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

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in common with gary something in common with gary lineker. he's ignited another impartiality row by signing a document with a load of other luvvie celebs demanding the rwanda plan is scrapped. should he stick to football. meanwhile, prince pinocchio is out of pocket. harry is ordered to pay more than 48 k in legal costs after losing part of a libel case against the mail on sunday. lady c wades in on that and rumours that this photo of kate wills and the kids is photoshopped. can you spot what's wrong with it .7 nigel what's wrong with it.7 nigel farage has pocketed £1.5 million from itv and he's come out swinging. >> but i would say to you, mr kevin lygo , the boss of itv , kevin lygo, the boss of itv, it's up to you , mate. if you it's up to you, mate. if you want to go to war with me, you really can. wow. >> should itv, director of television apologise to nigel farage.7 humza yousaf has gone rogue as well. he's conducting foreign policy with the turkish president that thinks that hamas are freedom fighters . giving
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are freedom fighters. giving their unfiltered reaction are my top panel tonight. i have got carole malone, benjamin butterworth and belinda de lucy . butterworth and belinda de lucy. this is patrick christys tonight. and we're live . tonight. and we're live. all right. email me, gb views at gbnews.com should sunak scrap rwanda? i'll see you after the headunes. headlines. >> patrick. thank you. good evening. well, the top story from the gb newsroom is that a group of tory mps who think the government rwanda policy needs a complete rewrite say they will vote for rishi sunak rwanda legislation tomorrow. but they warned they would oppose any amendments that would risk the uk breaching the rule of law . uk breaching the rule of law. the european research group says the current law provides an incomplete solution and a total
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overhaul may be the only option to save the boats. well, earlier on today, the illegal migration minister, michael tomlinson , minister, michael tomlinson, said he's confident the plan will work. >> this is the toughest piece of legislation that's ever been tabled before parliament. this is what we're determined to debate tomorrow. this is what we will debate tomorrow and we'll come amendments due come to amendments in due course. convinced course. but i'm convinced because i'm because we've seen it and i'm convinced because of the government's position that government's legal position that we've this afternoon, we've published this afternoon, that this is toughest piece we've published this afternoon, th.legislation toughest piece we've published this afternoon, th.legislation thatrghest piece we've published this afternoon, th.legislation that thisst piece we've published this afternoon, th.legislation that this does ce of legislation that this does meet the concerns of the supreme court. and we're going to have that late tomorrow that robust late tomorrow afternoon . afternoon. >> other news >> meanwhile, in other news today, the prime minister was busy defending his controversial eat out to help out scheme, saying it was merely a micro policy within a bigger plan to eventually reopen the uk after lockdown. rishi sunak told the covid inquiry it had been designed specifically to safely lift lockdown restrictions and he began his evidence today with an apology to those who'd lost loved ones to covid. but but he
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played down suggestions by lead counsel hugo keith kc that severe initial cases in downing street had led to a chaotic style of governance and the prime minister also blamed government borrowing during lockdown for record high taxes. now he told the covid inquiry the economic impact of paying it backis the economic impact of paying it back is only now being felt by taxpayers. it comes as new data shows property taxes in the uk are among the highest across the developed world, with the office for budget responsibility signalling further hikes will come . now the defence secretary come. now the defence secretary says securing the seas is the only way to defeat russia's president putin, as he announced a new maritime coalition alongside norway. two royal navy minehunter ships will be transferred to ukraine as part of efforts to bolster the country's defence capability . country's defence capability. the mod says it will deliver long term support, including
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training, equipment and infrastructure , to boost infrastructure, to boost security in the black sea . now security in the black sea. now the government's offering a financial package which it says is worth £2.5 billion to support the return of devolution in northern ireland. it would include a lump sum to settle pubuc include a lump sum to settle public sector pay claims and a new needs based funding formula for public services. sinn fein vice president michelle o'neill said the offer doesn't touch the surface and the dup leader, sir jeffrey donaldson, said it didn't go far enough . the duke didn't go far enough. the duke of sussex will have to pay more than £48,000 in legal costs to the publishers of the mail on sunday, after losing part of a libel battle. it follows a failed attempt by his lawyers to throw out part of a defence against a libel claim he's bringing against the newspaper. it's in relation to an article about the prince's security arrangement . whilst in the uk arrangement. whilst in the uk the claim itself can still go
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ahead to a trial and will be heard between mid—may and the end of july next year. now if you're planning a road trip this christmas, you're being advised to plan carefully with christmas falling on a monday this year , falling on a monday this year, the aa motoring organisation predicts friday, the 22nd and saturday, the 23rd, will be the busiest days on the road around 61.1 million car journeys busiest days on the road around 61.1 million carjourneys are expected to take place across the uk during that festive week . the uk during that festive week. end plan ahead is the advice on tv online dab+ radio and the tunein app. this is gb news. britain's news channel . britain's news channel. >> there is the stench of death around downing street. there is around downing street. there is a new rwandan civil war, but this time it's in the tory party. sunak is looking to push the bill through the right of the bill through the right of the party. don't want it. they think it's useless. earlier today, grant shapps appeared on
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this channel and said there was no civil war. >> nearly a year. we haven't had a conservative party leadership contest or a new prime minister. it feels as though the parties geanng it feels as though the parties gearing up for another fight in that direction. you? >> no, i'm sure the media enjoys stirring these things up, but i don't think that's the case at all. and actually, you're right. it's going to be a busy week. does anybody else think that shapps like this suv-7 guy? >> good old comical ali from the iraq war days, everything is fine. no civil war fine. absolutely no civil war here. well then tory mp mark francois came out and exposed the fact that there is very much a civil war. so the bill as drafted is not really fit for purpose . purpose. >> so the consensus of a meeting of five different backbench groups that i've just finished chairing was that the government rather than plough on regardless , would be better to pull the bill and to come back with a better draft that doesn't have
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all these holes in it. >> meanwhile, rishi sunak was locked in the covid inquiry, which is arguably the only thing that's even more of a waste of time and money than the rwanda plan. answering questions about eat out. all the eat out to help out. all the while , members of his party were while, members of his party were plotting boot him out. now, plotting to boot him out. now, at 6 pm, the right wing of the tory party to be tory party gathered to be addressed robertjenrick, tory party gathered to be addressed robert jenrick, the addressed by robert jenrick, the former minister who former immigration minister who resigned plan . resigned over the rwanda plan. then p.m, resigned over the rwanda plan. then pm, the one nation then at 7 pm, the one nation caucus said they'd vote for rwanda, they worry about us rwanda, but they worry about us foregoing our international human rights commitments . they human rights commitments. they don't want it to be any tougher and will vote against it if it is, then just after 7 pm. nigel farage fresh from the i'm a celebrity jungle, piped up and said it just wouldn't work. >> i've no idea where the sunak gets through this vote tomorrow or whether the tory rebels vote down this new, pathetic rwanda plan . then what i do know is plan. then what i do know is we'll never deal with any of this . all the while we stay part this. all the while we stay part of the echr , right?
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of the echr, right? >> so in the last hour , we've >> so in the last hour, we've heard from the right wing of the tory party, the new conservatives headed by miriam cates, danny kruger. they released the following statement . it says that more than 40 colleagues tonight colleagues met tonight to discuss the bill. every member of discussion said bill of that discussion said the bill needs surgery or needs major surgery or replacement and they will be making that plane in the morning to and over to the pm at breakfast and over the next 24 hours, the big question is this whose side are you on? let's get the thoughts of my panel now. daily express columnist carole malone, journalist and broadcaster benjamin butterworth, and former brexit party belinda luci brexit party mep belinda de luci karl, i'll start with you, whose side are you on over this? would you be voting for or against it? i would be voting for the rwanda plan, but i'm i'm furious plan, but but i'm i'm furious with the tories, patrick, because i just think, you know, we're an election. we're one year off an election. >> they've been they've been scrapping cats in a sack scrapping like cats in a sack since they deposed boris, the leader got them biggest leader that got them the biggest majority they'd ever and majority they'd ever had. and they've rid of him. and i they've got rid of him. and i heard some of them today, some of same tories who deposed
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of those same tories who deposed bofis of those same tories who deposed boris saying, made boris saying, oh, we made a mistake, idiots. these mistake, they're idiots. these people idiots. and the people are idiots. and the tories are going to go into electoral oblivion the electoral oblivion come the election. know , it's not election. you know, it's not a case if it's a case case of if now it's a case of how badly are going to get how badly are they going to get crushed in this next election. and they're fighting and they're still fighting and they make their they still can't make their minds over this. you know, minds up over this. you know, the distinct , minds up over this. you know, the distinct, i'm amazed that the distinct, i'm amazed that the one nation group, because there's 106 of them and they have now said they're going to back the bill, which is good, which means it's probably going to pass tomorrow. then it's to pass tomorrow. but then it's going go the where going to go to the lords where it will it will not be it will be. it will not be passed then. so we're going to be messing about and then are going legal going to come the legal challenges. now, sunak was told two when he first two weeks ago when he first announced that announced these measures that they enough, they they weren't tough enough, they were i were considered measures. i think. was told right think. but he was told right at the start they weren't tough enough and there'd be objections. and here we are two weeks going objections. and here we are two weefive going objections. and here we are two weefive different going objections. and here we are two weefive different groups going on, five different groups objected. will pass objected. so it will pass tomorrow, it's not going to tomorrow, but it's not going to get anywhere. it sure as get us anywhere. and it sure as hell going to hell isn't going to make a difference before the election. >> optimistic the sense that
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>> optimistic in the sense that it pass. benjamin i think it will pass. benjamin i think i know answer, but would you know the answer, but would you vote against it? vote for or against it? >> i wouldn't. i mean, it's just such a ridiculous mess. it's terrible in the first terrible policy in the first place. example, it place. for example, as it was exposed the other this exposed the other day, this policy says that rwanda send policy says that rwanda can send refugees somebody refugees to us. and if somebody is to rwanda, commits is sent to rwanda, commits a crime, we then to crime, there, we then have to take them into this country. so it's bad on principle, but also i at that package you had i look at that package you had and think these tory mps and i just think these tory mps are own are so full of their own self—importance. i mean, i've obviously news a lot, obviously read the news a lot, but to work out what but trying to work out what these different are the these different groups are the star the new star chamber, the new conservatives, the erg, the common one common sense. one nation. i mean, get yourselves , mean, get over yourselves, right? these people are having more fun trying to play politics than actually trying to fix the problems opposed the problems as opposed to all the different unions the different trade unions that the labor are members of and labor party are members of and friends from palestine . friends from palestine. >> we couldn't possibly have a political party with numerous different benjamin but different factions. benjamin but they're they're not holding they're not they're not holding anything over the labour party. >> complete mess. and >> this is a complete mess. and let me just say for the labour party, all. they don't party, that's all. they don't actually their funding been
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actually their funding has been matched. just going to matched. but i'm just going to point out carol says she'll think just said point out carol says she'll thinithat just said point out carol says she'll thinithat new just said point out carol says she'll thinithat new conservativesd point out carol says she'll thinithat new conservatives has that that new conservatives has 40 and they think it needs 40 mps and they think it needs major well, you only 40 mps and they think it needs maj0|29 well, you only 40 mps and they think it needs maj0|29 to well, you only 40 mps and they think it needs maj0|29 to vote lell, you only 40 mps and they think it needs maj0|29 to vote against only 40 mps and they think it needs maj0|29 to vote against and! 40 mps and they think it needs maj0|29 to vote against and it's need 29 to vote against and it's oven need 29 to vote against and it's over. so i'd say that tomorrow could be d—day for sunak or tuesday. >> belinda, would you vote for or rwanda? against or against rwanda? against >> because principled and >> because i'm principled and therefore don't to put my therefore i don't want to put my name to a of legislation name to a piece of legislation that i believe would work otherwise. >> it's conning the british people. there are loopholes in it. i'm fed up of tory policies being watered down, not being fit for purpose. we had it with brexit means brexit from theresa may then had it with the may then we had it with the northern ireland protocol from rishi. perfect . it's rishi. oh, it's perfect. it's victorious. there was no victorious. no, there was no break clause really. that worked very devil's the very well. the devil's in the detail then. had it with detail then. we had it with james cleverly in his immigration not really immigration speech, not really putting not really putting a cap on it, not really doing anything about it. and now you've it with rwanda. it is you've got it with rwanda. it is messy, policy will messy, messy policy that will cause delays. huge amount cause delays. a huge amount of money taxpayers if you can money for taxpayers if you can still challenge as a, still legally challenge as a, you know, an asylum seeker that on personal circumstances , you
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on personal circumstances, you don't find rwanda the place for you and you still have a path to that this bill. this bill is that in this bill. this bill is not stand by not fit for purpose. stand by your principles, rishi. scrap the bill. start it from scratch and through that and get something through that will this show he's not >> isn't this just show he's not a leader. he's not leader. a leader. he's not a leader. he's not leader. he's he's not a leader. he's a manager and he's trying to please all factions of his party and for it though. and he'd vote for it though. >> but vote for it because >> but you'd vote for it because what you're just desperate to see something. what you're just desperate to see swanthing. what you're just desperate to see swant thei. what you're just desperate to see swant the rwanda plan to >> i want the rwanda plan to work so do 49% of the work and so do 49% of the british people. the latest polling wants it to polling says 49 wants it to pass. don't and the rest pass. 27% don't and the rest don't know, which means they do know, think, 100% are know, i think, 100% of us are sick of hearing about tory mps arguing rwanda. arguing over rwanda. i agree with disagree with with you. i don't disagree with that. idiots. these that. they're idiots. these these fools and they these people are fools and they deserve job. the deserve to lose their job. the trouble we don't deserve trouble is, we don't deserve what's coming. and that's the problem. what's coming. and that's the pro i.em. what's coming is, you >> i think what's coming is, you know, early every know, it comes round early every year that's a tory year and that's a tory leadership election. it seems utterly preposterous that's utterly preposterous that that's on they vote on the cards. but if they vote this down on tuesday, sunak this down on tuesday, then sunak is okay . well, we are going to, >> okay. well, we are going to, in the next hour be having a
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chat about that because nigel farage out of the jungle farage has got out of the jungle and up as well. so and he's piped up as well. so we'll about all of we'll be talking about all of that that, though, belinda, that on that, though, belinda, let's everybody right let's say everybody of the right wing of the tory party does what you want, now, as far you want, which is now, as far as i can see, a fundamental matter of principle, knowing as i can see, a fundamental matter ofthat ciple, knowing as i can see, a fundamental matter ofthat it)le, knowing as i can see, a fundamental matter ofthat it would owing full well that it would be a vote of no confidence in all but name for rishi sunak you know, the destruction of the kind of destruction of the tory as we know it, almost tory party as we know it, almost definitely leading up to a general would general election. so you would still against it on still vote against it on a matter principle . matter of principle. >> i would respect my constituents i cannot look constituents and i cannot look my constituents in the eye and pretend to them that this rwanda bill is going to stop the boats. i think the kind of i think that the kind of falsehoods that have been coming from the government about immigration and illegal immigration has been a total betrayal the social betrayal and broken the social contract with the people. and i could not do to my constituents. >> your party, belinda, the reform you're a reform party party you're a member yes they're to member of. yes they're going to take quite a lot of the votes, i think probably 10% read today, think probably 10% i read today, which translate to about which could translate to about 20 all that's 20 or 30 seats. but all that's going do is split the tory going to do is split the tory party even they're going
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party even more. they're going to they're going two to they're going to have two weak parties, can weak parties, the tories can have got stop relying on have got to stop relying on labour worse than them to labour being worse than them to keep power. >> they up to them to >> they it is up to them to persuade british people persuade the british people to vote for them. not reforms job. >> no, i didn't say it was, but reform is going to take people away the tory party. then away from the tory party. then you've got two small parties that can't do anything. so the tory better. tory party do better. >> how about that responsible? >> final word to benjamin. final word. >> the tory party doesn't stand for had all these for anything. it's had all these different last different versions in the last 13 got it across the 13 years that got it across the line general elections, but line in general elections, but now got all these now you've just got all these different factions elected under different factions elected under different they've different leaders and they've got little. different leaders and they've got the little. different leaders and they've got the argument would be, again, >> the argument would be, again, whilst i think that is objectively true, obe, this objectively true, the obe, this is happens after you've had is what happens after you've had 13 years in power. you need to take a break. see take a break. let's see how labour do know for birds labour do you know for the birds whether do any whether or not they do any better. look, thank you very much, i want to go to much, panel. i want to go to somebody who's who's properly plugged in in kind of the world of going to of journalism. now i'm going to bnng of journalism. now i'm going to bring political as bring in the political as opposed as to opposed to as opposed to political journalism. we're going express our david
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going to express our line. david maddox. you very maddox. david, thank you very much. the much. it's quite the introduction. be good introduction. you better be good now. panel now. otherwise the panel are going in the break. going to lynch me in the break. what's going on in your whatsapp messages? what you hearing messages? what are you hearing now behind now from from people behind the scenes party? mps, scenes in the tory party? mps, the like? >> i wu- the like? >> i think that >> well, i still think that there's a more than 5050 chance that sunak going to that rishi sunak is going to lose tomorrow. i obviously lose tomorrow. i mean, obviously there's big there's going to be a big meeting of the you know, the five groups you've been talking about, new about, erg, common sense, new conservatives but i'm conservatives et al. but i'm we're right. and that that will probably the deciding moment. probably be the deciding moment. they've teasing it they've been kind of teasing it a bit with that statement tonight from new tonight from the new conservatives. but you know, ben was absolutely right. it only takes 29 of them to vote against it. and as of earlier today, there were certainly more than that it prepared to vote against. so i think sunak is in desperate trouble . desperate trouble. >> so you so the latest from you is that you are convinced that there are more than 29 people who are confirmed voting against this, which would mean that it would fail. then what would fail. and then what happens ? happens? >> well , i
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happens? >> well, i mean, i think all hell breaks loose, really. i mean, a lot of this is about whether sunak should continue as leader and as prime minister. you know, may well be that the waves of letters finally come in that have been threatened over the last few weeks . it may well the last few weeks. it may well be that you know, senior figures step forward and say he's got to go . it would certainly be go. it would certainly be a crushing blow to him. i mean, he may he may press the nuclear button on this and go for an election and say, back me or sack me. i suspect that the polls are suggesting that he'd be sacked . well yeah, absolutely. >> look, david, thank you very, very much. short and sweet, but we'd love to see it. yes, lots of reaction to that out there, carol. firstly, do you reckon that second rate, second rate, i'm going to go now to my second rate. do you know what i really meant? look, carol, what do you make so he is saying as far as his sources are saying there's
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more than 29 people voting against this. so it's cursed. >> i'd be very surprised at that. i'd also be really that. and i'd also be really surprised they shunt him surprised if they they shunt him out because that really is out now because that really is the tories. if they the end of the tories. if they do that tomorrow, unless the dream heard dream ticket that we've heard about boris with nigel, about today, boris with nigel, if happens, nigel if that happens, nigel has already he's very happy to already said he's very happy to talk boris about this. talk to boris about this. i think that's, that's a pairing that would get the red wall that would get back the red wall quite sure if quite quickly. i'm not sure if it would the election, but it would win the election, but i think what it would do is make the defeat less severe. that's what the defeat less severe. that's whtgordon, your to what >> gordon, your reaction to what maddox has said there? >> well, i mean, if this >> well, i mean, look, if this isn't on the rwanda isn't just a vote on the rwanda bill, is a confidence vote bill, this is a confidence vote in sunak because he's made in rishi sunak because he's made this centre of his political this the centre of his political agenda. and he fails, then agenda. and if he fails, then they might not letters they might not put the letters in. i think it's completely in. but i think it's completely over him and we'll see over for him and we'll see a general election in coming months. >> yeah. quickly, i mean, >> yeah. quickly, you're i mean, are you surprised by fact are you surprised by the fact that convinced this is that he's convinced that this is going fail tomorrow going to fail tomorrow if there's than 29 people there's more than 29 people voting against? >> not surprised at all. >> no, i'm not surprised at all. but rishi is only part but i think rishi is only part of even if you get of the problem. even if you get rid him, the conservative
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rid of him, the conservative party is run by a machinery of wet wipes. so whatever leader will be, will in charge. the will be, will is in charge. the tory churn the tory party will churn out the same rubbish and liza has been doing immigration over doing over immigration over the past think it's past 13 years. i think it's completely gone, destroyed, whatever okay whatever leader there is. okay >> of wipes >> the machinery of wet wipes has to quote of the show. so has to be quote of the show. so far, no the tory party far, no doubt the tory party would deny that it is indeed a machinery wipes. still to would deny that it is indeed a machi|prince wipes. still to would deny that it is indeed a machi|prince harry/ipes. still to would deny that it is indeed a machi|prince harry ises. still to would deny that it is indeed a machi|prince harry is forced l to would deny that it is indeed a machi|prince harry is forced to) come, prince harry is forced to cough up nearly 50 k to the mail on a bitter courtroom on sunday in a bitter courtroom blow. so should he his blow. so should he cut his losses and up his battle losses and give up his battle with the british press? lady colin campbell dampier colin campbell and phil dampier give take on give their expert royal take on that but up next in our that shortly. but up next in our rip roaring head to head , gary rip roaring head to head, gary lineker plunges the bbc into yet more impartiality rules by signing an open letter slamming the government's rwanda plan. so why was the corporation's highest paid star wrong to stick his nose in it yet again? neil hamilton and jenny barnett, they do that's next. also, do battle. that's next. also, how would you like to win £10,000 cash? brand new tech and shopping vouchers? well you could be the winner of our very
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first great british giveaway. here's all the details about how you could make those prizes yours. >> this week, we're launching the great british giveaway, your chance to grab some amazing pnzes chance to grab some amazing prizes and start your new year the right way . you could win an the right way. you could win an incredible £10,000 in tax free cash to spend on anything you like . cash to spend on anything you like. imagine having all of cash to spend on anything you like . imagine having all of that like. imagine having all of that extra cash in your bank account. we'll also bring you bang up to date with the very latest iphone 15 pro max and we'll give you £500 worth of shopping vouchers to spend in the store of your choice for your chance to win the iphone. the vouchers and £10,000 cash. a text gb win to 84 902 text cost £2 plus one standard network rate message or post your name and to number gb zero one p.o. post your name and to number gb zero one po. box 8690 derby de19 double t uk only entrants must be 18 or over lines close at 5 pm. on friday. the 5th of
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january. full terms and privacy nofice january. full terms and privacy notice at gbnews.com forward slash win . good luck . slash win. good luck. >> well coming up next, is gary lineker too divisive to work for the bbc? we will debate that in what promises to be a fiery head to head. we're off to a flyer.
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weekend at 3 pm. on gb news, the people's channel, britain's news channel . news channel. >> welcome back. now, royal
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masterminds, lady c and phil d coming up with news of a costly legal bill for prince harry. but time now for our head to head . time now for our head to head. and gary lineker's plunged the bbc into yet another impartiality row by publicly signing a letter that slams the government's rwanda bill. the match of the day host who pockets a whopping £1.3 million a year from licence fee payers , a year from licence fee payers, put his name to a letter from a refugee charity that said number 10 was banishing people fleeing persecution . responding to his persecution. responding to his latest row, saint gary clarified that he did not break the rules because he did it in an open letter and not on social media, but defence secretary grant shapps spoke for , i think most shapps spoke for, i think most people when he laid into the former england striker this morning. >> i just think gary lineker should get on with commenting on football and stop meddling in these other areas simply because if he thinks there's something proper and moral, which is what he seems to be saying about
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continuing to support by not putting in place effective blockers like the rwanda scheme, people being trafficked illegally and dangerously across the english channel, then that itself is likely to cost lives . itself is likely to cost lives. >> so what do you think? was the bbc's gary lineker wrong to sign a letter criticising the government's rwanda bill? let me know your thoughts . email me know your thoughts. email me gbviews@gbnews.com. tweet me at gb news. while you're there, go and take part in our poll. i'll bnng and take part in our poll. i'll bring you the results very, very shortly. well, initially on this i am joined by ukip leader neil hamilton . i am joined by ukip leader neil hamilton. ian neil here we go . hamilton. ian neil here we go. look, what do you think about this then? do you think that gary lineker is right to be allowed to tweet things like this or sign things like this? i should say? >> no, not at all. he's entitled to his puerile political opinions. course , but when he opinions. of course, but when he is paid for effectively by the taxpayer, because the bbc tv licence is in fact a television tax, in fact, it's a television poll tax, which we're all
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obuged poll tax, which we're all obliged to pay we want to obliged to pay if we want to watch television at all. and the bbc is constitutionally obliged to be impartial. of course, lineker is prides himself on pushing the envelope, on making controversial statements and i think that there are plenty of other people who could be better political, better football commentators him. you know, commentators than him. you know, he to make his living by he used to make his living by kicking balls . now he used to make his living by kicking balls. now makes his kicking balls. now he makes his living balls. so living by talking balls. so i think bbc should cut adrift think the bbc should cut adrift from lineker and get somebody who more in tune the who is more in tune with the majority of viewers. the majority of their viewers. the overwhelming majority people overwhelming majority of people in country believe in in this country believe in stricter immigration control . stricter immigration control. and i'm no admirer of the rwanda bill. i don't think it'll work. i think it's another excuse for the tory party to avoid taking the tory party to avoid taking the decisions that will sort the problem out. but lineker, of course, takes a different view. he's the kind of jeremy corbyn of the beautiful game . of the beautiful game. >> okay. all right. well, look very shortly i'm hoping to bring in journalist tv presenter jenny
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barnett and make this a proper head to head . but barnett and make this a proper head to head. but in lieu of that, i'll push back on you, neil. all right. gary lineker is not taking to social media to do all of this stuff. he has taken refuge into his home. you know, he's put his money where his mouth is there . you know, he's mouth is there. you know, he's a taxpayer himself. he's obviously fine to keep paying for things like the migrant hotels, etcetera . he votes in a etcetera. he votes in a democracy like everybody else. you know, what's so awful about about saint gary piping up over this and lending his lovely weight to a petition like this ? weight to a petition like this? >> well, he's entitled to his views and entitled to express them as a citizen. the problem is that the bbc, as an organisation is obliged to be impartial and i think it behoves people who work for an organisation like that to rein themselves in if they want to continue enjoying the material benefits. and 1.35 million is a little bit more than gb news is paying little bit more than gb news is paying you. patrick i assume you know. of course, but the time
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will come when gb news will be able to afford those kinds of payments. i'm sure, but we haven't quite got there yet. but of course lineker is entitled to his views, but i think because he works for the bbc, he should actually be a bit a bit more circumspect about the way he expresses his views on very , expresses his views on very, very controversial political matters. so you know, it's not a question of free speech. it's a question of free speech. it's a question of free speech. it's a question of adhering to the kind of ethos which the bbc has its 100 year old institution that is paid for effectively by the whole of the british people. and i don't pay to listen to gary lineker's views on politics. i possibly would pay to listen to his views on football, and i think he should stick to that. >> okay. i mean, what is it specifically about gary lineker, that kind of boils your what's it really ? you know, what is it it really? you know, what is it about him , the fact that he's about him, the fact that he's gary lineker , i think and that ,
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gary lineker, i think and that, you know, he he enjoys winding people up, no doubt. but it's worth, though, hasn't it? to be fair ? fair? >> well, i mean, you i haven't actually said anything about lineker in recent times. you have kindly invited me onto the show and i'm very delighted to give you the benefit of my wisdom on this matter, as indeed all matters. have me back as much as you can, but you know, lineker knows what he's doing. he knows that if he says these things that he's going to get masses of publicity and that's what he enjoys . i think he what he enjoys. i think he enjoys the sniff of publicity. >> okay ? i mean, one of the >> okay? i mean, one of the things that he did come out and say was that, you know, it's time to enact basically the will of the people on this. the people want a humane solution . i people want a humane solution. i just wonder if he's barking up the wrong tree. there because i think most people want an end to illegal economic immigration and people taking the mickey out of our generosity. frankly >> yeah. well, you know, there
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are hundreds of millions of people around the world who want to leave, failed states in africa, the middle east and elsewhere to come to the el dorado of the west and it's a different world altogether from , different world altogether from, um, 1950, when the european convention on human rights was brought in and the un refugee convention the following year , convention the following year, 1951, in in those days, travel was very, very much more difficult than it is today . and difficult than it is today. and we can't cope with the numbers that we're adding. a city the size of birmingham to our country through immigration, not just illegal, but illegal as well, but altogether every two years. so you know, we're we're full up, to be honest. and most of these people paddling across the channel are young men of fighting age. they're not fleeing persecution. certainly not in france, where they're coming from. and so they they
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are not, in my view, genuine asylum seekers. >> and i think this is and i think there's the argument would be how much is gary lineker's day to day life really affected by it? how much is his life and the lives of his loved ones really going touched by really going to be touched by this? you know, they're not living migrant living next door to a migrant hotel they're not hotel somewhere. they're not going out on the streets going to be out on the streets facing some of the real world consequence bounces over the counter he counter to that. obviously as he will well within will do. and he's well within his to do is say i've had his rights to do is say i've had two these asylum seekers in two of these asylum seekers in my home at least i've at least i've done but neil, i've done that. but look, neil, thank you very, very much. absolutely splendid stuff. that is hamilton. is ukip leader neil hamilton. unfortunately, we couldn't quite get journalist tv get hold of journalist and tv presenter jenny barnet there, but agree me what but do you agree me with what neil say was the bbc's neil had to say was the bbc's top paid presenter, gary lineker wrong sign letter wrong to sign a letter criticising government's criticising the government's rwanda go to rwanda bill? i'm going to go to social first, ben on social media first, ben on twitter stay of twitter says stay out of politics, gary and the same goes for so—called celebs. for any so—called celebs. i don't it. you don't don't want to hear it. you don't live the lives brits . live the lives of average brits. we've else here on we've got somebody else here on twitter i like twitter saying, i don't like gary lineker or what he stands
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for. but in a democratic society, he should free to society, he should be free to express and politics. express his views and politics. so as not on the so as long as it's not on the bbc, it's a fine line. that, though, isn't it? it's a fine line. darren on twitter says gary is a voter and he pays tax like everyone else. the government money government is wasting his money with ridiculous plan. so with his ridiculous plan. so yes, he has every right to call it out. i just don't like how disingenuous. sometimes in my view, he is saying, oh, it's got all language of germany all the language of 1930 germany then on and denying then like going on and denying that was talking nazi that he was talking about nazi germany things like that. germany and things like that. and throwing weight and then throwing his weight towards the whole gaza situation when in reality the people of hamas , they're are actually hamas, they're are actually behaving like people did in 1930. germany by, of course, wanting to eradicate the jewish people, although i'm sure gary is not in favour of that. but your verdict is now in. 85% of your verdict is now in. 85% of you agree that gary lineker was wrong to sign a letter criticising the government's rwanda bill. 15% of you say that he wasn't, spokesman for the bbc said all freelance said like all freelance presenters, is free to presenters, gary is free to contribute to projects for third
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parties as long as these do not conflict with his bbc commitments or do breach commitments or do not breach guidelines on conflicts of interest, the bbc into interest, nor bring the bbc into disrepute. does so disrepute. and he does so regularly while the guidance does allow people to talk about issues matter to them, issues that matter to them, it issues that matter to them, it is also that individuals is also clear that individuals should and not call should be civil and not call into anyone's into question anyone's character. we discuss issues that arise presenters as that arise with presenters as necessary . right. coming up. necessary. right. coming up. nigel farage has only been out of the jungle for a day and there's already rumours of a sensational coalition with former minister boris former prime minister boris johnson. nige is not johnson. plus now nige is not happy with the big boss at itv . happy with the big boss at itv. >> but i would say to you, mr kevin lygo, the boss of itv, it's up to you, mate. if you want to go to war with me, you really can. oofi fleet street icon kelvin mackenzie gives his expert analysis on farage versus lygo when he joins me live in the studio. >> but first, prince harry has been ordered today to cough up nearly 50 k to the mail on sunday in a bitter courtroom blow. while the bbc is told to
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release thousands of emails relating to martin bashir's infamous princess diana interview. royal mastermind lady colin campbell and phil dampier give their expert take on that in just a few moments. don't go
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monday to thursdays from six till 930 . loads coming your way till 930. loads coming your way with fleet street legend kelvin mackenzie . mackenzie. >> coming up on an unlikely alliance between nigel farage and boris johnson, especially as
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nigel farage just teed off on itv. stay tuned to find out more about that. but time now for my royal masterminds, lady colin campbell and phil dampier loads of royal news about today. prince harry took a knock in his ongoing libel against the ongoing libel case against the mail he was ordered mail on sunday. he was ordered to pay nearly 50 to the to pay nearly 50 k to the british tabloid. now the duke is suing the paper over an article about his struggle for armed security in the uk, which he claims his reputation . claims damaged his reputation. however, the judge, mr justice nicklin, ruled against the prince, stating that the case should go to trial and with only 13 days to cough up the funds, this is hardly the christmas present that the petit prince was hoping for. ladies he joins me now alongside phil dampier. i will start with lady c, should harry cut his losses , do you harry cut his losses, do you think, and give up on his bitter battle with the british press? >> harry needs to not only cut his losses with this case, but with his attitude to the press , with his attitude to the press, as harry rarely is emotionally
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disturbed and of his own admission in despair, he has an addiction to litigation that's actually a legal category called vexatious litigant . but harry vexatious litigant. but harry needs to maybe go into treatment and realise that , you know, it's and realise that, you know, it's one thing if the press depher shames you, but it's quite another if you scratch around and trying to find all sorts of causes to attack a free press when you are supposed to be actually supporting the right of the press to be free. you know, harry is anti freedom of speech. you know , remember what he you know, remember what he called the first amendment bonkers ? harry needs to wake up bonkers? harry needs to wake up and realise that if he's going to behave as a prince and claim to behave as a prince and claim to behave as a prince and claim to be a prince, he better start
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to be a prince, he better start to act as one. instead of being a jerk that he is. >> okay. i mean, strong stuff there from lady c, obviously. phil, look, you know, i suppose we do live in a free country. any citizen is inclined to push back on anything that they believe has wronged them. they can go to court, but i suppose he has to abide by this particular ruling. now, cough up just short of 50 k in the next 13 days or so. and actually go to trial going forward. what's going to happen here? what's going to happen here? what's going on? really break it down. >> yeah. good evening, going on? really break it down. >> yeah. good evening , patrick. >> yeah. good evening, patrick. i mean, £48,000. any normal person would take that as a shot across the bows and think, hang on a minute. >> is this such a good idea? but i'm sure this is just an absolute drop in the ocean. >> his fees must be >> his legal fees must be absolutely racking up into hundreds thousands, millions. >> he's got court cases >> he's got five court cases going 5 or 6. going on, 5 or 6. >> i think this is only the beginning of the mail on sunday. one normal person would one say any normal person would stop and that stop digging and realise that this nowhere except this is going nowhere except financial for him. i mean, financial ruin for him. i mean,
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i he's made a lot of money i know he's made a lot of money out of his books and netflix and one and another, but you one thing and another, but you cannot quickly cannot get through money quickly if it out for if you're forking it out for lawyers. so i any normal person would back. but he's made it would row back. but he's made it clear that he's on a mission. he's it's almost his life's he's said it's almost his life's work sort destroy the work to sort of destroy the press, blames for press, which he blames for virtually everything. don't virtually everything. so i don't think going row back. think he's going to row back. he's mad to carry on with it. >> well, we'll have to see how it there will be it pans out. but there will be a case now. so, know, we'll case now. so, you know, we'll have to get the popcorn ready for that. now, look, the bbc has been release been ordered to release thousands relating thousands of emails relating to princess 1995 princess diana's infamous 1995 interview martin bashir. so interview with martin bashir. so the journalist was found to have used forgery and deception to gain the bombshell one on one in which the princess revealed details of the king's affair with queen camilla. now bbc spokesperson has said the bbc fully accepted during the course of these proceedings that mistakes have been made in the case in past. we are case in the past. we are currently considering the tribunal's decision carefully and be appropriate and it would not be appropriate to legal to comment while legal proceedings ongoing . phil,
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proceedings are ongoing. phil, i'll go to you and then i'll round off with lady c. phil, 28 years later and still this story continues to roll on your views . continues to roll on your views. >> well, now it's getting a bit like watergate, isn't it? it's the cover up is becoming the story. it's almost worse than the original offence and the original offence bad the original offence and the original butnce bad the original offence and the original but no bad the original offence and the original but no , bad the original offence and the original but no , it's bad the original offence and the original but no , it's very,»ad the original offence and the original but no , it's very, very enough, but no, it's very, very bad for the bbc. it's down to the tenacious nature of this journalist andy webb, who's been following this and he's made the bbc handover. i think it's something like 30,000 emails which they previously said were irrelevant and now they're holding them back. but if we see those and we get the fact that they've been sort of covering this up, i think heads will have to roll. it's a very, very serious situation. >> c , we well, i think >> lady c, we well, i think martin bashir should be charged with the serious crimes he committed . committed. >> and i also think that the bbc functionaries who were involved in the cover up and who have
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been lying through their back teeth for decades should either be charged or stripped of or penalised in terms of their pensions . i think, you know, pensions. i think, you know, this is a very serious matter for what they did to the prince, to diana was an absolute outrage . they knew she was emotionally fragile and mentally ill. . they knew she was emotionally fragile and mentally ill . and fragile and mentally ill. and not only did did martin bashir play not only did did martin bashir play upon it, but the bbc protected him and continue to protected him and continue to protect him for years. and let's not forget that he then moved to america , where he then went off america, where he then went off to michael jackson as well. i mean, this is a deeply corrupt man. and the bbc. >> okay. i'm going to i'm just going to i'm going to cut in and just say martin bashir is obviously not here to defend himself. no doubt would refute what you said that lady c and obviously no one at the moment
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is set to be charged or anything. but we obviously take your take your points on board. but both of you, thank you very, very much as ever. my wonderful royal masterminds there so that we go now. lots still to come here, because coming up, is the one nation tories and the party's proper right wingers clash again over rwanda. i asked whether it's time for the warring tory party to just split up. plus, in the best newspaper review that you won't find anywhere else, we will get stuck into tomorrow's front pages hot off the press. next, though, will superstar will jungle superstar nigel farage newfound farage use his newfound popularity to propel uk popularity to propel reform uk to election success? will he team up with boris johnson on a mega tory ticket that will stun the nation? kelvin mackenzie gets stuck into that. plus, nigel essentially declaring war on itv . don't miss it. on itv. don't miss it. >> but i would say to you, mr kevin lygo , the boss of itv , kevin lygo, the boss of itv, it's up to you , mate. if you it's up to you, mate. if you want to go to war with me, you really can. >> yeah. when we return, i'll
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show you. nigel laying down an almighty gauntlet. its blockbuster stuff
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well, the dust has barely settled on nigel farage's triumphant run to the final of i'm a celebrity already rumours have begun to swirl that he could make a dramatic return to the political frontline, but not quite. how you're expecting. reportedly nigel could team up with former prime minister boris johnson on a so called dream tory ticket. nigel certainly didn't deny the rumours on his victory lap this morning. watch right. >> wrong by boris. in the past that he reneged on a deal with you . does that mean it's never you. does that mean it's never going happen again ? going to happen again? >> never say never , never say >> never say never, never say never. i, you know , i can't never. i, you know, i can't predict right now what will happen. what i do think is that our country is being appallingly led, right? >> so nigel's just come out the
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jungle to find out that david cameron is the foreign secretary the net migration figures are out and there are another shocker. and this rwanda bill might not get off the ground at all. i'm joined now by fleet street legend, former editor of the sun, kelvin mackenzie. street legend, former editor of the slwhatlvin mackenzie. street legend, former editor of the slwhatlvin ma> it's never out of the >> uh, it's never out of the question. >> i agree with him. and the reason i say that is this zelenskyy was a comedian on now he leads a country fighting for its life against the pigs who run russia. an and actually everybody laughed at him. he turned out to be a phenomenal leader in war and in many ways, going around the world encouraging people to give the money so that the ukrainians can have their own life and not have to live under the yoke of putin. so anything is possible now , so anything is possible now, look what's happened in in holland with wilder , right? holland with wilder, right? suddenly he's out in the out in the wilderness . thank you. i'm the wilderness. thank you. i'm here. >> we can have that one for free, ladies and gents. you're
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very welcome. send the very welcome. um, send the invoice kelvin mackenzie. invoice to kelvin mackenzie. >> he's in >> anyway, he's in the wilderness right? and now. and now he's going to be, you know, a central part of the government may well be the leader. now we have the ridiculous situation where those who , through boris where those who, through boris out now think, oh, hold on a second. this doesn't look like a good idea. as you as your panellists have already said, it's a nightmare for the conservatives. so nigel did himself of good. wasn't himself a power of good. wasn't he fantastic at the end of i'm a celebrity? instead of saying i'm going to get even with that? nella rose what did you think of that? fred syriac complete that? fred syriac a complete dick. know, and all that dick. you know, and all that kind of stuff, right? he didn't say any that. he said, oh, say any of that. he said, oh, there some people. there were some good people. nicely can see he was nicely done. you can see he was going votes with a very going for the votes with a very a triumph, actually. okay. >> all right . and yeah, sorry >> all right. and yeah, sorry for the language, but i think we're probably. all right. it's time now. are we? you said he didn't to get even with didn't want to get even with those people, he did those two people, but he did want get even. and i can see want to get even. and i can see you're itching to have a go at this. so, nigel, finally
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addressed inflammatory this. so, nigel, finally addressed igestures tory this. so, nigel, finally addressed igestures made about comments and gestures made about him director him by itv managing director kevin lygo when he was in the jungle. have a look a jungle. i'll have a look and a listen to this. >> it seems whilst i was in there, or 2 people up at the there, 1 or 2 people up at the top of itv were doing their best top of itv were doing their best to make life quite unpleasant top of itv were doing their best to makebute quite unpleasant top of itv were doing their best to makebut iquite unpleasant top of itv were doing their best to makebut i would npleasant top of itv were doing their best to makebut i would sayeasant top of itv were doing their best to makebut i would say to ant top of itv were doing their best to makebut i would say to you, for me. but i would say to you, mr kevin lygo , the boss of itv, mr kevin lygo, the boss of itv, it's up to you , mate. if you it's up to you, mate. if you want to go to war with me, you really can. the last person that did that was called dame alison rose from natwest bank. and look what happened to her. so i would suggest, mr lygo, that i am prepared to ignore your rude, one handed gesture as the pathetic attempts by some of your staff to stitch me up. i'm prepared to forget all of it. if we can call a truce. but if you really, really want to go to war with me, i don't think it'll do. itv share price an awful lot of good. so let's please end the nonsense and let's do it now . nonsense and let's do it now. >> okay? all right, kelvin, what do you think of that? >> well , i
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do you think of that? >> well, i think it's a shocking mistake by lygo . a shocking, mistake by lygo. a shocking, shocking mistake. after all, there are licensed business, itv. he actually he actually nigel farage destroyed natwest , nigel farage destroyed natwest, a major corporation. right. and important corporation. nobody gives a toss where the itv exists or not. actually it's only role in life is to give 1.5 million to nigel farage. beyond that, nobody cares about them. and talking about their share price, their share price is completely bombed anyway. completely bombed out anyway. it's 60 odd pence. it's it's down at 60 odd pence. it's they have been a shocking , they have been a shocking, shocking management right ? so shocking management right? so actually, he makes a very serious error there. lygo because actually to go against any politics, ian to start using hand gestures against them, right . it may well warm to his right. it may well warm to his crown and it doesn't warm to the crowd who buy their products . crowd who buy their products. supposing supposing they decided that the public who liked farage but actually didn't quite enjoy mr lygo supposing they decided
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to say we're not going to go to tesco's today if they continue to advertise on itv because of this . there to advertise on itv because of this. there is a lot there is a lot of lobbying to be done by by people who are pro farage and i know and you know and this station knows that that actually he has done himself the most phenomenal amount of good and lygo has done himself considerable harm at a time when itv are commercially on the on their backs, their audiences are massively down, their revenues are down, their talent at, well, talent that they did have seems to be disappearing at 100 miles an hour a great mistake. he would do well to apologise. >> now, do you think he should apologise to nigel? >> i think he should apologise to because nigel is not to nigel because nigel is not going go away and he has going to go away and he has a remarkable success. record brexit, not west. and now itv are in your side. >> the danger is of course, that nigel farage is now finding out about a lot of the alleged skulduggery that went on whilst
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he was the jungle and he was in the jungle and potentially as well reveal potentially as well can reveal some things that may or some of the things that may or may not have happened for him personally was in personally whilst he was in there. nigel farage is there. and given nigel farage is from footed approach it from footed approach there, it strongly insinuates he's strongly insinuates that he's willing. that willing. i mean the fact that he's trousered £1.5 million and then come out and immediately used his platform to stick to fingers up metaphorically to itv vs say i'll go for a war if you want a war and then go on a massive rant about migration. i mean this peak farage calvin, thank you very , very much. thank you very, very much. i could talk to you all day, but alas, we're out of i alas, we're out of time. i haven't got time to talk haven't even got time to talk about fact gales is about the fact that gales is being boycotted. yes apparently, because the middle class champagne socialists have finally their finally realised that their owner a raving luvvie. owner is not a raving luvvie. but i will find a way of working that into the show later on. it's hilarious stuff. coming up though, as the debate about women commentating men's women commentating on men's football following football continues following joey controversial joey barton's controversial comments , he's kicked comments last week, he's kicked on. do you think that what he said is sexist? peter lloyd kicks off with writer and
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broadcaster anna mae mangan on that very soon. but coming next, should the tory party split the new conservatives in the erg, the right wing of the party fall in line now behind behind nigel farage. i give my views on that before the panel weighed in. plus we'll have, as ever, the first of tomorrow's front pages hot off the press. so if you want to be ahead of the game and find out what's on the front covers and inside the buck of every single major national newspaper, then this is the place to plus as well, i place to be. plus as well, i have of viral clips, have a couple of viral clips, including including a vicious xl bully attack. does that prove that ban the dogs? that this right to ban the dogs? find out a mcdonald's find out what a mcdonald's security did to a security employee did to a homeless man. don't go anywhere. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers sponsors of weather on . gb news evening. on. gb news evening. >> i'm alex deakin and this is your latest weather update from the met office for gb news. after most of us had a dry monday, expect some heavy downpours . downpours tomorrow. thunderstorms possible and some
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gusty winds thanks to this area of low pressure. slowly but surely it's been heading towards us over the past 24 hours and now providing some pretty heavy rain across northern ireland where to for where it's likely to linger for most of night . and that most of the night. and that could disruption . so could cause some disruption. so we have a met office yellow we do have a met office yellow warning elsewhere. the warning in place elsewhere. the rain to through, rain does tend to move through, but could drop quite a bit of rain in a short space of time as that band england, wales that band crosses england, wales into scotland . touch of into southern scotland. touch of frost possible in northern scotland for a time, but generally temperatures rising as the night goes on and the rain moves into north east england. southeast scotland first thing tomorrow and then it kind of lingers again for most of the day. so because it's been day. so again, because it's been so wet, that could some so wet, that could cause some issues further there'll issues further south. there'll be showers , the be showers, heavy showers, the potential some large hail potential for some large hail stones as these showers drift through , they should through, they should move through, they should move through will be quite through because it will be quite blustery. if it brightens blustery. and if it brightens up, could get up to 12, 13 up, we could get up to 12, 13 degrees. but feeling a lot cooler than that, 7 or 8 with the more persistent over the more persistent rain over southeast scotland and
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north—east slow north—east england, that slow fizzles tuesday night. but fizzles on tuesday night. but stays damp across eastern stays fairly damp across eastern parts of england on wednesday. elsewhere we're looking much brighter and drier. and that is the theme for the second half of the theme for the second half of the week. low pressure systems disappear moves in disappear and the high moves in promising lot drier weather promising a lot drier weather for most of us. for the second half of this week. >> like things are heating >> looks like things are heating up. boxt boiler is sponsors of weather on .
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gb news. it's 10 pm. and this is patrick christys tonight. >> but i would say to you , mr >> but i would say to you, mr kevin lygo, the boss of itv , kevin lygo, the boss of itv, it's up to you, mate. if you want to go to war with me, you really can. >> nigel farage is ready for war with itv after their director of television slagged him off. he's bagged £1.5 million and immediately comes out swinging.
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peak farage. meanwhile while it's make or break for sunak the one nation wet have backed his rwanda bill, the right wing of the party have not. but whose side are you on? it's the confidence vote tomorrow. will rishi survive? does this shocking video justify the xl bully ban . bully ban. what do you make of that ? do you what do you make of that? do you think that that's just an accident waiting to happen? these xl bullies? do you blame the owners? i've got all of tomorrow's pages today and tomorrow's front pages today and some inside the book as some stories inside the book as well panel tonight , i've well on my panel tonight, i've got maloney, benjamin got carol maloney, benjamin butterworth wonderful butterworth, and the wonderful beunda butterworth, and the wonderful belinda oh and they belinda de lucy. oh and they don't know it yet, but they'll be joined in the studio by a live snake at the end of this houn live snake at the end of this hour. yeah, that's right. you will, carol. you will. this is patrick christie's tonight. anything .
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anything can happen. email me gbviews@gbnews.com. who should i throw the snake at? no. who would win the war between nigel farage and itv ? gb views nigel farage and itv? gb views gb news dot com. i will see you after the headlines . after the headlines. >> patrick. thank you. and the top story tonight, a group of tory mps who think the government's rwanda policy needs a complete rewrite say they will vote for rishi sunak's rwanda legislation tomorrow , but they legislation tomorrow, but they warn they will oppose any amendments that will risk the uk breaching the rule of law for the european research group says the european research group says the current law provides an incomplete solution and a total overhaul may be the only way to stop the boats. well earlier on today, the illegal migration minister, michael tomlinson, said he's confident the plan
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will work. >> this is the toughest piece of legislation that's ever been tabled before parliament. this is what we're determined to debate tomorrow. this what we debate tomorrow. this is what we will tomorrow and will debate tomorrow and we'll come amendments due course come to amendments in due course . but i'm convinced because we've and i'm convinced we've seen it and i'm convinced because the government's we've seen it and i'm convinced becaupositione government's we've seen it and i'm convinced becauposition that ernment's we've seen it and i'm convinced becauposition that we've nt's legal position that we've published afternoon, that legal position that we've pub|is1ed afternoon, that legal position that we've pub|is the afternoon, that legal position that we've pub|is the toughest noon, that legal position that we've pub|is the toughest piece that legal position that we've pub|is the toughest piece of|t this is the toughest piece of legislation that this does meet the concerns the supreme the concerns of the supreme court . and we're to have court. and we're going to have that debate tomorrow that robust debate tomorrow afternoon. >> meanwhile, today at the covid inquiry, the prime minister defended his controversial eat out help out scheme , saying out to help out scheme, saying it merely a micro policy it was merely a micro policy within a bigger plan to reopen the uk from lockdown . rishi the uk from lockdown. rishi sunak told the inquiry it had been designed specifically , in been designed specifically, in fact, to safely lift lockdown restrictions . he began his restrictions. he began his evidence with an apology to those who'd lost lost loved ones to covid. however, he played down suggestions by lead counsel hugo keith, kc that severe inefficiencies in downing street had led to a chaotic style of
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governance. well the prime minister also blamed government borrowing due to lockdown for record high taxes. now, he told the inquiry the economic impact act of paying it back is only now being felt by taxpayers . it now being felt by taxpayers. it comes as new data shows property taxes in the uk are among the highest across the developed world. with the office for budget responsibility also signalling further hikes are likely . the government is likely. the government is offering a financial package, which it says is worth £2.5 billion to support the return of devalued . in northern ireland it devalued. in northern ireland it would include a lump sum to settle public sector pay claims and a new needs based formula for public services . as sinn for public services. as sinn fein at stormont, vice president michelle o'neill said, the offer didn't touch the surface . and didn't touch the surface. and the dup leader, sirjeffrey donald, said it also didn't go far enough . meanwhile, a major far enough. meanwhile, a major data breach within the police service of northern ireland has
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been described as a wake up call for forces across the uk. the surnames and initials of almost 9500 officers and staff were published by mistake back in august . a report into the leak august. a report into the leak has made 37 separate recommendations for improving information security within the psni . and campaigners are making psni. and campaigners are making a last ditch effort to block controversial plans to build a tunnel next to stonehenge in wiltshire . the save stonehenge wiltshire. the save stonehenge world heritage site group is challenging the government's decision to back a £1.7 billion scheme, describing it as vandalism. the plans will overhaul eight miles of the a303 aimed at speeding up journey times across the south—west of england. a hearing will be held at the high court tomorrow . this at the high court tomorrow. this is gb news across the uk on tv in your car, on digital radio and on your smart speaker by saying play gb news. this is
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britain's news channel . britain's news channel. >> well, welcome along. busy hour coming your way. let's start with this. the rwanda plan is a complete and utter sham. it is a complete and utter sham. it is a complete and utter sham. it is a distraction technique to take your eye off what you can see happening right now, right in front of you. you've been lied to about legal immigration for countless prime for years. countless prime ministers home secretaries ministers and home secretaries have told they will get it have told you they will get it under control and they haven't. you can see community you can see your community changing you can see your changing and you can see your pubuc changing and you can see your public being battered. changing and you can see your pub can being battered. changing and you can see your pub can see being battered. changing and you can see your pub can see british|g battered. changing and you can see your pub can see british culture red. you can see british culture being see your being eroded. you can see your tax bills going up. you can see the streets becoming less and less you can see net less safe. you can see net migration at 645,000, maybe as high as 750,000. whatever it ends up being when they revise it next year. you can see all of that. and what's happened is political leaders have dangled something shiny in front of our faces to take our focus off it. the rwanda plan, rishi is saying , i'll stop the boats, but we are years on from the rwanda
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plan first being proposed and where are we? as of today, we are back exactly where we started . the left don't like it started. the left don't like it because it's inhumane . the tory because it's inhumane. the tory centrists will back it through gritted teeth because otherwise they'll have to be a general election, which they'll lose. and tory right don't support and the tory right don't support it because it doesn't go far enough. even if it gets through parliament will get parliament tomorrow, it will get held up in the lords, then in the british public the courts. the british public have let down have been monumentally let down by political class. they did by our political class. they did it brexit. wanted it over brexit. they wanted a second referendum because the pubuc second referendum because the public trusted and second referendum because the publthwarted trusted and second referendum because the publthwarted a trusted and second referendum because the publthwarted a proper:ed and second referendum because the publthwarted a proper brexit. they thwarted a proper brexit. they denied us the right to take competitive advantage. took competitive advantage. it took years a piss poor deal years to get a piss poor deal where nobody wins and now it's happening on immigration, on promises, promises, promises , promises, promises, promises, lies, lies . the lies, lies, lies. the conservative party is ripping itself to death over a policy that won't blow him work. labour haven't got a solution on the lib dems and the greens are irrelevant and reform will struggle because of our voting system. easy to see why system. it's easy to see why people believe in conspiracy theories if there was theories because if there was a conspiracy , this is exactly how
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conspiracy, this is exactly how they'd about it. the tory conspiracy, this is exactly how they'(is about it. the tory conspiracy, this is exactly how they'(is splityut it. the tory conspiracy, this is exactly how they'(is split on it. the tory conspiracy, this is exactly how they'(is split on everything' party is split on everything taxation, the echr, their social media policy, brexit. now there are wonderful . i look around the are wonderful. i look around the house of commons and i just see a load of jellyfish just utterly spineless individuals. no wasted, no time setting his stall out when he came out the jungle though i've no idea where the sunak gets through this vote tomorrow or whether the tory rebels vote down this new pathway btec rwanda plan. >> what i do know is we'll never deal with any of this. all the while we stay part of the echr . while we stay part of the echr. >> so here's what i'm asking you the top of this hour. should the tory party split and the new conservatives , the erg, the conservatives, the erg, the right wing of the party fall in line behind nigel farage? gb views gbnews.com to respond to that now i am joined again by daily express columnist first rate carole malone, journalist and broadcaster benjamin butterworth, and former brexit party mep belinda de deluise.
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carol, i'll start with you on this. should they just fall in line, do you think? should the tory party split? they're divided on everything here. >> absolutely not. no, the tory party is one of the oldest and most successful political parties in the history of democratic politics. you know, they split briefly in i think it was 1760, but they got back together quite quickly. and remember, it. together quite quickly. and remember, it . oh, together quite quickly. and remember, it. oh, benjamin , you remember, it. oh, benjamin, you are really skating on thin ice about age. the thing about age. the age thing tonight. careful and you know , tonight. careful and you know, back then, tory was a term of abuse. back then, tory was a term of abuse . but that's by the by abuse. but that's by the by that's just a little bit of a recap anyway. no, they shouldn't split because they've been through periods through this these periods before. do you remember when john power? he got john major was in power? he got just of the vote and that just 31% of the vote and that was that was the was in 97. and that was the lowest any tory had ever had . lowest any tory had ever had. and then, you know, the tories came back, they'd had 17 years in power and much more than they've had now, and they were kicked and they were, they kicked out and they were, they were wilderness for 13 were in the wilderness for 13 years blair. so this, this years under blair. so this, this is the end of them for now, i think. think the
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think. but i don't think the party should split. it has to regroup reset. regroup and reset. >> why i asked this >> the reason why i asked this and i don't want this to sound like much of an abstract like too much of an abstract question is because we're going to massive vote tomorrow question is because we're going to could assive vote tomorrow question is because we're going to could go ive vote tomorrow question is because we're going to could go either:e tomorrow question is because we're going to could go either way.norrow question is because we're going to could go either way. it'sow that could go either way. it's on bill in the last on the rwanda bill in the last houn on the rwanda bill in the last hour, we had david maddox on who was saying that thinks that was saying that he thinks that more than 29 tory rebel more than 29 tory mps will rebel against bill against it, therefore, the bill could fail. therefore the tory party find itself in even party could find itself in even more we're general more turmoil. we're in general election territory there. anything happen. that's anything could happen. that's why do you think, why i ask it. do you think, benjamin, party benjamin, that the tory party should just split should just should just split those on the right, should join another you another party on the right? you know, when i first thought about this thought, this this afternoon, i thought, no, that idea no, i don't like that idea because i like strong governments. >> i don't like these europe setups you have setups where you have 12 different trying different parties trying to cobble together . but cobble something together. but the to the more that i've listened to the more that i've listened to the to your program the news and to your program tonight, the more clear it seems that divide terminal in that the divide is terminal in the tory party. the idea that we have leadership elections every 12 months at the current rate shows you that they can't cobble together to form a government. and maybe we should stop
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pretending. thing pretending. and the other thing i'd that the labour i'd say is that the labour party, know, two big party, you know, the two big parties always sort of parties are always sort of coalitions. umbrellas of coalitions. they're umbrellas of ideas , right? labour ideas, right? but the labour party , you saw the moderate wing party, you saw the moderate wing fiercely take on the left and the corbynistas , and they won the corbynistas, and they won the corbynistas, and they won the argument in the party. the problem is the tories are too weak to have the argument in their own cars. >> let just quickly say >> let me just quickly say you're child with no you're a child with no experience life in general. experience of life in general. so you won't remember the time back when weren't. remember so you won't remember the time back 'then weren't. remember so you won't remember the time back 'the when weren't. remember so you won't remember the time back 'the when thezn't. remember so you won't remember the time back 'the when the labourmember so you won't remember the time back 'the when the labour partyer when the when the labour party was formed in 1924? i barely just do anyway. but, but. but since then the tories have been in two thirds the time. in power two thirds of the time. so not that bad. i don't so they're not that bad. i don't need to. belinda should should the erg, should new conservatives. >> look , their natural >> i mean, look, their natural leader is just nigel leader surely is just nigel farage at this point. he's saying what they want , isn't he? saying what they want, isn't he? >> yes. and what millions and millions of brits want and unfortunately, the conservative party, a huge chunk of it, is simply an extension of the civil service. now, they don't belong to the people anymore. they belong to the international
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stage. why we see the stage. this is why we see the constant fighting about echr constant fighting about the echr , about the human rights of criminals above the human going above the human rights of citizens. it's because a huge chunk of tory party chunk of the tory party completely kneel to the international stage and have forgotten the british people and representing their interests first. that why split first. and that is why the split , i think is terminal, because i don't think people will forgive or forget them throwing away an 80 or lying 80 seat majority or the lying over immigration they're over immigration and they're completely be completely lost. and let's be honest, divided party. honest, it's a divided party. and parties win and divided parties do not win elections because you can't trust manifest shows. trust the manifest shows. >> but mark my words, though, this will be this is important. we will be out the game this. we'll out of the game on this. we'll wake tomorrow morning. wake up tomorrow morning. there'll be a vote at some point. true cousins the point. the true cousins of the tory party be revealed and tory party will be revealed and everyone else and every other news tomorrow everyone else and every other nevevening, tomorrow morrow everyone else and every other nevevening, tomorrow and'ow everyone else and every other nevevening, tomorrow and the all evening, tomorrow and the day after are going end up day after are going to end up having this exact conversation. how party come how does the tory party come back fatally back from this? they're fatally wounded, but do you know why? >> think that thing will >> i think that the thing will pass because a lot of pass tomorrow? because a lot of these idiot mps are now waking up fact they're going to
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up to the fact they're going to be out of job soon. they be out of a job very soon. they should about that should have thought about that when they deposed boris, but they've realised that they've only just realised that now country and now how badly the country and the doesn't who the tory party doesn't know who it's for. >> p- it's for. >> the real problem >> that's the real problem because you've got these red wall, conservative, but wall, small c conservative, but big against these big state voters against these people in traditional southern tory want big tory seats who don't want a big state more socially state but a bit more socially liberal and they can't work out who they're for. and that's the fundamental. look, fundamental. all right, look, i'm the i'm just going to go to the inbox quickly. >> allison says the right of the tory party should definitely join start start join reforms, start or start their is their own party. this is ridiculous. of course, the conservative party just conservative party should just reform donald. and reform that, says donald. and there's a lot this there's quite a lot of this coming out. one nation coming out. the one nation tories get an absolute tories will get an absolute kicking, says graham. i'm paraphrasing now, graham, because what you because i couldn't read what you actually out. i want to get actually said out. i want to get your on this. going to your views on this. i'm going to start with with belinda this. start with with belinda on this. so nigel addressed some so nigel finally addressed some of comments and of these these comments and gestures him by itv gestures made about him by itv managing director kevin lygo gestures made about him by itv mana heg director kevin lygo gestures made about him by itv mana he was ector kevin lygo gestures made about him by itv mana he was in or kevin lygo gestures made about him by itv mana he was in the evin lygo gestures made about him by itv mana he was in the jungle. jo gestures made about him by itv mana he was in the jungle. so when he was in the jungle. so let's just refresh ourselves of what nigel said. >> was in >> it seems whilst i was in there, 1 or 2 people showed up at the top of itv, were doing
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their best to make life quite unpleasant for me. would unpleasant for me. but i would say you, to mr kevin lygo, say to you, to mr kevin lygo, the boss of itv, it's up to you, mate . if you want to go to war mate. if you want to go to war with really can. the with me, you really can. the last person that did that was called dame alison rose from natwest bank and look what happened to her. so i would suggest, lygo, that i am suggest, mr lygo, that i am prepared ignore your rude one prepared to ignore your rude one handed gestures , the pathetic handed gestures, the pathetic attempts by some of your staff to stitch me up. i prepared. >> yeah. okay. there we go. beunda >> yeah. okay. there we go. belinda how do you see that one panning out? should nigel go to war with itv? should itv apologise to him? >> i wouldn't pick a fight with nigel i think they're nigel farage. i think they're complete fools that. he. complete fools to do that. he. i mean, what a leader. if only we'd had him leading the brexit negotiations with the eu, talking that. i think talking like that. i think nigel's quite right point out nigel's quite right to point out the childishness and the attack . the childishness and the attack. he feels being targeted at him . he feels being targeted at him. and what did they think was going to happen? i mean, obviously nigel was going to take them to task after hearing about what's gone that hand about what's gone on that hand gesture. itv boss did or
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gesture. the itv boss did or apparently allegedly did. i'm not to it on telly or not going to do it on telly or i think i might have done think i might have just done it. >> apologies. apologise . >> apologies. i apologise. that's all right. we'll pass the water. >> you can't get away with that. sort of for good nigel. i think he should. i think he's cleaning up the whole business. banks tell stations politics. up the whole business. banks tellgood stations politics. up the whole business. banks tellgood nigel. tions politics. up the whole business. banks tell goodwhat l. tions politics. up the whole business. banks tellgoodwhat nigel politics. up the whole business. banks tellgoodwhat nigel p> look what nigel is now finding out, benjamin, is that itv's television itv's director of television apparently did a did a rude gesture, as belinda has expertly done earlier on there for us and basically come out kind of against him publicly and also potentially a little bit of skulduggery that was going on behind the scenes with some things that didn't end up being run. but a lot of people know were potentially about to be run about nigel farage whilst he was in so he's just in the jungle. so he's just finding about that now. so finding out about that now. so he's do think that he's livid. do you think that kevin if he knows what's kevin lygo, if he knows what's good for him itv, just good for him at itv, just apologises draws a on apologises and draws a line on it? >> absolutely should not >> we absolutely should not apologise. you know, i think that £1.5 million to that £1.5 million has gone to farages was just farages head. this was just banter at an itv event that is
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quite reasonable. a lot of us, you do things like that in you know, do things like that in a way, and i don't a light hearted way, and i don't think take it so seriously. >> but do you know what all that says to they put him in the says to me? they put him in the jungle. they paid all that jungle. they paid him all that money. they kept him off air loads the time when the loads of the time when the showtime still, showtime on there. but still, some vote was some people think the vote was fixed. but still he fixed. well, no, but still he came third. that's tells you that people like lygo are totally out of touch with the people of this country. they have no and what's have no clue. and what's happened there? happened to nigel in there? people he's not people have thought he's not he's he's not he's he's not a bigot. he's not he's not he's actually quite not barmy. he's actually quite he's a decent bloke, he's quite a decent bloke, a lovely father. i mean, you can't be father. >> can't claim they >> you can't claim that they hate farage. much that hate nigel farage. so much that they more than they've they paid him more than they've ever another in ever paid another celebrity in that and put him on that show. and they put him on their watched programme. their most watched programme. >> they clearly three, four weeks. the of weeks. but the director of television then went out and swore him at a public event swore at him at a public event and spoke in very derogatory terms. of terms. there were a couple of issues. you know, he alluded to a potential stitch up there in his in statement there. his in his statement there. you could make case, could very easily make the case, benjamin, that they realised that they'd mistake
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that they'd made a mistake because that because he turned out that he was right they didn't was all right and they didn't want with £1.5 million. want to part with £1.5 million. >> no, i don't think for a split second they only put him on there because they thought he would i think there because they thought he woul> you've reality you >> you've done reality tv, you know that. it's all about the edit. farage hardly the edit. nigel farage is hardly the first person on a reality show to get a weird edit. well, either nigel's come out either way, itv nigel's come out of really well and itv have of it really well and itv have paid him amount money paid him a huge amount of money just his reputation just to improve his reputation with the masses. >> the biggest his >> the biggest pay day of his life. what was life. what he did was immediately use his platform as well come out and say, apart well to come out and say, apart from teeing off on the itv direct probably says direct actor who probably says he's apologise he's got nothing to apologise for isn't here to for and obviously isn't here to defend but also said defend himself, but also said that election will be that the next election will be fought won and or lost on mass migration. he's come out swinging. out teeing swinging. he's come out teeing off do you think that
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off on that. do you think that he's about that, belinda? he's right about that, belinda? nigel yeah, completely. >> going nigel yeah, completely. >>total going nigel yeah, completely. >>total dominate going nigel yeah, completely. >>total dominate the going nigel yeah, completely. >>total dominate the nextgoing to total dominate the next election and nigel will be the forefront it. he's on it forefront of it. he's been on it the whole over brexit, over the whole time over brexit, over the whole time over brexit, over the dinghies. you he's put the dinghies. you know, he's put the dinghies. you know, he's put the in and he's a very, the work in and he's a very, very bright, bright man. he knows talking about. very bright, bright man. he knothat's talking about. very bright, bright man. he knothat's the talking about. very bright, bright man. he knothat's the case. king about. very bright, bright man. he knothat's the case. how about. very bright, bright man. he knothat's the case. how can jt. >> that's the case. how can labour win it? because they have no policies on immigration? >> the polling >> well, no, i mean, the polling shows more people trust labour on than shows more people trust labour on more than shows more people trust labour on more fool than shows more people trust labour on more fool then. than they more fool then. >> that's pretty idiotic because they us any they haven't given us any policies to judge on policies to judge them on nothing. policies to judge them on not okay. all right, look, loads >> okay. all right, look, loads of flooding in here, of emails flooding in here, patrick. there's a lot going on here with itv and nigel farage. nigel, any day, says nigel, will any day, says patricia . we've got quite a few patricia. we've got quite a few other emails kicking on here. the writer sent a conservative mp should defect a reform now says malcolm says a heck of a lot of these coming in gb views at gb views .com but look coming up next we have well some of the stuff we've got next is stuff we've got next anyway is the entertaining newspaper the most entertaining newspaper review find review that you will find anywhere television. we get anywhere on television. we get stuck tomorrow's front stuck into tomorrow's front
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pages. some pages. there are some sensational front sensational stories on the front of just had of the book. i've just had a sneaky little look in the break there. we'll bring them to you. you want to stay ahead of the game? does this latest game? plus, does this latest shocking is shocking video of what is allegedly justify allegedly an xl bully justify why their ban . why their ban. yeah, it's one of a couple of viral clips that have divided the internet today and will play a couple more of them to you. but next, former premier league star joey barton reckons that women should commentating women should stop commentating and pundits the men's and being pundits on the men's game they don't know game because they don't know what about what they're talking about are his controversial comments sexist? he have a point ? sexist? does he have a point? writer and broadcaster anna mae mangan kicks off with peter lloyd on on what is bound to be a massive row. also also also how would you like to win ten grand in cold, hard cash ? brand grand in cold, hard cash? brand new tack and shopping vouchers ? new tack and shopping vouchers? well, you could be the winner of
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our very first great british giveaway. here's all the details on how you can make those prizes yours. >> it's the great british giveaway. your chance to win three amazing prizes that will get your new year off to a great start. first, there's a terrific £10,000 in cash to be won. imagine what you could do with that. we'll also give you a tech update with the very latest iphone 15 pro max plus £500 worth of shopping vouchers to spendin worth of shopping vouchers to spend in your favourite store . spend in your favourite store. or the retail therapy could be on us for your chance to win the iphone.the on us for your chance to win the iphone. the vouchers and £10,000 cash. text gb win to 84 902 text cost £2 plus one standard network rate message or post your name and to number gb zero one p.o. your name and to number gb zero one po. box 8690. derby . de19 one po. box 8690. derby. de19 uk only entrance must be 18 or over lines close at 5 pm. on friday the 5th of january, full terms and privacy notice add
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gbnews.com forward slash win. good luck . for oh sign gbnews.com forward slash win. good luck. for oh sign me up for that. >> hey now coming up is joey barton sexist for criticising female football pundits? a fiery debate is coming your way next. don't you dare moo
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>> we only on gb news the people's channel, britain's news channel. >> now english football's bad
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boy, joey barton, remains in hot water. the former manchester city star has criticised female punst city star has criticised female pundits and presenters that cover men's football, blasting women shouldn't be talking with any kind of authority in the men's game, he compared this to himself, talking about knitting or netball . classic. you've or netball. classic. you've heard one of my guests there, however, football focussed presenter alex scott hit back live on the bbc yesterday . live on the bbc yesterday. >> hey, just before we say goodbye to all the women in football in front of the camera, behind it, the players on the pitch to everyone that attends a game keep being the role models that you continue to be to all those young girls that are told no, you can't. >> football is a better place with us all in it. >> goodbye. >> goodbye. >> so then barton doubled down. i mean, he's probably tripling down, quadruple down at this point, isn't he? on his comments and offered scott a debate on the topic, posting. can't say the topic, posting. i can't say you don't know men's football. no, don't. sorry. you don't no, you don't. sorry. you don't have a clue. and you were a really player compared to
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really bad player compared to even a sunday league player. but is there any truth to joey barton's comments are they barton's comments or are they sexist ? to thrash this one out, sexist? to thrash this one out, i'm joined by author and journalist peter lloyd, who you got a cheeky little glimpse of earlier and earlier on there, and broadcaster anna may manga and both thank you very much. both of you thank you very much. look keep you look peter, i can't keep you quiet, i'll start with you quiet, so i'll start with you then. do you think that joey barton is right about this? of course i do. >> and he's said what >> and he's only said what everybody thinking. >> and he's only said what eve it'sydy thinking. >> and he's only said what eve it'sydy 1fact.ng. >> it's just a fact. >> it's just a fact. >> men's football is literally in a different league to women's football. and quite frankly, it's really condescending to have female pundits critique male players. i'm sorry. have female pundits critique male players. i'm sorry . these male players. i'm sorry. these are women who might have some skill, but they couldn't even beat an under 13 boys team. so how on earth can they sit there and judge some of the world's best players? that's like asking katie price to give singing or vocal advice to mick jagger for goodness sake, me a break. goodness sake, give me a break. all anna, can see all right, anna, i can see you're itching to get involved. >> i mean, why not give a >> yeah. i mean, why not give a pink ball to the girls and the blue to the boys and why
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blue balls to the boys and why doesn't this guy understand that the that need for the only ball that you need for football you're kicking football are what you're kicking around football for around the pitch football is for everybody joey barton around the pitch football is for everybaiy joey barton around the pitch football is for everyba red joey barton around the pitch football is for everyba red card joey barton around the pitch football is for everyba red card forjoey barton around the pitch football is for everyba red card for being arton around the pitch football is for everyba red card for being such needs a red card for being such a dinosaur. and also , no, he's a dinosaur. and also, no, he's not he's not clever because what he said and he's not funny because he talks about knitting and netball like they're the only thing that women good only thing that women are good for. it's insulting and it's insulting all young insulting to all the young people, girls who enjoy people, boys and girls who enjoy both men and women's footballs. >> and one more thing. you don't have to be all the men aren't good pundits. and i've backed up by saying , good pundits. and i've backed up by saying, has anyone good pundits. and i've backed up by saying , has anyone seen good pundits. and i've backed up by saying, has anyone seen rio ferdinand commenting on anything? >> i mean , could do a betterjob >> i mean, could do a betterjob than him? >> yeah, but do you know what the difference is? >> he's actually a world class player. people like alex scott, they aren't . they aren't. >> what about sabrina, then ? >> what about sabrina, then? >> what about sabrina, then? >> could we bring her in? would you accept as a pundit? you accept her as a pundit? >> the manager. the manager >> so the manager. the manager of the england of the england women's team? of the england of the england worno, s team? of the england of the england worno, s think.�* of the england of the england worno, s think. i think if she >> no, i think. i think if she didn't have vagina, she didn't have a vagina, she probably wouldn't in that probably wouldn't be in that job. and i have to say, you
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know, because you're talking rubbish being really insulting. >> well, let peter finish >> well, we'll let peter finish and i'll give you and then i'll give you the response. all right. response. anna. all right. go on, peter. know, it's really on, peter. you know, it's really patronising have these these patronising to have these these women men's women talking about men's performance are equal performance as if they are equal in their ability. >> and their skill. they're just not even if you look at the finances, men's football, heavily subsidised as women's football because nobody wants to watch it. and if women's football is so great, why don't women watch it? >> all right, anna, i'll respond to all of that. >> it's interesting what you bnng >> it's interesting what you bring the money into it because i think the punditry goes i think the punditry that goes on old boys club and on is an old boys club and they're bringing their mates in to for massive to talk rubbish for massive amounts and a lot of amounts of money and a lot of them. >> let's talk about gary lineker is more than a pundit. >> he's actually a mouthpiece for the labour and he's >> he's actually a mouthpiece for evenabour and he's >> he's actually a mouthpiece for even talking and he's >> he's actually a mouthpiece for even talking about d he's >> he's actually a mouthpiece for even talking about football. not even talking about football. no woman does that in the game that they're talking no woman does that in the game that football,hey're talking no woman does that in the game that football, they're alking no woman does that in the game that football, they're enjoying about football, they're enjoying football, attract young football, and they attract young people the game and people people into the game and people like you need to go down the pub with your mates and get off the television talking rubbish.
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>> okay. peter do you think that there's some tokenism going on? because also went because joey barton also went on to say things you know, to say things like, you know, i'm not going to get he said, i'm not going to get he said, i'm save things like i'm going to save things like the stuff for different the race stuff for a different day. and all of that. no doubt that probably be that day will probably be tomorrow. do you think tomorrow. but but do you think he alluding i think, to the he was alluding i think, to the idea that there's some tokenism going peter? going on, peter? >> i mean, that's exactly >> yeah. i mean, that's exactly what mean, having what this is. i mean, having female pundits football female pundits in men's football , it's you've heard about penis envy. this is all about cultural envy. this is all about cultural envy. this is all about cultural envy . they cannot stand men envy. they cannot stand men having a space that is essentially theirs. they cannot stand it. they hate that men are celebrated by the nation every time there's a world cup. so they want a piece of the action. and it's all about cultural envy i >> -- >> okay, now, anna, so let me let me ask you this question and let me ask you this question and let me ask let me ask you this question, anna, which is that when there's like the women's world cup or there's, you know, the the female euros, the euros, the female euros, etcetera. what etcetera. now, from from what i've seen of that, it does appear that almost always the
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punst appear that almost always the pundits are female panel are pundits are all female panel are all yeah, always. so do all women. yeah, always. so do you think men's game is you think when the men's game is on, it not fair to say that on, is it not fair to say that maybe should all be the maybe they should all be the women their cake and women having their cake and eating it? >> it's beautiful game. >> it's a beautiful game. everyone and what everyone can comment. and what are here? it's not are they doing here? it's not science. opinion. and science. it's an opinion. and anybody an opinion on a anybody can have an opinion on a match how played and match and how it's played and the it's like horse the players, it's like horse racing. mean, you don't need racing. i mean, you don't need to everything about the to know everything about the jockey and the to able jockey and the horse to be able to opinion on it. jockey and the horse to be able to okay. opinion on it. jockey and the horse to be able to okay. yeah, ion on it. jockey and the horse to be able to okay. yeah, because, because, >> okay. yeah, because, because, because would be an because that would really be an insightful analysis of horse racing, if got racing, wouldn't it, if we got katie's you're not to katie's opinion. you're not to give on the match. give her opinion on the match. >> it's not. it's not analysis. it's just chat and any it's just it's just chat and any woman's not just chat. >> is the exact problem . >> that is the exact problem. it's like you who think it's people like you who think it's just chat. it's not just chat. chat. >> okay, so what is this? is a technique. it's mastery in football, is it? they've all got. >> go, go. anna, just just respond to that then. so i mean, realistically, i think when people i must be honest, i do think people do watch think when people do watch football punditry, they do want expert analysis, not just chat .
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expert analysis, not just chat. >> yeah, well, it is chat, though, because is there opinions, isn't it? i mean, everyone sees the game differently. and in my family, they're obviously kids they're all obviously my kids and they're they're their children. they love football. boys, girls . and they don't make boys, girls. and they don't make these divisions is about these dated divisions is about men and women's game . they enjoy men and women's game. they enjoy them both on their own levels. they're not saying they're equals and women's equals like men. and women's tennis , but it's tennis isn't equal, but it's equally and anybody equally enjoyable. and anybody can have an opinion on it. it's not you don't have to have a masters in football to talk about what went on on the pitch. >> we are going >> all right, bosh, we are going to we are going to draw a stern line under this now. that was fantastic. you very much. fantastic. thank you very much. strong either side. strong views on either side. it's what it for. it's exactly what we do it for. thatis it's exactly what we do it for. that is the wonderful journalist peter lloyd there and author and broadcaster mangan. broadcaster anna mae mangan. strong do you agree strong stuff. who do you agree with? at views .com. with? gb views at gb views .com. i that very, i will go to that inbox very, very shortly. up, more of very shortly. coming up, more of tomorrow's newspaper front pages very shortly. coming up, more of tomojust s newspaper front pages very shortly. coming up, more of tomojust droppedaper front pages very shortly. coming up, more of tomojust dropped hot front pages very shortly. coming up, more of tomojust dropped hot off1t pages very shortly. coming up, more of tomojust dropped hot off the ages have just dropped hot off the press. i'll get stuck into all of those. the biggest stories. there's shockers on there's a couple of shockers on the there as well.
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the front pages there as well. you won't want miss well. the front pages there as well. ycrather't want miss well. the front pages there as well. yc rather disturbingniss well. the front pages there as well. ycrather disturbing clip well. the front pages there as well. ycrather disturbing clip of well. the front pages there as well. ycrather disturbing clip of a ell. a rather disturbing clip of a man getting attacked on a train platform by what appears to be an is it time to ban an xl bully is it time to ban them? oh, yes. and i'm sure you've all seen by now. that you've all seen it by now. that clip a security guard at clip of a security guard at mcdonald's dousing a homeless man. what you make of
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morning, pull the bill, don't have the vote . have the vote have the vote. have the vote risk losing . risk losing. >> let's bring you tomorrow's news tonight now in the liveliest paper of you, you will get anywhere on the telly. the very first front pages have just been delivered for my press pack. here we go. so we start with the metro. i did the right thing. sunak's evidence at the covid inquiry. pretty self—explanatory. front page that i move on to the independent. yes there we go. sunak on the rack as tory factions feud over rwanda. right wing rebel mps urge pm to scrap asylum bill. obviously the one
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nafion asylum bill. obviously the one nation lot have decided to back it. it's going to be a massive day for rishi sunak tomorrow. we'll talk about that again shortly. tory rebels in standoff with pm on rwanda law says i with pm on rwanda law says the i they've also got a bullet point list self—appointed star chamber of legal advisers issues damning verdict on sunak's plan. that's the right of the tory party that we're talking about earlier but he receives backing from the centrist. this does feel like a battle for the conservative party's soul. if you ask me, there's a heck of a on the there's a heck of a lot on the front page there as well. bit on cop 28 dropping its phase out plan fossil fuels, which plan for fossil fuels, which actually massive. sun actually is massive. the sun fury verses cheshire council. here he comes. tyson's next bout so it's boxer tyson fury faces a new fight over an £82,000 council tax bill. cheshire east council which benjamin and i know rather well, claims the heavyweight champ , 35, is dad heavyweight champ, 35, is dad john and his brother shane owe the sum for property adjoining their £1 million mansion in style style is a place, a
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village in cheshire. so there we go. a battle there for a plot of land. we go to the national. now, the newspaper that supports an independent scotland and it says furious foreign office to quit its base in scotstoun . not quit its base in scotstoun. not a horrible layout on that. can i just say it's not really obvious where one word ends and another begins, but there we go. msp says it's a hammer blow and all the more horrifying . that the more horrifying. that decision was taken by david cameron, unelected lord with cameron, an unelected lord with no democratic mandate and the first minister slams petty threat to axe uk support for overseas activists. so it's time, obviously for us to get stuck into this now with daily express columnist carole malone, journalist and broadcaster benjamin butterworth, former brexit party mep belinda de well look, an almighty diplomatic spat has broken out after scottish first minister humza yousaf met with turkey's hamas supporting president erdogan, where he broke the uk government policy to call for a permanent ceasefire in gaza . lord cameron ceasefire in gaza. lord cameron hit back, threatening to shut
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down the scottish government's mini embassies abroad and obviously yusuf has labelled them petty and misguided. this is what's on the front of the national carrier. i'll start with you on that . with you on that. >> i'm going to have a laugh at the national first. but anyway, it says on the front of the national restricting scotland on a is abnormal. no, a world stage is abnormal. no, it because scotland is it isn't, because scotland is still uk and yusuf still part of the uk and yusuf should not be going to other countries and having relations with the president of turkey. how do you pronounce it? ben erdogan. erdogan of turkey. sign and but so you should you shouldn't be doing that. and he's caught. this is a really sensitive issue and he's getting involved in something that he really has no power over. >> the problem, the point of the problem, the problems problem, one of the problems with that with this, benjamin, is that erdogan said that erdogan has basically said that hamas fighters. hamas are freedom fighters. right. so you've got hamza yusuf going turkey meeting with going to turkey or meeting with the turkish president, i should say. and i mean, is he endorsing terrorism here? >> i mean, i think humza yousafs wife and erdogan's wife are long
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time friends. so they have a personal relationship between them that may explain why they wanted to chat when they got there. so there's a link outside of politics. the idea that the uk should be talking to this guy, l uk should be talking to this guy, i think is right. you know, obviously call obviously he's wrong to call hamas has. he calls hamas what he has. he calls israel a terrorist state, which is completely unacceptable in my view. essential to view. but he's also essential to fighting russia the war in fighting russia and the war in ukraine. but that's for the uk to . i think the idea that to do. i think the idea that scotland wants to carve out a separate foreign policy, he well, want that, they well, if they want that, they need to go and win 51% of the votes for in dependence referendum. but belinda referendum. yeah but belinda what do make of this mean what do you make of this i mean humza you north of humza yousaf you know, north of the there in scotland the border there in scotland saying he saying initially that he wants scotland throw arms scotland to throw its arms around all the gaz and around all of the gaz and refugees, etcetera. around all of the gaz and refl he as, etcetera. around all of the gaz and releeas, etc he wants to make it a safe haven for them. he's now basically going abroad and conducting policy on his own. >> he's % massive god >> he's got a massive god complex, this guy who on earth does is? he doesn't does he think he is? he doesn't represent the uk, nor were their government officials present dunng government officials present during the meeting , and i think
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during the meeting, and i think that's pretty dodgy if you ask me, or that's how it looks anyway, optically i don't like what he's doing. i don't like his arrogance or where he's taking scotland at all. remember, scotland didn't vote for he got narrowly voted for him. he got narrowly voted in by members. it wasn't a massive endorsement from the snp . he hasn't done much for scotland. he's been horrific to women their rights women and their rights in scotland their gender. bill scotland with their gender. bill which i think he's a wrong'un and i don't think this is good. what are you doing there? >> this has got nothing to do with the scottish people. this is not for this. this is is not good for this. this is grandstanding a little grandstanding of a little man who's very at what he who's not very good at what he does. and this is about personal advancement. this is not about scotland. i don't know why, scotland. and i don't know why, but could say much but i think you could say much like about cameron. like that about david cameron. >> guy trying to >> you know, the guy trying to shut down foreign that shut down the foreign bases that scotland he's not. scotland has. no, he's not. that's going to alienate scot. >> it'sjust that's going to alienate scot. >> it's just moving. >> it's just moving. >> it's just moving. >> it's going to alienate 3 or 4 miles east kilbride to miles from east kilbride to glasgow. foreign in glasgow. the foreign bases in foreign scotland foreign offices that scotland has independence. >> on from >> we're going to move on from that because we are going to
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that now because we are going to be returning to some of the front that not shown be returning to some of the fron yet that not shown be returning to some of the fron yet the at not shown be returning to some of the fron yet the next not shown be returning to some of the fron yet the next section.;hown be returning to some of the fron yet the next section. but/n you yet in the next section. but i want bring this to you. i want to bring this to you. look, firstly, obviously humza yousaf scotland part yousaf has said scotland is part of the uk outside of london. there's a track most there's a track to the most foreign investment for foreign direct investment for eight a row. he's a eight years in a row. he's got a right to and meet with right to go and meet with erdogan okay english erdogan now. okay english footballing legend michael owen erdogan now. okay english foot beeng legend michael owen erdogan now. okay english foot been relentlessly chael owen has been relentlessly mocked onune has been relentlessly mocked online core online for revealing the core mindset propelled to mindset that propelled him to the top of the game. here he is speaking upfront podcast speaking for the upfront podcast with . with simon jordan. >> you know, everything was challenge. >> audi and apple and you know, watching tv at night and the watching the tv at night and the bin would be by tv, you bin would be by the tv, you know, away or know, six metres away or whatever was. whatever it was. >> well, i would just do it. >> and well, i would just do it. >> and well, i would just do it. >> the bravery to, to miss >> i had the bravery to, to miss this and for there to be a stain on the wallpaper and my mum to absolutely scream at me and that confidence , that sort of daring . confidence, that sort of daring. i'm desperate for a nod, a little wink to say from my dad to say bloody hell you cocky little, you know . little, you know. >> and that's what i always yearned as a kid. it's the bravery he has.
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>> he had the bravery there. the bravery had the bravery to miss, you know? i mean, good grief, where do they get these people from? there we go. now okay, from? but there we go. now okay, look, coming up, we do have a greatest union greatest britain and union jackass. which right on jackass. find out which right on working might ban the working men's club might ban the word men from his title because of fears that it'll put women off offending. i kid you not next, we have more newspaper front pages we've a front pages because we've held a couple you. they've couple back for you. they've just dropped another flurry of stories. my panel and i get stuck that alongside very stuck to in that alongside very disturbing clip of what appears to xl bully dog attacking to be an xl bully dog attacking a man at a london a helpless man at a london platform . platform. yes so is it the dogs? is it the owners? is an age old debate there. i will be joined in the studio as well by a very, very special guest, trust me, you will want to stay awake for that. see you
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in two as you're about to find out. this really is the show where anything could happen. but let's just take a look at some more of tomorrow's front pages. quickly for you. we're going in with the guardian climate draft condemned as insufficient. a as weak and insufficient. a draft cut global fossil as weak and insufficient. a draftproductiont global fossil as weak and insufficient. a draftproduction isjlobal fossil as weak and insufficient. a draftproduction is grosslyyssil fuel production is grossly insufficient we're over insufficient. we're going over now to the telegraph. ben wallace, former defence sector. do not let rwanda bring down the government . yeah, i mean, that government. yeah, i mean, that is obviously one of the issues facing the government at the moment. the impending disaster tomorrow, the daily mail down to the after a day of the wire after a day of grandstanding from both of grandstanding from both wings of the rishi faces the tory party, rishi faces rwanda vote today. this is obviously tomorrow's front page today that could sink his leadership. think we leadership. yeah, i think we know we're going be know what we're going to be talking about tomorrow. don't we? but look, to bring we? but look, i'm going to bring my panel in a second. i'm just going play you this this clip going to play you this this clip that we've been teasing . it's xl that we've been teasing. it's xl bully dogs a licence
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bully dogs without a licence will england from will be banned in england from february year. no shocking february next year. no shocking stuff, it? commuter stuff, isn't it? but a commuter at stratford station in east london afternoon london yesterday afternoon may have brought have been wishing it was brought in sooner after was viciously in sooner after he was viciously attacked the dogs. what's attacked by the dogs. what's this clip? listen to it as well, because i think get the kind because i think you get the kind of audio of it then we'll of audio of it and then we'll have a chat . of audio of it and then we'll have a chat. can i have it. please? >> please , please, please , >> please, please, please, please . please. yeah >> okay. there we go. look, carol, do you think clips like that show or prove that the dogs should be banned? i mean, some people say it's the owner's fault. >> terrible dog, terrible owner. she's standing there with two dogs that she cannot control. she shouting the bloke to she shouting at the bloke to bnng dog she shouting at the bloke to bring dog the bloke is bring the dog over. the bloke is thrown the ground almost in
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thrown to the ground almost in front of the train. yes, she should jailed for that. should be jailed for that. i agree. absolutely jailed . it's astonishing. >> i'm just going come in and >> i'm just going to come in and say, look, they are reported to be bullies. getting few be xl bullies. i'm getting a few emails in now. how can you prove they're xl bullies? look, am they're xl bullies? look, i am they're xl bullies? look, i am the well, whatever they're xl bullies? look, i am this, well, whatever they're xl bullies? look, i am this, give well, whatever they're xl bullies? look, i am this, give a well, whatever they're xl bullies? look, i am this, give a loada/ell, whatever they're xl bullies? look, i am this, give a load of.l, whatever they're xl bullies? look, i am this, give a load of dogsatever they're xl bullies? look, i am this, give a load of dogs aever they're xl bullies? look, i am this, give a load of dogs a bad it is, give a load of dogs a bad rap. i tend to firmly fall in the camp, by the way of it being the camp, by the way of it being the owner's fault. so i want to make very, very clear. make that very, very clear. however, they do look xl however, they do look like xl bully benjamin, do you make bully benjamin, what do you make of that? >> em e“- e is the thing >> well, this is the thing because, you know, these are intended to to be intended to be bred to be violent. and so that would say that them. but violent. and so that would say thatproblem them. but violent. and so that would say thatproblem is them. but violent. and so that would say thatproblem is they'll1em. but violent. and so that would say thatproblem is they'll just but the problem is they'll just breed another dog and train them to that way. and to behave in that way. and so i think simply straightforward banning are banning xl bullies, which are hard identify. 1, as you just hard to identify. 1, as you just illustrated with the difficulties like illustrated with the diffic i .ties like illustrated with the diffici don't like illustrated with the diffici don't think like illustrated with the diffici don't think it'sike illustrated with the diffici don't think it's az that, i don't think it's a silver bullet. and, you know, the problem is that the people who want these the demand who want these dogs, the demand for they ain't going for them, they ain't going to say, oh, we can't have an xl bully. i'll go and buy bully. so i'll go out and buy a poodle. you come there status symbols. and they'll just symbols. and so they'll just keep breeds this. >> yeah. and you'll m
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>> yeah. and you'll always be able to buy them. yeah. >> i love dogs. i've got three dogs. i absolutely adore them. i'm responsible for i'm completely responsible for them behaviour. but them and their behaviour. but facts dog attacks them and their behaviour. but facts gone dog attacks them and their behaviour. but facts gone one attacks them and their behaviour. but facts gone one third :ks them and their behaviour. but facts gone one third in the have gone up. one third in the last years. the vast last five years. the vast majority them by pitbull majority of them done by pitbull types also seven people have types and also seven people have been types of been killed by these types of dogs the last two years, dogs in the last two years, three of them children. and i'm sorry, they different sorry, but they are different from dogs. latch on from other dogs. they latch on and stop until that and they don't stop until that person's dead. >> will ignite in >> okay. it will ignite in the inbox our very own inbox that. but now our very own nigel farage made all the way nigel farage made it all the way through to the final of this year's i'm celebrity. get me year's i'm a celebrity. get me out of here finishing third. he impressed public with impressed the voting public with his steel . oh there's his nerves of steel. oh there's a lot of people would like a snake to strangle me, i suppose. >> why would you normally be doing on a sunday down the boozer? >> where are you going to in your head? here now i'm thinking about things i've done in my life were worse than this. life that were worse than this. >> and go being stuck in the >> and go on being stuck in the that little aeroplane that crashed few ago when i. crashed a few years ago when i. >> now. okay to celebrate
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>> and now. okay to celebrate nigel's success down under we've got a little recreation of our own. just going to bring it own. i'm just going to bring it in there we go. me the snake. yeah >> hi, guys . >> hi, guys. >> hi, guys. >> i'm happy. hello, mate. how are you? what's your name? >> i'm good. my name is richard . >> i'm good. my name is richard. richard. nice to meet you. and who have we got here? richard, this is honey. honey the snake. she's a burmese python. female. burmese python. so she's actually the three burmese python. so she's actuallysnake the three burmese python. so she's actuallysnake speciesiree burmese python. so she's actuallysnake species in; burmese python. so she's actuallysnake species in the largish snake species in the world. hello. can they can all buy it? they can all buy it. they can all buy it. and they've got very, very sharp teeth. but they're not venomous. but they're not venomous. but they're not venomous. but they're not venomous. >> that's fine. so what's the best? is looking at best? because she is looking at me a little bit. >> well, she's only looking at you because they've actually got heat jaws so they heat pits on their jaws so they can the heat, the outline of can see the heat, the outline of your really? it's a your body. oh, really? it's a very clever way they use it to hunt prey. hunt their prey. >> if you could, could >> patrick, if you could, could you? yeah, of course. maybe drape her over me. >> course you're feeling brave. >> i am. it's like a burmese python. >> yeah. so i do body. >> i support her body. yeah
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>> i support her body. yeah >> and just let her do her thing, and i'll keep you safe. would you strangle him? >> looking at me. >> she is looking at me. >> she is looking at me. >> well, she is a constrictor us. so is actually how. okay. >> sorry, i didn't mean to jump there, that's okay. there, but that's okay. >> no, you're absolutely fine. >> no, you're absolutely fine. >> okay. and so. so >> okay. all right. and so. so how do these things tend to live? >> longer than me? around 40 years, usually about 40 years. >> old is honey? >> how old is honey? >> how old is honey? >> she's only one, so >> honey, she's only one, so she's she's still she's actually. she's still a baby. and she's. and she's. >> i must m slss m she-svsry m she's very nice. >> i must say, she's very nice. and she's. >> she's it's. it's like, you know, when britney spears at know, when britney spears was at the vmas. well, it's actually the vmas. well, it's actually the species of snake as the the same species of snake as the one britney had. >> she had albino burmese >> she had an albino burmese python. right this a hypo. python. right this is a hypo. >> this is really so >> this is this is really so very docile. >> do they apart from? >> what do they eat apart from? >> what do they eat apart from? >> well, she >> well, well, she well, she actually large rat in the back of my well she's tasting of my head. well she's tasting you haven't handled any rats you you haven't handled any rats or rodents lately have you. oh. because had she might be because if you had she might be confused and think you're food on a hamster. you've on a hamster. so. well if you've been hamster, she been holding the hamster, she might in that might be interested in that scent. oh, we. might be interested in that sce now h, we. might be interested in that sce now we. we. might be interested in that sce now we. now a. might be interested in that sce now we. now we find out. >> now we. now we find out. >> now we. now we find out. >> she's going to make a lock
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>> so she's going to make a lock on your neck. >> that's fine. i'm going to keep eye on that. don't worry. >> i'll tell you what we'll do whilst is happening, whilst whilst this is happening, whilst honey's me. and thank you honey's around me. and thank you very much for doing this. yeah you on there. i'll keep you keep her on there. i'll keep her. i'll keep her on. just to say normally kill say how do they normally kill their say how do they normally kill the construction. so she's >> construction. so she's working now. having >> construction. so she's wyeah, now. having >> construction. so she's wyeah, exactly. having >> construction. so she's wyeah, exactly. yeah.iving right. >> good stuff. a very little chance of obviously anyone dying here, think what here, though. so i think what we'll whilst this is we'll do is whilst this is happening, i really feel happening, all i can really feel the on my arm here. the pressure on my arm here. >> she's not actually >> well, she's not actually constricting. doing constricting. what she's doing is like she is she's treating you like she would a branch. she would a tree or a branch. she just doesn't want on the just doesn't want to fall on the floor. she's floor. so that's nice. she's she's on. so you she's just holding on. so you have stay in that position. have to stay in that position. i will stay. >> let me. oh, she has little tail. >> oh, there you now she's >> oh, there you go. now she's locked on. >> you've got the death grip. >> so what i'm going do is >> so what i'm going to do is i'm going do greatest britain i'm going to do greatest britain and right as i and union jackass right now as i slowly strangled to death. slowly get strangled to death. so carol can i get so can i go? carol can i get your greatest britain me, your greatest britain for me, please? yeah. your greatest britain for me, ple nigel'eah. your greatest britain for me, ple nigel farage emerge >> nigel farage would emerge triumphant from the jungle last night. didn't win, but he night. no, he didn't win, but he really because of really did, because millions of people the nice
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people now see him as the nice bloke benjamin we'll go bloke he is. benjamin we'll go for your. >> she going around the >> okay. she is going around the neck is. really? >> she is. really? >> she is. really? >> there go. you're okay. >> who cares about the greatest brits? yeah >> okay. >> okay. >> let's it. benjamin. oh no. >> let's do it. benjamin. oh no. oh, going red. >> he's going red. >> he's going red. >> there go. going >> there you go. you're going red. we like my great britain. >> my greatest britain is probably you right now, but otherwise lineker otherwise it's gary lineker saying opposes the saying that he opposes the rwanda policy. hopefully that won't as my greatest. >> britain is erg for >> britain is the erg for exposing the and the exposing the flaws and the loopholes plan. loopholes in the rwanda plan. pubuc loopholes in the rwanda plan. public know, the public need to know, okay, the greatest going to be greatest britain is going to be nigel for surviving the nigel farage for surviving the snake the jungle. snake in the jungle. >> although having had honey around i he was a bit around me, i think he was a bit of a pussycat. a bit absolutely lovely . there was a moment when lovely. there was a moment when i thought i was going die. i thought i was going to die. okay. your union jackass? okay. who's your union jackass? >> is khalife , awb's >> mine is khalife, awb's working men's club. who was considering taking word men considering taking the word men out of working men's club because puts women off. no, because it puts women off. no, it doesn't. my dad chairman it doesn't. my dad was chairman of working club of his working men's club for 30 years. of women in there. years. plenty of women in there. this the woke infiltra this is the woke mob infiltra hating workers. >> all right. it's a strong one again. benjamin. what a show. >> mine is the mcdonald's worker
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who threw water over a homeless person outside. and was just person outside. and it was just utterly unbelievable. you can see it there . they're just see it there. they're just washing water over someone trying to sleep. it's terrible. you what an obscene you know what an obscene attitude human beings. you know what an obscene attititie human beings. you know what an obscene attitit is human beings. you know what an obscene attitit is that human beings. you know what an obscene attitit is that is, human beings. you know what an obscene attitit is that is, i must] beings. you know what an obscene attitit is that is, i must say,ngs. no, it is that is, i must say, very, very infuriating. >> belinda, his union. >> belinda, his union. >> has my union mega jack >> jack has my union mega jack ass is lineker. >> jack has my union mega jack ass is lineker . yes. the ass is gary lineker. yes. the ivory tower dwelling, sanctimonious, smug moron that i would like to cottonwool or cnsps would like to cottonwool or crisps in between his ears. i don't know what is burn himself, but if he wants to make an argument about rwanda , stand for argument about rwanda, stand for election like the rest of us have to do, instead of whining on platform give on your platform we give you. he's listening. on your platform we give you. he' do listening. on your platform we give you. he' do you;tening. on your platform we give you. he' do you really? >> do you really? >> do you really? >> well, the winner. the winner of red yeah. is is a of the red acas. yeah. is is a mcdonald's coach called benjamin. you've won, which means to . you get to means you get to. you get to take now. no, no, no, no, ho. 110. >> no. >> i'll take honey. >> i'll take honey. >> no, she's benjamin . >> no, she's benjamin. >> no, she's benjamin. >> take snake. >> take snake. >> snake. i actually. >> snake. i actually. >> i went to live in the jungle recently with pythons, but i didn't get this close to them, thankfully. >> all right, well, thank you
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very much, everybody who has been watching and listening to this . this show. >> i have probably got about 30s left to live life. i've made sure that you tune into headunes sure that you tune into headlines later. i'd like to thank my wonderful panel. i would to thank you would also like to thank you very for bringing this very much for bringing in this lovely problem. lovely snake. no problem. anytime. and thank you and honey, and honey, all the best and headliners up next. and i'll headliners is up next. and i'll see tomorrow when see you tomorrow when i introduce a live into introduce a live panther into the studio . what could possibly the studio. what could possibly go wrong there? make sure you keep it tuesdays gb news this evening . take care. evening. take care. >> brighter outlook with boxt solar sponsors of weather on . gb solar sponsors of weather on. gb news evening. >> i'm alex deakin and this is your latest weather update from the met office for gb news. after most of us had a dry monday, expect some heavy downpours as tomorrow thunderstorms possible and some gusty winds. thanks to this area of low pressure. slowly but surely, it's been heading towards us over the past 24 hours and now providing some pretty rain across
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pretty heavy rain across northern where northern ireland, where it's likely linger for most of the likely to linger for most of the night. and that cause some night. and that could cause some disruption. do met disruption. so we do have a met office yellow warning in place elsewhere. does tend to elsewhere. the rain does tend to move through, could drop move through, but could drop quite a bit of rain in a short space of that band space of time as that band crosses england wales into southern of southern scotland. touch of frost in northern frost possible in northern scotland for a time, but generally temperatures as generally temperatures rising as the night goes on and the rain moves into north—east england. southeast scotland first thing tomorrow and then it kind of lingers again most of the lingers again for most of the day. because been day. so again, because it's been so could cause some so wet, that could cause some issues further south. there'll be showers, heavy showers and the potential for some large hail stones as these showers drift through. they should move through will be quite through because it will be quite blustery. and if it brightens up, get up to 12, 13 up, we could get up to 12, 13 degrees. but feeling a lot cooler than that , 7 or 8 with cooler than that, 7 or 8 with the more persistent over the more persistent rain over southeast scotland and north—east slowly north—east england, that slowly fizzles night but fizzles on tuesday night but stays fairly damp across eastern parts of england on wednesday . parts of england on wednesday. elsewhere looking brighter elsewhere looking much brighter and drier. and that is the theme for the second half of the week.
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low pressure systems disappear and a high moves in promising a lot. drier for weather most of us. for the second half of this week, that warm feeling inside from boxt boiler as sponsors of weather on . gb news. weather on. gb news. >> who is it ? >> who is it? >> 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. i was >> john cleese. haha. i was married to a therapist and you survived. i thought we were getting hugh laurie second best. i'm bellissima. you interviewed saddam hussein? what's that like? i was terrified. i'm playing strip poker with these three. >> oh , no, thank you . >> oh, no, thank you. >> oh, no, thank you. >> cds need to be put in alphabetical order. >> oh, are you going to be problematic again ? problematic again? >> the dinosaur. our sundays on gb news is
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>> good evening with gb news. the top story this hour, a group of tory mps who think the government's rwanda policy needs a complete rewrite say they will vote for rishi sunak legislation tomorrow. but they warned they'd oppose any amendments that would risk the uk breaching the rule of law. the european research group says the current law
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provides an incomplete solution and a total overhaul may be the only way to stop the boats. well, earlier, illegal migration minister michael tomlinson said he's confident the plan will work . work. >> this is the toughest piece of legislation that's ever been tabled before parliament. this is what we're determined to debate tomorrow. this is what we will debate tomorrow and we'll come in due come to amendments in due course. i'm convinced course. but i'm convinced because we've seen and because we've seen it and i'm convinced the convinced because of the government's that government's legal position that we've afternoon , we've published this afternoon, that toughest piece that this is the toughest piece of legislation that this does meet the concerns of the supreme court and we're going to have that robust debate tomorrow afternoon. >> other news today, >> well, in other news today, the prime minister been busy the prime minister has been busy defending controversial defending his controversial eat out out scheme during out to help out scheme during lockdown, saying it was merely a micro policy within a bigger plan to reopen the uk. rishi sunak told the covid inquiry it had been designed specifically to safely lift lockdown restrictions . he began his restrictions. he began his evidence with an apology to
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