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tv   Patrick Christys Tonight Replay  GB News  December 14, 2023 3:00am-5:01am GMT

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for nigel to be pm.7 but our politicians, well, for nigel to be pm? but our politicians, well, they really are a bad joke, aren't they ? are a bad joke, aren't they? >> mr speaker? christmas is a time of peace on earth and goodwill to all. has anyone told the tory party ha ha ha ha. >> i'm asking how much worse could it get under a labour government last night, don mark francois elianne, the leader of the right wing. five families let the country down over rwanda so tory mps sirjohn hayes will so tory mps sir john hayes will front up on how that shambles was allowed to happen. he will join me live. don't miss that . join me live. don't miss that. plus, harry and meghan are officially announced as the biggest losers in hollywood. gary might actually be gary lineker might actually be in trouble with the bbc for once and you'll never guess what happens next. in this shocking clip. here we go. yes. are you going to have to tune in to find out? find out shortly. and tonight, i'm joined by christine hamilton, adam brooks and matthew laws, a top team
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tonight. this is patrick christys. tonight and it's all . action loads to get through. email me right now gbviews@gbnews.com. would you vote for nigel? i'll see you after the headlines . see you after the headlines. >> patrick. thank you and good evening to you. well, police are still searching for a missing mother of three. they say they're in contact as well with detectives who worked on the nicola bulley case to learn lessons from their investing nation. well, cctv footage has been released showing the 55 year old who's missing . she's year old who's missing. she's called gaynor lord. she's seen here. if you're watching on television, leaving work on friday afternoon . she was last friday afternoon. she was last seen while walking through norwich city centre and her coat has been discovered in the
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nearby river wensum in norfolk. that's prompted a huge search by police fire crews and the coastguard police are saying she may have entered the water. underwater teams are searching there today . there today. >> we are continuing the work that we have been doing since friday night here at wensum park, conducting searches both on land and in the water. today, we've been joined by a specialist dive team who are in the water now and they're supporting the search in terms of getting into those deeper parts of the river wensum, which then obviously supports all of then obviously supports all of the search work that we've already done here at the river. >> politics now and ribbing the tories over infighting was the main focus of today's christmas themed prime minister's question time. the final session of the year. time. the final session of the year . 38 time. the final session of the year. 38 rebel time. the final session of the year . 38 rebel conservative mps year. 38 rebel conservative mps chose to abstain, not vote against it. the safety of rwanda bill last night. so it passed with a majority of 44. but the
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labour leader, sir keir starmer, took aim at the government, accusing them of being in meltdown. rishi sunak immediately hit back, saying numbers on migration and the economy speak for themselves . economy speak for themselves. >> boats down by a third. and crucially, as we heard from honourable friend tax cuts coming to help working families in new year . in the new year. >> mr speaker , he can spin it >> mr speaker, he can spin it all he likes, but the whole country can see that yet again. the tory party is in meltdown and everyone else is paying the price . now he's kicked the can. price. now he's kicked the can. >> he kicked the can down the road, but in the last week his his mps, his mps have said of him he's not capable enough. >> he's inexperienced . ernst >> he's inexperienced. ernst he's arrogant, a really bad politician , sir keir starmer politician, sir keir starmer well , at northern politician, sir keir starmer well, at northern ireland's main political parties from stormont and the government that failed to conclude their discussions as planned tonight, that means
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crunch talks on power sharing and funding will now be extended into next week. >> it comes after rishi sunak told the commons that he stands ready to legislate to keep northern ireland in the uk's internal market, but only if devolved government is restored . devolved government is restored. the stormont administration is effectively collapsed in february of last year after the dup left in protest over post brexit trading agreements. their leader, sir jeffrey donaldson , leader, sir jeffrey donaldson, has insisted there is more work to be done before his party's prepared to return to power sharing . now, as you've been sharing. now, as you've been heanng sharing. now, as you've been hearing , the tv presenter gary hearing, the tv presenter gary lineker may have breached the bbc's social media guidelines in recent posts about politicians. the government's candidate for bbc chairman says gary lineker has criticised some of the defence secretary grant shapps appears to be in breach of the corporation's guidelines . means corporation's guidelines. means the tv presenter was among a group of celebrities who signed a letter calling for the
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government to scrap its rwanda scheme . well, speaking to mps at scheme. well, speaking to mps at a pre—appointment hearing, samir shah said he didn't think it had been very helpful for lineker to comment . on been very helpful for lineker to comment. on tv online, dab+ radio and the tune—in app . this radio and the tune—in app. this is gb news. britain's news channel. >> roll up. >> roll up. >> roll up another day at the circus. it started well for rishi sunak, fresh from seeing off the rwanda bill, renegades by abstain from the vote mark don francois leoni, the boss of the five families, showed his hand. they are rebels without a cause. but then this morning, sunak was brought back to down earth. a new yougov poll released earlier on has the prime minister at his lowest popularity rating ever, finding himself at a lowly —49. that is less popular than novel chocolate at children's birthday
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party, a whopping 70% say they have an unfair opinion of him. and if that wasn't bad enough, sunak's worst nightmare has come rolling back into town . nigel rolling back into town. nigel farage. and it turns out that the tories love him. the public have got jungle fever. nigel has net approval ratings of plus 18 among conservative 2019 voters. sunakis among conservative 2019 voters. sunak is down at minus three. mark minus three. essentially more people would rather pass a kidney stone than have him as their leader. so is it any surprise that at pmqs earlier he lost his rag a little bit with keir starmer across the despatch box , a 11 year old liam walker box, a 11 year old liam walker homeless this christmas , he homeless this christmas, he wrote a letter to santa saying, please, can i have a forever home? >> i don't want any new toys . i >> i don't want any new toys. i just want all my old toys out of storage. i just want us to be happy again. >> mr speaker, if he really cared about building homes. no,
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no, no, no, no , no, no. no, no, no, no, no, no. >> if he really cared about building homes when there was an opportunity in this house. >> mr speaker , in this house, to >> mr speaker, in this house, to back our plans to reform defective eu laws to unlock 100,000 new homes. mr speaker, what did he do? what did he do? he went in front of the cameras and said one thing and came in here and blocked it. typical shame , opportunism . shame, opportunism. >> i actually think it's quite nice to see him a bit pumped up, to be honest with you. and i don't really like questions like that from keir starmer, but rishi is right about one thing there. starmer is a shameless opportunist . there. starmer is a shameless opportunist. this there. starmer is a shameless opportunist . this thatcher opportunist. this thatcher loving labour leader is strolling into downing street without political without a single political principle, nor a decent gag to speaker . speaken >> christmas is a time of peace on earth and goodwill to all. has anyone told the tory party . has anyone told the tory party. >> ha ha ha ha grief because
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here is actually what we know about labour and starmer. >> he has no plan of his own as far as i can tell, to stop the boats. apart from taking an added 100,000 migrants or so from his mates at the eu, he's hamstrung and at hamstrung by the unions and at odds with his palestine supporting mps. ten of starmer's frontbench walked away over the issue that is not a party ready for government, plus everything that labour does have control of seems to go up. nottingham seems to go belly up. nottingham city council bankrupt birmingham city council bankrupt birmingham city council bankrupt and what a legacy. mark drakeford is leaving behind after he announced his resignation as wales first minister today. a health service in tatters. nhs waiting times at a record high and a draconian anti motorist 20 mile per hour speed limit. his crowning glory was getting turfed out of a mosque alongside keir starmer. the only thing that kept sunak in office last night was the threat of his mps voting against him because then they would have voted for a labour government. so tonight i am asking ,
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labour government. so tonight i am asking, and i think this is relevant given what we saw last night with that farce with the rwanda bill. much worse do rwanda bill. how much worse do you think a labour government would be gbviews@gbnews.com? get those views rolling in now as well as whether or not you would vote for nigel to be pm. the inboxis vote for nigel to be pm. the inbox is lit up in front of me. i'll go to that shortly . hardly i'll go to that shortly. hardly a but let's get a surprise there, but let's get the of my panel. i've the thoughts of my panel. i've got broadcaster got author and broadcaster christine hamilton. i've got businessman and activist adam brooks party brooks and former labour party adviser matthew laza christine , adviser matthew laza christine, would things actually be worse under labour? >> could they be any worse ? >> could they be any worse? >> could they be any worse? >> this is what i'm asking. you know, they couldn't. >> i don't think they could. i don't think there'll be a massive amount of difference, to be perfectly honest. i mean, the tories have spent 13 years pretending tories . they pretending to be tories. they can't now in years, 12 months can't now in 12 years, 12 months time, suddenly turn that around . time, suddenly turn that around. it's too late. they're going to be labour a massive be handing labour a massive debt, massive economic difficulties, huge problems . difficulties, huge problems. >> interesting. labour will know what it feels like.
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>> well, very , very unlike what >> well, very, very unlike what the tories handed to labour in 1997 when they'd had ken clarke as chancellor, who'd got we'd come out of the exchange rate mechanism he'd got or failed to join. he'd got everything in order, handed them a massive gold and economic legacy . it gold and economic legacy. it isn't going to be like that this time. they're going to find themselves very, very constrained. the tories are constrained. and the tories are so woke we might as well have a labour government. we really might. so i don't think it will be any worse. matthew i'm sure will exactly the will tell us exactly what the labour going labour government are going to do. nice, better we'll do. it'd be nice, better we'll get, we'll to matthew. get, we'll get to matthew. >> the plan with >> i've got the plan with me. you've plan, you you've got the plan, have you got stuff the tories have had? >> give him it. >> give him it. >> he gave me. go on. >> yeah. he gave me. no, go on. right. adam do you think. you right. adam do you think. do you think made under think it could be made under labour or . or think it could be made under labour or. or not. >> it's going to horrific. >> it's going to be horrific. and i think tories have and i think the tories have failed the last 13 years failed over the last 13 years to many promises broken. we've got rishi that has either rishi sunak that has either u—turned or just gone back on anything they said from the leadership race to the policies in the last few months , he's
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in the last few months, he's probably the weakest prime minister that we've had in decades. but we've we're going to have a prime minister in keir starmer and that is very likely. that wouldn't say what a woman is. backbone . he is. so he's got no backbone. he just doesn't want to offend anyone. he kneeled for blm . you anyone. he kneeled for blm. you know, the woke issues are going to go out of control . the party to go out of control. the party is funded by the marxist unions. so god knows what's going to happen with all the pay and that nhs that's going to be bust in five years. it will improve, but it'll be bust in five years. i am dreading a labour government that's already look, things can that's already. look, things can get worse, you know, it is bad this country, but they're going to get a lot worse under labour matthews got his big plan. >> oh, i gave him. >> oh, i gave him. >> first of all, let's let's . i >> first of all, let's let's. i think we all agree that this government is a complete disaster, yesterday disaster, that yesterday was a shambles we need shambles and that we need a general election now to the general election now to put the government but government out of misery. but more importantly, the more importantly, to give the country it needs country the fresh start it needs . completely disagree with . and i completely disagree with the premise, patrick, because
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it's not going a lot it's not going to be a lot worse. be a lot worse. it's going to be a lot better because we're going to have a leadership that believes the this country the best days of this country are us, not behind us. are ahead of us, not behind us. it's this united kingdom belief that people who believed in brexit were were denigrated for, wasn't it? >> what you believing in? oh, it's it ? belief it's belief. is it? belief doesn't anything. absolutely. doesn't do anything. absolutely. >> why labour's got a >> which is why labour's got a clear set of commitments clear set of policy commitments across the issues. adam very kindly helped me keep up to date with latest plan on with the latest plan on migration . but you know, which migration. but you know, which is what the latest plan on migration above all else , to migration is above all else, to smash the gangs which the tories have failed they've taken have failed to do. they've taken their ball, they've their eye off the ball, they've spent all the time looking at rwanda, let's remind rwanda, which let's remind ourselves that we've sent more home secretaries, we've sent zero seekers to rwanda . zero asylum seekers to rwanda. and what we actually need to do is , is smash the gangs, use the is, is smash the gangs, use the terror legislation in against the holders proper the gang holders have proper police etcetera. police cooperation, etcetera. but home, what we saw today but at home, what we saw today is there's sunak boasting about the economy at pmqs. he obviously hasn't his obviously hasn't read his newspaper this morning see newspaper this morning to see
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what last month we dipped as a country. we our economic growth is we fresh start. >> matthew would labour deport illegal immigrants? yes or no? >> of course. yes. if people are people are turned down in the system. if people system. if people have if people have turned down system, of have turned down the system, of course to start course the government to start deporting immigrants, course the government to start dep never immigrants, course the government to start dep never in immigrants, course the government to start dep never in a immigrants, course the government to start dep never in a million grants, but never in a million governments across europe it . governments across europe do it. my governments across europe do it. my in the my friends in denmark, in the labour government, the social labour government, in the social democratic do it in democratic government do it in denmark, they at point, denmark, they at one point, at one wanted to fund ferry one point wanted to fund a ferry that would take migrants to an island off denmark and then leave them there and then outprice the migrants from being able to get the ferry back . able to get the ferry back. >> so if we're talking if we're fishing in that pond, then that's what we're doing, is what i'm saying is there is no correlation people on correlation between people on the weak on migration. >> and indeed, if we if there was offshore processing was an offshore processing centre worked , we were centre that worked, we were in favour, would in favour of it. >> just politely. we'll go to the panel. there is no correlation between on correlation between people on the being the left and being weak on migration. i point migration. can i just point you towards european union's migration. can i just point you towarbordereuropean union's
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migration. can i just point you towarborder scheme] union's migration. can i just point you towarborder scheme andion's migration. can i just point you towarborder scheme and what open border scheme and what angela germany angela merkel did to germany when the old syrian? when it came to the old syrian? >> was a conservative. oh, >> she was a conservative. oh, great. >> she was a conservative. oh, gre all okay. well, what i >> all right. okay. well, what i want going to do? want what is labour going to do? >> mind illegal migration, >> never mind illegal migration, which it's appalling >> never mind illegal migration, whi(nobody it's appalling >> never mind illegal migration, whi(nobody wantst's appalling >> never mind illegal migration, whi(nobody wants to appalling >> never mind illegal migration, whi(nobody wants to app.these and nobody wants to see these boats. and rishi an idiot boats. and rishi was an idiot to say would boats. say he would stop the boats. absolutely. he can't stop the boats because hasn't the boats because he hasn't got the backbone going to turn them around. >> he's not. that's what he should do. he should turn them around. they should be shepherded a little bit further down a big down the beach, put into a big passenger ferry and sent off back france enough back to france with enough fuel to enough to to get there and not enough to get but what is labour get back. but what is labour going to do about legal migration? what they to migration? what is they going to do students do about all these students who come these visas? come in on these student visas? they can bring their which come in on these student visas? the tories3ring their which come in on these student visas? the tories i ing their which come in on these student visas? the tories i know their which come in on these student visas? the tories i know absolutely,h christine. >> we agree. >> we agree. >> but are you going to stop that? well, the thing that that? well, the first thing that we going do is we that we're going to do is make sure there's make sure that there's no undercutting himself undercutting rishi sunak himself has last the reason we has spent the last the reason we put 700,000 because put 700,000 is because last yean put 700,000 is because last year, little list. >> it wasn't a little list. it was a long list and was a very long list and included like graphic included things like graphic designers, a shortage, occupations. to occupations. we called for it to go. the tories did it go. at least the tories did it last too but yes,
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last week. too late. but yes, we've got to clamp down on these dodgy routes. all right. we've got to clamp down on these docokay.|tes. all right. we've got to clamp down on these docokay. so. all right. we've got to clamp down on these docokay. so. all radam, >> okay. so look, adam, obviously you are firm. so, christine, the christine, you're firmly of the view could view that actually things could probably worse probably not get that much worse and fit paper between. >> well, hang on a minute. before anybody interprets that as that i want a labour as thinking that i want a labour government. of course, don't government. of course, i don't think they they're everything they they're socially, they don't believe, you etcetera etcetera. socially, they don't believe, youi etcetera etcetera. socially, they don't believe, youi thinkra etcetera. socially, they don't believe, youi think anyone era. >> i don't think anyone for a single ever you, single second he's ever met you, christine that christine would believe that you were bang in favour of comrade christine. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> you firmly are of the >> you you firmly are of the view that despite how it may seem and seem right now, it would and could get worse. >> and be voting for the >> and i won't be voting for the tories. i certainly vote tories. i certainly won't vote for believe after for labour. but i believe after five the labour five years of the next labour government, to government, which it's going to be government, be a labour government, this country complete , country will be complete, unrecognisable in all aspects of life. i think it is going to collapse. >> do you think they'd go after the social issues? because if they haven't got money spend they haven't got money to spend they haven't got money to spend they haven't got money to spend they have go after the social. >> i think it's think it's >> i think it's i think it's going to well, i think it's going to well, i think it's going to well, i think it's going to go further left with starmer in the next five years. >> absolutely not. >> absolutely. absolutely not. what is what you'll get. what you see is what you'll get. you'll starmer led
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you'll get a keir starmer led government. keir has been very clear being clear that all the people being selected to be labour candidates and labour mps, if people selected to be labour candidates and for labour mps, if people selected to be labour candidates and for them,jr mps, if people selected to be labour candidates and for them, areips, if people selected to be labour candidates and for them, are all if people selected to be labour candidates and for them, are all in people vote for them, are all in starmer's unions and the unions will get the biggest donors to the party the the labour party isn't the union, it's the guy who started autoglass. >> what's he going do about >> what's he going to do about protecting protecting protecting women, protecting british culture, protecting the british culture, protecting the british life ? british way of life? >> i wonder. i do wonder whether , example, not having gender , for example, not having gender as self recognition which which the to scotland. the snp tried to do in scotland. >> also remember the >> let's also remember the viewers need to remember that keir prime keir starmer and next prime minister wanted a second referendum on brexit. he basically did believe basically didn't did not believe in until he in democracy until he effectively had one in the nine 2019 general election and look how people how disappointed people are. >> happened in 2016 was the >> what happened in 2016 was the second the eu . second referendum on the eu. >> all right, lively start. you love to see it. get your emails coming in gbviews@gbnews.com. i'll very shortly . i'll go to them very shortly. still though, harry and still to come, though, harry and meghan's foundation meghan's archewell foundation hit whopping £8.7 million hit by a whopping £8.7 million drop in donations, which i think is unbelievable considering the profile that they've got. but they also branded they have also been branded hollywood's losers ,
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hollywood's biggest losers, which i think is quite hard to do . we've also prince harry do. we've also got prince harry nightclub revelations and a brand clip of kate brand new clip of kate middleton's university antics in the crown. top author angela levin delivers the royal dispatch shortly . but up next in dispatch shortly. but up next in the head to head is nigel farage's popularity soars above rishi sunak amongst tory voters. should the tory right choose the gb news star as our next prime minister going head to head, we've got edwina currie locking horns with belinda de lucy on nige's future . that's next. nige's future. that's next. also, how would you very lucky people like to win ten grand in cold hard cash, brand new tech and some shopping vouchers. well, you could be the winner of our very first great british giveaway giveaway. easy for me to say all the details. now this week we're launching the great british giveaway. >> your chance to grab some amazing prizes and start your new year. the right way. you could win an incredible £10,000 in tax free cash to spend on anything you like. imagine
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having all of that extra cash in your bank account. we'll also bnng 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 spendin 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 text gb win to 84 902 text cost £2 plus one standard network rate message or post your name and to number a gb zero one po box 80 690 derby e1 nine uk only entrance must be 18 or over lines close at 5 pm. on friday. the 5th of january. full terms and privacy notice at gbnews.com forward slash win . gbnews.com forward slash win. good luck . all the inbox is on fire. >> trevor's been on. he's the only man capable of putting this country back on the road. he's talking about nigel farage. well, up next, would you vote for nigel to farage be prime
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minister? way minister? that's coming your way in the head to
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weekend at 3 pm. on gb news, the people's channel, britain's news channel . news channel. >> welcome back, esteemed royal journalist angela levin is waiting in the wings. but first, it's waiting in the wings. but first, wsfime waiting in the wings. but first, it's time for the head to head . it's time for the head to head. fresh from its triumphant run to the final of i'm a celeb gb news superstar nigel farage landed back in blighty today and he was
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straight back in the office just as a bombshell. new poll revealed that the brexit broker's popularity has soared to new heights. nigel's approval rating with tory voters has risen to a whopping plus 18, whilst rishi sunak's plummeted to a dismal minus three after his rwanda bill made it through the commons last night. his rwanda bill made it through the commons last night . and the commons last night. and after this message earlier today from a fired up farage, the prime minister might want to keep a look over his shoulder, watch and listen. >> government is in desperate trouble , headed for catastrophic trouble, headed for catastrophic defeat . they've no idea what's defeat. they've no idea what's coming track towards coming down the track towards them and i think the last thing i heard before i went into the jungle was that cameron was back. but if he's got bad, back. but if he's got that bad, they must be in real trouble. and that he's just and i see that he's just about managed through vote managed to squeak through a vote on . but i mean, it's going on land. but i mean, it's going to make no difference at all. no, in dire, dire no, they're in dire, dire trouble . trouble. >> well, i see nigel's got a suit on that's the same colour as my socks this evening, which are causing quite lot
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are causing quite a lot of outrage in the inbox. vaiews@gbnews.com. but i am asking a proper question tonight. should the tory right unite behind nigel farage to save the party? let me know your thoughts. email views and thoughts. email me gb views and gbnews.com. tweet me at gb news while you're there, go and vote in poll . the results coming in our poll. the results coming your but to debate in our poll. the results coming yournow, but to debate in our poll. the results coming yournow, i'm but to debate in our poll. the results coming yournow, i'm joinedt to debate in our poll. the results coming yournow, i'm joined by» debate in our poll. the results coming yournow, i'm joined by former; this now, i'm joined by former tory minister edwina currie and former brexit party mep belinda deluise. ladies, thank you very much. i normally go ladies first, but i, i can't. don't know what to choose now, belinda, i'll go with you . do belinda, i'll go with you. do you think that the tory right should unite by nigel? >> i think anyone with principles who commits to reducing immigration controls our borders should get behind nigel farage. otherwise they're just lame ducks. following a completely incompetent international stage submissive group of one nation tories and one nation tories almost destroyed the party back in 2019 under theresa may they have not read the room . they've got
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read the room. they've got control back of the party having ousted all the pretty much all the right wingers and they're destined to for defeat. you know, nigel is a man with vision. he has he's a conviction politician as rare as hen's teeth these days . patrick and teeth these days. patrick and when you're flying through a storm, which is what this country is doing at the moment, you need a maverick, you need a maximus, not a technocratic penfold you know, we need to have a leader that actually puts the british people first instead of this huge chunk of the conservative party that prioritises pleasing the international stage above british safety, national security and the taxpayer payer. people are fed up with it. they don't feel safe with the conservative party not selling the uk out at every opportunity to schmooze with their international buddies. nigel farage is utterly devoted to this country . farage is utterly devoted to this country. he's a duty service, discipline man, and i think he inspires us. rishi he inspires no one.
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>> all right. belinda's had a weetabix. gosh, edwina , come weetabix. gosh, edwina, come back to that. would you vote for nigel? >> i was just wondering if you were going to be able to let me get in a word in edgeways with all that tirade . all that tirade. >> and actually, that's the point. patrick it's very easy for people to make speeches. that's all that nigel farage is doing , that's all that nigel farage is doing, running the government, running the country is a great deal harder, and it requires some very difficult choices. choices that nobody wants to make and everyone can object to, and make a fuss and everyone can make a fuss about. but actually running the country the hardest job of country is the hardest job of all. i don't think that we should be considering having nigel as a senior conservative active, let's put it like that. not least because in our system, in the general action that we're facing very, very shortly in the coming we have first past coming year, we have first past the post, not like the system in which belinda got elected to the european parliament first. past the post means that you have to do more than appeal to your own activists. you have to appeal to
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the centre as well , and you the centre as well, and you cannot win an election just by having tory voters or people that say that they're tory voters or might be tory voters. you have to actually appeal to the centre and you have to do rather better than the other side at appealing to the centre . side at appealing to the centre. now what means is that now what that means is that nigel farage, you know, bless him, he's , he's toxic to an him, he's, he's toxic to an awful lot of people thought he did the jungle. did very well in the jungle. well, not surprisingly, well thought he would do well, but for an awful lot of people, he's what will get them out on the doorsteps to fight against us. he is not good news and i don't think he's going much further. >> that's interesting. belinda go on. >> all right. okay the conservative party have proved to the voters not to trust them on illegal immigration, not to trust them on controlling our borders. they've literally proved it to us. so therefore, the idea that there's some sort of centrist group of people that are going to appeal to the majority, it is not centrist. having open borders. it is not centrist , having hyper having open borders. it is not
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centrist, having hyper mass immigration against the democratic will of the people . democratic will of the people. thatis democratic will of the people. that is extremist. in fact , that is extremist. in fact, nigel, don't have to argue . nigel, don't have to argue. >> belinda, nigel is actually very edwina. >> edwina , you know how this >> edwina, you know how this works over zoom. all right. beunda works over zoom. all right. belinda finished now. edwina belinda, finish and we'll go back to you. >> all right. i'm highly sceptical of that, but in any case, we need do if we case, what we need to do if we want to make sure and i don't think labour think you want a labour government led by somebody whose last efforts were to try get last efforts were to try and get jeremy into office. if we jeremy corbyn into office. if we want sure that we don't want to make sure that we don't have a labour government, want to make sure that we don't have a labour government , then have a labour government, then splitting as you are. splitting the vote as you are. >> okay, but is that good enough? all right. okay sorry, sorry, sorry. going i'm sorry, sorry. i'm going to i'm going come this going to come in on this because. really good because. is that really good enough? all right. you don't enough? all right. if you don't vote for the man want, you vote for the man you want, you might is in keir might get someone who is in keir starmer. belinda. is that what the got left ? the tories have got left? >> but such a reflection >> but this is such a reflection on how weak the tory party is, is that they keep going back to. yeah, but vote for us because the labour party is worse and
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blame the brexit party. blame reform uk for taking your votes. no, the tory party is just not good enough. the country deserves better and it took the trust of the voters in 2019 and it squander it. it never liked their new voters in 2019. they are completely beholden to the international stage above our interests. nigel farage. i met him when i was 19. for many decades i've known him and he inspired me to have the courage to be disliked by the bbc. approved liberal elite, which the tory party, neil down to. they've had their day. they completely squandered their majority . why would you reward majority. why would you reward them with. >> all right, edwina , go on. all >> all right, edwina, go on. all right, go on. have right, edwina. go on. have a good one. >> three of us. who's actually in the north england in the north of england right now seat, can now in a red wall seat, i can tell you that that's a load of rubbish. we have to sure rubbish. we have to make sure you're quite right the you're quite right that the government is performing as well as that those as possible and that those immigration numbers come down. as possible and that those imnthere on numbers come down. as possible and that those imnthere on rother rs come down. as possible and that those imnthere on rother thingse down. but there are other things as well, which well, like the economy, which actually turning actually seems to be turning around very well and i'm very
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satisfied we'll see more satisfied that we'll see more progress before the progress on that before the general election. >> you explain. >> edwina, how do you explain. no, >> edwina, how do you explain. n0, , >> edwina, how do you explain. no, , no, sorry. just want i no, no, no, sorry. i just want i just edwina. just want to go back to edwina. how you explain the polls? how do you explain the polls? because rishi sunak is absolutely plummeting , whereas absolutely plummeting, whereas nigel farage is amongst conservative voters in 2019. so red wall seats. nigel farage is way more popular. he's plus 18 compared to sunak's minus three. so with respect to edwina, how do you explain that? well the plummeting has happened in the last couple of weeks, and i don't think the row over rwanda has been any help accompanied by some horrible figures on immigration, which we really should have been on top of a lot a time before. a long time before. >> with that . we have to >> i agree with that. we have to do we can always do do better. we can always do better, but you do an awful lot better, but you do an awful lot better in government. let me tell you, than in opposition. okay >> final belinda. look >> final word, belinda. look really, i suppose, i mean, it's pretty obvious you would vote for you ? for nigel, wouldn't you? >> way all the way. he's >> all the way all the way. he's absolutely the man that the hero this country needs and the conservative party have taken
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people's votes for granted for so many years and they have laughed at the faces of their voters and completely betrayed them because they do not have them because they do not have the spine to stand up to international, terrible, harmful, outdated treaties. they've always prioritised them above the british people. nigel would never do that. and edwina , would never do that. and edwina, quickly, why? if the french can ignore strasbourg rulings and deport terrorist sympathisers, do our government not do the same because they have no spine, no political will to ever put the british people first above international bad law? >> all right, then. very final word, edwina. >> me. goodness me. >> oh, goodness me. goodness me. you know, think some of this , you know, i think some of this, um, difficulty with immigrants is actually playing against us in many parts of the country and bearin in many parts of the country and bear in mind that majority bear in mind that the majority of the country are not of seats in the country are not in the red wall area. they're in the south of england and they're the south of england and they're the is not nearly as the feeling is not nearly as strong as i hear belinda saying mean . i've served strong as i hear belinda saying mean. i've served in strong as i hear belinda saying mean . i've served in parliament mean. i've served in parliament and fought many elections in the uk parliament. belinda i don't
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think has ever been able to succeed in that. she was able to get into the i've never i've never put myself corrupt internationally supported system called called proportional representation doesn't work like this in the united kingdom. you have to play by uk rules and you're not going to make any progress while we have the system that we've got . system that we've got. >> edwina good luck , ladies. >> edwina good luck, ladies. >> edwina good luck, ladies. >> that's enough . >> that's enough. >> that's enough. >> thank you. okay all right. well, let's call the head to head. and it was box office. look, both of you. thank you very, very much. i'm very glad i'm not actually physically sat in the of you tonight. in the middle of you tonight. thank you. flooding in. thank you. emails flooding in. sorry, why nigel sorry, but why would nigel wants to suicide? to commit political suicide? joining the tories? the five families should defector reform says is michelle. there we go. look do you agree with? look who do you agree with? would vote for to nigel be look who do you agree with? wouljohn vote for to nigel be look who do you agree with? wouljohn on)te for to nigel be look who do you agree with? wouljohn on twittero nigel be look who do you agree with? wouljohn on twitter says|el be look who do you agree with? wouljohn on twitter says yes,e pm? john on twitter says yes, i would. nigel a man of the would. nigel is a man of the people career people and not a career politician like the of them politician like the rest of them . twitter says nigel is . rodri on twitter says nigel is the only person with any values and only person that will and the only person that will listen to the people. the country then country needs him. then ironically , nigel twitter
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ironically, nigel on twitter says already stood for says he's already stood for election several times and lost. presumably this isn't from nigel farage's own account. what what makes the tories think he'll be successful he's had a successful now? he's only had a little telephone fame. little bit of telephone fame. it's the same as winning an it's not the same as winning an election. look, your election. well, look, your verdict in. 86% of you verdict is now in. 86% of you would vote for nigel farage to be prime minister. 41% of you would not. coming up, he's the tory, right winger whose common sense group was one of the so—called five families that tried sinking rishi sunaks rwanda bill. all right. so after much fuss, what went wrong ? i'm much fuss, what went wrong? i'm going to let you in on a little bit of context now. quickly sorry, producers, i will keep this quick. i woke up to a whatsapp this morning whatsapp message this morning from prominent member of from a very prominent member of the who was the tory. right. who was devastated at the fact that they had not actually voted against this bill and they felt as though they'd let everyone down and that now they've been outmanoeuvred by rishi sunak and
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we as a nation will be stuck with whatever version of rwanda rishi sunak puts forward. i think country was let down think the country was let down massively yesterday by people who claimed to have serious principles sirjohn principles. well, sir john hayes, mp is going to front up to this stuff. okay wasn't me whatsapp by way . he whatsapp me, by the way. he joins give his joins me live to give his insight into the yesterday's commons drama very, very shortly. but first, harry and meghan are mocked as hollywood's biggest as their biggest losers as their archewell foundation is hit by a whopping £8.7 million drop in donations and we've got an epic prince harry nightclub tale that you will not want to miss. angela levin joins me with the royal dispatch. that's
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isabel monday to thursdays from. six till 930 . six till 930. >> the tory right. have a heck of a lot to answer for after yesterday's shenanigans over the rwanda bill. like i said, i woke up this morning first thing to a whatsapp message from a completely distraught tory mp who was saying to me they wish they'd to their guns and they'd stuck to their guns and not abstained. what did and not abstained. what you did and now stuck with what we've now we're stuck with what we've got. john to his got. so sirjohn hayes, to his credit, to come on and credit, is going to come on and explain yesterday's botched rebellion to me shortly, at least can, because least i hope he can, because i think do deserve answers. but think we do deserve answers. but time for our royal dispatch time now for our royal dispatch with author angela levin . with top author angela levin. and who would have thought stabbing everyone in the back would lose friends and influence? well, damning new figures from harry and meghan's
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archewell charity show. the organisation suffered a whopping £8] organisation suffered a whopping £8.7 million plunge in donations in the past year, leaving them with a £537,000 loss. donations fell to just £1.6 million from only two individuals over that penod. only two individuals over that period . now it follows period. now it follows a turbulent year for the sussexes , turbulent year for the sussexes, who dropped harry's vitriolic memoir , spare, and had their memoir, spare, and had their lucrative spotify podcast deal axed after being slammed as grifters. there was a word before that, but we can't possibly read it out. meanwhile, today, harry and meghan have been sensationally labelled hollywood's biggest losers by an industry bible following their whiny netflix documentary . so whiny netflix documentary. so angela levin, are they now a spent force? oh i think they are, actually. >> they've got it all wrong. they had so much opportunity rmt they had so much opportunity rmt they had so many options that they could have done and they hadnt they could have done and they hadn't because i think meghan feels that she knows better than anyone in in any area how it should be done. >> and harry just goes along and
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follows her. a main aim is to be to crush the royal family and certainly king charles, because she didn't get what she wanted. she felt that that she should be listened to first because she was someone who was self—made, whereas princess catherine wasn't. and she just got very annoyed with it being old and the demands. but you know, you can only take a little bit of that. you can have a little wine and then you move on. but you know, this this wine has gone on and on and on and it's gone very soun and on and on and it's gone very sour. and people now think , you sour. and people now think, you know, for goodness sake, you're in you've got in a big house, you've got everything wanted , and now everything you wanted, and now you're still moaning . you're still moaning. >> i don't i mean, fair >> i don't think i mean, fair enough, by the way. you know, i don't meghan don't really think meghan and harry much about harry would care too much about why. to say, despite the why. i have to say, despite the fact i did end up in their fact that i did end up in their netflix documentary, i don't like about twice. like to go on about it twice. and it twice but they and it twice and but they probably care about what the probably do care about what the hollywood bible says. yes. right. has named them right. and that has named them as the biggest losers. >> yes. >> yes. >> and that must a bit. >> and that must cut a bit. >> and that must cut a bit. >> of course it will. it make meghan would be absolutely
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furious, won't be her furious, but it won't be her fault. neither of them want to admit that it's their fault . it admit that it's their fault. it will be someone else's fault. and i think it will be very hard for them to hang on. and in a place once they go place like america, once they go off you, once lose capturing off you, once you lose capturing them, you've had it really it will be very, very hard unless they can get something really big, something imaginary, you know, really sort of something that everybody would really want to see in a surprise . to see in a surprise. >> but i mean, they could like just do some genuine. the thing is, just do some genuine good, right ? that's what i mean. like, right? that's what i mean. like, you back, back a winner in you know, back, back a winner in that regard. i it is that regard. i mean, it is possible. i think one of the issues for a lot of issues is that for a lot of people, their route back to redemption a sob story , redemption is like a sob story, right? so they've kind of told their sob story and that's maybe led to they are. but we're led to where they are. but we're going move on angela, going to move on now, angela, because paddy because tv presenter paddy mcguinness reckons that prince harry ripped a poster of his grandmother, the queen, from the wall of an underground london club. so that she couldn't watch
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his debauched party. listen to this. >> let's get a tap on the shoulder and it's prince harry. i turned around for a sec because i'd had a few and i'm like, sure, man . and he just like, sure, man. and he just went and he just went , i want to went and he just went, i want to go to fernandos . go to fernandos. >> they were all sorts going on. >> they were all sorts going on. >> he was ripping my t shirt off. yeah, yeah. snogging like kissing me and yeah . off. yeah, yeah. snogging like kissing me and yeah. rips rip queen off. well, he said i can't have her watching me do this. >> i was like, amazing . >> i was like, amazing. >> i was like, amazing. >> sounds like a good night, though. >> oh, dear, oh, dear. well, you know that he still feels that his mother is looking down on him, that diana is looking down on him and that she is guiding him. what to do and that she's watching him very , very watching him very, very carefully. feel that. carefully. he does feel that. and the only reason he could do that was feels the same for that was he feels the same for the queen, his grandmother, that she is looking down and she's she is looking down and she's she would be shocked by what he was but he didn't want
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was doing. but so he didn't want to see her. in other words, he felt that he was behaving very badly. but it's very childlike , badly. but it's very childlike, isn't it? you know, i don't mind, mummy. i don't my granny to know what i'm doing. i must hide it . to know what i'm doing. i must hide it. bizarre. >> we liked him more though didn't we, when he was behaving a bit like that. or is that wrong of me. >> no. he was very popular. he was popular royal of was the most popular royal of all time. because liked him all time. because they liked him because naughty and wild because he was naughty and wild and. and he was fun. and now he's just miserable. he was very funny. i mean, i spent 15 months with and he was a great with him and he was a great sense of humour. but now all that's gone and he's just arguing and energy, wasn't he full of energy ? full of energy? >> and finally, angela as well. netflow has released a new trailer for the crown that features kate middleton's infamous unit catwalk appearance that saw her strut her stuff in a see through dress. so this is the original real life pic. good grief . good grief the original real life pic. good grief. good grief is the original real life pic. good grief . good grief is the grief. good grief is the original real life picture of
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the now princess of wales on the occasion in 2002 that she is said to have first caught the eye of prince william. well and everybody else i'm much and this is the crown's dramatic re—enactment . re—enactment. jonathan van—tam . i don't want. jonathan van—tam. i don't want. to take too much time keeping the way you start . and try . and the way you start. and try. and do that right . do that right. >> you want to for. >> you want to for. >> what do you make of that? >> what do you make of that? >> well, it's very sexy, isn't it ? and she does walk with a it? and she does walk with a great veer . yeah. and come on, great veer. yeah. and come on, anybody who wants me, you know , anybody who wants me, you know,
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sort of look and. >> was that the moment, do you think? was that the moment that she i don't want to say snared william because that sounds like bad kate, doesn't it? but bad for kate, doesn't it? but did she looked did she you know, but she looked very attractive and was very attractive and he was obviously with her. obviously taken with her. >> but don't think it was just >> but i don't think it was just that because before that, they'd had rooms just very close to each other and they'd had very long conversations and they'd walk around the gardens. so they could actually get on and chatting and all that sort. so it was so this is, this is had nothing to do with angela absolutely. you know, the, the cherry on the top, obviously, you know absolutely nothing to do with the see through dress, nothing like that. >> angela, look, thank you very, very much. the wonderful angela levin, now an archewell spokesperson, has said it is not unusual for high profile foundations to receive influx foundations to receive an influx of the first year. it of funding in the first year. it is responsible to is fiscally responsible not to continue raising large sums of money millions still in money with millions still in reserve. that is that, as reserve. so that is that, as they say, coming up, i'm not holding back in my 10 pm.
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monologue as i make the damning case for us to follow the lead of australia and physically turn back the boats to stop the channel crisis. enough is enough . i will explain shortly. but first, leader of the tory common sense group, sir john first, leader of the tory common sense group, sirjohn hayes, will join me to hopefully sense group, sirjohn hayes, will joirwhat to hopefully sense group, sirjohn hayes, will joirwhat the opefully sense group, sirjohn hayes, will joirwhat the hellrlly sense group, sirjohn hayes, will joirwhat the hell happened explain what the hell happened with the so called rwanda rebellion that ended up falling flat on its face. don't go away
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now the right wing rebellion that threatened to sink rishi rwanda bill yesterday, ultimately fell flat as a pancake, didn't it? the so—called five families are the right wing tories made a big fuss about the controversial legislation designed to stop the small boats, but the all eventually abstained from the crucial commons vote, which the government won. then by a majority of 44, a leader of one of those families, sir john hayes , is about to join me live hayes, is about to join me live from westminster. but um, yeah,
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remarkably isn't here yet. apparently so it'd be nice if somebody did turn up and front up to this omnishambles that happens. so hopefully, sir john happens. so hopefully, sirjohn does that very, does manage to do that very, very i think the very shortly because i think the pubuc very shortly because i think the public answers, as public do deserve answers, as i certainly want answers, especially in light of the fact that i received a whatsapp message first thing morning message first thing this morning from the tory, from a member of the tory, right. me that felt right. telling me that they felt sick stomach they sick to their stomach and they think the wrong think they'd done the wrong thing and that sunak going think they'd done the wrong thiactually:hat sunak going think they'd done the wrong thiactually:hat sin ak going think they'd done the wrong thiactually:hat sin ak any going think they'd done the wrong thiactually:hat sin ak any of)ing to actually cave in to any of their and we're their amendments now. and we're going up with a wishy going to end up with a wishy washy rwanda bill. and actually they have their they should have stuck to their guns bottled guns and they completely bottled it. if it. so it would be nice if somebody joined at some point somebody joined us at some point to actually talk to about to actually talk to us about that. first, get the that. but first, let's get the thoughts panel, author and thoughts of my panel, author and broadcaster hamilton, broadcaster christine hamilton, businessman and activist adam brooks, and former labour party adviser lanza. yeah, adviser matthew lanza. yeah, look , christine, i mean, they look, christine, i mean, they bottled it, didn't they ? bottled it, didn't they? >> absolutely. they put the thought of power all the power that they've currently got power before their principles . i mean, before their principles. i mean, it's utterly extraordinary. they've they've been bought off with thoughts of maybe getting a
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knighthood, maybe getting to the house lords. will house of lords. that will be what happening in the what will be happening in the next they'll be next few weeks. they'll be saying, oh, come on, support the government and then you'll be sir, whatever. when we lose the election. extraordinary. election. it's extraordinary. i mean , the one thing that has mean, the one thing that has been tory party strength been the tory party strength throughout the centuries has been unity . and this is all gone been unity. and this is all gone by the board and the person i blame for that, not that i care terribly, is david cameron, because when he was prime minister, instead of allowing minister, he instead of allowing constituencies their constituencies to choose their own. so they wanted to choose own. so if they wanted to choose a they wanted a candidate who they wanted a good, tough right wing candidate, they weren't allowed to. they somebody from to. they had somebody from central parachute it in. central office parachute it in. and is why you've now got and this is why you've now got the massive the tory party in massive disarray with the one nation. et cetera. cetera. cetera. et cetera. >> were if they were >> if they were if they were going abstain , why going to abstain, why didn't they say from start ? they say so from the start? that's something that's because something changed, something changed, isn't it? something changed. been changed. and yeah, i've been told from a very good source in the conservative party that for weeks rishi sunak has been threatening with early election. >> so they are putting a few quid and a few months in their
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seats in front of their morals and their principles. absolutely. at the end of the day. now now, you know, it's very easy to say from the outside, but i would want to go outside, but i would want to go out as a hero or someone that, you is respected for you know, is respected for sticking what they sticking up for what they believe in. and this hype that was brought about and was brought up about rwanda. and we're we're not we're for we're we're not we're not for it. why didn't they vote against it? it's embarrassing. and i think the i've had enough of the tories from from that side to that side . they're done. that side. they're done. >> all right. okay. matthew very quickly, i can see sirjohn hayes. >> excellent. look, i >> excellent. well, look, i mean, salah al—din. >> excellent. well, look, i me and salah al—din. >> excellent. well, look, i me and i'm|h al—din. >> excellent. well, look, i me and i'm sure-din. >> excellent. well, look, i me and i'm sure you'll ask him >> and i'm sure you'll ask him why. know, about the why. you know, about the ridiculous yesterday ridiculous scenes yesterday where everybody to where they marched everybody to the hill then the top of the hill and then right down it an right back down again. it was an absolute in charge? >> i'm just going to cut you off because i do least because i do want at least a couple minutes with sir john, because i do want at least a cothat's minutes with sir john, because i do want at least a cothat's alliinutes with sir john, because i do want at least a cothat's all right.1 with sir john, because i do want at least a cothat's all right. so th sirjohn, because i do want at least a cothat's all right. so john'john, if that's all right. so john hayes, mp, leader of the common sense which also includes sense group, which also includes members anderson, members such as lee anderson, brendan clarke—smith, jonathan gullies, thank you very much for joining did joining me, sir. john and did you bottle it yesterday? >> pleasure. great pleasure. >> a pleasure. a great pleasure. did sorry didn't catch you. did sorry i didn't catch you.
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>> yesterday? >> did you bottle it yesterday? >> did you bottle it yesterday? >> what you said. >> i didn't catch what you said. absolutely not. no i tell you. let me explain exactly what happened.so let me explain exactly what happened. so we chose not to support the bill on a second reading of a bill. you vote for its principle. we've now put the ball back into the government's court and said, you've got to do better this bill has got to be stronger. we've got to stop the boats. we've got to send the planes to rwanda. that's the message we and that was message we sent. and that was the message to send . the right message to send. there's could support there's no way we could support this its current this bill in its current form. >> why? i wake up to a >> why? why did i wake up to a whatsapp message someone in whatsapp message from someone in your saying your group this morning saying that catastrophically that you got it catastrophically wrong and that rishi doesn't that you got it catastrophically wrongto nd that rishi doesn't that you got it catastrophically wrongto listent rishi doesn't that you got it catastrophically wrongto listen to 1ishi doesn't that you got it catastrophically wrongto listen to you doesn't that you got it catastrophically wrongto listen to you now n't have to listen to you now because majority of because he's got a majority of 44. you should have 44. and actually you should have stuck your guns. stuck to your guns. >> i don't know who sent >> well, i don't know who sent you the message, but i can tell you the message, but i can tell you pve you the message, but i can tell you i've had a lot you that i've had a lot of people you did people say to me, you did exactly the right thing, because had you voted against. okay, you would essentially signalling that the negotiations were over , that the negotiations were over, discussion about improving the bill was done . and by the way,
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bill was done. and by the way, you'd vote against the principle of the round of policy . that's of the round of policy. that's what second reading is. second reading happens. you debate the principle and then you the principle and then you have the committee stage where you amend principle and then you have the conbill.ee stage where you amend principle and then you have the conbill. youtage where you amend principle and then you have the conbill. you try; where you amend principle and then you have the con bill. you try to 'here you amend principle and then you have the conbill. you try to improve amend principle and then you have the conbill. you try to improve it,nend the bill. you try to improve it, and then you have the final stage third reading where you decide whether you're going to go ahead or not. >> happens? that's >> so what happens? that's the process. right? process. what changed? right? what because the what changed? because in the morning, in the morning, i spoke to a couple of members your to a couple of members of your kind larger umbrella kind of larger umbrella organisation, the five families and rebellion was on. and the rebellion was on. i mean, were you bought off by a bacon sandwich early doors ? bacon sandwich early doors? >> no, no, absolutely not. i mean, the truth is that the prime minister said at that early meeting that he was prepared to see the bill tightened. and what i means is you can actually improve the bill, make it stronger, make it do its job. it doesn't have that . we're going to go forward. it .we're going to go forward. it doesn't have to. >> now he's got a majority where he does, doesn't he? >> because . no, no, look, the >> because. no, no, look, the mass of it, of this, 39
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conservatives abstained . about conservatives abstained. about 32 of them arouse in addition to that many others said we'll vote for second reading on the understand funding the bill that improves in committee and will think again at third reading. so what we essentially is we've given notice some way we've veiled our threat, but it's pretty thinly veiled because we know numbers to do it. >> all right . it. >> all right. i mean, a member of the umbrella organisation messaged me and says that in their experience , the rebels get their experience, the rebels get weaker, not stronger, as the bill progresses. and rishi sunak and james cleverly were off doing a victory lap this morning. i mean that is that is the mood amongst your group right . right. >> well, let me tell you about the politics of that. what you have to do in politics and in life by the way, is to you must never do what your opponents want you to do. so those are the people who want to soften this bill, those people who don't believe what we believe. and they troop through they expect us to troop through and as who
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and be portrayed as people who wanted to kill the rounder policy. want us be policy. they want us to be destructive. forward policy. they want us to be destsaid,'e. forward policy. they want us to be destsaid, no, forward policy. they want us to be destsaid, no, no, forward policy. they want us to be destsaid, no, no, we're forward and said, no, no, we're constructive. we want to improve this now to you. do this. now it's down to you. do you want to improve it to exactly the right tactic? so you're right. if you want to be crass, you would have done the easy thing . if you want to be easy thing. if you want to be clever, you do the sensible thing. that's exactly what thing. and that's exactly what we did, right. >> so what amendments do you need now , now in order to need to see now, now in order to vote for this or should i rephrase that if it doesn't include specific things, which i'm hoping you're going to tell me, is now you will vote against, you'll give a promise to the nation right now. you will vote against this so that we're not with a wishy we're not stuck with a wishy washy bill that doesn't we're not stuck with a wishy washjin bill that doesn't we're not stuck with a wishy washjin your bill that doesn't we're not stuck with a wishy washjin your view, that doesn't we're not stuck with a wishy washjin your view, sirit doesn't we're not stuck with a wishy washjin your view, sir john?;n't work in your view, sir john? >> well, think about what >> well, let's think about what happens next and what happens next is and we again, got an agreement on this yesterday is that our the lawyers that were of professed that this bill is not up to scratch . they've not up to scratch. they've they've studied this. they've scrutinised it and they've claimed that the bill won't do
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what it's intended to do , and i what it's intended to do, and i believe them. so that's what robert jenrick, the former immigration minister, said. that's suella braverman , that's what suella braverman, our excellent home our excellent former home secretary, . if those secretary, said. if those lawyers will now meet the government's lawyers who clearly take different view, the aim take a different view, the aim will be to come up with an amendment which which we will put forward. now, we hope the government will accept that amendment , that the bill will be amendment, that the bill will be improved along the lines the lawyers have recommended . but if lawyers have recommended. but if the government doesn't accept lawyers have recommended. but if the bill,rnment doesn't accept lawyers have recommended. but if the bill,rnmergovernment:ept lawyers have recommended. but if the bill,rnmergovernment says the bill, if the government says no, to be no no, there's going to be no improvement, have improvement, clearly we have to think won't we, about think again, won't we, about that process. >> so, sirjohn, look, thank >> so, sir john, look, thank you.
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it's 10 pm. and this is patrick christie's tonight have to destroy the boats and send them
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straight back . well, it's straight back. well, it's official . we've deported a grand official. we've deported a grand total of nought point 4% of channel migrants since 2020. should we just turn the boats back?it should we just turn the boats back? it has to be cheaper, easier and more effective than the total rubbish that we're deaung the total rubbish that we're dealing with right now. plus, i will tell you what kemi badenoch has kicked off about here. >> he never said that that is a lie. well, that is a lie. and i think you should withdraw that statement. that is a lie . statement. that is a lie. >> oh. meanwhile, is gary lineker finally about to get the boot? the incoming bbc top dog thinks that he should be brought to heel over political tweets and a suspected suicide on the bibby barge has led for some people saying that it's too inhumane to house migrants. where are you on that , do you where are you on that, do you think it is? i've also got tomorrow's newspaper headlines tonight in the liveliest paper of you you will get anywhere on the telly. and here to it all the telly. and here to do it all with christine hamilton, with me, christine hamilton, adam matthew laza. with me, christine hamilton, adam we matthew laza. with me, christine hamilton, adam we go matthew laza. with me, christine hamilton, adam we go . matthew laza. with me, christine hamilton, adam we go . goodiatthew laza. with me, christine hamilton, adam we go . good stuff.n laza. with me, christine hamilton, adam we go . good stuff. justza. there we go. good stuff. just about one wave. there you love to it. oh, and yes, you
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to see it. oh, and yes, you won't believe what happens . won't believe what happens. next. oh oh, there we go. all right. you're gonna have to stay tuned to find out. it's i can guarantee you it's not what you would be expecting. one can would be expecting. no one can expect is coming there. i expect what is coming there. i don't think you'll be to don't think you'll be able to guess. that way. don't think you'll be able to gu
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out and is taking hold. south wales police are also saying the roads around that industrial estate are currently closed. it's expected the area will be cordoned off for some time. so just to confirm , south wales just to confirm, south wales police declaring a major incident after a large explosion on an industrial estate. any further detail ? of course, we'll further detail? of course, we'll bnng further detail? of course, we'll bring it to you . now. police are bring it to you. now. police are still appealing for help in their search for a mother of three who has been missing for five days. cctv footage has been released showing 55 year old gaynor lord leaving work on friday afternoon when she was last seen walking through norwich city centre police are saying she may have entered the river wensum, prompting a huge search by specialist divers, fire crews and the coastguard as some items of her clothing had been found in the river. and tonight, norfolk police officers have also said they're in contact with the lancashire police force, which worked on the nicola bulley investigation
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to learn what they can from that that enquiry . that enquiry. >> we are continuing the work that we have been doing since friday night here at wensum park conduct in searches both on land and in the water. today we've been joined by a specialist dive team who are in the water now and they're supporting the search in terms of getting into those deeper parts of the river wensum, which then obviously supports all of the search work that we've already done here at the river politics now. >> and the conservatives were mocked mercilessly for their infighting at today's christmas themed prime minister's question time. the final session in the commons for 2023. last night, 38 rebel tory mps chose to abstain from a vote on the safety of rwanda bill, but the vote still passed with a majority of 44. the labour leader, sir keir starmer, accusing the government of being in meltdown. but rishi sunak saying the numbers on
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migration and the economy spoke for themselves . for themselves. >> boats down by a third. and crucially, as we heard from honourable friend tax cuts coming to help working families in the new year. >> mr speaker , he can spin it >> mr speaker, he can spin it all he likes, but the whole country can see that yet again. the tory party is in meltdown and everyone else is paying the price . s now he's kicked the price. s now he's kicked the can. he kicked the can down the road , but in the last week his road, but in the last week his his mps, his mps have said of him he's not capable enough. he's inexperienced, he's arrogant, a really bad politician . politician. >> sir keir starmer , now the >> sir keir starmer, now the former boss of oil giant bp, has lost more than £32 million in pay lost more than £32 million in pay and bonuses after committing serious misconduct. bernard looney resigned from the oil giant in september after he misled the firm about past work
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relationships in a statement today, the company's board said they'd asked mr looney about his connections with colleagues , but connections with colleagues, but have now concluded his answers were inaccurate and incomplete. it means he'll get no further salary pension allowance or benefits or bonuses and lose out on nearly £25 million in share awards . and lastly , a group of awards. and lastly, a group of british men have become the first in the world to enter early trials of a new male hormone free contraceptive pill. 60 years after the female pill was introduced, a group of 16 volunteers will test out the new birth control treatment . the birth control treatment. the pill contains a drug that prevents sperm production by blocking access to vitamin a science . artists hope that if science. artists hope that if the tests are successful , the the tests are successful, the daily tablet could balance out the responsibility for contraception between the sexes . contraception between the sexes. thatis contraception between the sexes. that is , of course, if they that is, of course, if they remember to take it. that is, of course, if they remember to take it . yeah. this remember to take it. yeah. this is gb news across the uk on tv in your car , on digital radio
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in your car, on digital radio and on your smart speaker by saying play gb news. this is britain's news channel . britain's news channel. >> at what point do we just turn the boats back? surely it's time to have a serious conversation about that. this has been a devastating couple of days for anyone who cares about border security and national sovereignty . and when you think sovereignty. and when you think about the time , money, energy, about the time, money, energy, incompetence , ineffectiveness incompetence, ineffectiveness and idiocy that has gone into trying everything else to stop the boats, surely it would now just be easier and more effective to turn the boats back.i effective to turn the boats back. i woke up this morning to a whatsapp message from a prominent mp on the tory right who was sick with fury. how he and others had bottled it over the rwanda vote last night . he the rwanda vote last night. he doesn't expect rishi sunak to make good on any promises over amendments to the bill and he expects the rebels to soften still further by flipping mark francois, the chairman of the
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erg. last night he was acting, wasn't he, like don francois leony, the boss of the five families where he got completely shafted and now so is the country . gone is mark francois country. gone is mark francois leoni . welcome. mark frater leoni. welcome. mark frater giving it large before mugging everyone and himself off. then today we had more shocking revelations. the bibby stockholm owned barge where somebody suddenly reportedly took their own life yesterday . it's costing own life yesterday. it's costing us about £22 million. it houses just a handful of people. it's a floating white elephant. after that , we also floating white elephant. after that, we also learned that floating white elephant. after that , we also learned that since that, we also learned that since 2020, just nought point 4% of channel migrants have been returned to their own country. even care for calais would have to admit that more than 0.4% of people coming across the channel are not genuine asylum seekers . are not genuine asylum seekers. bringing up the hat trick of utter tosh. a couple of hours ago, the tory centrists have reportedly said that they want to table some amendments of their own to soften the rwanda bill even more. i mean, good
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grief . now i know bill even more. i mean, good grief. now i know tobias bill even more. i mean, good grief . now i know tobias ellwood grief. now i know tobias ellwood , miller ellwood to his brothers went to afghanistan and you know , helped out with the old taliban pr but i didn't realise he wanted to offer them an open invitation as well. that's a joke the tobias it's joke, by the way. tobias it's a little bit of a joke. you should know what those look like. even if the rwanda deal sails through now , when are going to see now, when are we going to see flights taking off? we caught up with geoffrey cox, mp earlier . i with geoffrey cox, mp earlier. i mean, this is quite pathetic . mean, this is quite pathetic. >> yeah. what are the odds on flights taking off with migrants in the spring in may, as the pm has promised ? has promised? >> i would put it at slightly higher than evens . higher than evens. >> oh, great. are we can we can all live off that can't we? almost as pathetic as the utter contempt that our snot nosed pubuc contempt that our snot nosed public school boy civil servants have you , me and ordinary have for you, me and ordinary people like anderson assam jumped up, overpaid home office civil servants . how many people civil servants. how many people had been deported a couple of weeks ago? they couldn't answer.
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they didn't care . well, the they didn't care. well, the ironically named immigration delivery minister, tom pursglove , was before that select committee today not answering questions again from lee anderson. what are the minister's first, the mr ryecroft and mr ridley, who to my knowledge didn't answer one simple single question throughout the whole session. >> do you think it would be a goodidea >> do you think it would be a good idea to put these pair into special measures? >> i miss, sir, may i address that? >> and i know you're not going to hold back. you don't, and nor should because you're should you, because you're entitled to ask your questions in it is in your own way. and it is a unique and very effective style, if i may say so. >> yeah. look, instead of having to put up with this omnishambles, at what point does someone just decide to turn the boats back and be done with it? do it for a couple of weeks and the problem goes away? what are the problem goes away? what are the french going to do, go to war us? obviously not. they war with us? obviously not. they did in australia and they're did it in australia and they're glad they did it and they would do went and asked do it again. we went and asked some them .
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some of them. >> our policy involves turning around boats where this can safely be and practically be done. >> yeah, look, i think they've probably got to do something similar in europe straight away . similar in europe straight away. >> don't even let them stay and get rid of boats. you have get rid of the boats. you have to destroy the boats and send them straight back . them straight back. >> to have >> it's important to have controls everything that controls on everything that impacts lots of people . impacts lots of people. >> look at how ridiculous , >> look at how ridiculous, expensive and useless the situation is now. we're turning the boats back . really be any the boats back. really be any worse ? yes. but to respond now, worse? yes. but to respond now, i'm joined again by author and broadcaster christine hamilton . broadcaster christine hamilton. i've got businessman and activist adam brooks and former labour party adviser matthew laterza . christine, turn the laterza. christine, turn the boats back or not? >> absolutely. why haven't we been doing this for ages? i mean, australia has shown the way. how to do it. belgium has apparently stopped 90% of their boats. all seem to have done boats. all we seem to have done is france, think it's is given france, i think it's 500 or something. some 500 million or something. some ludicrous money. in ludicrous amount of money. in exchange for which they put a
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few more beach patrol few more beach buggies on patrol and more drones. and a few more drones. apparently we should, apparently of course we should, as come beaches, as they come up the beaches, we should take each one in a coach down to the nearest port or jetty or whatever, put them on a large passenger, large ish, medium sized passenger boat, send back to france with send them back to france with enough to get to the french enough fuel to get to the french coast safely. enough to coast safely. we not enough to get push them back into get back, push them back into the frenchies problem. they expect to them when they expect us to take them when they push off from the beaches push them off from the beaches there. help. there. of course. help. >> they help. they don't push them off. >> this rwanda plan is not going to never going to work. it's never going to get through. find through. it's going to find obstacle after obstacle. the house etcetera. house of lords, etcetera. so that moonshine. we've got to that is moonshine. we've got to do something else. >> i go before i go to >> before i go before i go to yahoo! on this. look, if the tories decide which they're tories did decide which they're not going do, if they did not going to do, but if they did decide boats decide to just turn the boats back i don't think back and it works, i don't think labour reverse that labour would reverse that policy. >> turning boats >> turning back the boats is a nice alliterative sound. sound bite, solution bite, but it isn't a solution to the . why not? because. the problem. why not? because. well, least because well, not least because turning back the boats involves the royal navy or the border force doing it. >> i think you'd find a load of
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fishermen who'd be happy to do it. >> well, what's wrong with. because. >> because the royal navy. >> because the royal navy. >> with >> there's nothing wrong with it. i was a in it. but i was on a phone in earlier this week to? one earlier this week where to? one serving one recently retired serving and one recently retired royal navy officer said it's literally a reminded us that it's literally against the first law of the sea, which is that you don't effectively to turn back boats once they're in back the boats once they're in the water in the most the water in the in the most busiest shipping channel in the world, it that you're world, it means that you're basically to pushing basically going to be pushing people. falls people. and if anybody falls in there, turn those there, you just turn those little dinghies back and little rubber dinghies back and push little rubber dinghies back and puswell, some people are, >> well, some people are, christine. i made it quite clear you them to safe boat you take them on to a safe boat and you send them back. but of course, not course, we don't mean we're not allowed launch dinghies allowed to just launch dinghies under auspices. under our auspices. >> it right. our >> let's just have it right. our coastguard taxi service for coastguard is a taxi service for illegal immigrants. absolutely right . and that is a that is the right. and that is a that is the hard truth of it. >> the coastguard, the coastguard duty to look up to save souls. >> adam at the end of the day, why is our coastguard going into french waters to pick up migrants that is absurd. what are the french doing? they go
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missing when suddenly these boats are in trouble. how very convenient. and we give them hundreds of millions of pounds to do that. at the end of the day , the average brit cannot get day, the average brit cannot get a doctor's appointment, a dentist appointment. some are struggling to feed their families. if you come over to this country on a dinghy, you get housed, you get fed, you get access to immediate health care. something is seriously wrong and something needs to be done about it. when you smash the gangs. >> adam absolutely. we need to stop them getting on the boats in place. stop them getting on the boats in they place. stop them getting on the boats in they needice. stop them getting on the boats in they need to. stop them getting on the boats in they need to know they >> they need to know if they come do not get come here. they do not get a thing. it will stop. so. thing. it will then stop. so. >> so you would turn the boats back? >> i'll turn the boats around and leaflet the whole of and i would leaflet the whole of calais camps with calais and all these camps with a very clear message. won't a very clear message. you won't get get fed , get housing, you won't get fed, you won't get health care, you're you'll you're getting nothing. you'll stay . stay back. >> all right. okay. well, one thing do get and thing that they do get and obviously it's tragic that somebody their life on somebody has taken their life on the bibby stockholm, but that is the bibby stockholm, but that is the biggest killer young the biggest killer of young men in this country is suicide. >> unusual . well,
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>> so it's not unusual. well, what those migrants on the bibby stockholm get is counselling . stockholm get is counselling. now, very large now, there are a very large number of our own veterans who are sleeping on the streets. they don't get house, they don't even get a house, never mind counselling to cope with everything that they've been through. it is just absolutely been through. it is just absit utely been through. it is just absit isely been through. it is just absit is and we are about, we >> it is and we are about, we are about to actually have a discussion about the bibby stockholm in light of and it is a tragedy, right? somebody reportedly taking their own lives boat . does that in reportedly taking their own live�*way, boat . does that in reportedly taking their own live�*way, shape»at . does that in reportedly taking their own live�*way, shape or. does that in reportedly taking their own live�*way, shape or form s that in reportedly taking their own live�*way, shape or form changer any way, shape or form change your about if it's if it's your views about if it's if it's a humane or inhumane place to house people? we will have that discussion very, very shortly . discussion very, very shortly. we look, matthew, this idea of us trying everything else at great expense and, you know, people laughing at us on the other side of the channel now and the tory party tying itself in knots, the labour party, unless they do smash the gangs, then they're going to be exactly then they're going to be exactly the same situation. turning the boats it boats back would just sort it out, it? out, wouldn't it? >> , well you said that 0.4% >> well, well you said that 0.4% have been sent back. do you know what percentage of the people who've on boats in
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who've arrived on small boats in the last year have been processed? 1% country well, that's . exactly. it is that's exactly. exactly. it is a total scandal . they will all total scandal. they will all give them a pass. they just wouldn't give them a pass. it wouldn't give them a pass. it would applications would process the applications and those shouldn't and those who shouldn't be here would and those who shouldn't be here w0117,000 missing. yes absolutely. >> exactly. under the tory government, are they 13 years of a tory government that was genuine? of them could genuine? some of them could be a genuine asylum. >> wouldn't go missing. right. >> f- f" f“ >> but but, adam, i am nobody. i'm not saying and the labour party is not saying that everybody genuine asylum everybody is a genuine asylum seeker. saying is seeker. what we are saying is let's claims let's process the claims and send aren't back . let send people who aren't back. let me say the government me just say the government aren't that. aren't doing that. the government processed government are processed one, they turn them around. >> the government vote us. >> the government vote for us. they jump ten points in they would jump ten points in the overnight. they would jump ten points in the they overnight. they would jump ten points in the they would. ght. they would jump ten points in the they would. but but but what >> they would. but but but what happens if you turn the boats back? right. and you know, people die in the channel which is, let's be honest, the thing thatis is, let's be honest, the thing that is stopping a lot of people dying anyway, coming in this, would you tell them presumably now are talking towing would you tell them presumably now aall talking towing would you tell them presumably now aall lthyig towing would you tell them presumably now aall tiway back towing would you tell them presumably now aall tiway back to towing would you tell them presumably now aall tiway back to theing them all the way back to the beachesin them all the way back to the beaches in calais? is that where you're at with it? >> first all, i want to stop
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>> first of all, i want to stop them coming from france. >> so need we need do more >> so we need we need to do more with smash the gangs and with that smash the gangs and make sure the are make sure the french are actually doing their job. >> i would turn them >> but i would just turn them around. i'm not being inhumane at the of the day, this is a at the end of the day, this is a national emergency. we have had terrorists paedophile criminals, rapists come over on these boats. we have to stop it. >> okay. do you know the person in charge, the unit of the french police or whatever? who's in charge of stopping these boats, taking off has been on sort of home paid leave for the last 18 months. they are not taking it is reported that he's been. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> they've never forgiven >> all they've never forgiven her for brexit and it's all part of getting getting their own back. >> okay right look lively >> okay all right look lively start. very, very start. thank you very, very much. to see what's much. i'm excited to see what's in inbox. i do have a point in the inbox. i do have a point of clarification, though . so to of clarification, though. so to make earlier on, it was make that earlier on, it was a clip of lee anderson , who was clip of lee anderson, who was talking to michael tomlinson and not tom pursglove . hey, look, we
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not tom pursglove. hey, look, we have a load of clips to process. it's a pretty easy mistake to make coming up as an isis bride and her five children are repatriated to the uk. should we open our doors to the other 25 families believed to be living in a syrian refugee camp? i will cover that with my press pack as we delve through the first of tomorrow's front pages. so if you want to see what's on the front the box, you're going front of the box, you're going to stay tuned. but to have to stay tuned. but first, reported that first, it is reported that a migrant sadly took his own life on stockholm. on the bibby stockholm. now, is that inhumane? okay. that barge now inhumane? okay. a former aide to margaret thatcher, now gardner lockhart , thatcher, now gardner lockhart, warns with immigration lawyer hojjat singh bhangal another hojjat singh bhangal in another cracking head to head. also different tone. now how would you like to win £10,000 in cash? brand new tech and shopping vouchers? well, you could be the winner of our very first great british giveaway . here's all the british giveaway. here's all the details of how you can make those prizes yours. >> it's the great british giveaway, your win giveaway, your chance to win three prizes that will three amazing prizes that will get your new year off to a great
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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. the retail therapy could be on us for your chance to win the iphone.the 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 a gb zero one po box 8690 derby de1 nine uk only entrance must be 18 or over, lines close at 5 pm. on friday. the 5th of january. full terms and privacy notice at gbnews.com forward slash win . gbnews.com forward slash win. good luck . good luck. >> all right. well there we go . >> all right. well there we go. uh, now is the bibby stockholm
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barge ethical? it has people divided and we will tackle that debate head on in our head to head.
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weekend at 3 pm. on gb news, the people's channel. britain's news channel . news channel. >> all right. loads of other stuff on. i'm going to be bringing you the lively paper review. anywhere on british telly. we're also going to be showing you a clip of kemi badenoch really wading in on the trans issues that are gripping the country at the moment and heck a lot as well,
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heck of a lot more as well, including crash that ends including a car crash that ends so differently than anyone would expect . but first, it is time expect. but first, it is time for another head to head . so for another head to head. so look, tragic news from the bibby stockholm barge yesterday. a migrant believed to be in his 20s who was housed on the vessel, was reported to have taken their own life. now, the migrant charity care for calais obviously wasted no time in pointing the finger. they said the uk government must take responsibility for this human tragedy . now, responsibility for this human tragedy. now, you responsibility for this human tragedy . now, you may know, tragedy. now, as you may know, i'm a big advocate for mental health support . i've raised 130 health support. i've raised 130 grand this year for the charity mind. will the money? mind. will you raise the money? really? spoke about it. mind. will you raise the money? re'thank spoke about it. mind. will you raise the money? re'thank you, spoke about it. mind. will you raise the money? re'thank you, everybody |t it. mind. will you raise the money? re'thank you, everybody who did so thank you, everybody who did that. for that. now, unlike care for calais, i don't yet think the barge can be unequivocally blamed for this very tragic incident. but to help me, i suppose, make my mind up, i'm asking, the bibby stockholm asking, is the bibby stockholm inhumane ? going head to head on inhumane? going head to head on this is immigration lawyer hardeep singh bhangal, former
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adviser to margaret thatcher as well . now, gardner, chaps, look. well. now, gardner, chaps, look. thank you very, very much. obviously, sensitive subject matter, but this is the discussion are discussion that people are having at the moment as a result of this tragedy taken of this tragedy that's taken place does place on the barge. now does this prove that the bibby stockholm is not fit to house people on? do you think ? people on? do you think? >> patrick thank you for having me on the show today. and i think the responsibility for this tragedy really rests at the door of the horrible smuggling gangs who are basically bringing large numbers of illegal migrants across the channel. >> they're the ones responsible , >> they're the ones responsible, is not the responsibility of the british people or the british government here. and i do think housing, illegal migrants on a barge is a perfectly reasonable solution, considering costs about £6 million a day to house illegal migrants in the uk , illegal migrants in the uk, that's over £2 billion pounds a yeah that's over £2 billion pounds a year. so we are talking about very large sums of money here
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and the british government has a responsibility to the british taxpayer to reduce the cost , but taxpayer to reduce the cost, but also i think to send a clear deterrent message as well to illegal migrants who wish to cross the channel. they should not be housed at great expense in hotels . and i think as well in hotels. and i think as well that the british prime minister should be doing all he can to stand up to emmanuel macron over this. after all, the french government is doing to government is doing nothing to stop boats crossing the channel. >> all right. so in your view, the barge itself is not the barge in itself is not inhumane. hijab, your view? no >> well, well, my view is this is a whole situation created by the government . the government the government. the government has created this whole situation. it has created this whole backlog of cases, 150,000 cases that are still waiting more than a year for a decision on. there are more than than there's there are people who
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haven't been deported , 60,000 haven't been deported, 60,000 people were deported under a labour government and now only 3000 people are deported under a tory government. so tories are supposed to be um, hard on a on, on immigration, but it doesn't look like it is. >> is the barge itself inhumane? that's the thing because you know, look, this is, this is again, i really want to emphasise the tragedy individual here believed to have taken their own life. i'm not i'm not diminishing that but you know, is it the barge to blame here really can we say that? i mean, you know what you think, haja you know what do you think, haja well, it does it deter people. >> i mean, a barge, how many people can it hold? 300 people. 500 people? how many people is it going to deter ? what about it going to deter? what about the 49,000 and a half thousand people that is it going to deter them? people is not going to deter them. people. and where's the cost going for this barge? the cost is we don't know where
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it's going for the barge. it's not going to deter 49,500 people from crossing the channel for that. and it doesn't help. and the fact is now someone's lost their life on this barge . we are their life on this barge. we are responsible for that . responsible for that. ultimately, the person allegedly who lost his life is a doctor. he was supposed to be saving lives at, and he's taking his own life just because we're running out of time. >> but i get i get what you're saying. right? so now come, come back to that. right. so, you know, responsible know, are we responsible for this? the are this? no, because the calls are going felt. calls have going to be felt. the calls have started. you know, gabriel, off this barge is a floating hellhole. this to hellhole. how can we do this to people? go on. people? so go on. >> i don't think the >> yeah. i don't think the british government is responsible at for all this. it's a prison well . i it's not a prison as well. i think the occupants of this barge are able to leave it freely during the day and visit the local towns and so on. so there are hardly prisoners . and there are hardly prisoners. and this is perfectly reasonable
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accommodation, i think, for illegal migrants. it's not inhumane in in any way at all. of course, what we should be doing, of course, is stopping these boats from crossing the channelin these boats from crossing the channel in the first place. they should not be coming ashore in the united kingdom. and of course, illegal migrants should the united kingdom. and of cotdeported al migrants should the united kingdom. and of cotdeported asmigrants should the united kingdom. and of cotdeported as well. nts should the united kingdom. and of cotdeported as well. so should the united kingdom. and of cotdeported as well. so we uld the united kingdom. and of cotdeported as well. so we do be deported as well. so we do have to look at the big picture here. but it's not inhumane to put illegal migrants on a on a barge that is perfectly humane to do so. and the british government, british people are not responsible for this this tragic incident . tragic incident. >> okay. both of you, thank you very much. really, really interesting that was interesting stuff that was a good head to head. that was hardeep singh bungle. nigel gardner . hardeep singh bungle. nigel gardner. look, i suppose. what side you on? side are you on? vaiews@gbnews.com. i'll go to that inbox very , very shortly. that inbox very, very shortly. but coming up in my press pack and get to this and i want to get to this because always like to be the because i always like to be the first one with your front pages. okay entertaining paper first one with your front pages. okyou entertaining paper first one with your front pages. okyou that entertaining paper first one with your front pages. okyou that you entertaining paper first one with your front pages. okyou that you enteiget|ing paper of you that you will get anywhere on telly. gary anywhere on the telly. gary lineker hot water again as lineker is in hot water again as the new bbc chair that
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the new bbc chair suggests that his tweets have broken his ranting tweets have broken impartiality . so our impartiality guidelines. so our gazza's at the beeb gazza's days at the beeb numbered i will be giving you the very first front pages and some of the stories from inside the as including the book as well, including remarkably. we're not remarkably. i mean, we're not talking about shamima begum here. the return british here. the return of a british isis bride who's been repatriated from a refugee camp in syria with her five kids. should we be welcoming these people back? stay tuned
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successful they don't like the idea of deporting people from here to protest in rwanda . it here to protest in rwanda. it might be my favourite bit of the show. >> this let's bring you tomorrow's news tonight in the liveliest paper of you anywhere on telly. the very first front pages just delivered pages have just been delivered for . so we've got for my press pack. so we've got the independent. dare we hope the independent. dare we hope the future of fossil fuels is going up in smoke. cop 28 climate deal. it reads massive picture story of yet chuck a load of smoke 200 nations agree to move away from fossil fuels with deep and rapid reductions
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in emissions. it's quite astonishing thing shift this in astonishing thing shift this in a day because this time yesterday all the noise was that the was complete the whole thing was a complete was time. and that's was a waste of time. and that's what you get if you hold it in an oil state. but big oil producing states resist us producing states resist uk, us and out fossil and eu call to phase out fossil fuels. together, so not an fuels. all together, so not an entirely wasted trip. it's nice to get to enjoy that back in the private jet later , don't they? private jet later, don't they? but mirror now venables but the mirror now venables parole verdict justice for my james. this is an exclusive with james. this is an exclusive with james bolger's mum . she james bolger's mum. she expresses her relief after the killers bid for freedom was rejected. that's, of course, denise fergus, who is just absolutely haunted by this. every single time this parole heanng every single time this parole hearing comes around, every single time it's back in the news blazer. we'll go over now to the sun leo in secret date with lottie moss. oh, superstar actor leonardo dicaprio and model lottie moss. party till the early hours on a secret date, which of course has
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somehow managed to make its way onto the front page of the sun. so not that secret. as far as secret dates go, i think. let's whiz the eye whiz ourselves over to the eye now. will keep interest now. tax cuts will keep interest rates high, pm warned , as rishi rates high, pm warned, as rishi sunak has given his strongest hint yet that more tax cuts are likely next year. hey, that's something be cheerful. but something to be cheerful. but economists warn that the tax reduction will keep interest rates high. so a move on the income or inheritance tax might well push back the date of a rate cut beyond september. so there we go. interesting as well on the front of the eye, new bbc chairman on collision course with lineker. we'll on to with lineker. we'll come on to that. with lineker. we'll come on to that . this one we're that. but this is the one we're going be focusing on so going to be focusing on now. so defiance top tory reported to defiance of top tory reported to police over man in wig row as she writes in mail that she refused is to deny reality. the headune refused is to deny reality. the headline there, the trans bullies won't silence me . so bullies won't silence me. so there we go. there is, of course , a picture story there about the missing mum. , a picture story there about the missing mum . and we're going the missing mum. and we're going to go in with the panel now on the the trans the mail. the trans bullies won't tory won't silence me. top tory reported a trans
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reported to police in a trans row to continue speaking up for women's rights . they said that women's rights. they said that was, of course, rachel mclean and christine. do you think that's fair enough ? that's fair enough? >> yeah. 100. i mean, if that isn't a man in the way in a man in a wig, then i mean, i'm father christmas. there can't be any sane person in this country who can't see that that is a man in a wig. and i'm sorry. she just said the truth. she was speaking the truth plain as a pikestaff. what is wrong with it? i'm delighted that she's it? and i'm delighted that she's not, as it were, just taking it. the lying down. she's the threats lying down. she's not we need to not backing down. we need to fight for this. need fight for this. women need to fight for this. women need to fight we'll be fight for this or we'll be eradicated . eradicated. >> also women need men >> and they also women need men to this back as well. and to fight this back as well. and that's something i've done on twitter and on here. the absurdity of that, that person being a woman, you know, is a man, that man being is a joke, you know, and anyone that thinks that that is a woman or says that that is a woman or says that that is a woman is , you that that is a woman is, you know, in cloud cuckoo land . know, in cloud cuckoo land. >> okay, matthew, your views on it, because he has caused a heck
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of a lot of control. >> i think the original tweet that rachel mclean said, i think was inappropriately phrased. i think quite a lot of think and i think quite a lot of people that the language people believe that the language was inappropriate. up was inappropriate. it's up to the electors of bromsgrove because . the person in question because. the person in question is a green is the green candidate in that constituency. i would let voters decide. i don't think rachel mclean would pick characteristics pick on other characteristics of an so i think it was an opponent. so i think it was inappropriate that the original tweet, voters tweet, but it's for the voters to decide. >> it's a bit of context here, obviously, it's an aspiring obviously, that it's an aspiring green party mp who. >> green opponent. yeah yeah. >> green opponent. yeah yeah. >> who is and i'm just making sure i get this right. i mean, forgive me because this is just inherently it doesn't read correctly to me this, but it's a man who wears a wig and calls himself right himself a proud lesbian. right so there's a lot of so there's quite a lot of contradiction. man so there's quite a lot of contradation. man so there's quite a lot of contradation. that's attracted >> it's a man that's attracted he's attracted to a woman, a lesbian. >> so. so it is somebody who identifies as a trans woman >> so. so it is somebody who id�*attracted; a trans woman >> so. so it is somebody who id�*attracted to trans woman >> so. so it is somebody who id�*attracted to women. iman is attracted to women. >> so that would then make them . >> so that would then make them. if you that a trans woman is
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if you say that a trans woman is a then would make a woman, then that would make them and that's them a lesbian. and that's that's where the that's them a lesbian. and that's that's they where the that's them a lesbian. and that's that's they are. ere the that's where they are. >> i think legally this >> i mean, i think legally this person is a because person is still a man because they haven't transitioned and they haven't transitioned and they therefore, they haven't. so therefore, legally man that nonsense. >> right? like you should you should surely able to you should surely be able to you should surely be able to you should and will keep. >> i don't care if i'm threatened with police or whatever. i will always say that is a man. >> you shouldn't arrested. >> you shouldn't be arrested. or in anyway, for saying, in my view anyway, for saying, for that is a i mean for saying that is a man. i mean , you want any , obviously you don't want any kind crime you don't kind of hate crime or you don't want picture. but, you want any like, picture. but, you know, asked suspend know, being asked to suspend belief. , there is there belief. but look, there is there is relevant to this is and this is relevant to this discussion we're having. discussion that we're having. right. business right. because a business secretary, kemi badenoch, was taking questions at the women and in and equalities committee in parliament evening. and parliament this evening. and i mean absolutely the mean, she absolutely wiped the floor with labour mp after she made quite outrageous accusations . an i'll throw it accusations. an i'll throw it over to kemi who also made these statements using inflammatory language that likens children and young people coming out as trans to the spread of a disease. >> i've never said that that is a lie . well, that is a lie. and
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a lie. well, that is a lie. and i think you should withdraw that statement. that is a lie. when was that statement made? and where? i don't know. >> did you? >> did you? >> of course i didn't. did you get that from . i'm not here to get that from. i'm not here to answer your question because you don't know. because you don't know. it is not true. and you should not be saying that in this committee when you don't know statement came, know where that statement came, not a liar. not calling you a liar. >> yeah . >> yeah. >> yeah. >> wow. there you go, kemi badenoch. obviously not backing >> wow. there you go, kemi badenyou obviously not backing >> wow. there you go, kemi badenyou know,jsly not backing >> wow. there you go, kemi badenyou know, i;ly not backing >> wow. there you go, kemi badenyou know, i do 1ot backing >> wow. there you go, kemi badenyou know, i do 1ot bitoing down. you know, i do want to make very clear there's no make it very clear there's no obviously people don't feel obviously some people don't feel comfortable their comfortable in in their own original or or whatever. original genders or or whatever. and i get that right. original genders or or whatever. and i get that right . and, you and i get that right. and, you know, there is a big difference between being overtly mean to someone and bullying them and being nasty to them and marginalising them. but also at the same time, i don't my view is that you don't you shouldn't have biological facts have to suspend biological facts in compensate in order to compensate necessarily for somebody's feelings. maybe you think i'm wrong. get in touch. vaiews@gbnews.uk hmm. doubt vaiews@gbnews.uk hmm. no doubt plenty people will think i'm plenty of people will think i'm wrong, was kemi wrong, but christine was kemi badenoch to push back on badenoch right to push back on
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it. because this is the other thing, it? de—man thing, isn't it? the de—man ization, right? >> somebody she >> if somebody is saying she said she said something and she didn't, i think that this goes back to when kemi badenoch said that a lot are gay are lot of children who are gay are being told that, in fact, they're trans. yes that's where it all starts from. and i couldn't quite hear what the labour mp said. and for her to say when she's sitting there to answer questions, i'm here answer questions, i'm not here to questions. sorry. >> a bit of an >> it's a bit of an embarrassment, though. is it? is it in idea that if it matthew in the idea that if you're to lob accusations it matthew in the idea that if you there to lob accusations it matthew in the idea that if you there right, lob accusations it matthew in the idea that if you there right, then ccusations it matthew in the idea that if you there right, then you ations it matthew in the idea that if you there right, then you should out there right, then you should be back it up? be able to back it up? >> you know, >> absolutely. you know, i defend a lot with the labour party but kate party does. but kate kate osborne, the labour mp, osborne, the mp, the labour mp, they have her they didn't seem to have her facts straight. to get facts straight. you need to get your because your facts straight because otherwise your otherwise you undermine your argument. a lot argument. i used to write a lot of for people like of questions for people like you, patrick, and, and know, you, patrick, and, and you know, we source every fact, we had to source every fact, every we wanted every accusation we wanted to be put politician, whoever the put to a politician, whoever the politician you know, politician was. so, you know, you facts straight first. >> yeah, i think it's done. >> yeah, i think it's done. >> kemi exchange have >> kemi that exchange will have done at done kemi badenoch no harm at all. will. done kemi badenoch no harm at all.i will. done kemi badenoch no harm at all.i just l. done kemi badenoch no harm at all.i just want to squeeze this >> i just want to squeeze this one in as well, because this is a that's to be on
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a story that's going to be on the inside a couple the the inside of a couple of the newspaper tomorrow. newspaper hours tomorrow. so it's has it's a british woman that has became an isis bride in syria, has returned the uk has now been returned to the uk alongside children. alongside her five children. this shamima begum that this is not shamima begum that we're it's we're talking about here. it's somebody else. charities estimate british estimate that 25 british families in the families are still living in the roj refugee camp syria amid roj refugee camp in syria amid growing concern that these camps are breeding the next generation of terrorists . the former of terrorists. the former director counter—terrorism at director of counter—terrorism at mi6, barrett , director of counter—terrorism at mi6, barrett, is director of counter—terrorism at mi6, barrett , is now mi6, richard barrett, is now calling for their repack patriation because he views the camp squalor conditions as propaganda for isis. i'm just going to throw it over now to you first, adam. do you think we should be repatriating these people? i mean, there are kids involved. >> i believe i speak for probably 90% of the public by saying this , saying they can saying this, saying they can stay where they are, even with the i don't care . the kids, i don't care. >> at the end of the day, they chose their bed lie in it, not the kids, not the cold odds. these women are threats to our national security . i don't want national security. i don't want them here. i've got my own kids
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safety to worry about . let them safety to worry about. let them rot. that's what i'll say. let them rot. >> strong stuff, matthew . >> strong stuff, matthew. >> strong stuff, matthew. >> i think all of our number one concern is public safety and the safety of 60 million safety of the 60 odd million people in this country. and the intelligence services say that actually it's more likely to breed terrorism by having them there. then let's let's bring them back. it's for me, it's not about human of the about the human rights of the isis about the isis brides. it's about the human of all us. so human rights of all of us. so the argument would then be a final quickly to you, final word quickly to you, christine, if christine, on this would be if it is breeding terrorists, it's breeding else. >> $- e— >> well, if it's breeding terrorists, thing we terrorists, the last thing we want have them here. want is to have them over here. but young children. but i do very young children. they choose to there. they didn't choose to go there. so i think there is a more of an argument for but argument for them. but no, anybody age, anybody who of an adult age, they can jolly well say that all they can jolly well say that all they have to is get on a they have to do is get on a dinghy and we're housed them. >> council. >> well, i suppose council. >> well, i suppose council. >> why need to smash >> that's why we need to smash the out. the gangs out. >> why need smash >> why we need to smash you really smash the really plugging this smash the gang stuff tonight, matthew. >> be a labour >> it's going to be a labour line, it? line, isn't it? >> there we right. look, >> there we go. right. look, coming welsh leader coming up. okay. welsh leader soon to be former leader mark
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drakeford finally out drakeford finally bowed out today well, today after five years of, well, failure. really the helm in failure. really at the helm in cardiff. has cardiff. could you guess who has nominated for greatest nominated him for a greatest britain award ? but britain or union jack award? but next saint lineker's halo next saint gary lineker's halo appears cracking appears to finally be cracking as the chairman as the new bbc chairman sensationally admitted today that the match the day host's that the match of the day host's behaviour does look behaviour on twitter does look like it breaches corporation rules . don't miss gary's fall rules. don't miss gary's fall from grace . and of course, i've from grace. and of course, i've got a couple more front pages for that not put out for you that we've not put out there our press pack . there yet in our press pack. i'll just in two.
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wow. it's time to return to the liveliest pay per view anywhere on telly. more of the front pages. justin delivered hot off the press. we go in with the telegraph. so britain to build next generation fighter jets , uk next generation fighter jets, uk based projects with japan and italy aims to create a new supersonic aircraft by 2035. i suppose that's a good british business and supposedly defence story as well. vallance is
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pandemic diary to be kept a secret? thank god for that, sir. patrick vallance is full pandemic diaries to be kept a secret at a covid inquiry. it's emerged that obviously some people will want it all out there. as far as i'm concerned, that be bedtime that will just be bedtime reading. to reading. let's move on to the guardian because they've been going landmark cop 28 deal agreed transition away from agreed to transition away from fossil fuels. very similar page front the independent front page to the independent shock universities face fines under new free speech guidelines as well . let's go to the times as well. let's go to the times now . interesting picture story now. interesting picture story on the front of the times. the hollywood star sienna miller has posed for vogue and spoken about the pressures of pregnancy . see, the pressures of pregnancy. see, and if you are listening on radio, then she's visibly pregnant on the front of the times. so there we go. facebook is now a dangerous to children. parents told crime chief raises alarm over encrypted messages. there we go . we'll go to the there we go. we'll go to the metro. has lineker met his match? well, we'll come on to that. okay. so we're just going to do it. we're going to do it
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right now. actually so it appears gary lineker appears that gary lineker may well breached well have breached bbc guidelines . well have breached bbc guidelines. so this what guidelines. so this is what they're metro , but they're saying in the metro, but not you might not for the reasons you might have so here's have expected. okay. so here's the government's candidate to become the new bbc chairman . become the new bbc chairman. samachar speaking to mps at the pre—appointment hearing earlier today as far as i'm aware , the today as far as i'm aware, the signing of the letter did not breach those guidelines. >> i do think, however, the more recent tweet that mr lineker , in recent tweet that mr lineker, in which he identified some to politicians does , on the face of politicians does, on the face of it, seem to breach those particular guidelines of public. >> i'm not sure how egregious it is, but it does. >> and i would imagine that the bbc is now looking into that and considering its response right . considering its response right. >> well, look, first, gary took a swipe at tory mp jonathan gullis, suggesting he didn't know how to read before accusing defence grant shapps defence secretary grant shapps of multiple identities
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of using multiple identities mocking shapps mocking him. as for shapps shapps, panel, as new bbc shapps, so panel, as new bbc chairman says gary lineker tweets appear to breach social media guidelines . are his days media guidelines. are his days numbered the christine numbered at the beeb? christine absolutely, and before time. absolutely, and not before time. >> . i've always >> it's ridiculous. i've always taken view that lineker is taken the view that lineker is the useful idiot because the bbc's useful idiot because he's out there saying the things that they would love to say and what half the bbc already thinks he says it for them. but absolutely a gross insult absolutely it's a gross insult to all the licence payers and especially people like pensioners. costs them about pensioners. it costs them about is it 5% their pension goes is it 5% of their pension goes on the licence fee. >> there's a difference between there is a difference between what think should happen what people think should happen with gary lineker and what people think will happen with gary lineker. he's out. >> adam i'm not one for cancel culture and i've always said i don't want him sacked, but it's the last straw. now he's he's mocking the licence fee payers. at the end of the day we pay his wages and he wouldn't have 8 or 9 million twitter followers if he wasn't on match of the day and he wasn't on the bbc. so
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he's gained from being on the bbc he's now using it bbc and he's now using it against taxpayers licence fee payers. >> don't forget his 1.4 million a year too. okay, well , well, a year too. okay, well, well, last point, matthew, do you do you buy that? >> i mean, do you do you think that, you know, he was an impartiality breach? i mean, he's done other stuff, hasn't he? argue that more he? i would argue that he's more egregious and he's egregious than this and he's still . still there. >> i from samir, he's >> i think from samir, he's going be a very good chairman going to be a very good chairman of the bbc. and a very clever person to plod through the political minefield . yeah. so he political minefield. yeah. so he was very carefully their saying was, well , he was very carefully their saying was, well, he didn't he didn't break the original guide, the guidelines because they're about social sorry, because social media use. sorry, because the social media use and the original thing was a letter. but once to get into the once he started to get into the spat, so it doesn't spat, he did. so it doesn't matter him. they're matter how they get him. they're going to get him. it'll be he'll be be gone. be gone. he'll be he'll be gone. whoa, whoa, whoa. yeah. >> gary lineker will >> you think gary lineker will be bbc? be booted by the bbc? >> i think. i think yes, absolutely. i you had the absolutely. i mean, you had the chairman there that chairman saying there that he thought facie chairman saying there that he thougthat facie chairman saying there that he thougthat broke facie chairman saying there that he thougthat broke impartiality; case that he broke impartiality guidelines. the guy cannot carry
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on okay expecting >> wow. okay wasn't expecting that bbc spokesperson that the bbc or bbc spokesperson has said we aren't to has said we aren't going to comment or indeed comment on individuals or indeed individual the individual tweets. while the guidance allow people to guidance does allow people to talk issues that matter to talk about issues that matter to them, is clear that them, it also is clear that individuals should civil and individuals should be civil and not question not call into question anyone's character. we discuss issues that with presenters as that arise with presenters as necessary. there go . necessary. there we go. >> that's interesting >> that's quite interesting statement because it actually does make it by saying about character. that's actually an attack is as attack as a code. this is as strong as a bbc statement gets as on gary. as an attack on gary. >> now, i've teasing >> now, look, i've been teasing the of this the living heck out of this clip, all right? so i am finally going to it to a chap going to show it to you. a chap playing local playing pool in his local nottinghamshire boozer has become internet become a bit of an internet sensation after he managed to hold some pretty sensation after he managed to hold circumstancessome pretty sensation after he managed to hold circumstances .)me pretty sensation after he managed to hold circumstances . his.pretty sensation after he managed to hold circumstances . his. yeah. unique circumstances. his. yeah. okay this land rover being pursued by police is about to smash straight into a wall and that wall is attached to this pub, but it didn't stop him from potting the black. haha. that's fantastic stuff. car comes in black goes in. i mean , it
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black goes in. i mean, it doesn't even flinch. the guy and we can see it really, really rams straight through the pub didn't it? i mean despite that three ton surprise it just ploughs straight into the back of him. the black, a true british hero. can i just say, well done, my good man. fantastic. do we know his name or not yet. if only the spineless tory party because he didn't know he was drinking in the pub. he mentioned. you see the pub. he mentioned. you see the video? that looks a lot like you though, jeff. anyway if only the tory rebels who the spineless tory rebels who bottle rwanda vote bottle that rwanda vote yesterday shred of this yesterday had a shred of this quy's yesterday had a shred of this guy's composure . we've guy's composure. we've just about a little bit of time, about got a little bit of time, i think, haven't we? now for greatest britain and union jackass. greatest britain and union jackass . greatest britain jackass. greatest britain christine well, you have cued me in wonderfully because it's the pool player and i was hoping you'd be able to give me his name. >> i thought that was absolutely wonderful. it showed the great british stiff upper lip. it's the spirit that won the war. thank goodness it's still alive and kicking pool pub. and kicking in the pool pub. >> mean, of course we are >> i mean, of course we are skirting fact
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skirting over the fact that there a wild police chase there was a wild police chase taking before it. taking place before it. >> who has taken the >> yeah, but who has taken the headlines? hero of the hour. headlines? the hero of the hour. the hero. the game was more important. >> doesn't even flinch . legend >> doesn't even flinch. legend or i was going to take some beating. adam mind suella braverman for being probably one of the only conservative mp s that i actually believe in at the moment that wants to tackle immigration. okay. all right. did cop it a bit, but not for me. no, no. tory mp voted against the bill, but yeah. anyway, matthew. against the bill, but yeah. any slightly matthew. against the bill, but yeah. anyslightly different1ew. against the bill, but yeah. anyslightly different change of >> slightly different change of tone minds. the church of england last allowing england for at last allowing church blessings from this weekend same sex couples weekend for same sex couples who've marriages. you who've entered marriages. you still can't get married in a church, but at least the church will showing some to will be showing some love to those couples who are those same sex couples who are in found in scotland . all in love found in scotland. all right. yes, absolutely. this is the england. yep the church of england. yep >> right. >> all right. >> all right. >> so the winner pub >> cool. so the winner is pub man. well done, pub man. man. yes. well done, pub man. christine pub pool player who's managed to pop the black despite coming heavy artillery coming under heavy artillery fire from land rover. right fire from a land rover. right we've got now union jack .
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we've got now union jack. >> yes. i don't think i'm going to be so lucky this time. but finally, these people, do finally, these people, we do them the whole time and them down the whole time and i think they deserve the it's a great accolade to be union, jack. really is. it's a jack. it really is. it's a massive means the to massive prize. it means the to world people. so i think this definitely has to go to the sussexes because they've now won the i think sussexes because they've now won the! think might biggest >> i think you might win biggest losers hollywood let's losers in hollywood and let's really their day by making really make their day by making them also. >> one honorary, of course, >> one is honorary, of course, but is very much royally but one is very much royally british. the jackasses. >> on knees . >> okay, go on my knees. >> okay, go on my knees. >> mark drakeford, the authoritarian lunatic of a leader of wales. >> i'm not sure i'd call him a lunatic. even if you disagree with him. >> mark drakeford we used to call him. >> just. just say why today again, mark draper isn't here to defend himself. dripfeed >> i can do my to best write. >> i can do my to best write. >> why? why? why is he your jackass? >> because during covid, you know, he taped off kids areas in supermarkets . you know, he wants supermarkets. you know, he wants 20 mile an hour zones, all over wales. he is a covid nutter. >> he's destroyed the health
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plaza . plaza. >> how would you respond to some of those allegations? >> i mean, look, i think you can disagree mark. i'm not. i disagree with mark. i'm not. i mean, today, mean, you're on fire today, adam. look, is adam. i mean, look, mark is a controversial figure. he got re—elected by with the good vote in covid. so was in wales during covid. so it was up welsh people to decide up to the welsh people to decide . he's been a great . and i think he's been a great servant for wales while the nhs under has down. under his watch has gone down. can do because sometimes can i do mine? because sometimes we've of time and my we've run out of time and my union, jack, as you might like this one, is mark francois or mark donald mahoney, francois francois . absolutely. who francois leoni. absolutely. who is a chocolate soldier, if ever there were one. i mean, how pathetic is it all leading up the top of the hill, straight back down again, flipping heck, i'm wasn't charge i'm glad he wasn't in charge in the war. otherwise i'm glad he wasn't in charge in thewouldn't war. otherwise i'm glad he wasn't in charge in thewouldn't be war. otherwise i'm glad he wasn't in charge in thewouldn't be speaking:herwise i'm glad he wasn't in charge in thewouldn't be speaking german, we wouldn't be speaking german, as they well all right. >> the winner is mark drakeford. oh it is . i couldn't let you oh it is. i couldn't let you have it, mate. i couldn't let you have it. brilliant stuff. yeah. so mark draper, who's decided to call it quits today after a heck of a long time. it feels anyway. in charge feels that way anyway. in charge of wales. so there we go. of. of wales. so there we go. look, can i just say thank you
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to my panel i've thoroughly enjoyed tonight. it's been a rip roaring have very roaring show. we have some very controversial topics. and you controversial topics. and if you do back and have do want to go back and have a little listen to little look and listen to anything as then make anything as well, then do make sure go on sure that you go back on youtube, watch it all there. or, of course, you can set it to recording watch recording your telly and watch it any you like. headliners it any time you like. headliners are i'll see you are up next. i'll see you tomorrow nine. a brighter tomorrow at nine. a brighter outlook boxt solar sponsors outlook with boxt solar sponsors of weather on . gb news. of weather on. gb news. >> hello there. i'm greg dewhurst and welcome to your latest news forecast. turning chilly for a time this evening, but then mild air spreads back in overnight as cloud and rain moves in from the atlantic . this moves in from the atlantic. this weather front pushes south eastwards as we head through tonight and into thursday. and then split into then a north—south split into then a north—south split into the weekend. high pressure keeping it dry in the south. this evening. turning quite chilly. some frost out there. but overnight we see cloud and rain moving in from the atlantic. this slowly pushing its eastward. so its way south eastward. so temperatures rising as the night goes on, taking us into thursday
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morning. most places frost free generally between 2 and 8 celsius, but it does mean a cloudy, damp start for many , cloudy, damp start for many, particularly across england and wales, do have wales, where we do have outbreaks of rain slowly pushing south eastwards, brighter northern and scotland northern ireland and scotland with showers in the far with blustery showers in the far north and then through the day the and the rain slowly the cloud and the rain slowly pushes south eastwards, becoming confined to the far south—east for the afternoon. most places becoming bright, plenty becoming dry and bright, plenty of sunny spells, still some blustery showers across scotland. near scotland. temperatures near average for the time of year, 7 to 11 celsius, maybe just slightly above for some western parts on friday itself, some mist and fog and frost to start the morning and then plenty of dry weather across england and wales. variable amounts of cloud cloudy skies, for cloudy skies, though, for northern scotland, the northern ireland, scotland, the risk rain as we move risk of some rain as we move through the day in a mild through the day here in a mild day everyone into the day for everyone into the weekend, generally stays weekend, it generally stays quite temperatures quite cloudy and temperatures remain above average for the time of year . see you soon. time of year. see you soon. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers sports answers of
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weather on gb news as
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>> good evening with jb news. let's bring you more on that breaking news we brought to you about an hour ago. news coming to us from south wales police about what's being described as about what's being described as a large explosion on an indust
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estate. police have declared a major incident in treforest . major incident in treforest. that's a village near pontypridd. that's north—west of cardiff. police and firefighters are at the scene where a major fire has broken out . flames and fire has broken out. flames and smoke can be seen in videos being shared on social media. we're also hearing local hospitals are on high alert after that blaze and people in the surrounding areas are being asked not to go to a&e unless it's absolutely necessary . as it's absolutely necessary. as you can imagine, roads around that industrial estate and treforest remain closed. it's going to be cordoned off for some time. the public are being asked to avoid the area now. police searching for a missing mother of three say they are in contact with detectives who worked on the nicola bulley case to learn lessons from their investigation . earlier on, cctv investigation. earlier on, cctv footage was released showing 55 year old gaynor lord leaving work last friday afternoon . she work last friday afternoon. she can be seen walking through norwich city centre on the footage. police are saying she
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