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tv   Patrick Christys Tonight  GB News  December 7, 2023 9:00pm-11:01pm GMT

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christys. tonight patrick christys. tonight >> but you don't have to look far to spot the migrants. they're everywhere here. we feel i >> -- >> yes, we expose the truth about albanians, africans and others breaking into britain in a bombshell exclusive. and it blows the doors of sunak fighting talk today. >> the first time small boat arrivals here are down by a third in the clash tonight , third in the clash tonight, should the tories replace rishi.7 >> plus, eco loons are costing us £20 million a year and taking 300 police officers off the street every single day. shocking new stats raise the question should just stop oil and co be designated as a terror group and whitaker responds to claims that nigel will leave the jungle and immediately join the conservative party and the bbc have hiked the licence fee . have hiked the licence fee. well, here's what i think about that. >> live from london this is bbc
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news. >> britain's former prime minister boris johnson apologised on my panel tonight. >> i've got madeline grant, lord shaun bailey and amy nicole turner this is patrick christys. tonight buckle up . tonight buckle up. well despite rush's claims, the albanians are still breaking into britain. we expose the truth tonight. i'll see you after the headlines . patrick. after the headlines. patrick. >> thank you and good evening. we've got confirmation from kent police tonight that a 49 year old man has been arrested after a seven year old boy was killed in a hit and run car accident yesterday afternoon. the boy's distraught parents made an emotional plea for information for the driver to come forward, saying the little boy had been collecting his football from the road when the accident happened.
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the arrested man is now in police custody in folkestone. any witnesses or drivers with dash cam footage are urged to come forward to kent police . the come forward to kent police. the main news story today, russia's federal security service, the fsb, has hacked high profile mps in what the government says was a sustained effort to interfere in british politics. the deputy prime minister said peers civil servants, journalists and non—governmental organisations have also been targeted. it's understood politicians had their personal email accounts compromised and oliver dowden said those responsible would be held to account . meanwhile, the held to account. meanwhile, the first vote on the new emergency rwanda legislation will be put through parliament next week . through parliament next week. the prime minister has defended the government's plan, describing it as the country's toughest anti—immigration law, but acknowledging some people disapproved of the bill. but he said it addresses concern issues raised by the supreme court.
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>> bill blocks every single reason that has ever been used to prevent flights to rwanda from taking off as the rwandans themselves have made clear , if themselves have made clear, if we go any further, the entire scheme will collapse and there is no point having a bill with nowhere to send people to . but i nowhere to send people to. but i am telling you now we have set the bar so high that it will be vanishingly rare for anyone to meet it . meet it. >> rishi sunak well, at the covid inquiry today, boris johnson rejected claims that he didn't care about the suffering inflicted on the country during the pandemic. inflicted on the country during the pandemic . and a warning the pandemic. and a warning there are some flashing images coming up right now. if you're watching on television. the former prime minister was answering questions the covid answering questions at the covid inquiry about parties. at number 10 street as well . he 10 downing street as well. he says idea of mass rule says the idea of mass rule breaking is a million miles from the truth . he also admitted that the truth. he also admitted that a trip to barnard castle in 2020 by his former chief adviser,
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dominic cummings, was a bad moment and an external review has found its made considerable efforts to uncover the truth about an alleged relationship between tv presenter phillip schofield and a junior member of staff. the report says the broadcaster was aware of rumours circulating in 2019, but was unable to uncover the relevant evidence until mr schofield made an admission himself in may last yearin an admission himself in may last year in total, 48 people were questioned . but the review questioned. but the review author said the daytime television presenter reluctantly declined to take part himself because of a risk to his health. a and lastly, wild salmon protection zones are to be brought forward and set in place in scotland for next year. the zones will be introduced in the hebndes zones will be introduced in the hebrides and along the western coast in february . wild fish are coast in february. wild fish are under threat due to threats from invasive species and rising sea temperatures on tv , online dab+
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temperatures on tv, online dab+ radio and the tune—in app. this is gb news, britain's news channel. >> welcome along. now, forget the small boats. today rishi tried to steady his sinking ship. he called an emergency press conference to sell his new rwanda deal to the nation. he teed off on labour. >> real question when it comes to all these votes is for the labour party. the real question when it comes to parliament, the question for all of you to ask is what are the labour party going do about this vote .7 going to do about this vote? >> out swinging on >> he came out swinging on foreign courts, even with this new law here at home, we could still face challenges from the european court of human rights in strasbourg . in strasbourg. >> so let me repeat what i said. two weeks ago. i will not allow a foreign court to block these flights . flights. >> but do you believe him ? he'll >> but do you believe him? he'll do whatever he takes, will he? he'll stop the boats. he's got less bottle than an aa meeting. this guy, the problem for rishi
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is that it looks like he just doesn't always tell the truth. here he was at the same meeting making this claim the first time. >> small boat arrivals here are down by a third. even as illegal crossings in the mediterranean have soared by 80. let me just repeat that small boat arrivals here are down by a third. >> he says that's because of his policies. but here's what we discovered. he's in the number crossing in small boats is a bit lower than last year. >> it's down to the people smugglers themselves controlling the flow of small boat launches drives up the prices , and the drives up the prices, and the gangs have become much more sophisticated in knowing when to launch. >> and obviously he thinks that his plans are a deterrent. now, a deal with albania shows deters science works well. rwanda is proving different, isn't it? >> mentioned rwanda and the people here in the camps just
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laugh. it's become a bit of a joke . the threat hasn't put them joke. the threat hasn't put them off because no one here thinks for a second they're heading back to rwanda. if make back to rwanda. if they make it to uk. to the uk. >> you mentioned albania though, and he to go on about how and he likes to go on about how well he's done the well he's done with the albanians. in fact, he responded specifically our political specifically to our political edhon specifically to our political editor, hope who specifically to our political editor,him hope who specifically to our political editor,him about hope who specifically to our political editor,him about the)pe who specifically to our political editor,him about the report ho specifically to our political editor,him about the report that asked him about the report that we brought to you yesterday, detailing numbers of people detailing the numbers of people waiting cross the waiting in calais to cross the channel. >> last year, a third of all those arriving in small boats were albanian. this year, we've returned 5000 people and cut those arrivals by 90. but tonight, gb news can exclusively reveal that albanians haven't stopped coming. >> they've just change the way they break into britain . they break into britain. >> the number of the albanians on the boats might be down by 90, but make no mistake, they're still coming. they're arriving, hiding in the back of the trucks. the albanian gangs seek out willingly. usually polish lorry drivers, they pay them to smuggle them across europe and
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then across channel in the then across the channel in the back their vehicles. back of their vehicles. >> rishi have a problem >> does rishi have a problem telling you the truth ? tonight telling you the truth? tonight at 10 pm, we have another special report from our home and security editor mark white exclusively for show, which exclusively for this show, which blows doors off any blows the doors off any suggestion that the albanian problem that problem is fixed or that stopping the boats is really slowing illegal immigration into britain . let's get the thoughts britain. let's get the thoughts of my panel daily telegraph columnist and sketch writer madeline grant. we've got conservative peer lord shaun bailey, an author and broadcaster , amy nicole turner. broadcaster, amy nicole turner. madeleine, i'll start with you . madeleine, i'll start with you. i mean, rishi has basically said unite behind me or die . i, unite behind me or die. i, i mean , they've chosen to die, mean, they've chosen to die, haven't they ? haven't they? >> well, there's nothing. >> well, there's nothing. >> the tory party loves more than a bit of mutual acrimony and psychodrama, that's for sure . but i think what his statement today was trying is, you today was trying to say is, you know, i hear your concerns with the rwanda legislation and i'm going as far as i can that is compatible with what rwanda will accept. and the law as it
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currently stands. and i think that was his effort to say that there not some easy solution. there is not some easy solution. there's some that you there's not some lever that you can that we haven't already can pull that we haven't already pulled this is pulled that will make this is not and, you know, have not easy. and, you know, i have some that. i think, some sympathy for that. i think, you . fair enough. you think you know. fair enough. you think rishi sunak has deceitful, rishi sunak has been deceitful, but off the official but going off the official figures, which are not third party figures, not just plucked out of the air by the government, it is fair to say that albanian crossings have declined. you know, i think i think this is all a bit harsh. it's a very complicated issue. and they are trying i mean, obviously not having much success. success. >> success. >> think just on that point >> i think just on that point about being deceitful, about rishi being deceitful, i think that he might not necessarily be entirely aware of everything. possibly i can believe that. i can believe that he's a busy man with a load of stuff on and maybe he's being fed some duff information. i can also understand that maybe he's trying the numbers trying to massage the numbers a little bit. what we're going to show later is about people show later on is about people coming in the lorries. coming in the back of lorries. so if you say, look, we've massively down number of
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massively cut down the number of albanians coming small boat, albanians coming by small boat, well, fine. but obviously well, okay, fine. but obviously not volunteering the not necessarily volunteering the information not necessarily volunteering the informa'the trade, if you on with the lorry trade, if you will. ask you about will. sean, i'll ask you about this now. i mean, do you think that suella braverman teeing off yesterday and our immigration minister resigning ? why should minister resigning? why should we rishi sunak over we believe rishi sunak over them? there's two things i'd say. firstly, rishi sunak isn't trying to become prime minister. >> i think that's an important issue in why we should believe him over then. >> also he's stuck around to >> and also he's stuck around to deal with it . let's be very deal with it. let's be very clear. this never to clear. this was never going to be stop i may , if be easy to stop and i may, if a person has sympathy for people coming over in boats or lorries, ultimately matter ultimately it doesn't matter what is who actually what matters is who actually gets it and how people gets it and how many people get here. the number here. and that's the number we should be concentrating should actually be concentrating on. said before, if on. but as i've said before, if you want to help country you want to help this country with its definite immigration policy, place to look policy, the real place to look is legal immigration. >> the number is massively bigger , and what we bigger, and that's what we should looking at. firstly should be looking at. firstly but comes to the small but when it comes to the small boats be very boats thing, let's be very clear. sunak isn't in clear. rishi sunak isn't in this alone. france have suffered that they doing as well. in
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they should be doing as well. in fact, whole international fact, the whole international community they community has something they should until should be doing and until somebody , i.e. the of somebody else, i.e. the rest of the world, their part, it the world, does their part, it will stop. and the other will never stop. and the other thing that rishi said that i thought was very true and pertinent was what will keir starmer ? it's very easy to starmer do? it's very easy to poke fun , but you look at at poke fun, but you look at at someone basically said, poke fun, but you look at at someopen basically said, poke fun, but you look at at someopen the basically said, poke fun, but you look at at someopen the borders. ly said, poke fun, but you look at at someopen the borders. i said, poke fun, but you look at at someopen the borders. i willi, let's open the borders. i will come on to that. >> amy we had a plane on the runway. i was sitting in this chair actually watching it on the and the lights went the runway, and the lights went off off. and it off and everyone got off. and it never we about to never went. we were about to have a deterrent. and now here we are a year and a bit down the line and everyone's the line and everyone's pick the bones of this thing and it's bones out of this thing and it's no longer deterrent. is that no longer a deterrent. is that the these human rights the fault of these human rights charities lawyers charities and lefty lawyers getting well getting involved? well deterrence not work. >> can i just say to sean's point, wearing my red point, i'm wearing my red tonight in fact, on tonight because, in fact, on immigration alone, labour are leading in the polling . so leading in the polling. so people labour more than people trust labour more than the conservatives this point . the conservatives at this point. and also when you talked and also you when you talked about about that, though, i mean, seriously, do you know what their is to deal with
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what their plan is to deal with legal levels of immigration or legal levels of immigration or legal levels of immigration or legal levels or small boats crossings so legal and illegal, what happened last week with the amendments to the legal migration raising the bar for their salaries? surely it's going to impact on illegal immigration directly and increase that because now you have to smash the people smuggling gangs and to open safe and legal routes. well we have more safe and legal routes. >> they're going to allow more people. >> my question to all this is we pay >> my question to all this is we pay £140 million to rwanda to send 200 people there in return for 200 rwandan migrants back . for 200 rwandan migrants back. >> that's a joke. >> that's a joke. >> the thing. but then what in theory happens after that? what happens when rwanda's full at 200, a point of agreement, genuine ? genuine? >> is that is that when this rwanda scheme was initially proposed, the whole was proposed, the whole point was for to be a deterrent. and i for it to be a deterrent. and i think that that deterrent is now gone the of time gone because the length of time we've around with we've been fiddling around with this and kind of the this thing and kind of the running joke it has
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running joke that it has literally so therefore, literally become. so therefore, i think now of i do think it's now kind of pointless. would rather have pointless. i would rather have 100 though. but maddie, 100 than not though. but maddie, can i should people can i ask you, should people like me be focusing more or on on labour, on this? do you think do you that maybe we do you think that maybe we should our on on should be turning our guns on on to party? rishi sunak to the labour party? rishi sunak did that today. to the labour party? rishi sunak did yeah. that today. to the labour party? rishi sunak did yeah. althoughiday. to the labour party? rishi sunak did yeah. although iay. to the labour party? rishi sunak did yeah. although i think he was >> yeah. although i think he was he attempting to spin his he was attempting to spin his way out of a very difficult press conference. you know, i'm trying context trying to think what the context of was , but he said, oh no, of it was, but he said, oh no, it's fine actually . you it's all fine actually. you know, really this is a problem for labour because don't for labour because they don't have a plan at all. that is, you know, there's way that the know, there's no way that the current psychodrama is current tory psychodrama is anything but a massive gift to laboun he anything but a massive gift to labour. he was almost labour. and he was almost presenting chaos if presenting the chaos as if it were somehow, know, a were somehow, you know, a headache but, headache for keir starmer. but, but i think, i think in but yeah, i think, i think in general we should because as we inch closer towards an increasingly labour increasingly likely labour government, of course need government, of course we need to ask these questions they've ask these questions and they've just doubly just been included doubly fortunate is so much fortunate that there is so much chaos tension in government chaos and tension in government that journalists are often focusing on that and not really
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doing their job properly. >> i mean, the fact that we can't get around though, sean, is 13 years of tory government. this migrant crisis didn't happen overnight. we started seeing some seeing people landing on some of the greek islands. then they worked their way across europe. i literally been i mean, this has literally been heading years and heading towards us for years and no action was taken. no pre—emptive action was taken. it no, there's no doubt that it is no, there's no doubt that the tory government have to going have to answer going to have to answer a question on this. >> but what's interest is >> but what's interest thing is when was asked what when keir starmer was asked what he will do if he gives any detail, it just looks like actually he'll open doors actually he'll open the doors and country even and make make the country even easier into, which easier to get into, which is fine. he's to tell the fine. but he's got to tell the pubuc fine. but he's got to tell the public that first. that's very, very important. also very important. and also immigration has been high for a very , very long time. very, very long time. immigration has largely been good for this country. but there's a point and many people feel we've crossed the point where becomes a challenge for where it becomes a challenge for the country, whole the country, and the whole political has has political firmament has has a question to answer. and keir starmer has for every initial lviv that the government has brought in to reduce the number.
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so actually he will be a hypocrite if he then says, well, he'll reduce the number because when he was given the opportunity to support a government would, didn't government that would, he didn't he an opportune way to he acted on an opportune way to support argument. right. support his argument. all right. >> last night we >> now, amy, last night we played exclusive from mark played an exclusive from mark white that we're to follow white that we're going to follow up today. showed up with today. he showed that the waiting to the numbers of people waiting to cross channel in calais were cross the channel in calais were as high as they've ever been . as high as they've ever been. today, we're going to be showing the way that people are are either using in terms either using new routes in terms of by bribing essentially polish lorry drivers or just getting to the ports and trying to break in. are you all right with that? do those people like asylum seekers to you? >> i the way we're framing >> i think the way we're framing it we're calling it a it and we're calling it a national emergency is purely political because this isn't a national emergency is a is a natural disaster , a war, natural disaster, a war, a terrorist attack, 40,000 people coming over in small boats because they have to flee their country for whatever reason. and you've got to have you genuinely , really buy into the idea that they are having to flee their
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country. i don't surely the very fact of getting into that boat in those perilous conditions , in those perilous conditions, seeing the number of people that have died before them, it suggests that maybe the water is safer than the land , does it safer than the land, does it not? would you get in a boat? >> no, it doesn't know because i wouldn't break into a country. >> i just say to. >> i just say to. >> but you know as well as i do, there's no such thing as breaking into a country that we have an international law. we have an international law. we have asylum because of this. >> but but let me just say >> but but but let me just say two then, amy. our two things then, amy. our international say international asylum laws say you first. you stay in a first. >> no, they don't. >> no, they don't. >> no. even i believe >> no, no, no. even i believe that's right. and if they don't, that's right. and if they don't, thatis that's right. and if they don't, that is not the case. well, then why? any safer why? why is britain any safer than france? >> but if france has >> yes, but what if france has if france has declined in asylum , an asylum claim? why do you have stay in france? have to stay in france? >> and the other >> the and the and the other thing to say as well, why thing to say is as well, why this a national emergency. this is a national emergency. we've had a massive in we've had a massive rise in rough sleeping. has been a rough sleeping. this has been a part of that. we've had a massive rise in families in a temporary and our temporary accommodation and our housing, our housing need is
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acute. and this plays into those things . things. >> now. i think that's a cost of living, which is about to have a debate whether not it debate on whether or not it would be electoral oblivion for the tories to get rid of rishi sunak before the next general election. i'll just warm that up a bit early. maddie, what do you think? >> yeah, i think i think it would be completely insane for them, whatever the views are of rishi sunak, can you imagine having another tory prime minister between the minister between now and the next another next general election? another person that would standing person that would be standing there waiting by the cenotaph, perhaps next year's one, perhaps at the next year's one, you like there would be you know, like there would be more. i think the same number of conservative prime ministers dunng conservative prime ministers during this administration than they have ever been. labour prime ministers in history, which then have to be paid £100,000 a year. >> it's a choice forever between between bloke over between following a bloke over the top who you know is going to get absolutely battered or just playing hail mary and playing the hail mary and getting else in. getting someone else in. >> i mean, just get battered? >> look, nobody in the party wants to get rid of rishi. i've
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spent a lot time in spent a lot of time in parliament. that's just not a conversation people are having. some are having a some people are having a conversation needs to be conversation and he needs to be more. are saying, we more. some are saying, we support me, we'll push to do support me, we'll push him to do more. but that isn't happening and i'd have to say, as a conservative, someone conservative, if someone suggested to me that we're going to another minister, to have another prime minister, i have to backhand i mean, i might have to backhand them. they'll do them. do you think they'll do it, because there's this it, amy, because there's this kind confidence vote. kind of pseudo confidence vote. >> he's referring to >> i know he's not referring to it that at the moment, it as that at the moment, although of course the labour party are, you do you although of course the labour party that you do you although of course the labour party that they do you although of course the labour party that they actually you although of course the labour party that they actually will think that they actually will end up into the next end up going into the next general with rishi general election with rishi sunaki general election with rishi sunak i hope they don't only purely his health purely for his mental health because so sad at that because he looks so sad at that lectern because he looks so sad at that lectwhen they asked him that >> when they asked him that final when it final question, when was it chris asked him. he looked chris hope asked him. he looked down and i think he had tears in his eyes. i think he his eyes. i don't think he believes in the stuff he's believes in half the stuff he's saying, be honest. saying, to be honest. >> i actually i must i've got to be honest with you. i'm very critical of him the critical of him over the immigration things. for immigration side of things. for me, my criticism stems from what my look him, i my opinion when i look at him, i don't see a man who is kept awake night by some of the
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awake at night by some of the issues are really issues that i think are really affecting this country. could affecting this country. i could be that. that's be wrong about that. that's just my but i do think he actually. >> what basis do say that? >> what basis do you say that? i just not think that that man just do not think that that man gets urgency of the illegal gets the urgency of the illegal migration crisis. >> think that that >> i do not think that that that his heart is in it. and i think when he's out of here, he'll be off california with family. >> i've got to disagree because i sometimes people like i think sometimes people like you not appreciate the you might not appreciate is the sheer resistance that sheer level of resistance that he's had he's had he's had. he's he's had he's had a home office that's dysfunctional, but to hide dysfunctional, but gets to hide behind whoever happens to be the minister. behind whoever happens to be the ministhat thwarted every party that have thwarted every effort small matter effort he's made small matter that members of the public that as members of the public launch legal bids against him, he been up a supreme court he has been up a supreme court and kept supreme court. and he's kept the supreme court. as said, he's kept pushing as amy said, he's kept pushing through. is through. i think he is concerned. okay >> all right. well, look, there's still there's lots more of this still to because you to come because i will bring you part two mark white's calais part two of mark white's calais exclusive that exclusive as he reveals that french are overwhelmed by french police are overwhelmed by migrants. don't have to look migrants. you don't have to look far the migrant s. far to spot the migrant s. >> they're everywhere here we film as one clambers into the
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back of this lorry disappears , back of this lorry disappears, appearing out of sight every time a new truck parks up here within seconds, they're swarming around aid, checking the doors , around aid, checking the doors, probing for weak spots to get inside . inside. >> well, something tells me that rishi might not be being totally honest with us, but, hey, at least we're going to have a ban on smoking and more levels, aren't we? i mean, that's fantastic. that's what we really want, isn't it? more of that eye opening report that you won't catch else on media catch anywhere else on the media coming up next the coming soon, but up next in the clash, ukip henry clash, former ukip leader henry bolton and former cabinet minister david mellor head minister david mellor go head to head leaders head to ask if changing leaders yet again would consign the tory party electoral oblivion. party to electoral oblivion. sparks will certainly fly
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weekend at 3 pm. on gb news, the people's channel, britain's news channel . news channel. >> welcome back. britain's best loved entertainer, jim davidson is on the way. before we lift the veil on the true scale of the veil on the true scale of the migrant crisis with the second part of our home security editor mark white, calais exclusive. but right now , it's exclusive. but right now, it's time for the clash . now, after time for the clash. now, after rishi sunak rwanda plan failed to appease the tory right and cost him his immigration minister and friend robert jenrick, the embattled pm appeared to plead for labour's support to get his emergency bill passed through parliament. >> it real question when it comes to all these votes is for the labour party. the real question when it comes to parliament. question for all
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parliament. the question for all of are the of you to ask is what are the labour party going do about labour party going to do about this vote? >> look, i think he's got a point. i absolutely think he's got a point about that. you know, labour don't appear to have clear he's right to have a clear plan. he's right to point out. the issue for him point it out. the issue for him is that the tories have in is that the tories have been in for years and he's in charge for 13 years and he's in charge now. that's always going to now. so that's always going to be sunak also be a problem. but sunak also denied that he was ready to make tuesday's vote on this emergency rwanda or sack me rwanda bill a back me or sack me scenario. growing scenario. but fears are growing that could face that the tories could face electoral oblivion if the flight don't ground. don't get off the ground. >> conservative faces >> the conservative party faces electoral oblivion a matter electoral oblivion in a matter of months. >> if we introduce yet another bill destined to fail. >> do we fight for sovereignty or do we let our party die? >> well , a or do we let our party die? >> well, a startling ipsos poll today revealed that sunak's popularity has plummeted 13 points this year. >> so should the party think about replacing him as prime minister or would that consign them to electoral oblivion? let me know your thoughts.
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vaiews@gbnews.com. lots of good onesin vaiews@gbnews.com. lots of good ones in there already by the way. or tweet me at gb news. go and take part in our poll. i'll bnng and take part in our poll. i'll bring you the results very shortly. but first to duke shortly. but first here to duke it bring in former ukip it out, i bring in former ukip leader border control expert leader and border control expert henry tory grandee henry bolton and tory grandee david mellor chaps, you david mellor. chaps, thank you very looking forward very much. i'm looking forward to should they get to this. henry should they get rid would it spell rid of sunak? would it spell electoral oblivion if they did that ? that? >> in a word, they should do? i'll explain why i think it is absolutely crucial for the good of the country going forward that we avoid ideally . a labour, that we avoid ideally. a labour, a socialist victory in the next general election . general election. >> and if they do win , which is >> and if they do win, which is looking increasingly likely at the moment, then that victory, the moment, then that victory, the damage that they can cause, needs to be mitigated by a strong opposition. now yeah, at the moment the conservative track record over the last 13 years has not been particularly good, particularly on the topic of the day, which is immigration. and the thing is, with sunak, he's simply with rishi sunak, he's simply not when he says, you
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not credible when he says, you know, of these know, he's doing all of these things two reasons. one is things for two reasons. one is that he's had the opportunity to do already, as we've heard do this already, as we've heard from braverman, been do this already, as we've heard from to braverman, been do this already, as we've heard from to this'erman, been do this already, as we've heard from to this repeatedly been do this already, as we've heard from to this repeatedly anden asked to do this repeatedly and failed to do it. now, all of a sudden, you know, the you know, the lions are at the gate and you've got he's got to do something. so he's thrown this out there. it's not credible for him to go forward and claim that this his work. second this is all his work. second thing that , this is all his work. second thing that, quite this is all his work. second thing that , quite honestly, thing is that, quite honestly, he's not got the charisma or the character to take it forward. what the conundrum is, though , what the conundrum is, though, that you're quite right in your lead up, there is a massive hit for the conservative party as well. if they change leader, okay, they're damned if they do, damned if they don't. but they've got to go one way or the other and go. other and i'll go. >> i'll go to david mellor. just respond to that. and henry obviously rid of obviously thinks that get rid of sunak. something sunak. try something else. >> mean, many times >> well, i mean, how many times can that? i mean, this can they do that? i mean, this is a joke. a totally ludicrous situation, an where a government seems think he can throw out seems to think he can throw out its leader every couple of weeks
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and maintain in and yet maintain in some prospect of keeping the confidence of the country . look, confidence of the country. look, if they get rid of sunak, the conservative party might as well collectively commit suicide. every one of them put some chains around their ankles and jump chains around their ankles and jump off westminster bridge. at least be an amusing least that would be an amusing spectacle and you know, this is where, if i may say so there is a difference between those of us who are actually in practical politics. and i spent nine years as a member of mrs. thatcher's government. the idea that she'd ever have allowed any of this nonsense quite wrong. and nonsense is quite wrong. and those who are largely theoreticians , people who think, theoreticians, people who think, well, would be interesting if well, it would be interesting if or what if or what if at the end of the day, politics is a practical business and the failure of the conservative party to come to terms with the reality of their situation and fail to recognise that unless they can all rally behind sunak , they can all rally behind sunak, then they've had it. this is this is the way it is. and the fact that you know, sunak isn't
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my ideal choice as a leader. of course he isn't. he's not really a leader . but course he isn't. he's not really a leader. but at the end of the day, the problem. >> david yeah. david i do appreciate it, all of that. i do. there is you have put up what is obviously a very really stark and understandable side of it. okay? but you've said several things there, which is that this is a mess. he's not a leader. i mean, it does sound like there's a choice between getting rid of rishi, trying something else and hoping that works. henry or facing the inevitable electoral oblivion thatis inevitable electoral oblivion that is coming. henry indeed. >> you know, it's the lesser of the two evils, isn't it? there's got to be selected here. rishi sunakis got to be selected here. rishi sunak is at the moment going down in the polls in his own popularity, and he's driving the conservative party that way as well. the conservative party is facing effectively electoral oblivion. if they don't change him. so is there someone there who we don't need to go into speculation now in this debate
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as to who it might be, but is there someone there who actually could say to the country, look , could say to the country, look, we got wrong, but i am we got it wrong, but i am credible, i have a credible team. and you know what? for the first time, i'm presenting you with not with a list of promises, but with a credible plan. the how, what, where and when and all the rest of it. now, that's never come out of sunak's mouth and that is one of the reasons he's not credible. he keeps promising things and never delivering the country. and the conservative voters who didn't the by didn't turn out in the by elections need want elections are going to need want somebody who they can actually trust . trust. >> okay, david, come back to that then . that then. >> well, the prospects of that working are slim and none and slim left town. you know, i mean, this is hopeless. this is a joke . i'm one day i'm going to a joke. i'm one day i'm going to wake up and i'm going to say all a terrible dream. the idea that having had all of the problems that the conservatives have had in office, having got rid of two prime ministers, they can get rid a third. this is a joke.
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rid of a third. this is a joke. this for theoretical ones, this is for theoretical ones, people who've never had any practical experience of elected politics, but who come up with this junk . and this is junk. this junk. and this is junk. junk >> so. david, david, david, what's your answer? >> let david finish. go on, david. >> all right. i mean, what can i say except this is such a total and utter rubbish , right? and utter rubbish, right? >> okay. i think you had finished, actually. henry go on. >> yeah. david so what is your answer then, to the situation in the polls and the fact that conservative voters aren't turning out to support the conservative party that is because there is , as you quite because there is, as you quite rightly said, the leadership is fundamentally flawed . someone fundamentally flawed. someone who needs to change before. >> david yeah , sorry, am i >> david yeah, sorry, am i speaking or is this gentleman you speak? no. henry henry's made his point. >> one dump on at least someone who served some time in government and in parliament. and the reality is, it doesn't work. you know, it's not the sort of leading article in the
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sun or something like that, but we're trying to do is find a party that can run the country . party that can run the country. and the best way for the conservatives to demonstrate they have no chance whatsoever of running the country is to get rid of yet another leader. it's a joke. okay >> joke. david. all right. we're going. >> any credibility whatsoever. >> any credibility whatsoever. >> we're going to park it because i think you've both actually done exactly what we wanted, which is hold a mirror up to a very polarising discussion that is gripping people who vote tory in this country especially, which is, look, do we ditch him? will it work? would we look even more ridiculous than we do now? or actually, do we carry on? both of you, thank you very, very much. is ukip, former ukip much. that is ukip, former ukip leader and border control expert henry alongside tory henry bolton, alongside tory grandee do grandee david mellor. who do you agree rishi comes agree with as rishi sunak comes out swinging defence his out swinging in defence of his small policy, would small boats policy, would changing again consign changing leaders again consign the tories to the electoral dustbin? well, you've all been piling on with your comments, adrian, on twitter says how many times can play musical
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times can they play musical chairs consulting chairs without consulting voters? i've a tory all my voters? i've been a tory all my life , but even i think they are life, but even i think they are taking the mickey. yeah, i think the election thing we did a poll last night, didn't and more last night, didn't we? and more of wanted an election a of you wanted an election than a change leader. lionel says change of leader. lionel says no, mean electoral no, it wouldn't mean electoral oblivion because somebody could turn kemi, turn it around. suella and kemi, they i'll just they mentioned there, i'll just get through one more quickly now. there is no going back for the conservative now. the conservative party now. oblivion. matter what. that's the conservative party now. oblivilet's matter what. that's the conservative party now. oblivilet's getiatter what. that's the conservative party now. oblivilet's getiattthe/hat. that's the conservative party now. oblivilet's getiattthe poll. that's the conservative party now. oblivilet's getiattthe poll. oh, 's nick. let's get to the poll. oh, it's close one. 47% of it's another close one. 47% of you that changing leaders would consign tories to electoral consign the tories to electoral oblivion. 53% of you say that it wouldn't really interesting to see how split you are on the general election topic. now general election topic. and now this look, coming up, this as well. look, coming up, rishi might boast that small boat crossings are down by a third, but that's only scratching the surface of the channel migrant crisis. >> the driver sees them and tries telling them there's no point in climbing aboard. as he's heading to belgium , it's he's heading to belgium, it's clear they don't believe him. and as he pulls out of the lorry park , unbelievably just visible
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park, unbelievably just visible on the roof. here is 15 year old majid . majid. >> well, a lot more of that coming your way. no one is talking about the lorries, which , by the way, is the new favourite mode of transport for the albanians. favourite mode of transport for the albanians . two favourite mode of transport for the albanians. two more of mark wyatt's exclusive calais report that exposes the true scale of the migrant crisis coming very soon. but first, what do just stop oil protesters prince harry and the rwanda plan all have in common? well they'll all be taken task by comedy legend taken to task by comedy legend jim davidson, me jim davidson, who joins me straight break.
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isabel monday to thursdays from six till 930 . six till 930. >> welcome back. former tory minister and whitaker on the way. but first, as the so—called climate activists at just stop oil continue to wreak havoc on the lives of hard working brits, it's emerged that a whopping 20 million quid's worth of taxpayers cash has been spent policing this group, the met. police also confirmed that a staggering 300 police officers are being taken out of frontline policing every single day. 300 police officers a day to deal with these eco zealots. well, i'm joined now by comedy legend and the owner of streaming channel ustream . it'sjim channel ustream. it's jim davidson. jim great to have you on the show. should these eco clowns do everyone a favour and just frankly put an end to their antics, what would your solution be taking up all this time and money? >> well, i mean, you say time and money, patrick. >> and good evening, by the way,
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everybody. i haven't seen 300 coppers the last 20 years. if coppers in the last 20 years. if i'd have counted every copper i'd have counted every copper i'd seen on the beat, it wouldn't have been 300. and i think we ought to do it. just just ignore these people. if there's a protest in the roads, just turn around and go back and treat them like a big pothole. and when people say, well, you can't do that because they stop ambulances hospital , ambulances going to hospital, etcetera, i've got a great etcetera, well, i've got a great idea. them things idea. have you seen them things in and canada where they in alaska and canada where they put them snowplough on front put them snowplough on the front of they to do the of trucks? they ought to do the same thing with ambulances and then just plough these then just sort of plough these people of the stick people out of the way, stick them of the them in the back of the ambulance and take him to hospital the people that hospital with the people that really mean, it's really need help. i mean, it's absolutely ignore these absolutely crazy. ignore these morons. but 300 police morons. but but 300 police haven't seen 300 police of you. >> yeah, i mean, presumably there, jim, we could put some kind of padded foam thing on the end of that. that snow plough there. then no one would would have to get hurt. that is the thatis have to get hurt. that is the that is the issue for me really, which is that i don't want to
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see these protesters get hurt. i mean, i think they plonk themselves in very themselves in into very dangerous situations. we don't want to advocate violence or anything like that. but at the same is same time, you know, it is incredibly difficult to see how how get people out the how we get these people out the way. if these police way. and if these police officers well. we mentioned officers as well. we mentioned 300 police officers a day. well, a the time it seems to me a lot of the time it seems to me like they're them like they're offering them tea and biscuits. >> know it's ridiculous. and >> i know it's ridiculous. and taking of rainbow knee. taking the sort of rainbow knee. yes, i think it's a good idea to put a bit of sponge on the front or a little broom and just or maybe a little broom and just push to side or turn push them to the side or turn around, go back and just leave them 300 police. i've yet them there. 300 police. i've yet to see so many crazy. >> i've got something i really want your take on here, jim. right. because harry's right. because prince harry's legal action against the home office over his security arrangements concluded today. and the duke's sensationally claimed that he was forced to step down from royal duties despite citing previous suggestions that he'd chosen to stop being a working member of the royal family court also the royal family the court also heard of harry's witness heard part of harry's witness statement, which the statement, in which he said the
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uk is a place i want my children to feel at home in as much as where live now in us where they live now in the us that cannot happen if it's not possible to keep them safe when they on uk soil. cannot they are on uk soil. i cannot put wife in danger like that put my wife in danger like that and i'm reluctant to unnecessarily myself in unnecessarily put myself in harm's way to jim . just the harm's way to jim. just the pampered duke really deserve taxpayer funded police protection . protection. >> well, there's a couple of ways of looking at this, patrick. he's obviously wealthier now than she is as well to get their own mind. there's a lot of ex—special forces firms out there that are sensational. but the way i look at this, i believe the at it like this, i believe the taxpayer for armed taxpayer should pay for armed protection for all of the protection teams for all of the royal family, because although harry is a tough cookie and you know, it would take a good old team to take out, he's a team to take him out, he's a tough chap. don't you worry about that. but the fact is, let's say he doesn't have a police armed protection and he gets himself kidnapped. police armed protection and he gets ito self kidnapped. police armed protection and he gets ito put kidnapped. police armed protection and he gets ito put the napped. police armed protection and he gets ito put the kinged. police armed protection and he gets ito put the king under going to put the king under terrible the country terrible stress and the country under stress. and under terrible stress. and i don't want that for someone i love in a country that i love. i
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i remember when princess diana and certain people said i don't need protection . well, actually, need protection. well, actually, maybe but the country maybe you don't. but the country does don't want this. does and we don't want this. it's all nonsense. and you know what? how much does it cost to have couple of coppers looking have a couple of coppers looking after prince? got 300 of after the prince? we got 300 of them off the front line. why them now off the front line. why don't take them all of don't we take them all off of those oil protesters, give them a good luck. just point a gun and good luck. just point it at and say, look, you it at someone and say, look, you know, go away, otherwise i'm going to shoot you. will it. >> i probably i must say, the very direct approach that jim davidson all davidson has taken to all matters so far, i think matters policing so far, i think we'll have of people we'll have a lot of people applauding at their televisions. but, does the does duke but, jim, does the does the duke actually i suppose he's actually need it? i suppose he's one those things. mean, one of those things. i mean, some would say, look, you some people would say, look, you know, when he when put in his know, when he when he put in his first book, about how first book, spare, about how many he'd many taliban fighters he'd killed to them killed and then referred to them as pieces and stuff, i as chess pieces and stuff, i mean, look, obviously, i don't want him come any harm want to see him come to any harm at all. but you think, at all. at all. but you think, well, i mean, if you've kind of brought a pseudo fatwa on yourself, taxpayer have yourself, does the taxpayer have to for that? to really pay for that? >> i don't think the
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>> well, i don't think the taxpayer is paying to protect him. i think taxpayer him. i think the taxpayer is protecting and protecting the royal family and the as i say, the crown i mean, as i say, harry is a tough old chap and okay, maybe shouldn't have okay, he maybe shouldn't have boasted about that. that was a bit i don't know, bit macho. and i don't know, quite how true that is. quite frankly, how true that is. but i mean, if we're all worried about stating what done, about stating what we've done, i couldn't the couldn't go out on on the streets. now because half the front row would come and find me and somewhere for and beat me up somewhere for taking mickey out them. taking the mickey out of them. >> yeah, now, look, >> well, yeah, quite. now, look, jim, there's been yet more tory turmoil over rishi sunak's new rwanda been talking rwanda bill we've been talking about quite lot tonight. about that quite a lot tonight. we've exclusive from we've got a big exclusive from calais in just a few minutes time. actually but with robert jenrick dramatically resigning last night, suella braverman throwing down the gauntlet to the warning that he faces the pm, warning that he faces electoral oblivion if his bill fails. sunak obviously wasn't having any of it today. defending his plans, suggesting his critics clearly don't want to boats . jim, where to stop the boats. jim, where are on this? are you on this? >> well, first of all, it's very difficult to stop the boats, isn't it? we've got to. why have we made this such a really good country to come to? these people have walked across fantastic
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countries our place. countries to get to our place. and most of us people that are here that have been here for millions are slightly millions of years are slightly fed it all. now imagine fed up with it all. now imagine you being the prime minister or the president of rwanda and james cleverly, who's a nice bloke, turns and says, bloke, turns up and says, listen, want to your listen, we want to use your country deter people coming country to deter people coming to country. well why would to our country. well why would you that? says the president . you do that? says the president. well, because your country is horrible. we're saying that, horrible. and we're saying that, you if come here, you know, if you come here, we're to send you there. we're going to send you there. it's a recipe for disaster. i don't know what's going to happen. all i know is that suella is being , you know, suella is being, you know, lobbied and had a go at and trolled ridiculous . and as for trolled ridiculous. and as for martin jenrick , not martin martin jenrick, not martin robert jenrick . yeah, leaving . robert jenrick. yeah, leaving. well, i've met him a couple of times. i always thought he was a bit of a self—licking ice cream, but i think he's quite bright and he is a lawyer and he knows that the lawyer will drive a truck through all these things that rishi is putting together so that's the problem.
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so well. that's the problem. there's going on and there's something going on and it just. he was asked. it is just. and he was asked. >> yeah, exactly. and jim, thank you. rishi was asked today you. and rishi was asked today directly any directly whether or not any flights before flights would take off before the election and he could the next election and he could not that, should be not answer that, which should be a look, jim, you a concern. look, jim, thank you very we're have very much. we're going to have to park there. my good man. to park it there. my good man. comedy king jim davidson. coming up, i'm bringing you part two of marc exclusive marc white's exclusive report from expose the from calais as we expose the true of the migrant crisis. >> those spoke to are from >> those we spoke to are from sudan. here night after sudan. they're here night after night . night. >> i have two months here. >> i have two months here. >> two months? yeah. trying every night. yeah. do they every night. yeah. and do they discover you on the lorries? do they find you? yeah, i go to port security . port security. >> they take me. i go to work here like this every day. yeah >> wow. and you're just going to keep trying until you get to the uk? >> yeah , well, the french are >> yeah, well, the french are obviously doing wonders for us, aren't they? >> yeah. get off that lorry. come back tomorrow. don't miss the rest of exclusive report the rest of the exclusive report that the lid off some of that blows the lid off some of rishi sunaks boastful press conference but next, conference earlier. but next, with rwanda plan causing
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with the rwanda plan causing chaos, immigration minister robert resignation still robert jenrick resignation still reverberating westminster reverberating around westminster , what minister , what would tory minister former tory minister anne widdecombe's plan be for britain's broken borders to give a hot take on that plus the potential impact of nigel farage rejoining the conservative party. she hits back saying
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coming up, another big exclusive report from gb news home and security editor mark white exclusively for this show . he's exclusively for this show. he's gone behind the curtain of the small boats crisis to expose what's really happening in calais. but back in blighty, rishi sunak fighting tonight to contain a growing tory party revolt. immigration minister robert jenrick quit last night. he said that the new legislation wasn't tough enough. suella braverman out braverman has obviously come out swinging she thinks it swinging as well. she thinks it will fail, but the prime minister hit back today. >> government has introduced >> the government has introduced the anti—illegal the toughest anti—illegal immigration ever. this bill
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immigration law ever. this bill blocks every single reason that has ever been used to prevent flights to rwanda from taking off. >> okay. a lot to get through tonight with former tory minister ann widdecombe. and thank you for joining minister ann widdecombe. and thank you forjoining us. do you thank you for joining us. do you think he will get flights off the ground ? what's your battle the ground? what's your battle plan for britain's borders. >> well, it looks to me very unlikely that he's going to get the flights off the ground , the flights off the ground, particularly given the huge resistance in the tory party the likely resistance in the lords , likely resistance in the lords, the possibility of further legal challenge, even though he believes and has obviously been advised by government advisers, lawyers that that this does successfully block all the objections. >> if you add up everything that's got to happen between now and the next election , i would and the next election, i would say it's unlikely. and my big criticism of sunak has always been not that he's pursuing rwanda au chair , i'll stand on
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rwanda au chair, i'll stand on the runway and cheer if a plane takes off, but rather that he has never had a plan b and it is plan b, which matters now. reform party , for example, which reform party, for example, which has a six point plan. but the reform party will actually concentrate on turning back the boats, which we're allowed to do in international law, taking them back to french waters, back to where they came from . and if to where they came from. and if you do that often enough, they're going to get rather frustrated. so and the other thing that i have said for 30 years, and you've heard me say it before on this program, patrick, what we need to do is house all knew asylum seekers, all of them, whether they come in the lorries, whether they come on the boats, all new asylum seekers in secure reception centres until we've determined their claims. reception centres until we've determined their claims . and the determined their claims. and the benefit of that is they then can't disappear into the underground economy . underground economy. >> no, indeed. and just a little
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tease again, that exclusive report from mark white coming up very, very shortly. but and there's lots of speculation recently that gb news is very own. nigel farage currently in i'm a celebrity contestant might rejoin the tory party. you mentioned reform there. the leader of reform uk, richard tice , has poured cold water on tice, has poured cold water on these rumours . he says that he's these rumours. he says that he's still tied in with reform and what do you think about nigel when he gets out of the jungle, rejoining the tories ? why on rejoining the tories? why on earth would he rejoin the party thatis earth would he rejoin the party that is about to be absolutely massacred at the next general election when currently he belongs to a party which is increasing almost with every poll. >> its share of the vote. why would he? why would he rejoin a party that is in total chaos? i mean, it doesn't make any sense to me. and all this began it all began when he attended conservative party conference on a press pass . now, you know, if a press pass. now, you know, if i'd gone on a conservative on an
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express press pass, would that have meant i was about to rejoin the conservative party it's just absolute nonsense . absolute nonsense. >> you think he's better standing on his own two feet, as it were, with reform, even with the difficulties of our voting system at the moment, for the less established parties? >> absolutely . i mean, reform is >> absolutely. i mean, reform is moving up in the polls. conservative party is moving down. >> i'm okay. and thank you very, very much. lovely stuff. i hope you take care and i will see you again very, very soon. that's former conservative minister ann widdecombe. now, coming up, as bofis widdecombe. now, coming up, as boris johnson tries to explain away some whatsapp away some missing whatsapp messages , this week's covid messages, this week's covid inquiry, we speak to a woman who says that she could help recover them . former personal friend of them. former personal friend of bofis them. former personal friend of boris johnson, jennifer arcuri beams in live from the stage to explain how she thinks she could help shed some light on those misled messages. but i ask, is she a woman scorned? she's claims to have had an affair
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with boris johnson. boris johnson has received an absolute kicking at the covid inquiry with everything that led up to him being ousted. while what many people regard as being a kangaroo court can we trust what she says? do we think we'll be talking about all of that? but next, part two of mark white's exclusive report from calais as we reveal the truth about rishi sunak claim that albanians have given up essentially entering the uk illegally, the number of the uk illegally, the number of the albanians on the boats might be down by 90. >> but make no mistake, they're still coming. they're arriving and hiding in the back of the trucks the albanian gangs seek out willingly. usually polish lorry drivers , they pay them to lorry drivers, they pay them to smuggle them across europe and then across the channel in the back of did everyone really think the albanian problem had gone think the albanian problem had gori certainly i'm sure >> i certainly didn't. i'm sure the majority you didn't. the vast majority of you didn't. it as though they are it just looks as though they are taking routes taking different routes into britain and you are not being told about these routes. and it's easy massage some it's very easy to massage some figures and say small boats crossings down. yesterday crossings are down. yesterday we revealed, didn't we, right here on the human
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on this show that the human traffickers themselves are believed blame for believed to be to blame for the small boats crossings being reduced. because they're reduced. why? because they're trying to increase prices so trying to increase the prices so more revelations are more shocking revelations are still from mark white's still to come from mark white's exclusive report . that's exclusive calais report. that's coming next to you. the migrant crisis is worse than ever before. don't believe otherwise . before. don't believe otherwise. we will be telling you all about that. we will be telling you all about that . i will also be asking that. and i will also be asking the well, whether or the question as well, whether or not has gone far. not diversity has gone too far. one prominent member of the arts community in america has finally snapped and said, yes, it is. do you feel as though diversity is going too far? as ever, i want to hear from you, gb views. >> and that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers as sponsors or whether on . gb news evening . whether on. gb news evening. >> alex deakin here with your latest weather update from the met office for gb news. today's rain slowly clearing away this evening. tomorrow, a bit drier and brighter in the east, but there will be more heavy showers and it stays pretty blustery for its eastern areas. still very
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soggy still met soggy this evening. still met office weather warnings office yellow weather warnings in place. rain does clear in place. the rain does clear away all but the far north—east. some showers come into the west, many places having clear spells overnight. temperatures dropping to about or 6 degrees in most to about 5 or 6 degrees in most towns and cities, maybe a little lower in 1 or 2 spots. could be some mist and fog around tomorrow morning. particular some mist and fog around tomceasternirning. particular some mist and fog around tomceastern areas. particular some mist and fog around tomceastern areas. pebitzular some mist and fog around tomceastern areas. pebit ofar over eastern areas. a bit of a glum here, but in eastern glum start here, but in eastern england, should brighten up england, it should brighten up and of the day will be and then most of the day will be dry here. but elsewhere, expect more quite a wet day more showers. quite a wet day again for ireland. again for northern ireland. frequent showers for wales, north—west england and across much of scotland as well . in the much of scotland as well. in the sunny in the south, 12, sunny spells in the south, 12, maybe 13 celsius, generally a little bit warmer than today, but feeling all that warm but not feeling all that warm when the showers come along and the winds, another spell the gusty winds, another spell of comes friday of rain, then comes in friday night into saturday. that night and into saturday. that spreads north during saturday, lingering over parts of southern scotland and northern england, the south will brighten up on saturday with some saturday afternoon with some decent sunshine decent spells of sunshine staying mostly dry across the far staying quite chilly far north, staying quite chilly here, but in the south we should
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with a bit sunshine, into with a bit of sunshine, get into the by saturday day. low the teens by saturday day. low pressure systems continue to bnng pressure systems continue to bring more wet and windy weather. we're keeping a close eye could bring eye on this. one could bring another of wet and very another spell of wet and very windy some on sunday. >> looks like things are heating up. boxt boilers as sponsors of weather on .
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gb news widget. >> we're here for the show so welcome to the dinosaur hour with me. john cleese . haha, that with me. john cleese. haha, that was married to a therapist and you survived. i thought we were getting hugh laurie second best belly steamer. you interviewed saddam hussein. what's that like ? i was terrified. i'm playing strip poker with these three. oh no thank you. >> cds need to be put in alphabetical order. >> oh, are you going to be problematic again?
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>> the dinosaur are our sundays on . gb news is >> the dinosaur are our sundays on. gb news is 10 pm. and this is patrick christys. >> tonight. >> tonight. >> you don't have to look far to spot the migrants. they're everywhere here we film as one clambers into the back of this lorry. >> we expose the truth about the scale of illegal immigrants breaking into britain. rishi sunak boasted today about stopping the albanian problem. but our special exclusive report blows the lid off that the number of the albanians on the boats might be down by 90. >> but make no mistake, they're still coming. they arrive in hiding in the back of the trucks. jennifer arcuri, the woman who claims to have had a four year affair with boris johnson, critiques his performance at the covid inquiry. >> she is, of course, also a tech entrepreneur. sir, we'll be talking about those whatsapp. so now she doesn't hold back , but
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now she doesn't hold back, but is she just a woman scorned ? and is she just a woman scorned? and is she just a woman scorned? and is boris actually being unfairly treated? we go down under for the latest reaction to nigel farage in the jungle with this reprobate, adam cherry. look at him there getting steadily sunburnt. it turned into a drawings of ham . i've got drawings of ham. i've got tomorrow's front pages tonight as our press pack , so as well with our press pack, so you'll be ahead of the game with my panel. muddling grant. lord shaun nicole shaun bailey and amy nicole turner find out what's going turner and find out what's going on as the french take on here as the french take matters into their own hands. this is patrick christys tonight . don't miss a minute. in just a moment's time, we expose the truth about how illegal immigrants are breaking into britain in massive numbers. the government don't want you to see this. oh, well, see, after the headlines .
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the headlines. >> patrick, thank you . the top >> patrick, thank you. the top story from the newsroom , story from the newsroom, russia's federal security service , the fsb, has hacked service, the fsb, has hacked high profile mps in what the government says was a sustained effort to interfere in british politics. the deputy prime minister says peers, civil servants , journalists and servants, journalists and non—governmental organisations , non—governmental organisations, russians have also been targeted . and it's understood politicians had their personal email accounts hacked. oliver dowden says those responsible will be held to account . also will be held to account. also today, the first vote on the new emergent rwanda legislation will be put through parliament next week. the prime minister has been busy defending today the government's plan describing it as the country's toughest anti—immigration law . rishi anti—immigration law. rishi sunak acknowledged, though some disapproved of the bill. but he said it addressed concerns raised by the supreme court. >> this bill blocks every single
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reason that has ever been used to prevent flights to rwanda from taking off as the rwandans themselves have made clear, if we go any further, the entire scheme will collapse and there is no point having a bill with nowhere to send people to. but i am telling you now we have set the bar so high that it will be vanishing rare for anyone to meet it. >> rishi sunak there now at the covid inquiry today, boris johnson rejected claims that he didn't care about the suffering inflicted upon the country dunng inflicted upon the country during the pandemic. and a warning there are some flashing images coming up. if you're watching on tv. the former prime minister was answering questions about parties at number 10 dunng about parties at number 10 during lockdown and he says the idea of mass rule breaking is a million miles away from the actual truth. but he admitted that a trip to barnard castle in 2020 by his former chief adviser, dominic cummings, was a
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bad moment . adviser, dominic cummings, was a bad moment. now the foreign secretary is in the united states and he's been urging politicians there to approve a fresh package of military aid for ukraine. it's after the us congress failed to pass an £88 billion package of wartime funding for ukraine and for israel . lord cameron says israel. lord cameron says blocking ukraine aid would be a christmas present to vladimir putin and described the response to the conflict as the greatest test of our generation in i see it as the challenge of our generation just as my grandfather's generation had to fight off nazi aggression in europe, we are fighting against russian aggression in europe, and the challenge in a way, is a simple one. >> if you add up the economies of the allies of ukraine, the united states, the united kingdom, countries of the european union , we outmatch european union, we outmatch russia by 30 to 1. what we have to do is to make that economic strength count . strength count. >> lord cameron, the new foreign
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secretary, speaking in the united states a short time ago . united states a short time ago. now, santa claus is always busy at this time of year. and guess what happened today? well, he told his majesty that he's on the very good boy list for people ella whelan and the king was greeted by a polish children's choir as he entered a west london shopping centre today to see the christmas markets there. and during the visit, king charles visited santa claus grotto, which of course will be granting children's wishes in the run up to christmas eve. having a brief chat there with father christmas and some his elves here with and some of his elves here with gb news across the uk on tv in your car, on digital radio and on your smart speaker by saying play gb news. this is britain's news channel . now. news channel. now. >> rishi sunak came out swinging today, boasting about his record on small boats, the first time
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small boat arrivals here are down by a third, even as illegal crossings in the mediterranean have soared by 80. >> let me just repeat that small boat arrivals here are down by a third. well our increasingly tetchy prime minister then lashed out at our political editor , christopher hope when he editor, christopher hope when he put our calais revelations from last night's exclusive to him, which showed the numbers waiting to cross the channel are as bad as they've ever been, and that rwanda is a running joke amongst the migrants. >> news has been in calais. prime minister where migrants have told us that they are laughing at the uk and its rwandan policy . are they right rwandan policy. are they right to laugh ? is your policy a joke to laugh? is your policy a joke and your government a laughing stock on this matter? look at the results. >> so you've been over in calais, you've been over france. well, number people well, the number of people crossing france to uk crossing from france to the uk this year is down by a third, right? that's the simple truth .
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right? that's the simple truth. granian. so actually, what we're doing is making a difference. we're disrupting criminal gangs upstream before they get anywhere near calais in the first place. i'm not about talking. i'm about action. the numbers of people crossing from exactly where you were to the uk are down by a third. >> well, are you quite possibly. are talk? actually, mate , are all talk? actually, mate, because french police officers have gb news they are have told gb news us they are overwhelmed the scale of the overwhelmed by the scale of the migrant crisis in northern france struggling to france and are struggling to make a meaningful impact on those cross uk by those trying to cross the uk by small but at what rishi small boat. but at what rishi sunak doesn't want you to know is the scale of the invasion taking place via lorries. although uk politicians are fixated on this very visible and high profile small boats crisis, thousands of migrants are still risking their lives to sneak onto the back of trucks. our home security editor mark white witnessed around the witnessed the chaos around the port calais as young dice port of calais as young men dice with death in their attempts to jump with death in their attempts to jump aboard uk bound lorries all around the port of calais. >> even in broad daylight, around the port of calais. >> even in broad daylight , these >> even in broad daylight, these migrants are everywhere , looking
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migrants are everywhere, looking for transport across the channel. they're opportunists, often young african men who have no money to buy a place on a small boat, opting instead to clamber aboard trucks through the security fence. this young man is trying to stay out of sight. next to a roundabout, waiting for the moment. lorries slow down here in the hope of jumping aboard while the uk politicians are fixated with the small boats crisis , politicians small boats crisis, politicians here say the lorry crisis is just as bad . just as bad. >> there are clearly those who can afford a boat trip, but many, many others who have no money who see the lorries that pass through the port in their thousands as the only realistic way of getting to the uk . way of getting to the uk. >> and as bad as things are dunng >> and as bad as things are during daylight, it's at night when it truly gets crazy here,
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we're on our way to a lorry park on the outskirts of calais, where we're told that after dark, my parents appear looking for a suitable trailer to stow away inside it for the journey to the uk , you don't have to to the uk, you don't have to look far to spot the migrants. they're everywhere . here we film they're everywhere. here we film as one clambers into the back of this lorry disappearing out of sight every time a new truck parks up here. within seconds as they're swarming around , they're swarming around, checking the doors, probing for weak spots to get inside . those weak spots to get inside. those weak spots to get inside. those we spoke to are from sudan. they're here night after night . they're here night after night. >> i have two months here. two months? yeah. >> trying every night? yes. and do they discover you on the lorries? do they find you? yeah, i go to port security . i go to port security. >> they take me. i go to work here like this every day. yeah
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>> wow. and you're just going to keep trying until you get to the uk? >> yeah . >> yeah. >> yeah. >> suddenly the migrants are on the run, scattering as an unmarked police vehicle enters the lorry park . unmarked police vehicle enters the lorry park. but unmarked police vehicle enters the lorry park . but talking to the lorry park. but talking to these officers, they tell us they're completely overwhelmed by the scale of the migrant problem here. and despite the extra money from the uk, they say they don't have the resources to make a meaningful impact on both the small boats and lorry crisis . quite often and lorry crisis. quite often when the migrants try to get in the back of these lorries , they the back of these lorries, they end up damaging them, cutting the guide cables or sometimes even cutting their way through the roof. so what you find is that some of the lorry drivers do this. they just leave their back door open so that people can see right down inside the lorry. they see it's empty . lorry. they see it's empty. there's no point in getting into that lorry because they're going to be found out. migrants after migrant tells the same story like majid here. it's london.
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they're determined to reach and you will keep trying to get to london. >> london? yes i go to london within minutes. >> majid and his friends are around the latest lorry to arrive . but the driver sees them arrive. but the driver sees them and tries, telling them there's no point in climbing aboard. and tries, telling them there's no point in climbing aboard . as no point in climbing aboard. as he's heading to belgium , it's he's heading to belgium, it's clear they don't believe him. and as he pulls out of the lorry park, unbelievably just visible on the roof. here is 15 year old majid. when we catch up with the lorry on the motorway, the driver has discovered majid and another migrant pulling over as they jump . off they're dicing they jump. off they're dicing with death . migrants have been with death. migrants have been injured and killed on these roads, but that doesn't put them off. and they're more determined than ever to reach the uk . mark than ever to reach the uk. mark white gb news calais. well
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there's not much sign of deterrence at play there, is there? >> that must make quite uncomfortable viewing for the government because it's not just everybody backed up waiting to get on the small boats at calais. it there's lorry parks appear be full as well. but appear to be full as well. but rishi sunak also claimed today that problems that he solved the problems of albanians breaking into britain or there or thereabouts last yean or there or thereabouts last year, a third of all those arriving in small boats were albanian. >> this year we've returned 5000 people and cut those arrivals by 90. but that small boat, isn't it, are people smuggling contacts on the ground in calais directly contradicts that claim . directly contradicts that claim. >> the number of the albanians on the boats might be down by 90, but make no mistake, they're still coming . they're arriving, still coming. they're arriving, hiding in the back of the trucks. albanian gangs seek trucks. the albanian gangs seek out willingly. usually polish lorry drivers, they pay them to smuggle them across europe and then across channel in the then across the channel in the back their vehicles as well. back of their vehicles as well. >> response those >> in response to those startling revelations from calais , a home office
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calais, a home office spokesperson told us, we are relentless in our pursuit of those to enter the uk those who seek to enter the uk illegally and stand ready to respond to all methods deployed by smuggling gangs, by people smuggling gangs, including other including lorries and other clandestine our clandestine routes. our extensive security measures include robust specialist measures from border force who work closely with our international partners. since the start the year, the start of the year, immigration enforcement have also more than 230 also arrested more than 230 people leading to 160 people smugglers leading to 160 years in sentences. but to respond to all of that now, i am joined again by daily telegraph columnist and sketchwriter madeline grant, columnist and sketchwriter madeline grant , conservative madeline grant, conservative peer shaun bailey and peer lord shaun bailey and author and broadcaster amy nicole turner. madeline, i'll start with you . i mean, a clear start with you. i mean, a clear red presentation there that simply saying that they're getting a handling on the small boats crisis. firstly, that may well not be true, but also we're just seeing people like albanian gangs trying to get in and getting in the backs of lorries. >> yeah, it's very bad indeed. but i noted that the pm was specifically talking about boats
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in that sentence, so i don't think fair to say that what think it's fair to say that what was being in that was actually being said in that speech was untrue. so he speech was was untrue. so he wasn't talking about lorries . wasn't talking about lorries. >> all about illegal >> it's all about illegal immigration, though, isn't it? and was talking about channel and he was talking about channel migrants. being. migrants. i think he's being. yeah, i think he's yeah, but i think i think he's being very agree. when being very, very i agree. when he talks about illegal immigration and all of this stuff. and got really stuff. and so we've got really the albanians through. the albanians coming through. but disingenuous, but it's quite disingenuous, isn't know that isn't it, if you know that actually albanians are just actually the albanians are just using well, we using other routes. well, we don't exactly how many are don't know exactly how many are using routes. using these routes. >> again, i just think >> i mean, again, ijust think you to be careful before you have to be careful before saying actually saying someone is actually lying. he's lying. like i'm not saying he's lying. like i'm not saying he's lying necessarily. >> saying he's >> i'm not saying he's deliberately lying. think he's deliberately lying. i think he's being with the being quite selective with the truth. being quite selective with the trutand you what? like this, >> and you know what? like this, this acute. for this problem is acute. and for a long time it has been ignored. it was ignored by many in the media gb news being an media with gb news being an exception. this is exception. and this is a fantastic from mark, fantastic report from mark, who's shedding light who's really shedding light on something important. something very, very important. but mean, i sorry for but i mean, i feel sorry for those men from sudan. you those young men from sudan. you know, there's a civil war in sudan that's going on right now. but finite limit to
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but there is a finite limit to what can tolerate. what britain can tolerate. >> mean, does appear, sean, >> i mean, it does appear, sean, that are not doing that the french are not doing that the french are not doing that much for the money that we're getting. i mean, that's the revelation being the other revelation we're being told things are told that, you know, things are going with the french. going all right with the french. we're our buck. we're getting bang for our buck. i they're sending unmarked i mean, they're sending unmarked police around park and police car around a car park and move for to come move someone on for them to come back night. i mean, is back the next night. i mean, is that the best they've got? >> i we are giving a >> i mean, we are giving a french an enormous sum of money and doesn't look like we're and it doesn't look like we're quite paying quite getting what we're paying for. what's for. but i think what's important is to separate important here is to separate these out. the migrant these things out. the migrant boat crisis is relatively new. people the channel people coming across the channel in there is in lorries is not. and there is a system. check the a system. they check the lorries, the drivers are liable, etcetera for stopping that. so that was a not that number was was a not a surprise and never going to be as big as the boats because the boatis as big as the boats because the boat is new. and what the prime minister was referring to was the efforts around the boats , the efforts around the boats, because what people are because that's what people are focussed i would focussed on now. but i would i would suggest, go back would suggest, and i go back again, the three big things here are, is , is what are we doing are, is, is what are we doing about a legal migration? what
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are we doing about the money we're giving to the french? but the real fundamental question why britain? why london and why are people travelling through france a perfectly rich, perfectly fine country to come here? that's the fundamental question we need to ask ourselves. because when you talk about deterrence, it's the other side of a deterrent is the price. why are we the price? >> amy we didn't see a lot of women and children there. i mean, does that say something to you or not? >> what that says to me is that it's a very dangerous, very perilous journey. if we remember the 69 vietnamese migrants that died in the back of a refrigerated lorry. so probably the men want to come here, claim asylum. they probably believe firmly that they will achieve that because they probably have faith in the uk and then they'll get a family reunion visa. i mean, my husband wouldn't drag mean, my husband wouldn't drag me along. ideally in that scenario , we don't have a legal scenario, we don't have a legal route for people from sudan. sudanis
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route for people from sudan. sudan is now now people are coming out saying when that all kicked off in sudan, though , we kicked off in sudan, though, we did send flights to get british nationals to get british nationals to get british nationals out. but we are not doing anything about sudanese asylum. >> i'm sorry, but what do we do? this is we throw our arms around the world. >> patrick, how can you see a video of a 59 year old boy, nearly a child ? nearly. why is nearly a child? nearly. why is it not our problem ? there's it not our problem? there's massive inequality in the world, and this is what's driving it. let's look at the root cause of migration. we've spent 140 million on absolutely nothing. why give that to why don't we give that to somewhere where why don't we give that to somemake�* where why don't we give that to somemake no where why don't we give that to somemake no difference?/here they make no difference? >> what you're missing >> i think what you're missing the root cause is what you're missing. i have always talked about the root cause and i've always talked about needing an international response. but the scale is far beyond what britain could arguably could do. it's arguably far beyond europe and beyond what europe can do and do. an international do. we have an international response, i want very response, and i want to be very clear £140 million to tackle the root causes would be less than a drop. >> no, hang on a minute. >> no, hang on a minute. >> i'm just using that as an example. the people who are most
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against migration are ordinarily also favour of foreign also not in favour of foreign aid, foreign aid, and you might be a chance. be in with a chance. >> going to park it >> we're going to park it because. because we've a lot because. because we've got a lot coming got lot coming up. we've got a lot coming up. we've got a lot coming coming up. french coming up, coming up. french farmers have a big f you to farmers have said a big f you to do a load of manure. do well with a load of manure. find out who are . yeah, find out who they are. yeah, there we go. find out who they are so angry with a little bit later on in the show. but next, as boris johnson attempted to defend the loss of thousands of relevant whatsapp messages dunng relevant whatsapp messages during week's during this week's covid inquiry, lost inquiry, are they really lost forever? former close forever? it's former close personal friend who claims to have intimate affair have had an intimate affair with him. entrepreneurjennifer him. tech entrepreneur jennifer arcuri says absolutely not. okay, fair enough. find out how she thinks she could help uncover these missing messages. but do you think boris is being unfairly treated? you won't want to miss this
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weekend at 3 pm. on gb news, the people's channel, britain's news channel . news channel. >> now it's time to cross live to florida for an exclusive interview with former close personal friend of boris johnson, jennifer arcuri. i'm bofis johnson, jennifer arcuri. i'm boris has been back in the headunes boris has been back in the headlines this week as he navigated his way through some tncky navigated his way through some tricky questions at the covid inquiry here's how he defended this mysterious loss. over 5000 whatsapp messages sent during the pandemic. >> do you know why your phone was missing those 5000 odd whatsapp? i do not know the exact reason, but it looks as though it's something to do with
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the app going down and then coming up again. >> but somehow now . not >> but somehow now. not >> but somehow now. not >> but somehow now. not >> but jennifer arcuri thinks that she may be able to help. now she was a close personal friend and business associate of bofis friend and business associate of boris johnson's, claiming to have had an intimate relationship with the former prime minister between 2012 and 2016. but as fate would have it, arcuri is also a technology entrepreneur with expertise in data recovery, and tonight she is sensation offering to help expose some of these missing whatsapp, saying it is possible to recover whatsapp messages . so to recover whatsapp messages. so if anyone wants to see what they are hiding, i've got the team . are hiding, i've got the team. there's quite a lot to discuss here. jennifer thank you very much for joining here. jennifer thank you very much forjoining us. and firstly, welcome to the show. you are confident that you can get these whatsapp messages. are you could you just talk me
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through that, please ? so sure. through that, please? so sure. >> and thank you very much for having me on. i appreciate you giving me a opportunity to explain this, although i can't stand this idea of a woman scorned , nothing i said is scorned, nothing i said is because i'm scorned. i'm just simply stating the facts. i have a i have a cyber security company in the uk, which i've run for many years. most of the people running the cyber security industry in the uk i've either worked with directly or are familiar with me, but most importantly are familiar with my team's so i think i need team's work. so i think i need to stress a few points here is that we are kind of glossing oven that we are kind of glossing over, as in formation, you know, in your phone is not just stored on an app, it's actually , you on an app, it's actually, you know, stored throughout the hardware and the operating system. there are data stores throughout both and frequently that means that when information is deleted and a person can
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recover this information. now we would use our technical our teams, technical abilities to recover and re—evaluate all that data . we scrutinise the data. we scrutinise the electronic components of the of the phone and really the key here is that we're missing the interaction with not just the device itself , but with every device itself, but with every other device that came into contact with to ascertain and detail the exact time line of events that to led this deletion of data and any deliberate attempts to do so . i think, you attempts to do so. i think, you know, this is incredibly important that there is a cryptoanalysis and every effort recover these deleted messages because it can it can be it is possible. >> do you not think that maybe inquiry should be demanding access to the laptop to restore that by johnson's own admission , that by johnson's own admission, uh, was used to recover this phone. uh, was used to recover this phone . so his phone was going to
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phone. so his phone was going to ask you. i'm just going to ask you, do you not think that maybe bofis you, do you not think that maybe boris johnson has been through enough? he nearly died during this coronavirus pandemic. he was, many people think, hounded out in the end by a kangaroo court, had his personal life delved into quite a lot. to be fair, i mean, does he really need this now? he's being even put up with things like false graphs and false data about access, deaths and stuff. i mean, does he really need this? is not been through enough, is he not been through enough, do think . do you think. >> i'm i apologise. the sound is going in and out, so i think i hear your question. does he really need this scrutiny? the truth is, it's just getting started . and the man was started. and the man was responsible for the single biggest crime against humanity. and while the media might keep touting this sympathetic, you know , like like you just did , know, like like you just did, you made it seem as if this man was completely innocent and void of all scrutiny . the reality is,
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of all scrutiny. the reality is, is he and his by his own admission, his ignorance of incompetence , of understanding incompetence, of understanding not only the technology , what not only the technology, what does that say about the other decisions across the board? i mean, there's a lot of data right now that's that's showing, you know, the excess mortality rates people locked into their homes. people died because of the decisions that were made on hypothetical models, trusting the . and i think he's the experts. and i think he's difficult for people to claim, though, jennifer, it's difficult for people to claim that boris johnson the johnson wasn't on top of the brief and he was a bit scattergun and he wasn't getting briefed correctly. >> then claim that he's >> and then also claim that he's directly for lot directly responsible for a lot of he not just of these. was he not just listening to modelling false modelling, people putting huge amounts pressure him, the amounts of pressure on him, the media huge amounts media putting huge amounts of pressure what other pressure on him? what other countries mean, do countries were doing? i mean, do you singularly blame countries were doing? i mean, do you johnsongularly blame countries were doing? i mean, do you johnson forarly blame countries were doing? i mean, do you johnson for this?.ame countries were doing? i mean, do you johnson for this? and this boris johnson for this? and this is why i do i do think it's relevant for our viewers. i don't mean any offence by asking this genuinely, jennifer, but i think it is a bit of the elephant in the room, you know, are you so anti him because of
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the history you've had with him? >> absolutely not. i'm not even kind that mean that that's been that's old news this man that the parading around calling bofis the parading around calling boris johnson and his team were taking orders in this entire set up . so whether we want to up. so whether we want to dismiss them as he just didn't know. and then plausible deniability, he wasn't given all the information or just choosing not to. he was still responsible for what what decisions were made and his team were i mean , made and his team were i mean, people were locked in the care homes. they weren't allowed to be with their loved ones. i mean, can we even talk about midazolam or am i going to be cancelled this? i mean, all cancelled on this? i mean, all of cabinet were taking of the cabinet were taking orders from at what orders from someone. at what point claim point do we claim accountability? people should be, should be given be, you know, should be given the truth, be allowed to the truth, should be allowed to see messages. what see all those messages. what were they hiding? were the what were they hiding? this like a deliberate this seems like a deliberate attempt. imagine criminal attempt. imagine if a criminal went their own court went into their own court submitting own evidence . i submitting their own evidence. i mean, was handed over by
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mean, this was handed over by his his legal team. why aren't we inquiring as to what actually happened between these two? and why is the government using third party apps like zoom and whatsapp that are clearly not secure and allowed to get rid of information on a whim? so these are the questions people should be asking. i think this inquiry he is a is an attempt to whitewash what happened in a way to dismiss and excuse lose this unprecedented event , to dismiss and excuse lose this unprecedented event, you to dismiss and excuse lose this unprecedented event , you know, unprecedented event, you know, with a sad face. and as we lay claim to all the unfortunate lives lost, it's a mockery for the people that lost loved ones. and i think there should be a demand and answers, you know, to sit there and say, poor boris , sit there and say, poor boris, are you serious? this whole act of him going into covid, where are those nurses that resuscitated him and brought him back to life? they disappeared as soon as they emerged this was all orchestrated and the people need to wake and ask need to wake up and ask questions around what really happened, who were these men taking from? were taking orders from? who were they investing in?
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they really investing in? because it wasn't all right, jennhen because it wasn't all right, jennifer, look, thank you very much for joining jennifer, look, thank you very much forjoining us. much for joining us. >> incredibly strong stuff, no doubt, as you will be aware, bofis doubt, as you will be aware, boris johnson will contest a lot of that. he's not here to defend himself. but i appreciate you coming and giving us your coming on and giving us your view anyway, jennifer view. anyway, that's jennifer arcuri there who was offering to try to help get some of these whatsapp messages back. i know that boris remains very, very popular with a lot of our viewers, and it'll be interesting to see what you make of do think that it's of that. do you think that it's unfair and do you think that some allegations that some of the allegations that were there, which he no were put there, which he no doubt will refute massively, are actually let actually a bit unhinged? let me know. vaiews@gbnews.com. still actually a bit unhinged? let me kn come, views@gbnews.com. still actually a bit unhinged? let me kn come, we'll@gbnews.com. still actually a bit unhinged? let me kncome, we'll bringzws.com. still actually a bit unhinged? let me kn come, we'll bring you:om. still to come, we'll bring you tomorrow's spiciest stories with the spectator's political correspondent james heal in a week that has seen wild westminster into chaos. westminster descend into chaos. but next, i bring back tonight's panel of top pundits. they run through tomorrow's front pages. and, of course, about and, of course, we're about to go down find out what go down under to find out what on earth has happened nigel on earth has happened with nigel farage jungle.
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that both parliamentarians and ministers have. >> you're listening to gb news
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radio . radio. >> welcome back . we can cross >> welcome back. we can cross live now to gb news. reporter down under , adam cherry with the down under, adam cherry with the very latest list from nigel farage in the i'm a celebrity jungle. so, adam, you've got your hat on. what does this mean? what's the latest for us? >> yeah, good evening, mean? what's the latest for us? >> yeah, good evening , patrick. >> yeah, good evening, patrick. well, the latest is nigel is through to the final five. it was danielle who's left the jungle for the jungle afterlife of the marriott hotel in the last few minutes. nigel is through to the final five vote. remain is on. it's absolutely scorching here, so, yeah , am scorching here, so, yeah, am wearing my hat. talking of burning. here's my segway talking of burning a huge controversy in the in the jungle camp last night over over some rice. so take a look at this. this is nigel and sam having a bit of a disagreement over how to cook the rice and this is what happened next. take a look
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at this. >> nice . threw me right under >> nice. threw me right under the bus. so i told you, mate, nigel jumped ship as soon as you walk tall jumps ship. i'm almost certain i didn't hear him be like, can you take can you, can you, can you watch out for it? this is just like brexit. >> the hit the fan and nigel got off. >> basically, the ship was well and truly sinking and farage jumped right off that ship and was the emergency boat and was on the emergency boat and left the captain on board. >> nigel has 100% being the race and he's looked to blame someone i >> politics all over, isn't it? yeah. yeah >> pass the book. you everything . now pass the . book now . . now pass the. book now. >> i said. i said earlier that perhaps it was nigel's fault over the cooking fiasco . do you over the cooking fiasco. do you know what i. i i apologise. it was. it was sam's fault. sam was responsible for that, not nigel. i think nigel is in the clear. that's my take on on lunch gate. so again, i'm really sorry,
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nigel. that was not your fault. >> this is the aggressive levels of spin that we're putting on. this is absolutely phenomenal. >> we've got a bloke there wearing a zebra hat, getting third degree burns in the sun, doing nigel farage pr for him. >> i mean, fantastic. and i love it. i love it. and you know what? so far it is working, right? because nigel is still on track to be king of the jungle. adam i think you're fantastic, mate. well done for everything. you take care. i'll see you tomorrow. all right, now, let's bnng tomorrow. all right, now, let's bring you tomorrow's news tonight. in the most tonight. now in the most entertaining paper review anywhere on the telly, the very first front pages have been first front pages have just been delivered from my press pack. all right, serious face on. we start with the metro ofsteds brutal inhumanity. family fury. as coroner links reports a suicide. so this is to do with that headteacher, of course, who received a negative ofsted report. and sadly she is no longer with us. the independent next they have the lead picture story of benjamin zephaniah ,
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story of benjamin zephaniah, pioneering poet at peaky blinders star as well, who sadly died at the age of 65. and there lead story though, is sunak pleads with tory rebels backed by rwanda plan. we've spoken about that a lot. we go to the daily star . yes, we do. airport daily star. yes, we do. airport smuggler is caught with half a zoo down his undies. is that a prairie dog and two otters in your pocket or are you just pleased to see me? a smuggler was caught with two otters and a prairie dog stuffed down their pants. interesting the i wounded pm faces growing rebellion. yes we've spoken again about that quite a lot, haven't we? the kind of in—fighting the guardian again, big picture story there of benjamin zephaniah who has sadly died at the age of 65. sunak fights to hold tories together over rwanda. plan mps call for inquiry into russian cyber attacks and gaza faces descent into chaos would kind of politely suggest it's already in chaos. but there we go. and the sun . now this chaos. but there we go. and the sun. now this is the chaos. but there we go. and the sun . now this is the latest one sun. now this is the latest one to land of the front pages today
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. itv this morning dossier staff too scared to speak out. juniors feared losing their job. this is feared losing theirjob. this is about phillip schofield of course, and some allegations. sky chief refused quiz over runner this morning. staff feared for their jobs if they spoke out over phillip schofield affair. an itv probe has found. philip, whose 61 and his young lover a runner , were refused to lover a runner, were refused to be quizzed so that we go. those are all of your front pages. i'm joined now by my press pack, daily telegraph columnist and sketch writer madeline grant, conservative peer lord bailey , conservative peer lord bailey, and author and broadcast writer amy nicholl . turner i'm quite amy nicholl. turner i'm quite close . just very quickly, touch close. just very quickly, touch on the sunshine . i think you got on the sunshine. i think you got quite strong views on on this, haven't you? i think it's horrible to think those junior staff are under such pressure that they couldn't say anything and they were worried . and they were worried. >> and why did the junior >> and also, why did the junior staff know and the senior staff didn't? what the difference? didn't? what was the difference? how come were aware of what
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how come they were aware of what was on and they weren't? was going on and they weren't? i think the junior staff's take on this will, will won't help . this will, will won't help. phillip schofield argument . phillip schofield argument. >> okay. do you think there's any way back for him, amy? >> i don't know. i feel like why so it's so difficult because why couldn't he have just been a little bit more honest from the start? i that. you know how start? i hate that. you know how competitive he put competitive media is. and he put those staff in such an those junior staff in such an awkward i can awkward position. and i can i can kind of relate to why they wouldn't why they wouldn't want to speak out. but i think it might bit too late for him might be a bit too late for him now . how. >> now. >> okay. all right. i'll tell you what. i'm just to kind you what. i'm just going to kind of bar a little bit, of raise the bar a little bit, i think. now just go inside the times. i'll start with you on this maddie. but this one, maddie. but a stateside report, it has internationally renowned screenwriter hitting back at diversity efforts in hollywood and wider film industry. so and the wider film industry. so pulitzer david pulitzer prize winner david mamet has written book mamet has written a book inspired by his decades at the top of the industry. he's told the wall street journal this week that trigger warnings or what calls diversity porn what he calls diversity porn
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have . and what do have gone too far. and what do you think about this? well i, i firstly, absolutely love david mamet. >> i don't know if anyone has seen the film or the play glengarry glen ross, but it's brilliant and has the most swearwords of just about anything i've ever watched . i anything i've ever watched. i think he's absolutely right. and i do think that when he talks about it, for example, the efforts to always place diverse characters into literally everything , while i think often everything, while i think often well—intentioned and has really started to jump the shark recently, shark recently in hollywood, you know, we've had the snow white and the seven dwarves that didn't feature dwarves that didn't feature dwarves at all. there have been a great deal of backlash. i'm a huge fan of star wars and there was massive backlash to obviously tokenistic characters in of the more recent in some of the more recent outings that disney have have done. outings that disney have have done . and it really is starting done. and it really is starting to irk people and feel that it's not just diversity, looking for the broadest range talent, the broadest range of talent, but diversity . there is but it's diversity. there is almost some kind of broader agenda here that is destroying the quality in the
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pi'ocess. >> process. >> okay, sure. i'll expand on that >> okay, sure. i'll expand on tha i >> okay, sure. i'll expand on thai think think the challenge >> i think i think the challenge for hollywood try to for hollywood is they try to shoehorn diversity where it shoehorn diversity in where it didn't and people didn't didn't exist and people didn't like the measures like it. and the two measures were diverse. communities also didn't weren't didn't like it. they weren't rushing the cinema to see it. rushing to the cinema to see it. and line and hollywood's bottom line suffered. disney's five largest latest blockbusters have been anything but blockbuster . but anything but blockbuster. but the thing the real thing that's important, trigger warnings . important, trigger warnings. what they really about is cancel culture. that means that someone gets to decide what is culturally important. that's what it's really about. it's a it's a subtle, sly way of writing things out of history. and i think that is what we will see a pushback against now. >> now, we've had quite a heavy show tonight, okay. with a variety differentthings variety of different things about illegal immigration about that exclusive that mark white exclusive from calais for but a lot on the calais for us. but a lot on the rwanda plan. we've had all of this boris this stuff. okay, boris johnson's ex. good johnson's alleged ex. good grief. wild, it? grief. that was wild, wasn't it? now something bit now something a little bit lighter. okay, another bbc lighter. okay, so another bbc presenter taken a leaf out presenter has taken a leaf out of weatherman thomas nana and he
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was going to get this wrong. thomas surpanakha's exaggerated bark and given the viewers i was practising , given the viewers at practising, given the viewers at home a bit more than home a little bit more than they bargained who can forget bargained for, who can forget this slip up from this iconic slip up from schafernaker back in 2010? >> now we'll have the weather forecast in a minute. >> and of course, it'll be 100% accurate and provide all the detail you could possibly want. i've just seen thomas schafernaker prepare bearing for it, so i'm entirely. oh oh, yes. >> well, it seems that bbc news anchor marianne moshiri has failed to learn from thomas's mistake . here's her intro to the mistake. here's her intro to the bbc news bulletins yesterday afternoon . afternoon. >> live from london, this is bbc news . britain's former prime news. britain's former prime minister boris. this news. britain's former prime minister boris . this is gb news minister boris. this is gb news live from paddington on a thursday afternoon. >> look like a harmless bit of fun or an insult? an insult to
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the licence fee payer. amy, what she said she's explained it actually badly. >> they were counting down. oh, god. come on. you know , we have god. come on. you know, we have people over there counting down. you know, there's. >> there's . >> there's. >> there's. >> there's. >> there's two things to say. there's two things to say. firstly here on gb news, we have to be very careful about pointing a finger at. >> absolutely. >> absolutely. >> and secondly, she never offended the viewer because she wasn't directing it at a viewer. she didn't think she was on air. so in her defence, she wasn't offended anyone brilliant. >> i think she probably >> i think she was probably goofing around the goofing around with the cameraman staff in the cameraman or the staff in the gallery . it's not the first time gallery. it's not the first time this happened, but it comes this has happened, but it comes at a very bad time for the bbc. so have leapt at a very bad time for the bbc. so it. have leapt at a very bad time for the bbc. so it. now have leapt at a very bad time for the bbc. so it. now i. have leapt on it. now i. >> i dish it out a fair bit of some certain things. that's absolutely not something will absolutely not something i will be giving them any stick be giving her or them any stick for at all. personally, one for at all. personally, it's one of things and you know of those things and you know that's quite an extensive blooper for behind the blooper reel for me behind the scenes, french farmers angry about high taxes, have been
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struggling to get their message heard. they've taken matters struggling to get their message heartheir they've taken matters struggling to get their message heartheir own 've taken matters struggling to get their message heartheir own handsen matters struggling to get their message heartheir own hands using tters into their own hands using a great big blast of manure to deliver their message, quite literally onto the doorstep of the government . the government. >> that's all we need to do. we need to be more like the french, right? >> doing everything with poo? >> doing everything with poo? >> yeah . brit school jack carson >> yeah. brit school jack carson poo . poo. >> you sure? >> you sure? >> if the french have always been military? remember when they went around gluing locks? i mean, can't with french mean, you can't mess with french farmers sure. farmers for sure. >> it'd like fiscal problems >> it'd be like fiscal problems for there's also this myth of >> there's also this myth of like, france being more kind of progressive socialist. look progressive and socialist. look what taxes are what happens when the taxes are raised. you get gelasian. you get people spreading the mail, mail, mail. >> yeah, i see your fluids . >> yeah, i see your fluids. >> yeah, i see your fluids. >> right. >> right. >> fantastic. well done, panel. good stuff. this we'll come back to you in a tick because coming up as the bbc causes offence yet
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again x rated cock up again with an x rated cock up live can they really live on air, can they really justify hike in the of justify the hike in the price of their licence fee? find out in tonight's greatest britain and union the man union jackass. but next, the man himself, hale, the himself, james hale, the political correspondent at the spectator, through political correspondent at the s|couple', through political correspondent at the s|couple more through political correspondent at the s|couple more of through political correspondent at the s|couple more of tomorrow'sjh a couple more of tomorrow's front pages. see you in a .
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tick i'm joined now by the spectator's political correspondent, james hale , to correspondent, james hale, to tackle more of tomorrow's front pages tonight. james good stuff. i believe we are going to bring up on the screen very shortly. the daily mail. so we'll start with that one. there we go. my minister immoral to threaten jail over licence fee. they say they've also got that phillip schofield story . let's go to the schofield story. let's go to the telegraph quickly. so there is on the front of the telegraph
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staff there ousting pm would be insanity, says tory chairman. right. okay james. so firstly , right. okay james. so firstly, you are obviously banging the side of britain's political landscape at the moment. do you think is shaping up to be insanity if they do oust sunak ? insanity if they do oust sunak? >> well , that's certainly the >> well, that's certainly the argument that rishi sunaks allies and cabinet ministers will be putting forward in the next couple of days or so. look, i mean, i think that the prime minister is in a really difficult spot right now. we've got the big legislation coming back think, back on tuesday day and i think, frankly, we would have seen a very different situation in terms letters. terms of letters. so far, i think we've had one mp, one think we've only had one mp, one tory go public that tory mp go public saying that they going to put forward they were going to put forward a letter and if this was a different situation, perhaps where there was much more time in the parliament where we hadnt in the parliament where we hadn't seen so many different prime different prime ministers in different years, in very years, we would be in very different landscape. i different landscape. and so i think basically richard holden's different landscape. and so i think basi is.ly richard holden's different landscape. and so i think basi is.ly ri it ard holden's different landscape. and so i think basi is.ly ri it would lden's different landscape. and so i think basi is.ly ri it would be n's argument is that it would be insanity to have what would it
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be, sort fifth prime be, a sort of fifth prime minister four years. and minister in four years. and that's really going be that's really what's going to be the that's made the the argument that's made in the coming and months. the argument that's made in the conyeah, and months. the argument that's made in the conyeah, well,and months. the argument that's made in the conyeah, well, look,|onths. the argument that's made in the conyeah, well, look, can1s. the argument that's made in the conyeah, well, look, can i. the argument that's made in the conyeah, well, look, can i ask >> yeah, well, look, can i ask you what you think is going on behind because we're behind the scenes? because we're going to have this confidence slash. definitely slash. it's definitely not a confidence coming confidence vote that's coming our week. we our way early next week. we think rumours that the whips have round trying have been ringing round trying to for to assess the support for sunak's rwanda plan and that their calls haven't been their phone calls haven't been particularly their phone calls haven't been part any arly their phone calls haven't been pariany updates on that at all got any updates on that at all from inside knowledge? yeah from your inside knowledge? yeah i mean, i think that that's really going to be the coming story next three days. story of the next three days. >> minister gave his big >> prime minister gave his big press this morning press conference this morning at 11 for i think 11 am. thereafter for i think a lot of the tory mps went home because there was meant to be a three line whip and then it was then cancelled. so the next three going be three days are going to be taking soundings their taking soundings in their constituent. see, at the same time, big, time, we're going to see a big, big operation by number and time, we're going to see a big, big whipsion by number and time, we're going to see a big, big whips office number and time, we're going to see a big, big whips office to mber and time, we're going to see a big, big whips office to tryer and time, we're going to see a big, big whips office to try and and time, we're going to see a big, big whips office to try and geti the whips office to try and get as many people onside before tuesday. rishi sunak has made it very unlike liz truss very clear that unlike liz truss and vote and that fracking vote last yean and that fracking vote last year, he's not going year, she's not he's not going to make it a confidence vote
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because he does want to bring down premiership on this. down his premiership on this. but yeah, i this is going but yeah, i think this is going to really issue to be a really, really big issue because minister has because the prime minister has put political capital in it. >> okay. look, james, thank you very, much. short and very, very much. short and sweet, but we'd love to see it. james the james hale there of the spectators. another interesting one of the one here on the front of the daily i'll just bring one here on the front of the dayou, i'll just bring one here on the front of the dayou, professori'll just bring one here on the front of the dayou, professor suggested ng to you, professor suggested blowing up of jewish blowing up venue of jewish labour police labour conference. police are investigating a universal of bristol professor bristol emeritus professor for suggesting on social media that someone venue someone should blow up the venue of a jewish labour conference which astonishing which is quite astonishing stuff, so so stuff, isn't it really? so so there go. yeah quite a lot on there we go. yeah quite a lot on there we go. yeah quite a lot on the front pages tomorrow, i think. it is time now, though, to reveal today's greatest britain and union jackass. to reveal today's greatest britain and union jackass . want britain and union jackass. want me to reveal that? aren't my wonderful panel. i will start with you, madeline . who's your with you, madeline. who's your greatest? britain, please. >> i'm nominating the british pubuc >> i'm nominating the british public for the story that came out today that shoppers this christmas for the first time in over a decade are using more cash. so they're shopping more in cash and less in card. and i think that is i don't know, it's probably all sorts of reasons for people
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for that, including people wanting to budget. but i don't know. quite heartened by the know. i'm quite heartened by the idea completely idea that we haven't completely given tyranny given in to the techno tyranny of in that of doing everything in that remote fashion. >> i like that . i like that a >> i like that. i like that a lot. it's going to be a hard one to beat for cash. >> my union, sorry, my greatest britain is benjamin zephaniah, who died sadly 65. he who died sadly aged 65. he overcame dyslexia. i'm a fellow dyslexic . he overcame it and dyslexic. he overcame it and became a world renowned writer and a very, very good poet . and and a very, very good poet. and he really is encapsulated the struggles of the black community both here and abroad. and i just he will be sorely missed. he was a real pioneer. wow. >> another incredibly strong choice. amy, your greatest britain >> i would second either of those. but if i if i have to pick my own, i'm picking felix the huddersfield train cap . oh. the huddersfield train cap. oh. died he died this week. >> oh, no. »- >> oh, no. >> but he had a good life. he got to the age of 12. he was brought in as pest control at huddersfield train station. and he stayed there his whole life. i love him. really? >> how the heck am
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>> yeah. how the heck am i supposed to choose between these three now? >> can we have ridiculous joint win first time? win for the first time? >> okay. win for the first time? >> right. okay. win for the first time? >> right. we okay. win for the first time? >> right. we allzay. win for the first time? >> right. we all know that morally what this is, a joint morally what this is, is a joint win. the difficulty that i've got that i can't ever got here is that i can't ever really, as a broadcaster , not really, as a broadcaster, not choose british public. so. choose the british public. so. madeleine, fantastic. you, you win that one. the greatest britain is the british public. okay, cut to the chase. okay, let's cut to the chase. this union jackass >> okay. well, this is an honorary one because they're not actually but they actually from the uk, but they were awful . and also they were so awful. and also they probably given that did found probably given that we did found america originally. they kind of count as honorary brits. i suppose are the leaders of suppose these are the leaders of various ivy league colleges who were telling congress or testifying about anti—semitism on campus that calls for the genocide of jews did not necessarily break their rules . necessarily break their rules. and when questioned about it, they would say things like, oh, well, it depends on the context, as if there a context to as if there is a context to calling genocide could calling for genocide could somehow acceptable. calling for genocide could sonlehow acceptable. calling for genocide could soni think acceptable. calling for genocide could soni think we cceptable. calling for genocide could soni think we have able. calling for genocide could soni think we have abquick clip >> i think we have a quick clip of actually for a for of this actually for a bit for a bit of context, i'm calling for the genocide of jews via late
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pens, rules or code of conduct is if the yes or no, if the speech becomes conduct, it can be harassment. >> yes, conduct , be harassment. >> yes, conduct, meaning committing the act of genocide . committing the act of genocide. >> yeah. i mean, so you actually have to commit a genocide anyway . ridiculous. sean quigley my union jack is a bbc for hiking the licence fee. >> they're going to make an extra £243 million. we have a cost of living crisis. the licence is looking less and less justifiable. >> okay , go on, amy. >> okay, go on, amy. >> okay, go on, amy. >> very quick. it is the man whose legacy will be requesting the removal of mickey mouse murals from children's detention centres. it's smithers, aka robert jenrick. >> okay . right. the union jack >> okay. right. the union jack is the bbc. yes. okay. there we go. for hiking the licence fee. thank you very much. wonderful panel thank you very much. wonderful panel. great show. go back and watch mark weiss exclusive on youtube. tomorrow youtube. i'll see you tomorrow at nine. >> a brighter outlook boxt >> a brighter outlook with boxt solar sponsors of weather on . gb
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solar sponsors of weather on. gb news evening. >> alex deakin here with your latest weather update from the met office for gb news. today's rain clearing away this rain slowly clearing away this evening. tomorrow a bit drier and brighter in the east, but there will more heavy showers there will be more heavy showers and stays pretty blustery. and it stays pretty blustery. it's areas very it's eastern areas still very soggy this evening. still met office yellow weather warnings in place. the rain does clear away all but the far northeast. some showers come into the west , some showers come into the west, many places having clear spells overnight . temperatures dropping overnight. temperatures dropping to about 5 6 degrees in most to about 5 or 6 degrees in most towns cities , maybe a little towns and cities, maybe a little lower in 1 or 2 spots. could be some mist and fog around tomorrow particular some mist and fog around tomceastern particular some mist and fog around tomceastern areas particular some mist and fog around tomceastern areas .)articular some mist and fog around tomceastern areas . articular some mist and fog around tomceastern areas . a bitjlar some mist and fog around tomceastern areas . a bit ofr over eastern areas. a bit of a glum start here, in eastern glum start here, but in eastern england, should brighten up glum start here, but in eastern eng|then should brighten up glum start here, but in eastern eng|then most uld brighten up glum start here, but in eastern eng|then most ofi brighten up glum start here, but in eastern eng|then most ofi bri dayn up glum start here, but in eastern eng|then most ofi bri day will be and then most of the day will be dry elsewhere, expect dry here. but elsewhere, expect more wet day more showers. quite a wet day again for northern ireland. frequent showers wales and frequent showers for wales and northwest england and across much of scotland well. in the much of scotland as well. in the sunny spells in the 12, sunny spells in the south, 12, maybe 13 celsius, generally a little bit warmer than today, but not feeling all that warm. and the showers come along and the winds, another spell
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the gusty winds, another spell of then comes in friday of rain then comes in friday night saturday. night and into saturday. that spreads north during saturday, lingering over parts of southern scotland and northern england . scotland and northern england. the will brighten up on the south will brighten up on saturday afternoon with some decent sunshine decent spells of sunshine staying dry across the staying mostly dry across the far north. staying quite chilly here, but in the south we should with a bit of sunshine, get into the by saturday. low the teens by saturday. low pressure systems continue to bnng pressure systems continue to bring more wet and windy weather. we're keeping a close eye on this one could bring another of and very another spell of wet and very windy for some windy weather for some on sunday. warm feeling inside sunday. that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers sponsors of weather on . gb news, who is it? weather on. gb news, who is it? >> we're here for the show . well >> we're here for the show. well come to the dinosaur hour with me. john cleese . haha, that was me. john cleese. haha, that was married to a therapist and you survived. i thought we were getting you. laurie. second best at least you interviewed saddam
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hussein. what's that like ? i was 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 ? going to be problematic again? >> the dinosaur for our sundays on .
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gb news. >> it's 11:00. you're watching >> it's11:00. you're watching gb news. good evening. the top story tonight, russia's federal security service or the fsb, has hacked high profile mps in what the government is describing as a sustained effort to interfere in british politics. the deputy prime minister saying today that peers civil servants , peers civil servants, journalists and non—governmental organisation russians have been targeted. it's understood politicians had their personal email accounts compromised . email accounts compromised. oliver dowden saying those responsible will be held to account and the prime minister was busy today defending the government's rwanda plan, describing it as the country's toughest anti—immigration law yet. rishi sunak acknowledged that critics disapproved of the bill, but he said it addressed concerns raised by the supreme court . the first vote on the new court. the first vote on the new emergency rwanda legislation will be put through parliament next week. on tuesday day at the covid inquiry today, boris johnson rejected claims that he
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