is because he's prince harry and is in pubuc because he's prince harry and is in public eye? it doesn't in the public eye? it doesn't mean be mean that we shouldn't be protecting would protecting him. what would it take for us to actually think we do actually just to protect do actually just need to protect him? just i feel like >> so i just i just feel like with harry's newfound with prince harry's newfound woke views. right. probably woke views. right. he's probably the of person, was the kind of person, if he was living in this country, would think know , non—dom think that, you know, non—dom status be abolished and
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status should be abolished and all the wealthy should pay their fair tax. do find it fair share of tax. i do find it remarkable now that he therefore wants taxpayer to wants the british taxpayer to pay wants the british taxpayer to pay his own security when pay for his own security when he's this country. some may he's in this country. some may say hypocritical , say that's a bit hypocritical, but it's . absolutely outrageous. >> it is very, very hypocritical. critical considering his ultra woke political views along with meghan as and this meghan markle as well. and this idea are, you know, idea that they are, you know, vulnerable individuals, they're not they are hugely not i mean, they are hugely privileged, people who privileged, wealthy people who have a great deal of security in in california. and as for vitriol and hate, they really spew that all the time against the british royal family. they do all they can to undermine the royals and also, frankly, the british people as well. it's absolutely disgraceful . they absolutely disgraceful. they should not be given any kind of special privileged protection or treatment by by the british government funded by the british people. >> all right. look, both of you, thank you very, very much. it's great to have you both on the show. clash. you both show. that is a clash. you both have radically different show. that is a clash. you both haveit'siically different show. that is a clash. you both haveit'siicallytoifferent show. that is a clash. you both haveit'siicallyto getant show. that is a clash. you both haveit'siicallyto get them both and it's good to get them both across. rebecca across. as rebecca told me, their and
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their showbiz journalist and nigel as well, the nigel gardner as well, the director of washington, d. s director of washington, d. c. s heritage but the big heritage foundation. but the big question who you question really is, who do you agree with? as his lawyers challenged home office challenged the home office decision, prince harry be decision, should prince harry be entitled armed police guards entitled to armed police guards when britain? lynn on when he visits britain? lynn on twitter says not twitter says harry's not a working royal and that was his decision. bring his own decision. he can bring his own bodyguards with him. why should he guards bodyguards with him. why should he for guards bodyguards with him. why should he for by guards bodyguards with him. why should he for by the guards bodyguards with him. why should he for by the taxpayer guards bodyguards with him. why should he for by the taxpayer gianna paid for by the taxpayer? anna says harry isn't important to says harry isn't as important to the as he pretends he is the country as he pretends he is . he wants to be in the . he just wants to be in the news can obviously news and can obviously afford to pay news and can obviously afford to pay protection if he pay for his own protection if he wants twitter wants it. as ammo on twitter says , despite what happened , he says, despite what happened, he is still a member of our royal family and he should be entitled to he no to protection. if he had no bodyguards killed in an bodyguards and was killed in an attack, be total attack, it would be a total tragedy. would, course, tragedy. it would, of course, be a i just whether a tragedy. i just wonder whether or pay for his own or not he could pay for his own bodyguard. verdict bodyguard. but your verdict is in one 4% of you agree that in 14. one 4% of you agree that harry should be entitled to armed police guards when he visits britain. 86% of you say that should not. now, i've that he should not. now, i've got a very emotive story coming up, and it has got a lot of people got people going in the inbox, got a lot people going on social
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lot of people going on social media well. and we're just lot of people going on social mediato well. and we're just lot of people going on social mediato confront1d we're just lot of people going on social mediato confront1d we'reonst going to confront it head on because up , we tackle two because coming up, we tackle two stories expose the shocking stories that expose the shocking state women's rights . first, state of women's rights. first, the government's the scottish government's startling new policy that will allow dangerous trans criminals with a history of violence against women to serve their sentences in female prisons . and sentences in female prisons. and a trans cyclist sparked a pair of trans cyclist sparked fury by stealing first and second in elite cycling competition. so is suicide city safe and fair for women today? gb news superstar nana akua speaks out shortly . but here we speaks out shortly. but here we go. after a 91 year old dementia patient died because foreign care staff were unable to explain her condition to 999 operators. should english language tests be made tougher for medical staff? former big brother star and director of care campaign for the vulnerable , jane connery gives her view before my panel returned to this debate. is it really racist to want workers to speak english? don't go away
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isabel monday to thursdays from. six till 930 . six till 930. >> welcome back. gb news star nana akua on the way, but first, an elderly woman has tragically died after two foreign carers failed to describe the details of the medical emergency. so barbara rimell passed away. having become trapped under a stair lift after a fall at a care home in somerset last year. the coroner's report found that when her two carers from romania and india called 999, their inability to understand the difference between bleeding and
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breathing made any assessment of mrs. rimell condition virtually impossible. shockingly it's also emerged at the inquest that one of the carers never passed . the of the carers never passed. the engush of the carers never passed. the english language test required for a work visa with the coroner samantha marsh blasting the minimum level of english required for care home staff has wholly insufficient int. well, before i go to my panel again on this, i'm joined now by the director of care campaign for the is jane connery. the vulnerable is jane connery. jayne thank you very, very much . jayne thank you very, very much. how do you feel about this? do you think it's unfair to ask foreign care workers or demand really that they should be fluent in english? >> hi , patrick. thank you for >> hi, patrick. thank you for having me on. this is a really tragic case. yes. um, no, it's not unfair at all. i think being a carer, you . it's all about a carer, you. it's all about communication, especially when you're dealing with very vulnerable people. um to not have that level of communication
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opfion have that level of communication option is a failure . option is a failure. >> and this has to be directed at the person who obviously employed these carers. so it's really, really important , really, really important, particularly in dementia care , particularly in dementia care, that carers have of um, a strong engush that carers have of um, a strong english language , um, so that english language, um, so that they can do the right care and they can do the right care and they can do the right care and they can deliver the right care, but also as well dealing with predominantly elderly, vulnerable people who might already on top of whatever primary care issues they may have, they may also be deaf or all of those very understandable things. >> i don't think it's . racist, >> i don't think it's. racist, is it to say, look, having someone who can speak clear, fluent english is going to be better for the of your better for the care of your vulnerable elderly loved one? >> absolutely . not. i don't know >> absolutely. not. i don't know why that's even stated . it's
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why that's even stated. it's like saying you know, you can be a doctor, but you don't have to necessarily train , um, on on, necessarily train, um, on on, you know, how the body functions being carer is it's the main requisite to have the right communication. um, i have personal experience of this with my mum when she had a home care and i was advised by the provider to use google translate , but to actually talk to the carer, it is a huge failing and it could have placed my mother at risk . um, we receive a lot of at risk. um, we receive a lot of calls every week about this issue. no, it's not racist . it issue. no, it's not racist. it it's, it's very , very serious. it's, it's very, very serious. and i think this case, as with other cases that have happened , other cases that have happened, it's extremely distressing for everybody, including the carers how. >> now. >> indeed. thank you very, very much, jane, for coming on. and just giving us the truth and the
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reality really of what it's like. that's the director of the care campaign for the vulnerable, jane connery. so, you know, it's widespread you know, it's a widespread issue. i'm going to go to my panel issue. i'm going to go to my panel, i'll start with panel, albeit i'll start with you. mean, is this a very you. i mean, is this a very obvious example of how having incredibly lax immigration system, unfortunately, can cost lives ? lives? >> i think we've got to look at why is it that the english language skills required to be a carer are so low? and why is it that all the carers and many of the carers that we seem to have in are immigrants is in britain are immigrants is because don't because british people don't want and the want to do the job and the reason british don't reason why british people don't want the job is because want to do the job is because the wages aren't very and the wages aren't very high and the wages aren't very high and the wages aren't very high and the is wages aren't very the wages aren't very high and the is because vages aren't very the wages aren't very high and the is because wees aren't very the wages aren't very high and the is because we importt very high is because we import immigrant labour, which depresses wages. so it's this insolvable problem. and we're here about the symptoms here talking about the symptoms of a problem rather than actually looking at how solve of a problem rather than actlproblemzing at how solve of a problem rather than actlproblem .ng at how solve of a problem rather than actlproblem . and: how solve of a problem rather than actlproblem . and we'll solveve of a problem rather than actlproblem . and we'll solve the the problem. and we'll solve the problem increasing care wages problem by increasing care wages and we'll solve the problem by reducing look, reducing migration. okay look, rebecca, i'm going to throw it over to you here. >> do you feel about this? i >> how do you feel about this? i mean , obviously, it's 91 year mean, obviously, it's 91 year old lady, isn't it ?
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old lady, isn't it? >> yeah. i mean, listen, she she was 91 and she had alzheimer's, so there was a complicated medical history here. however, the nature of the accident was actually fairly horrible . and actually fairly horrible. and what i'm confused by, though, is that in terms of these carers trying there are trying to talk to 999, there are many examples of toddlers being able to get the ambulance to come. i am concerned, by the way that the ambulance system works in this country, that rang that the ambulance system works in tithey�*untry, that rang that the ambulance system works in tithey were, that rang that the ambulance system works in tithey were clearly rang that the ambulance system works in tithey were clearly in rang and they were clearly in distress . they have sent distress. they should have sent somebody immediately without needing through nine needing to go through nine questions about versus questions about bleeding versus breathing . if someone's breathing. if someone's distressed, they should have sent is an nhs sent someone that is an nhs problem. there the wider problem. there is also the wider problem. there is also the wider problem speak problem of people who speak fluent country, fluent english in the country, don't be carers. i think don't want to be carers. i think as a country too reliant as a country we're too reliant on carers because on care homes and carers because we enough after we don't do enough to look after our elderly relatives , which our own elderly relatives, which creates for profit creates this industry for profit making care homes which which pay making care homes which which pay people terrible wages and therefore can only get people who don't really want to do the job, who don't speak fluent english. >> okay, suzanne, your take on this? mean , this for me is an
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this? i mean, this for me is an incredibly widespread problem. and the idea on top of it was that no one would check to see if any of them had actually passed their english. no, no. >> is i mean, really >> this is i mean, it's really shocking. doubt shocking. there's no doubt been an abject failure here on the part of those employing these people. i just incensed people. but i just get incensed by the way we treat carers people. but i just get incensed by care the way we treat carers people. but i just get incensed by care homes.' we treat carers people. but i just get incensed bycare homes. it's treat carers people. but i just get incensed bycare homes. it's appalleders people. but i just get incensed bycare homes. it's appalled .s in care homes. it's appalled. ing rebecca mentioned be said to the wages are terrible . the the wages are terrible. the starting salary is £14,000 a yeah starting salary is £14,000 a year. how are you supposed to live on that unless you're living with your parents? say how are you supposed to even think about renting somewhere in london kind of a very london on that kind of a very low salary? job is low salary? and yet the job is mentally, physically and emotionally draining . and it's emotionally draining. and it's about actually about time somebody actually shook it up. did something about it, and started to pay , is not it, and started to pay, is not any excuse for having someone there who talk the there who can't talk the language. point language. it's not. but my point is, patrick, were paid is, patrick, if they were paid £30,000 people would be £30,000 a year, people would be queuing do the job. we queuing up to do the job. we wouldn't need to exploiting wouldn't need to be exploiting foreign migrant labour, which is what we're doing we're what we're doing here. we're saying, oh, you're foreign, you can do the cheap jobs can come and do the cheap jobs that want do . that
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that we don't want to do. that is what's a form of racism, in my think it's appalling my view. i think it's appalling and it leads to tragedies like these . and worry the these. and my worry is the government's obviously to government's obviously got to respond this coroner's respond to this coroner's report. what report. and i know what they'll say we have learnt say it'll be. we have learnt lessons are lessons because lessons are always . the truth is, always learnt. the truth is, lessons are . lessons never are. >> okay. i mean i'll be presume ably we have to go on a government mandated, state sponsored aged care training scheme . i mean, sponsored aged care training scheme. i mean, i'm sponsored aged care training scheme . i mean, i'm all for scheme. i mean, i'm all for this. this idea that you know, the practical jobs in society, i mean, this is a caregiving job, but other practical jobs that we have society , the idea that have in society, the idea that we specifically we can't specifically incentivise people and do incentivise people to go and do these things, whether it's waiving of student fees waiving any kind of student fees that you would need an increasing i mean , this increasing wages. i mean, this is really the way around this because at moment we've got because at the moment we've got care home providers more care home providers who are more than happy to get people over not really giving a toss whether or not they can speak the language. would argue, language. i would argue, therefore, we're not really giving the of therefore, we're not really givi 91 the of therefore, we're not really givi 91 year the of therefore, we're not really givi 91 year old the of therefore, we're not really givi 91 year old dementia of the 91 year old dementia sufferer they supposed sufferer that they are supposed to after . i sufferer that they are supposed to after. i mean, is to be looking after. i mean, is this example where the state this an example where the state has come in the state does
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has to come in the state does need to come in and had need to come in and we've had conservative prime minister after conservative prime minister going minister say they're going to sort sector in this country. >> they're going out >> they're going to sort out social whenever social care. but then whenever they put something on the table because expensive, because it's so expensive, because it's so expensive, because to raise wages because it's so expensive, because expensive :o raise wages because it's so expensive, because expensive :0 rcare wages and it's expensive to care for people, are not happy people, people are not happy with way that we fund it. with the way that we fund it. people with people weren't happy with theresa people to theresa may's idea for people to use people's homes to fund it. people raise people don't want to raise taxes. can't for it taxes. so we can't pay for it that way. it's an expensive problem. going to need problem. it's going to need money. we don't have very much of i also where >> and i sense also where a movement to encourage to >> and i sense also where a moveienglish encourage to >> and i sense also where a moveienglish livingrage to >> and i sense also where a moveienglish living in|e to >> and i sense also where a moveienglish living in this to learn english living in this country , classes, accessibility country, classes, accessibility and app. a conservative government who was encouraged people to learn english would not received . but why? not be well received. but why? why think it why not? because i think it would sound like they were saying, over, we love saying, come over, we love immigration. feel saying, come over, we love imna|ration. feel saying, come over, we love imna hard1. feel saying, come over, we love imna hard on feel saying, come over, we love imna hard on immigration el like a hard on immigration policy. i imagine a lot of viewers not pleased viewers would not be pleased to hear money. think hear that tax money. i think a lot people an effort lot of people would be an effort to really to integrate. i'd be really interested whether interested to know whether i'm wrong. genuinely, course . >> yeah, genuinely, of course. but think one of the but i think i think one of the things email gb views things that email gb views news.com, of news.com, i do think that one of the people really
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the things that people really get up about a get very wound up about is a perceived of integration. perceived lack of integration. language the biggest barrier language is the biggest barrier to thank you to that. good stuff. thank you very everybody. very much, everybody. a difficult but difficult topic to cover, but there go. look. coming up, there we go. look. coming up, can the conservatives back can the conservatives claw back support rwanda fly support by getting a rwanda fly in before the next in the air before the next election , or is too little, election, or is it too little, too and will nigel farage too late? and will nigel farage remain after another eviction night down under? we will have exclusive reaction from australia. very, very soon. but next, we tackle two stories that expose the shocking state of women's rights today or lack of first, the scottish government's startling new policy that will allow dangerous trans criminals with a history of violence against women to serve their sentences in female prisons and a pair of trans cyclists sparked fury by stealing first and second in an elite cycling competition. obviously so is society safe and fair for women today? gb news superstar nana akua speaks out. don't miss it
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coming up, coming up , conservative coming up, conservative mp dame andrea jenkins gives me the inside track on this secret meeting of tory mps. it's taking place over the new rwanda deal . place over the new rwanda deal. if they don't back it, it could be curtains for sunak. so like i said , keep your eyes peeled for said, keep your eyes peeled for that because i think that will be really, really revealing. but in yet another attack on women's rights, scottish rights, a shocking new scottish government will allow government policy will allow trans criminals with history trans criminals with a history of violence against women to serve their sentences in female prisons under the new rules due to come into force next year, dangerous trans criminals will be transferred women's be transferred to women's prisons there compelling prisons if there is compelling evidence that they do not, quote , pose a risk of unacceptable harm. well, i'm joined now by gb news superstar nana akua nana. thank you very much. always an absolute pleasure to have you on. look, mean , what's an on. look, i mean, what's an unacceptable risk? i would argue a attacked a woman a bloke who's attacked a woman is probably an unacceptable risk
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. i ijust, is probably an unacceptable risk . i i just, you know, is probably an unacceptable risk . i ijust, you know, i don't understand why this is carrying on. >> we saw what happened with isla bryson, who was obviously a man, adam graham, who went to a female prison even though he was a double rapist. they're saying that somebody like this wouldn't go to a female prison, but then there is a potential that they could . and as long as there is could. and as long as there is compelling evidence they compelling evidence that they don't a harm or risk don't pose a harm or risk to women, this is totally, women, look, this is totally, totally wrong . if i were in totally wrong. if i were in charge, it would be based on biology. that's that you're a man and you've committed a crime. you cannot then go to a female prison . i don't female prison. i don't understand why they are confusing things in this manner because, a if you're a man that believes you're a woman, you are potentially suffering from gender dysphoria . b you may well gender dysphoria. b you may well be playing the system like the likes of isla bryson and see, what about the women in the prison that you are going to ? prison that you are going to? what are your rights? trump the women's rights in that prison. there's no woman in that prison
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that wants a man , even if he that wants a man, even if he thinks a woman in the thinks he's a woman in the prison. it's not even safe for the staff. so don't really get why somebody somewhere is pushing this and trying to literally remove women's rights before our very eyes. i think it's totally wrong. i don't even understand why this is going on. look what i'll do is i'm going to read the snp's justice secretary's comments on this. >> right. and i'll and i'll get you to respond. so angela constance, justice constance, the snp's justice secretary, said updated secretary, said this updated policy protects the safety and welfare of staff, those in their care and the rights of transgender people . it makes transgender people. it makes clear that if a transgender woman meets the service's violence against women and girls criteria, will be admitted criteria, they will be admitted and accommodated in the male estate. i mean, as far as you're concerned . this shouldn't even concerned. this shouldn't even be a question. it's basically if you're born with the male tackle, you're in a blokes prison, right? tackle, you're in a blokes prisit's right? tackle, you're in a blokes prisit's quite’ tackle, you're in a blokes prisit's quite straightforward. tackle, you're in a blokes priinf; quite straightforward. tackle, you're in a blokes priinf; qui thinkiightforward. tackle, you're in a blokes priinf; qui think you're ward. tackle, you're in a blokes priinf; quithink you're aard. tackle, you're in a blokes priinf; quithink you're a woman and if you think you're a woman and you're a man, frankly, and you're a man, then frankly, you a secluded you can go to a secluded wing in the prisoners. the prison for trans prisoners. if is case, woman
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if that is the case, this woman is talking absolute claptrap. she a prison then she should go to a prison then perhaps, and sit there with a load of men who believe that they and see they are women and see how comfortable feels. it is comfortable she feels. it is absolutely absurd. the worst comfortable she feels. it is absisutely absurd. the worst comfortable she feels. it is absis that absurd. the worst comfortable she feels. it is absis that it's.urd. the worst comfortable she feels. it is absis that it's actually the worst bit is that it's actually a woman pushing this woman who's pushing this nonsense. she should go there herself. she should sit with male prisoners and imagine being a woman prisoner in that environment where you cannot escape because you're being punished. other part of punished. and the other part of it have honour it is that they have to honour the pronouns . so it is that they have to honour the pronouns. so can you imagine if now in a man's prison , a man if now in a man's prison, a man decides that he wants to be called a she, but remains in that prison ? it diminishes the that prison? it diminishes the responsibility and the power of the guards there, who then have to go along with this. >> all right. so it's like we're living in a we're living in narnia this stage. we're narnia at this stage. we're living in narnia. it's ridiculous. to another ridiculous. but look to another affront women. affront to biological women. nana athletes have won nana to trans athletes have won first and second. and this is youri first and second. and this is your i know it's getting worse, isn't it? i mean they'll they'll they'll it'll be a clean sweep next. this is a prestigious
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cycling competition america cycling competition in america leaving just single leaving just one single biological on the podium. biological woman on the podium. and it's not the first time this has happened. one of the trans cyclist, williamson, cyclist, evelyn williamson, has collected 18 medals collected a staggering 18 medals in female races across america . in female races across america. according to the chicago cross cups website, the c.c.c. has always been first and foremost about fostering a positive and supportive community built around competitive cyclo cross racing. and that means welcoming and challenging everyone who wants to contribute to the series and make it better. nana what do you make of that? well, it's like we're living in a clown world. >> this has got to be a joke, right? look there's two men on the podium and there's a woman. i don't even know why she's smiling. if i were a woman in any of those sports, i'd refused to go up against male competitors . i'd say let them. competitors. i'd say let them. let them have it. there's literally no point. i think women boycott the sports women should boycott the sports where they are forced to participate who present participate with men who present themselves as women because it's
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simply not fair. sport is about bodies. it's comparing bodies andifs bodies. it's comparing bodies and it's comparing the strength of bodies . so in sport, at the of bodies. so in sport, at the very least , that should be the very least, that should be the one place where this a woman's space and being female should be sacrosanct. but sadly even sacrosanct. but sadly not even there. almost comedic. it's there. it's almost comedic. it's got to be a joke. and these are, as martina navratilova said, mediocre men who didn't place anywhere in the male sports. but they've come in onto the women's sports and they're taking the proverbial. >> yeah, they are. no, it's reality is bang average male sportsman. not even not even bang average sometimes actually diabolically awful. male sports people who wouldn't have even got a college scholarship in their chosen sport who then win something like this and the continued to win it and continue to win it. i mean, i think it's cheating, but it's all very well and good being being being called inclusive or anything, but i mean, at the expense of what though, nana, what my concern, though, nana, is that we saw is that that picture that we saw earlier there is a window earlier on, there is a window into future that's into the future where that's just sport .
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just sport. >> that's what it's getting more and more familiar, isn't it? we're used seeing we're getting used to seeing men on taking the first on the podium taking the first second place. there's usually one solitary woman. it's one solitary woman. now it's going to be first, second and third. somebody must be looking at thinking , this at this and thinking, this is ludicrous, doesn't seem ludicrous, but it doesn't seem to be happening. i don't understand . it's not people will understand. it's not people will call transphobic . it's not call it transphobic. it's not transphobic talk about transphobic to talk about reality of men in reality of biology. men in general are stronger than women , general are stronger than women, so they shouldn't be competing in sports where power and strength is what is measured. thatis strength is what is measured. that is quite simple because it's not fair to the women . it's not fair to the women. >> no, it's absolutely not fair. and people's lives hinge on this. right? sponsor money in sports on it . i this. right? sponsor money in sports on it. i mean, sports hinges on it. i mean, people's safety in the changing rooms. we've already kind of rooms. but we've already kind of touched haven't touched on that, haven't we? things scholarships things like college scholarships all stuff, you know, all of this stuff, you know, just have their just fame and people have their entire are then a bloke entire lives are then a bloke rocks up and takes it all away from you. it's an absolute disaster zone. but nana, thank you much. always a you very, very much. always a delight to have you on. nana akua setting to akua that's setting the world to rights as she does so well. gb news look, i've got
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news presenter look, i've got quite a lot going on in the inbox, right? just inbox, all right? and i just want to return very, very quickly that gb views and quickly to that gb views and gbnews.com riht, only really strong stuff about whether or not it was racist to suggest that people who work in our care system should speak fluent english. people do look english. patrick people do look after their elderly this after their elderly in this country, a country, but for some it's a last resort put them in the last resort to put them in the care trouble is, care homes. the trouble is, of course, care homes they think are worried about are just too worried about making and aren't too making money and aren't too focussed on whether or not people there should speak english. that's from steve. thank you very much, steve. but coming up, former education minister andrea jenkyns reveals all after dozens of conservative backbenchers set up a brexit style star chamber. that's what they call it , of style star chamber. that's what they call it, of legal style star chamber. that's what they call it , of legal experts they call it, of legal experts to establish whether the new rwanda treaty would actually get flights off the ground . it's flights off the ground. it's going to absolutely pop off this right , because we've got this right, because we've got this new rwanda deal and whether or not group backbenchers not this group of backbenchers back, could actually back, it could actually determine future. but determine sunaks future. but next, it emerges more 2019, next, as it emerges more 2019, tory voters are set to back
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reform rather than labour. can the party still be saved from electoral oblivion ? and i'll electoral oblivion? and i'll have all of tomorrow's front pages tonight . will farage pages tonight. will farage remain in the jungle? it's all go that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers sponsors of weather on . gb news. on. gb news. >> good evening. welcome to your latest gb news weather update from the met office. it will be a colder night tonight than last night because much of the country be under clear country will be under clear spells. that's because the rain many of us have seen through today this low today brought by this low pressure, off to the pressure, is pushing off to the east and behind it. we've got a bit more of a settled interlude at least that will last at least through . so plenty through wednesday. so plenty of clear there this clear spells out there this evening. frost developing evening. and a frost developing quite quickly. so temperatures will off quite quickly will drop off quite quickly tonight. there's warning tonight. there's an ice warning in force eastern areas of in force across eastern areas of scotland and we'll see some mist and fog developing across parts scotland and we'll see some mist anwalesieveloping across parts scotland and we'll see some mist anwalesievelthelg across parts scotland and we'll see some mist anwalesievelthe south—west ts scotland and we'll see some mist anwalesievelthe south—west of of wales and the south—west of england . and it will widely england. and it will be widely a frosty start to the day tomorrow . but there will some . but there will be some sunshine around, particularly
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across and across northern areas and eastern areas where the sunshine should much of the day. should last for much of the day. by west, though, by the west, though, the sunshine hazier sunshine will turn hazier throughout once any throughout the day. once any mist and clears. and you can mist and fog clears. and you can see across parts of northern ireland, be rain ireland, there will be rain arriving that rain arriving by lunchtime. that rain will push into of wales as will push into parts of wales as well as cornwall. by the end of the day temperatures the day as well. temperatures will rise, though, in will start to rise, though, in the with more a south the west with more of a south westerly east, westerly breeze in the east, however, feeling however, still feeling quite chilly with only highs around chilly with only highs of around 3 and then 3 or 4 degrees. and then thursday's to be a widely thursday's going to be a widely more wet day. are warnings more wet day. there are warnings in for heavy rain across in force for heavy rain across many areas as well as many western areas as well as parts of scotland , too. there parts of scotland, too. there could be some difficult driving conditions because of the rain and the rain will last through the rest of the week, friday and into the weekend . but into the weekend. but temperatures will start to rise into double figures by looks like things are heating up. >> boxt boiler as sponsors of weather on .
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gb news. >> it's 10 pm. and this is patrick christys tonight . patrick christys tonight. >> and despite rishi sunak continued optimism that his stop the boats policy is working, we've uncovered evidence that the migrant crisis here is as bad as it's ever been. >> three home secretaries under three prime ministers have gone to rwanda . today we've got a new to rwanda. today we've got a new deal to rwanda. today we've got a new deal. the government better hope it works because as we're ahead of the game, we've been to calais and despite what the government claims, the channel migrant problem is worse than even migrant problem is worse than ever. tory mps are scrutinising this deal with top lawyers as we speak. andrea jenkins joins me. she's one of them for the inside track on a potential tory rebellion that could finish sunak off. talking of tough immigration policies, look at this numpty who's just won. art turner prize for assembling some scrap metal in a heap and calling profound . and finally
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calling it profound. and finally , obviously , somewhere with , obviously, somewhere with a strong points based immigration system is australia. but they've let this guy in. adam cherry is outside the versace hotel down under to get the latest on nigel in the jungle for us. grief last night he ate a cricket. i'm not sure what on earth is going to do tonight. that's enough adam thank you now and we've been mugged off by the norwegians yet again, off by the again, but mugged off by the norwegians. us norwegians. they've sent us another terrible trafalgar square . it's so square christmas tree. it's so badifs square christmas tree. it's so bad it's needed . a branch bad it's needed. a branch transplant . yeah. you just transplant. yeah. you just couldn't make it up. i'll have tomorrow's front pages and the inside stories with my press packs. you'll be ahead of the game when it comes to tomorrow's news on the sofa tonight. susan evans, amankona and evans, albie amankona and rebecca reid. this is patrick christys. tonight here we go .
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christys. tonight here we go. email obe gbviews@gbnews.com. if rwanda doesn't work this time round , just sunak have to go. round, just sunak have to go. i'll see you after the headlines i >> patrick. thank you. and good evening. our top story from the newsroom tonight is that a 28 year old male has been arrested on suspicion of attempted murder following the stabbing of a 29 year old woman in aberfan in south wales today. the pregnant woman was subjected to a knife attack in broad daylight there this morning. attack in broad daylight there this morning . she was taken to this morning. she was taken to hospital and is believed to be in stable condition . chief in a stable condition. chief inspector rob miles from south wales police this update . wales police gave this update. >> the man is known to the victim and is currently in police custody . i appreciate police custody. i appreciate there will be a real sense of shock when the local community, with having happened with the attack having happened in local schools in broad daylight, local schools activated their lockdown protocols to keep people safe . protocols to keep people safe. neighbourhood officers have been in the area to ensure ensure pupils have been able to leave
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the school safely at their normal time . this was done as normal time. this was done as a precaution and schools will reopen tomorrow as normal chief inspector rob miles. >> now the home secretary said today he's rather uncomfortable with some of the criticism being directed at rwanda as he unveiled a new asylum treaty in kigali. it's understood that new british laws are to be expedite through parliament, declaring that rwanda is a safe country for the processing of asylum seekers arriving in the uk. james cleverly praised rwanda for being part of the british solution. but the shadow home secretary yvette cooper, cast doubt on the plans. >> they sent more home secretaries than they have asylum seekers to rwanda and this scheme is badly failing . this scheme is badly failing. they still won't tell us how much it will cost, even though we've already know that we've spent £140 million and more on this scheme and what they could be doing is putting that money into going after the criminal smuggler gangs and taking action
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there instead . there instead. >> yvette cooper junior doctors in england are set to stage the longest strike in nhs history after talks on an improved pay deal with the government broke down. ministers and the british medical association , the union medical association, the union representing junior doctors have been locked in negotiations now for five weeks, trying to find a solution. the bma says the government's offered a pay increase of just 3, which it says amounts to a pay cut for many doctors. the first walkouts are due to start across england from 7 am. on the 20th of december. the royal family has been seen in public for the first time since the publication of omid scobie's controversial book about the royal family was published . but the monarch was published. but the monarch was joined by the queen, prince william and kate for a dazzling evening at buckingham palace, which traditionally heralds the start of the festive season for the royal family aides stressed it was business as usual at the white tie and tiaras event. the
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annual gathering welcomes over 500 members of the diplomatic corps in the state rooms at buckingham palace . now sir paul buckingham palace. now sir paul mccartney has led tributes for wings and moody blues musician denny laine, who has died today at the age of 79. since you gotta go, are you better go now ? gotta go, are you better go now? >> i his wife said he died after a long running battle with lung disease. >> denny laine sang on the moody blues. millions selling hit go now, as you just heard and co—wrote the wings hit mull of kintyre number one for nine weeks in britain. back in the day, sir paul mccartney described him as an outstanding vocalist and guitar player, saying it was a pleasure to know him. mickey dolans as well from the monkees has said tonight on social media he was a wonderful person and his music would person and that his music would be missed . denny laine, be sorely missed. denny laine, who died today , you're with gb who died today, you're with gb news across the uk on tv, in
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your car, on digital radio, and on your smart speaker by saying, play gb news. this is britain's news channel . news channel. >> how long is it before church groups in rwanda start having collections for the people of britain? james cleverly is the third home secretary we've sent there and three separate prime ministers have tried to get flights off the ground. surely african nations looking african nations are now looking at us and laughing at how chaotic disorganised are. chaotic and disorganised we are. we signed a new treaty, we have signed a new treaty, though. here, he is cleverly and rwanda's foreign affairs minister, vincent biruta . that minister, vincent biruta. that signing looks a little bit like a panic buying on transfer deadune a panic buying on transfer deadline day, but will take deadline day, but we will take it far as i can tell, the it as far as i can tell, the deal that the home secretary has signed today means signed in rwanda today means that rwandan government has that the rwandan government has pretty said that they will pretty much said that they will accept the chance. they will probably end up keeping everyone who sent there. okay. the new treaty ensures that people relocated to rwanda are not at risk of being returned to a
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country where their life or freedom will be threatened. that's important, which, that's vitally important, which, as established it is as we've established it is essentially anywhere that's not europe. there will be a new appeals body which will be made up of judges from around the world. rwanda asylum system will be monitored by an independent committee whose powers to enforce the treaty would be beefed up. the monitoring committee will develop a system which will enable relocated people and their lawyers to lodge complaints . the government lodge complaints. the government says can we just take a moment now to appreciate how utterly absurd it is for anyone to suggest that rwanda isn't a safe country or that they're going to mistreat these so—called asylum seekers? they are taking seekers? yes they are taking a lot of money from us, but that's our fault, not theirs. they're accepting world's scrutiny accepting the world's scrutiny on their treatment of these people. they're allowing an international monitoring committee to oversee their decisions and appeal them if necessary. no sovereign country should be expected to make those kind of concessions. we certainly wouldn't. and yet they're doing it, aren't they? do honestly think that
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do you honestly think that they're going that far out of their way just so that they can abuse the human rights of a few blokes albania still blokes from albania and still there's no way this is happening? before the next general this will be general election. this will be held up in the house of lords. remarkable maybe this still remarkable maybe this will still not the case legitimacy not meet the case for legitimacy from of unelected people from a group of unelected people who get £300 just for who get £300 a day just for turning up so they can gorge themselves on taxpayer subsidised wine steak subsidised red wine and steak while will of the while they block the will of the people before asleep people before they fall asleep in chamber and dribble all in the chamber and dribble all over themselves. their the ones that abolishing, not the that need abolishing, not the rwanda labour any rwanda plan. labour aren't any better today. yvette cooper said that she'd replace it . that she'd replace it. >> we don't think the rwanda scheme is working. it's failing and that's why we think the right thing to do is to replace it with a proper plan to go after the criminal gangs rather than rights . all of these than rights. all of these cheques to rwanda for a policy that's continually failing, actually use that money to go after the criminal gangs and make sure that you can prevent these dangerous boat crossings and protect our border security.
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i'll just go after the gangs. >> yeah. proper proper policy. but we'll just go after the gangs. yeah, but on this show , gangs. yeah, but on this show, patrick we patrick christys tonight, we know the issue of illegal immigration and the small boats crisis is right up there at the top of people's lists of priorities. we know that you're sick of being lied to about rwanda. sick of being rwanda. you're sick of being lied how french are lied to about how the french are doing well with your hard doing so well with your hard earned money. you're sick of being told that the government's plans stopping the boats and plans are stopping the boats and stopping forms of illegal stopping other forms of illegal entry. we knew that this rwanda deal coming to a head, so we deal was coming to a head, so we made call to dispatch our made the call to dispatch our home security editor, mark white. to now, on white. to calais. now, on tomorrow's show and on thursday's , he's going to thursday's show, he's going to be revealing some absolutely shocking things that completely blow the lid off all of those things that the government is promising . here's a little promising. here's a little flavour of it . flavour of it. >> join us tomorrow night and thursday night as we report from northern france. and despite rishi sunak's continued optimism that his stop the boats policy
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is working , that his stop the boats policy is working, we've that his stop the boats policy is working , we've uncovered is working, we've uncovered evidence that the migrant crisis here is as bad as it's ever been i >> -- >> yeah, indeed . you don't want >> yeah, indeed. you don't want to miss that. shortly andrea jenkyns mp dame andrea jenkyns is going to be joining us. she's going to be kind of revealing what's going on behind the curtain right of curtain as the right wing of the tory scrutinise this tory party scrutinise this policy in detail. but to respond to some of the things i've said there, now i've got political commentator suzanne evans. i've got gb news contributor albie amankona and author amankona owen and author and journalist rebecca reid. suzanne, i'll start with you. would better under labour? >> ha things could always be worse under labour, but i must admit when you've got so many people coming into the country and so seemingly an impossible task, i just don't know. >> patrick is the answer. the tories have handled this shamefully . shambolically 20 and shamefully. shambolically 20 and ten they got into government first of all in coalition with the lib dems on a manifesto to cut immigration to the tens of thousands. cut immigration to the tens of thousands . boris johnson the
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thousands. boris johnson the same in 2019. it tripled under since since since 2019. so even if they do get a handle on this, rwanda issue and flights do get off the ground , we're talking off the ground, we're talking about, what, 50,000 a year coming across in small boats? well, less than 10% would well, that's less than 10% would be obviously immigration as a whole. >> it would act as a deterrent and therefore it would stop that number of people. but but i'll be i'll come to you on this because we i've obviously had a yvette cooper there who was pressed rigorously . are pressed quite rigorously. are you going to are you going to cancel going cancel this plan? are you going to basically said to cancel? she basically said they said, we'll they would. she said, we'll replace that they're replace it and that they're going to use that money to fight the gangs. the problem is we've already spent the money, so they're going to spend more money fighting the gangs and i think labour basically think labour are basically now admitting that they're just going rwanda. going to scrap rwanda. >> you asked, >> the question you asked, suzanne , was do you think things suzanne, was do you think things could under labour? could be better under labour? maybe things could be better on delay. let's at the delay. but let's look at the statistics. it brings no statistics. it brings me no pleasure but in pleasure to say this, but in 2002, seeker 2002, i think asylum seeker
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applications were at about 84,000. labour got them down to around 17,000. by 2010. the conservatives have been in power since 2010. they've gone back up to 81,000. since 2010. they've gone back up to “5300. since 2010. they've gone back up to ils that not because of a >> is that not because of a labour government perceived labour government is perceived as and leftie as not being racist and leftie lawyers inclined to lawyers are less inclined to drag out through the drag it all out through the courts. know if courts. well, all i know is if we look numbers, labour we look at the numbers, labour were better at dealing with asylum seekers and the conservatives asylum seekers and the con so vatives asylum seekers and the conso maybe would be >> so maybe labour would be better at with them. better at dealing with them. >> think will be >> rebecca i think they will be better think they'll better because i think they'll better because i think they'll be better generally, but also they're to this they're not shackled to this thing isn't they're not shackled to this thing to isn't they're not shackled to this thing to work. isn't they're not shackled to this thing to work. they isn't they're not shackled to this thing to work. they don't1't going to work. they don't have to pretending that to keep pretending that everything idea. they to keep pretending that eve athing idea. they to keep pretending that eve athing start idea. they to keep pretending that eve athing start thatea. they to keep pretending that eve athing start thatea. ahey got a fresh start and that is a massive also there are massive bonus. also there are a lot of voters, not my lot of labour voters, not my kind, in london and kind, who live in london and feel all time, the feel smug all the time, but the rest them who deeply, deeply, rest of them who deeply, deeply, deeply care about this. labour rest of them who deeply, deeply, de generally about this. labour rest of them who deeply, deeply, degenerally arout this. labour rest of them who deeply, deeply, degenerally a partyiis. labour rest of them who deeply, deeply, degenerally a party thatabour rest of them who deeply, deeply, degenerally a party that isour is generally a party that is fairly what's the policy there? >> what is the policy ? >> what is the policy? >> what is the policy? >> i do think, broadly speaking, that trying to get the people trafficking , as in the large trafficking, as in the large scale organisations that are doing that under control is really important and a lot of that about security that is about cyber security and cyber it's you cyber crime because it's if you can invest in your
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infrastructure it's infrastructure there, it's usable across the board. both tackling problem and other tackling that problem and other problems think are coming tackling that problem and other problethe think are coming tackling that problem and other problethe line think are coming tackling that problem and other problethe line . think are coming tackling that problem and other problethe line . all1k are coming tackling that problem and other problethe line . all right. coming down the line. all right. >> i think that's problem >> i think that's the problem that the conservatives really haven't been sorting the root cause this. they're cause of this. they're trying to come deterrent. come up with a deterrent. they're up with they're trying to come up with these but as these crazy plans. but as rebecca ultimately it's rebecca says, ultimately it's clamping track. clamping down on the track. >> conservatives >> well, the conservatives have made statements in made a few two statements in recent weeks. firstly that rwanda a deterrent. rwanda will act as a deterrent. secondly they have been secondly that they have been stopping the boats and that people albania are not people from albania are not coming. anything like the numbers that they were before. and that there are fewer people waiting on the other side of the channel. mark, why i'm security editor has been over there for us and tomorrow's show and thursday's show we blow the lid off all of that. the problem as we will expose is worse than it's ever been. so rwanda or no rwanda, that's what we're up against. and we should be under no illusions of that. other news outlets seem not particularly inclined to show you that, but we will. coming up we certainly will. but coming up , we will uk's most , we will have the uk's most entertaining paper review. you won't bored my of
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won't be bored as my panel of news lot chew news experts on this lot chew through the latest headlines. hot the press will nigel hot off the press and will nigel spend another night in the i'm a celebrity jungle? i'll reveal the results as we go the eviction results as we go down under. so you don't have to bother sitting through that tripe. james cleverly tripe. annette james cleverly hailed his new rwanda treaty today, but several tory backbenchers, they aren't convinced they've gathered for a behind closed doors meeting. earlier, former education minister dame andrea jenkins joins me live in the studio to reveal right here on gb news. exactly what went down. don't mess it
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pm. on gb news, the people's channel. britain's news channel . channel. britain's news channel. >> on a night where the european research group are making waves in westminster. i am delighted to welcome the deputy chairwoman, dame andrea jenkyns. and breaking tonight, breaking tonight, dozens of tory mps from the european research group, new conservatives and common sense group are uniting. they are setting up a star chamber that will scrutinise the government's new rwanda treaty . after intense new rwanda treaty. after intense meetings both last night and earlier tonight, a brexit style panel of legal experts has been assembled to analyse the effectiveness or otherwise of james cleverly's latest rwanda legislation, with rumours that it could reach parliament as early as tomorrow. dame andrea , early as tomorrow. dame andrea, thank you very, very much. great to have you in the studio. now i believe you've got little bit to have you in the studio. now i bethea you've got little bit to have you in the studio. now i bethe inside e got little bit to have you in the studio. now i bethe inside track little bit to have you in the studio. now i bethe inside track forittle bit to have you in the studio. now i bethe inside track for use bit to have you in the studio. now i bethe inside track for us. sot of the inside track for us. so you've at meetings. you've been at these meetings. yes, one last
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yes, i was at the one last night, which was with the new conservatives 2019 intake of conservatives of 2019 intake of the centre right conservatives tonight. >> they came to our erg meeting and tomorrow there's another one with the common sense group , with the common sense group, which is a john hayes group in parliament. so we're committed to working on this together because it's so important for our constituents and for our country. >> so what's the mood like then? what's said? what's discussed? >> well, i think it's too early to going to do to say what we're going to do yet because to examine yet because we need to examine this . but all i yet because we need to examine this. but all i can say yet because we need to examine this . but all i can say is yet because we need to examine this. but all i can say is that we're committed to working together here because we've seen we've seen how the left of the party, they work so well together we're doing the together and so we're doing the same. and this is so important. and i mean, at the meeting this evening , we had suella we had evening, we had suella we had pretty jacob was there. we had some really strong contenders there to really put in their views forward on what we need to do. bill cash was there. bill cash as we've discussed, is restarting the star chamber. but the star chamber , patrick i
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the star chamber, patrick i mean, during the brexit days, the heady days of brexit where we had to fight in parliament against all the remainers in parliament to get brexit out, they really was a strong force because these are lawyers who and some of them are parliamentarians , are also parliamentarians, are also lawyers who will be examining the detail and see how watertight it is and can it be challenged . challenged. >> we have some interesting stuff here from from the documents. so i'm going to read it. i'm hoping i'll be able to bnng it. i'm hoping i'll be able to bring up on on the screen. this is agreement between the conservative we go. conservative oh, there we go. between the government of the united kingdom great united kingdom of great britain and northern ireland the and northern ireland and the government of the republic of rwanda. fine wishing to continue the bilateral the excellent bilateral relations both relations between both countries, appreciating deep countries, appreciating the deep economic ties, considering that for years rwanda has for many years rwanda has willingly been hosting and giving shelter the word considering here is on it four times on this one page, acknowledging the need to provide international protection for refugees, etcetera, from your initial sighting of this
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document, how do you feel about it? >> i'm deeply concerned , to be >> i'm deeply concerned, to be honest, patrick. i mean, the tone of that first page, i think it's actually going to be a feast for lefty lawyers. and but but it's a small print that we've seen bits coming out tonight where it says that the rwandan government will decide whether they on a case by case basis, whether they want to take these people into their country. and also we've got to take refugees from their country. so to me, if we're trying to get the it just seems bonkers. >> hang on a minute. so from what you've seen, it's up to rwanda to decide on a case by case basis who they take. >> absolutely. and we will have to take refugees from rwanda. absolutely. so how are we getting the numbers down if we're taking extra from them? >> so even though we're not sending that many people to rwanda, also rwanda, we're still also going to receiving from to be receiving people from rwanda to be receiving people from rw¢|t's| to be receiving people from rw¢|t's bonkers, it? to be receiving people from rw¢ it's bonkers, it? yeah, >> it's bonkers, isn't it? yeah, right . right. >> and do you vote for that ?
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>> and do you vote for that? >> and do you vote for that? >> not as it stands. course i couldn't. absolutely. mean, couldn't. no absolutely. i mean, the key thing is as well, i mean, measures that was mean, the measures that was announced , you know, the last announced, you know, the last 24, 48 hours about raising the threshold as well, where people coming over what they've got to earn and pleased with measures like this. but but again , that like this. but but again, that doesn't begin until the spring. and how many more people would have come in before or before the so i think we need the spring. so i think we need to get our finger out. we need to get our finger out. we need to get our finger out. we need to get working on this immediately. and this better be watertight if it isn't, watertight because if it isn't, then the flight's not going to be rwanda . be going off to rwanda. >> so if you all come to the conclusion that it's not watertight and that well, if the star chamber comes to the conclusion and the star chamber is a group of lawyers. >> yeah. some of them are parliamentarians and their verdict should in this verdict should be in on this within coming days. within the coming days. >> be definitely it >> yes, it will be definitely it will they decide that will be. if they decide that this watertight, what this isn't watertight, what happens ? happens? >> well, it's always down to the individual mp like if we're talking times
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talking during the times of brexit when they looked at theresa may's deal, they looked at deal. we waited for at boris deal. we waited for their judgement on at boris deal. we waited for theirjudgement on it. and then their judgement on it. and then you know, a lot of us in the ig we voted against, i mean , well, we voted against, i mean, well, and i mean there's what there was 20 odd spartans who voted against theresa may's deals. however now it's down to the individual mp . so it depends individual mp. so it depends whether those individual mps can be bought off by the whips as well . well. >> okay. so if we had the erg, the new conservative and the common sense, what kind of numbers are you talking there? and i know it's down to every individual mp let's just assume hypothetically they all vote against this, right? kind? against this, right? what kind? roughly? i'd say. i mean , >> roughly, i'd say. i mean, looking at the what the erg membership , looking at the what the erg membership, i used to be like, i mean, i'm not deputy chairman anymore. i misread anymore. sorry. i misread that earlier, i mean, we'd have earlier, but i mean, we'd have oh a gosh, about 80 to 100 members then . i don't know what members then. i don't know what it is at the moment. i ain't got
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sight of the figures. i'd say it's probably me with the other groups, maybe about 140 mps. that's, , that's essential. >> so it's a substantial number. and one would imagine that labour aren't going to vote for this. >> so, so it could be defeated. >> so, so it could be defeated. >> yeah. yeah. okay >> yeah. yeah. okay >> but we need a solution though, don't we? you know, we want a we want it to succeed because we want to be sending people across through the countries . and also, patrick, countries. and also, patrick, did you see in the news the last 24 hours how france is ignoring the european court of human rights and sending a radical islam islamist to a country which they deemed unsafe ? yes. which they deemed unsafe? yes. so if they can ignore it, why can't we? >> yeah, exactly . exactly. no, >> yeah, exactly. exactly. no, exactly. and this is something that i think is going to keep rearing its andrew, thank rearing its head. andrew, thank you very, very much. absolute pleasure. going pleasure. as always. going to be a fascinating couple of days. watch space. it's watch this space. i think it's dame andrea jenkins there. now. coming nigel farage still coming up is nigel farage still in become in the running to become king of the will down the jungle? we will go down under result of under to find out the result of the latest public vote. they've got strong based got a strong points based immigration australia,
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immigration in australia, haven'tdeport him. my immigration in australia, haven returned|im. my immigration in australia, haven returned for my immigration in australia, haven returned for the my immigration in australia, haven returned for the most panel returned for the most fiery and entertaining paper of you that you will not get anywhere else. i will also show you this winner of you this year's winner of the turner all i can say turner prize. and all i can say is that no michelangelo. back
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>> you're listening to gb news radio . now we cross live to radio. now we cross live to gb news reporter adam cherry , who's news reporter adam cherry, who's outside the versace hotel for us, where celebrities go after they've been booted out of the jungle. >> now he's got the latest on nigel farage in the celebrity camp. adam oh, we'll got off to we're going to have to hold it there. we'll get adam's audio sorted. we're going to audio sword. you in. if we sword. i will fill you in. if we were just watching us, apparently has gone. apparently d fred has gone. nigel still in. so nigel nigel is still in. so nigel farage has seen off fred and nella, which is, i think, a triumph , an absolute triumph
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triumph, an absolute triumph for the man, isn't he? so he the main man, isn't he? so he will be remaining for the first time in his life he's ever wanted to remain in anything in the jungle another day. the for jungle another day. i think it is actually quite fascinating . we do have a little fascinating. we do have a little clip for you. okay. of nigel farage in the jungle last night now. hey we all we all know nigel here at gb news, don't we? and he's he's got strong convictions. his political views . who knew that he was also , . who knew that he was also, though, quite clearly a sex icon . i'm too sexy for my too love, sexy for my love. >> love's going to leave me . >> love's going to leave me. >> love's going to leave me. >> we were all so given the delight of nigel farage. i'm too sexy for my shirt. sexy for my shirt, too sexy for my shirt. >> so sexy it hurts . >> so sexy it hurts. >> so sexy it hurts. >> i do know the fairbrass brothers that produce that hit. you know i'm too sexy for my shirt. you've got to get your shirt. you've got to get your
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shirt . shirt. off right , adam? right, adam? >> so nigel stays . uh, we're >> so nigel stays. uh, we're going to have to suck this one off, unfortunately. but there we go. all right, look, we'll hopefully go back to adam anyway as we get the chest. nigel does stay in the jungle. let's bring you tomorrow's news tonight. now in the most entertaining pay per view telly . the very view anywhere on telly. the very first front page has just been delivered pack . delivered for my press pack. right. the metro goes in with new rwanda treaty signed . it's new rwanda treaty signed. it's a done deal . new rwanda treaty signed. it's a done deal. but will it pass the uk supreme court's verdict ? we uk supreme court's verdict? we go on to the eye wide . did the go on to the eye wide. did the bodies have to pile high? covid families have ten questions for bofis families have ten questions for boris johnson as he believes. sorry, is he gives evidence at the covid inquiry today that will, of course, be tomorrow.
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that was the i. so we'll move on again now over to the daily mirror as well. if we can bring that up, that will be absolutely lovely. christmas cosmetic surgery for turkish company selling cheap festive deals at events in britain. risky bum lifts offered but no danger warnings despite death. grief, sir, mirror investigation and we're off to the guardian. apocalyptic conditions in gaza blocking aid. warn un officials. sellafield nuclear leak could pose safety risks. so there we go . and tory in threat to sunak go. and tory in threat to sunak on rwanda. yeah, we've been right across that from the start. but now let's have a little look at the daily mirror. okay because this is kind of a return to the old i'm a celebrity issue with nigel farage. the daily mirror has launched transparent launched a pretty transparent campaign against our very own nigel farage. you are just nigel farage. if you are just joining in the joining us, is remaining in the jungle. thanks to all of your votes, fred of course, off . votes, fred is, of course, off. and as recently as saturday, their front page carried labour
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mps venomous assessment of farage. it was labelled poisoned us due to his politics. but this morning they changed their tune. now apparently nigel is too bonng now apparently nigel is too boring for the jungle, with itv insiders reportedly branding him a waste of money. so panel, as the daily mirror's head jobs against nigel farage continue to evolve is the left now desperate to cancel him at any cost? >> suzanne oh, they always have been. >> come on. who on the left has ever liked nigel farage? it's been let's get farage from day one. and as you say, one day he's boring. one day he's too sexy . they can't make their he's boring. one day he's too sexy. they can't make their mind up. they just want him out. >> i i'll firstly >> yeah. i mean, i'll be firstly , that clip is , your reaction to that clip is nigel in fact, too sexy for his shirt ? shirt? >> oh, well, nigel's not quite my he does look my type, although he does look very good in that video. but on the mirror , trying cancel the mirror, trying to cancel nigel farage. i mean, a left wing newspaper going after a right wing figure like nigel farage. one, am shocked. farage. i, for one, am shocked. >> the thing is. farage. i, for one, am shocked. >> the thing is . so apparently >> the thing is. so apparently the they did a poll the mirror, they did a poll right where of about 3500 people supposedly. and reportedly about
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1500 of them said that they were going to back nigel. and then what happened was what happened after that was they to kind of nobody, they got to kind of nobody, labour , to come out and say labour mps, to come out and say that this man is, and i'm paraphrasing here, essentially a force evil in this world who force for evil in this world who tears at the fabric of british society taken down. society and must be taken down. and then that didn't work. so then they go, oh, you know what? he's he's boring. know he's dull, he's boring. we know the he him the two people he clashed him with. it nella and with. rebecca it was nella and it fred . and the public it was fred. and the public have offed them . offed them. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> look, i'm not a great fan of nigel's. however, what i will say is that everybody i know who knows him says he's in—person. a very nice man. and like very nice man. and it seems like the camp are the people in the camp are enjoying company, enjoying his company, which, while seems while confusing to me, seems to be review of him. be inconsistent review of him. what i really can't get on board with conspiracy theory with is this conspiracy theory that itv are trying to keep him off show or get rid of off off the show or get rid of him. did not spend £1.5 him. they did not spend £1.5 million to put him on television to then try and get rid of him. they want him to be fun. it's just it's a tired, boring, just that it's a tired, boring, worn format people worn out format that people aren't watching because it's.
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but in your but is it appropriate in your opinion, rebecca, for labour mps like whittome to go after like nadia whittome to go after nigel farage in the mirror about i'm a celebrity, get me out of it. i i don't think it it. i mean, i don't think it should be the number one thing on that but on their list that day, but i don't think i don't think it's a problem either. think problem either. i don't think it's it. it's wrong that they did it. i think were asked think if they were asked a question, allowed to question, they're allowed to answer but i don't think answer it. but i don't think that it's a particularly pressing of pressing on the front page of the get him out >> nadia whittome, get him out of she have of there. does she not have better mean, better things to do? i mean, i imagine that didn't her imagine that didn't take her very imagine that didn't take her venlf it did, then i'm worried >> if it did, then i'm worried about her kwasi as an mp, but i imagine quite quick imagine she replied quite quick email. think i'm email. i have to say i think i'm not sure how more not sure how much more of nigel's i cope with nigel's body i can cope with seeing television. nigel's body i can cope with seeactually, television. nigel's body i can cope with seeactually, we've'ision.his bare >> actually, we've seen his bare bottom. chest bottom. we've now seen his chest today. , all i can say is today. i mean, all i can say is i'm glad that was working i'm glad that when i was working with he never got with nigel in ukip, he never got . interesting. with nigel in ukip, he never got . 100% interesting. with nigel in ukip, he never got . 100% sure, resting. with nigel in ukip, he never got . 100% sure, though. this >> i'm 100% sure, though. this is sorry, is the beginning. i'm sorry, positivity. totally the positivity. this is totally the beginning a relaunch of his beginning of a relaunch of his political a change of political or a change of political or a change of political direction. this is about making him more likeable, more . yeah, this is more accessible. yeah, this is kind his boris johnson . kind of his like boris johnson. like, have got news for you
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era? >> he's becoming rebecca as one of his critics. >> unfortunately , yes. >> unfortunately, yes. >> unfortunately, yes. >> warming him. no, no , no. >> warming to him. no, no, no. >> warming to him. no, no, no. >> but i think the british pubuc >> but i think the british public somebody can public loves somebody who can laugh also, laugh at themselves. but also, you you you know, supposedly, if you believe read in lot believe what you read in a lot of newspapers the time believe what you read in a lot of you newspapers the time believe what you read in a lot of you news online the time believe what you read in a lot of you news online or the time believe what you read in a lot of you news online or you time believe what you read in a lot of you news online or you see e believe what you read in a lot of you news online or you see on or you read online or you see on twitter, know, the public twitter, you know, the public are massively of, are massively in favour of, you know, gen z woke stuff. know, all this gen z woke stuff. >> massively in favour of >> the massively in favour of all the remain stuff . well, all of the remain stuff. well, i'm sorry, but nella was in there screaming like a banshee. gen z. you don't watch this programme . programme. >> in fairness, gen z and i'm a celebrity commenting about it on twitter, don't use twitter, but gen z don't use twitter. broadly speaking, z twitter. broadly speaking, gen z don't part of don't have any part of any of this. like boomer this. this is a very like boomer gen x thing. >> and then you've got fred there single there who were every single opportunity was trying to have a p0p opportunity was trying to have a pop about nigel nigel trying to make about european make a point about european greed, which the way greed, which by the way absolutely does exist. not absolutely does exist. fred not letting finish and then letting him finish and then accusing rubbish, accusing him of talking rubbish, although he more impolite than that the british that and how we, the british pubuc that and how we, the british public watch i'm a celeb public who do watch i'm a celeb have decided they prefer nigel farage to all of that. yeah look you shocked british. farage to all of that. yeah look you no ocked british. farage to all of that. yeah look you no i'm d british. farage to all of that. yeah look you no i'm not. british. farage to all of that. yeah look you no i'm not. because the >> no i'm not. because the
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british public watching british public like watching positivity. was just positivity. nella was just miserable and negative all of the time, getting into arguments. people just saying everything offensive . and no everything was offensive. and no one to watch that on one wants to watch that on television . television. >> got really stuck >> nigel's also got really stuck in to all his tasks and all his no , he hasn't. no, he hasn't. >> he's been robbed. like with the of respect . he's the greatest of respect. he's really rubbish. can't hold really rubbish. he can't hold his underwater, really rubbish. he can't hold his because ter, really rubbish. he can't hold his because he smokes so allegedly, because he smokes so much. i can't charge. we all like a fan very much. >> he's been a whimper back. >> he's been a whimper back. >> absolutely. but he hasn't. i think broadly, the reviews i've read have said that he hasn't been like throwing himself into the because he's not very been like throwing himself into the to because he's not very been like throwing himself into the to .because he's not very been like throwing himself into the to . so ause he's not very been like throwing himself into the to . so i'm; he's not very been like throwing himself into the to . so i'm not's not very been like throwing himself into the to . so i'm not sure. very been like throwing himself into the to . so i'm not sure. that's able to. so i'm not sure. that's why think people just like why i think people just like her. like her. i think people like a naughty are we? naughty boy now, are we? >> oh, dear. >> oh, dear. >> well, there we go. you >> well, well, there we go. you see, just. just little. see, just. just a little. >> just ableist. little >> just ableist. just a little reminder for some people of a couple stories leading couple of the stories leading tomorrow's papers. >> threatened to quit >> ministers threatened to quit over rwanda flights law and senior tories are prepared to resign if the prime minister presses ahead with hard line plan. so as rishi sunak faces up
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to ten ministers quitting if he adopts a hardline approach on rwanda and uses emergency legislation to circumvent the european convention on human rights. this is a pincer movement. rishi sunak. i'm going to be returning to that shortly with stanley of that with tim stanley of that particular parish , who's particular parish, who's hopefully going to give us a little info as little bit more inside info as well. but look here is some proof. if you ever needed it, that art is subjective, take a little look at this year's winner of the prestigious turner prize. jessie darling , with his prize. jessie darling, with his exhibition at the gallery towner eastbourne . yeah. i'm just going eastbourne. yeah. i'm just going to play some clips of it now. that's a crutch and an oxygen cylinder. he has said that he was inspired by quotes , the was inspired by quotes, the effects of many years of austerity kwasi brexit, the pandemic and the hostile environment generate by the government's immigration policy . government's immigration policy. and playing to the woke gallery, the berlin based artist gave the most unoriginal speech in the history of the award ceremony,
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slamming the tories, slamming margaret thatcher before pulling out a palestine flag because, well, isn't that what left wing people are supposed to do ? people are supposed to do? here's a bit of it. people are supposed to do? here's a bit of it . and finally, here's a bit of it. and finally, he . he. >> thank you very much . >> thank you very much. >> thank you very much. >> yeah. all right. i mean, is that art, seriously, suzanne? i mean, it's some scrap metal. >> i love modern art. and i find it very difficult to make the case for modern art very often. and this does not help. >> i don't know if we might be able quickly just bring able just quickly to just bring able just quickly to just bring a those pictures back a couple of those pictures back up again. i mean, rebecca, up again. but i mean, rebecca, it's fatuous to try show it's so fatuous to try and show a picture sculpture , which a picture of a sculpture, which is immersive experience. a picture of a sculpture, which is these immersive experience. a picture of a sculpture, which is these are nersive experience. a picture of a sculpture, which is these are like ve experience. a picture of a sculpture, which is these are like large )erience. a picture of a sculpture, which is these are like large scalece. >> these are like large scale installations, immersive installations, an immersive experience, it's it is you experience, and it's it is you get about the tip. >> i'm going to say, and i don't know that i'm not sure how many, how regularly consume how regularly do you consume modern gallery i went to the modern art gallery i went to the tate and tell you tate gallery and i'll tell you what modern britain. i tell you what i saw. >> modern britain, the one in
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the one with the people faces or the one with the people faces or the ones with the bits of staff, the ones with the bits of staff, the ones with the bits of staff, the one that looks like a giant carbuncle. >> right. okay. so i went there and exhibitions and one of the exhibitions was quotes. right on quotes. now bit of rope right on the was the floor. another one was a television screen on just on an empty room . another one was a empty room. another one was a woman who feathers woman who had feathers for fingers. over fingers. he was doing this over a that's not art. that's break. >> because you don't understand. it is not it doesn't mean that it is not rubbish. you think rubbish. it made you think something. it made you feel something. it made you feel something. created something. it created a discussion. it was an interesting made me interesting day. it made me think much money to interesting day. it made me thinin. much money to get in. >> it made free and it made >> it made me free and it made me like i wanted leave. me feel like i wanted to leave. >> think about it's >> what do you think about it's not about modern >> what do you think about it's not like about modern >> what do you think about it's not like tracey modern >> what do you think about it's not like tracey emin,rn >> what do you think about it's not like tracey emin, who artists like tracey emin, who just know, don't artists like tracey emin, who just their know, don't artists like tracey emin, who just their rooms. know, don't tidy their rooms. >> are you joking? that is one of the incredible pieces of the most incredible pieces of modern art ever created that tells a physical story. after a few a diary. it's few weeks, it's a diary. it's a piece of human life that you can stand inside and consume. that is absolutely it's some of the best art it is. >> i totally agree with rebecca. you know, art is not something that's stuck in history. it's not just paintings on a wall. it's about beauty . it's about beauty. >> it'sjust it's about beauty.
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>> it's just skill. >> it's just skill. >> and there can be a beauty in ugliness. it's also about telling are telling stories. caravaggios are not . not beautiful. >> they in a line under this art discussion because it's just. i just. is it a bit confusing? >> patrick? >> patrick? >> not only one of the right minds can think that's award winning, you know. anyway, now, since 19 competition, since 1947, the people of norway have gifted a christmas tree to london as a thank you for britain's help in saving them from the nazis back in world war ii. and this is what they sent us this year. okay so i'm sorry , us this year. okay so i'm sorry, but i think it takes the mic. all right. it would arguably be less offensive to send us nothing at all than a tree that looks like it's been through looks like it's been put through a the back of a car wash. right. the back of the is missing. gone. the tree is missing. it's gone. we know where it's gone. we don't know where it's gone. i don't know how that happens. they've they've had to they've had to do they've had to do a branch transplant on the tree , which think involved tree, which i think involved cutting branches in cutting off other branches in less and sticking less obvious places and sticking to what to the back of it, like what wayne did his hair wayne rooney did with his hair right honestly , what right now. oh, honestly, what what have done to upset the what have we done to upset the norwegians this year ? i'll be
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norwegians this year? i'll be that's that's borderline offensive . offensive. >> patrick. you should have seen the tree last year it was worse . the tree last year it was worse. >> i think this one's worse. i really do. but i reckon if you remember when i was younger, they never used to look like this. no, they to be. this. no, they used to be. >> year to go >> we go every year to go look at lights are at the tree when the lights are being on. and i'd being switched on. and i'd always think about how beautiful and , reckon. and full it looks, i reckon. is it thing? it a brexit thing? >> i think had some time >> i think if you had some time on you could on your hands, you could probably them probably do a picture of them over they over the last 20 years and they would and bolder and bolder. >> yeah, but i'm sorry, but do you this deliberate? you think this is deliberate? because presumably. absolutely. you think this is deliberate? bec.it se presumably. absolutely. you think this is deliberate? bec.it must�*sumably. absolutely. you think this is deliberate? bec.it must�*sunbutl. absolutely. you think this is deliberate? bec.it must�*sunbutl. absiwhat y. but it must be. but why? what have the norwegians have we done to the norwegians apart them from the nazis? >> i'd nazis? » rd >> i'd like to see what it looked like when left norway. looked like when it left norway. and you want to sabotage en and you just want to sabotage en route? yeah. >> like a yodel >> it might be like a yodel issue or an every can i just say, that presumably. say, like that presumably. >> norway, >> is someone's job in norway, right . so can you sort out the right. so can you sort out the brits christmas tree when that tree up for the second or tree turns up for the second or third year on the trot? and it looks like it's got mange, do you that maybe that you not think that maybe that person loses their job? >> aren't we getting >> why? why aren't we getting our scotland or
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our tree from scotland or northern ireland? >> why are we why are we letting other over here and other trees come over here and stand in our trafalgar square? why a british tree why don't we have a british tree that speaks english? >> exactly. >> absolutely. exactly. >> absolutely. exactly. >> is it green ? >> absolutely. why is it green? why it white? why isn't it white? >> that right. tree >> that tree right. that tree does anything to does not contribute anything to this country at all. >> nothing. no taxes. >> nothing. no taxes. >> okay. coming up. coming up. coming up is nigel's jungle nemesis, nella rose , a greatest nemesis, nella rose, a greatest briton or a union? jack ass? my panel offer their unfiltered opinion shortly. but next, columnist in the daily telegraph, tim stanley joins me. expert analysis on tomorrow's newspaper front pages and there's breaking news of a fresh tory revolt. he's got the inside scoop on that backing .
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jungle. fred out of the jungle. we are going to go to australia now with gb news. reporter adam cherry . adam, what's going . on cherry. adam, what's going. on >> right, hopefully i'm loud and clear, patrick, because you're right . breaking news here in right. breaking news here in australia . fred sirieix is out. australia. fred sirieix is out. nigel farage survives another day in the jungle, another round of evictions gone. the vote remain campaign surges on. behind me is the marriott hotel, where fred sirieix is surely going to arrive with his friends and family to stay for the duration of the remainder of the show . so that's the breaking for show. so that's the breaking for news you. hopefully you haven't heard that loud and clear. nigel is in fred is out. fred's heading to that hotel behind me very, very shortly. hopefully i'll bump him. i'll bump into him. >> absolutely . adam, thank you >> absolutely. adam, thank you very much. just very quickly , very much. just very quickly, very much. just very quickly, very quickly, what was the look on you know, on fred's face like? you know, because he's quite smug, because he's he's quite smug, isn't he? so presumably that evaporated . evaporated. >> absolutely. patrick. well he
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was an early favourite, or at least one of the more popular contestants , but it turns out contestants, but it turns out moaning about brexit and moaning about doesn't do you moaning about brexit and moaning ab0|favours doesn't do you moaning about brexit and moaning ab0|favours with doesn't do you moaning about brexit and moaning ab0|favours with the >esn't do you moaning about brexit and moaning ab0|favours with the public. 0 you moaning about brexit and moaning ab0|favours with the public. so )u any favours with the public. so that smug look wiped his that smug look was wiped off his face quickly . face quite quickly. >> and of course, he's got >> and now, of course, he's got about week ten days or about a week or ten days or whatever is, trapped in that about a week or ten days or whatewith is, trapped in that about a week or ten days or whatewith nella.ipped in that about a week or ten days or whatewith nella. sozd in that about a week or ten days or whatewith nella. so i'm] that about a week or ten days or whatewith nella. so i'm a hat about a week or ten days or whatewith nella. so i'm a bit hotel with nella. so i'm a bit of that. right. thank you very much . as cherry, gb news much. as adam cherry, gb news reporter glad we reporter in australia. glad we managed to get to him in the end. there we go. your news, end. there we go. see your news, of that nigel farage of course, is that nigel farage is in the jungle. is indeed still in the jungle. now of tomorrow's newspaper is indeed still in the jungle. now pagesf tomorrow's newspaper is indeed still in the jungle. now pages are morrow's newspaper is indeed still in the jungle. now pages are morthey newspaper is indeed still in the jungle. now pages are morthey are vspaper is indeed still in the jungle. now pages are morthey are hot per front pages are in. they are hot off and i am well, off the press and i am well, joining me joining me to delve into this big news stories is columnist for the daily telegraph. it's tim stanley. tim, thank you very, very much. look, going to whisk look, i'm just going to whisk through the times before we get to so to your parish, as it were. so the got sunak middle the times have got sunak middle way rwanda migration law will way on rwanda migration law will seek to allay tory fears over human rights. pm has ruled out withdrawing from the european convention. there's also one at the top there. kfc thwarts efforts to stop fast food
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outlets near schools and anti obesity policies to stop takeaways being opened near schools are being thwarted by kfc. i'll go to the telegraph , kfc. i'll go to the telegraph, of course, as well, because on the front page of your paper it is reporting tonight that up to ten cabinet ministers, is that right , are ten cabinet ministers, is that right, are threatening to quit over rwanda flights law if sunak adopts a hardline approach . tim, adopts a hardline approach. tim, i'll throw it over to you. what's going on? >> first of all, i'm sorry i can't be with you, but i had to watch. i'm a celebrity sorry to see the frenchman getting voted out. and it wasn't because he was french . was french. >> what's happening? if you if you back up slightly . you back up slightly. >> if you back up slightly and just. just consider what's happened with the rwandan deal . happened with the rwandan deal. the to send asylum the plan was to send asylum seekers to the government regarded as illegally to regarded as coming illegally to rwanda instead of being allowed to settle britain . the uk to settle in britain. the uk supreme said , you can't do supreme court said, you can't do that and you can't do that because guarantee how because we cannot guarantee how the rwandans will treat those asylum seekers. so the
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government has responded with two things. one, the treaty that was today with james was signed today with james cleverly rwanda, by which cleverly in rwanda, by which rwanda would make certain commitments supposed commitments which are supposed to the court and the to satisfy the court and the second thing was a legislative push by the government, which we expected to come forward tomorrow , but which which now tomorrow, but which which we now think is going to delayed think is going to be delayed until week because think is going to be delayed un resistance week because think is going to be delayed unresistance among 3k because think is going to be delayed unresistance among more:ause think is going to be delayed unresistance among more liberal of resistance among more liberal minded ministers within the government , potentially up government, potentially up to ten now , what the ten of them now, what the government, more government, what more conservative ministers think they can do is not withdraw from they can do is not withdraw from the tear up the human the echr or tear up the human rights act, but essentially ignore it. you have notwithstanding clauses, you have a block on judicial review. so you say acknowledging all of the complaints and all of the worries about sending people to rwanda. ultimately parliament is sovereign. it has the final say and we say they can go, but there is a significant body of opinion within the party opinion within the tory party which doesn't which really doesn't like that which really doesn't like that which regards of which regards membership of the echr human rights act as legal obugafions echr human rights act as legal obligations that the government has to abide by. so it doesn't surprise me actually, that there
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is a significant number of ministers have ministers who who have threatened to resign this threatened to resign over this because if you think about a number of policies , the number of other policies, the tory come close to tory party has come close to endorsing from, endorsing then backed away from, it's even with the boris it's because even with the boris johnson 2019 majority, there still isn't quite a majority within parliament, including tory, including tory mps for tory, including tory mps for tory policies . tory, including tory mps for tory policies. remember liz truss said that one of the reasons why her tax cuts were not balanced with spending cuts was because she said there wasn't a majority for it in parliament. >> yeah, no indeed. but it is amazing how far we've fallen though. is it not, from the days of suella braverman at least tubthumping and kind of saying that she wanted this. she dreamed. she dreamt it of getting the flights off the ground . james cleverly ground. james cleverly reportedly called the rwanda scheme batshit , is now our home scheme batshit, is now our home secretary and we are now it seems completely categoric ruling out that we're going to leave the european convention on human rights echr and we've gone
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back with some kind of kind of middle way. i mean, does he think is this how he's going to win an election, this really because he not just going because is he not just going to get up lords and get held up in the lords and held in the courts again? held up in the courts again? and, know, here we are two and, you know, here we are two years banging on years later, still banging on about all, about it? well first of all, for me, parallel is with about it? well first of all, for me,windsor parallel is with about it? well first of all, for me,windsor framework with about it? well first of all, for me,windsor framework and] about it? well first of all, for me,windsor framework and the the windsor framework and the northern ireland that northern ireland protocol that the tories think can come the tories think they can come up middle way that up with a middle way wheeze that will them over the will get them get them over the hump issue and the right hump of an issue and the right of saying, of the party just keeps saying, no, it works. no, that's not how it works. >> to logically follow through what elected you what we've been elected on, you have to do x so you have to totally withdraw from the northern ireland protocol or you have to withdraw from the echr. you find a way around you can't find a way around these things . the government's these things. the government's calculating that two things will play calculating that two things will play in its favour. one is that the number of boats is going to continue coming across the channelis continue coming across the channel is going to continue to fall, they will get some one fall, but they will get some one on a plane to rwanda and that they can pick a fight with labourin they can pick a fight with labour in the coming election where they can say, look, we're actually immigration, actually tough on immigration, we're done . but
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we're getting things done. but i'm i'm an immigration hawk , but i'm i'm an immigration hawk, but a rwanda sceptic because i have thought from day one, this is not i don't see how you can actually do it. therefore, don't propose something to the public. promise the public. you can't do exactly deliver and what suella braverman she argued from the beginning and she warned the government, unless you do legislative things, you cannot get it done. and thus far she's being proven correct. >> look, tim, thank you very, very much. that's tim stanley there of the telegraph. i implore to and read all implore you to go and read all of this guy's work. okay so we are going to go to my panel, i think. oh, no , we've got a clip. think. oh, no, we've got a clip. we've got a clip. very quickly, very quickly of suella braverman. apparently being heckled as me as the girl from the exorcist, which was described in one review as disturbing in a very entertaining way. >> i'm not sure if that's a compliment. i don't think it is
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not. would you like to come up so much to say, come on, come on. so nice to meet you . yes. on. so nice to meet you. yes. >> okay . >> okay. >> okay. >> all right . >> all right. >> all right. >> afterwards, we'll do the we'll do the boxing match afterwards. okay let's. let's suella finish. love you . suella finish. love you. >> love your work . >> love your work. >> love your work. >> well, okay, there we go. no doubt that we talked about a lot. tomorrow we'll go now to be quick this. reveal quick about this. let's reveal today's and today's greatest britain and union now, i'll start union jackass now, i'll start with suzanne. greatest britain. >> so my greatest britain is a guy richard donnell. he's guy called richard donnell. he's the of the executive director of zoopla. this week had the zoopla. and he this week had the guts speak a self—evident guts to speak a self—evident truth , but one the open borders truth, but one the open borders people don't and is people don't like, and that is that uncontrolled immigration is fuelling britain's rental crisis. >> okay, i'll be my gracious. >> okay, i'll be my gracious. >> britain is the wonderful james cleverly. i've actually had the pleasure of meeting james about when he was james cleverly about when he was foreign secretary, and that's because point because he's had his five point migration plan. he's been able to in weeks what suella to do in a few weeks what suella braverman wasn't able to do in over year . over a year. >> oh, okay. right. rebecca >> oh, okay. all right. rebecca mine's the king's foundation. >> royal charity who have been
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converting buckingham palace curtains into kimonos and auctioning them for charity. very sound of music . very sound of music. >> okay. winner is suzanne's >> okay. the winner is suzanne's nominated . yes, that's nominated. yes, that's right, richard. donald gustav. very quickly now , union jackass. so quickly now, union jackass. so jackass is prince harry. >> you quit your job, harry. you pushed off to america. how dare you still expect british taxpayers to pay your bills ? taxpayers to pay your bills? >> nana rose just the most unlikeable person on i'm a celebrity get me out of here. you know, for a young black woman to get such huge profile woman to get such a huge profile on television show, woman to get such a huge profile on was television show, woman to get such a huge profile on was unlikeable,;ion show, she was unlikeable, disagreeable, found everything offensive. i'm glad she's gone. gone >> rebecca comedian matt rife, who very famous who went on a very famous podcast complain about being podcast to complain about being cancelled having cancelled despite having a netflix on netflix. netflix special on netflix. right. really not super cancel . right. really not super cancel. >> enough. right. the >> fair enough. all right. the winner nomination of winner is alby's nomination of nella rose . thank you my nella rose. thank you to my wonderful panel. great stuff tonight. you to everybody wonderful panel. great stuff tonighbeen you to everybody wonderful panel. great stuff tonighbeen watching» everybody wonderful panel. great stuff tonighbeen watching and�*rybody wonderful panel. great stuff tonighbeen watching and tuning who's been watching and tuning in. headliners. nice. see in. headliners. nice. i'll see you at nine with you tomorrow at nine with our exclusive you tomorrow at nine with our echsive you tomorrow at nine with our ech brighter outlook you tomorrow at nine with our exc a brighter outlook with you tomorrow at nine with our ech brighter outlook with boxt >> a brighter outlook with boxt solar sponsors of weather on . gb
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news. >> good evening. welcome to your latest gb news weather update from the met office. it will be a cold night tonight than last night because much of the country be under clear country will be under clear spells. that's because the rain many of us have seen through today brought this today brought by this low pressure, off to the pressure, is pushing off to the east and behind it. we've got a bit of a settled interlude , bit more of a settled interlude, at least that will last at least through . plenty through wednesday. so plenty of clear there this clear spells out there this evening. frost developing evening. and a frost developing quite quickly. so temperatures will drop off quite quickly tonight. an warning tonight. there's an ice warning in force across areas of in force across eastern areas of scotland. we'll see some mist and developing across parts and fog developing across parts of and the south—west of of wales and the south—west of england. it will be widely england. and it will be widely a frosty the day frosty start to the day tomorrow. but there will be some sunshine around, particularly across areas and across northern areas and eastern areas where the sunshine should last for much of the day. further west, the further west, though, the sunshine hazier sunshine will turn hazier throughout the day once any mist and and you can see and fog clears. and you can see across parts northern across parts of northern ireland, be rain ireland, there will be rain arriving by lunchtime. that rain will into parts of wales as
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will push into parts of wales as well as cornwall by the end of the day as well. temperatures will start rise, though, will start to rise, though, in the west, with more of a south westerly east, westerly breeze in the east, however, still feeling quite chilly around chilly with only highs of around 3 or 4 degrees. and then thursday is going to be a widely 3 or 4 degrees. and then thurswetis going to be a widely 3 or 4 degrees. and then thurswet day. ing to be a widely 3 or 4 degrees. and then thurswet day. there be a widely 3 or 4 degrees. and then thurswet day. there area widely 3 or 4 degrees. and then thurswet day. there are warnings more wet day. there are warnings in for heavy rain across in force for heavy rain across many western areas as well as parts scotland , too. there parts of scotland, too. there could be some difficult driving conditions because of the rain and the rain will last through the rest of the week. friday and into the weekend. but temperatures will start to rise into double figures by that warm feeling inside . feeling inside. >> aside from boxt boilers sponsors of weather on . gb news, sponsors of weather on. gb news, who is it? >> we're here for the show . >> we're here for the show. welcome to the dinosaur hour with me. >> john cleese . haha, i was >> john cleese. haha, i was married to a therapist and you survived. i thought we were getting hugh laurie, second best
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man . man. >> at least. >> at least. >> you interviewed saddam hussein. what's that like? >> i was terrified. i'm playing strip poker with these three. >> oh , no, thank you. >> oh, no, thank you. >> oh, no, thank you. >> my cds need to be put in alphabetical order. >> oh, are you going to be problematic again ? problematic again? >> the dinosaur hour , sundays on >> the dinosaur hour, sundays on gb news is
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>> good evening. i'm polly middlehurst and it's 11:00. >> good evening. i'm polly middlehurst and it's11:00. some breaking news to start this bulletin. a 42 year old woman has died and two others have been injured after a shooting in east london this news coming to us in the last half an hour. three people, we understand, were found with gunshot wounds after police were called to the incident in hackney. this evening. the woman died at the scene. two other people, a 20 year old man and a 16 year old boy, were taken to hospital. no arrests far . well, the other arrests so far. well, the other main today is that a 28 main news today is that a 28 year old man has been arrested on suspicion of attempted murder following the stabbing of a 29
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