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tv   Headliners  GB News  January 18, 2024 11:00pm-12:01am GMT

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. well, the prime priority. well, the prime minister's plan to stop the boats comes as the home office confirms 358 people were intercepted trying to cross the engush intercepted trying to cross the english channel yesterday in eight small boats. that means 621 people have arrived in the uk in the last five days. despite the poor weather in the last two weeks. it's train tickets are twice as expensive when bought from platform ticket machines than those booked online. the consumer group, which says same day tickets are particularly high in cost and in their research , best value fares their research, best value fares were either unavailable or hidden among too many options. for example , a journey from for example, a journey from northampton to cardiff was found to cost £107 from a ticket machine , but was only £43 if machine, but was only £43 if bought online. an 2 in 5 railway stations don't have ticket offices now, so when passengers don't have access to tickets online, then the only option is
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a platform ticket machine . now a platform ticket machine. now thousands of jobs are at risk in south wales as tata steel has decided to push ahead with plans to close both blast furnaces at port talbot. the decision comes despite unions today putting forward proposals aimed at saving the jobs. tata then rejected that the redundancies , rejected that the redundancies, which must be completed by march next year, will see three quarters of the 4000 staff on site at risk of losing their jobs. site at risk of losing their jobs . unions will now consult jobs. unions will now consult members with industrial action not being ruled out . prince not being ruled out. prince william visited kate in hospital today. she's recovering from planned abdominal surgery. there he was seen driving out of the private london clinic this afternoon with his close protection team, alongside him. the princess of wales said to be doing well after her operation on tuesday , but it is expected on tuesday, but it is expected she'll stay in hospital for the next 10 to 14 days. meanwhile
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queen camilla said his majesty is fine and looking forward to getting back to work as he awaits treatment for an enlarged prostate . king charles says he's prostate. king charles says he's keen to go public with his rather private condition to encourage other men to make sure they get themselves checked out . they get themselves checked out. this is gb news across the uk on tv in your car, on digital radio and now on your smart speaker. this is britain's news channel . this is britain's news channel. >> hello and welcome to headliners, your first look at friday's newspapers . friday's newspapers. >> my name is andrew doyle. >> my name is andrew doyle. >> joining me tonight to our two comedians podcast youtubers, commentators, etc. leo kearse and nick dixon. would you like to moonlight don't you.7 you've to moonlight don't you? you've got a lot of strings to your bow, nick. >> multi—talented. i'm sorry. what i do? thumbs and what can i do? what thumbs and please? yeah, thumbs in pays and
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pays. that's the same. that is the same fingers in this country. it just the country. well, is it just the thumb scotland? thumb thumb in scotland? yeah. thumb makes bit sordid for makes it sound a bit sordid for some reason. yeah, some of is some reason. yeah, some of it is a bit sordid. yeah, yeah. well, stop fans, stop thumbing pies. >> going to have a >> nick, we're going to have a look front covers for look at the front covers for friday's newspapers before we crack the mail is crack on the daily mail is leading with don't defy will of the people. leading with don't defy will of the rishi le. warns lords . >> rishi lawns warns lords. >> rishi lawns warns lords. >> the front cover of the telegraph nato warns of war telegraph has nato warns of war with russia the next 20 years. >> the guardian netanyahu we will not accept a palestine state after gaza war. the times is running with teachers locked for in their own safety. in a credible story . we'll get to credible story. we'll get to that in a moment. and the i news has government orders, inquiry that in a moment. and the i news has secondnent orders, inquiry that in a moment. and the i news has second post orders, inquiry that in a moment. and the i news has second post office. inquiry that in a moment. and the i news has second post office. it quiry into second post office. it scandals, claims and the daily star. thou shalt have rumpy pumpy. that's a message from the pope. apparently those were your front pages . so we're going to front pages. so we're going to kick off our in—depth look at the front covers with the daily
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mail. leo, what are they leading with on friday? >> so they lead with don't defy will of the people. rishi warns lords as this is his rwanda bill, which passed as surprisingly um con . surprisingly um con. >> evidently only 11 tories voted to crash the law altogether. >> yeah, there were worries that as many as 60 tories could vote against it. >> they didn't have the bottle. >> they didn't have the bottle. >> is that right? >> is that right? >> they didn't have the bottle. uh, something else that floats. >> they didn't have the bottle. uh,but1ething else that floats. >> they didn't have the bottle. uh,but wheng else that floats. >> they didn't have the bottle. uh,but wheng got that floats. >> they didn't have the bottle. uh, but wheng > they didn't have the bottle. uh,but wheng > but when it got to the when it got to the when the bill got to lords, to the house of lords, rebellious shouted shame . rebellious peers shouted shame. um, so they obviously don't want this pass. and they've, this bill to pass. and they've, they've their they've shown their true colours. you know, has colours. but you know, rishi has made the point. look, the british kind of british public are kind of getting a bit sick. the british pubuc getting a bit sick. the british public this bill pass. public want this bill to pass. >> i think we could do it pass another law that says we handcuff dinghy man, each handcuff each dinghy man, each man across in one of man who comes across in one of these boats to a lord. >> yeah. have to go >> yeah. and they have to go around with them all day. >> the problem having >> isn't the problem having an elected of your elected body as part of your parliamentary system? yeah, i would that's part would have thought that's part of yeah of it. yeah >> i mean, sometimes it works well it doesn't.
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yeah. >> eh agree ou, ee >> when they agree with you, leo, that's it works. well, leo, that's when it works. well, i'd say just maybe abolish people elected. people who aren't elected. what do think you're of these do you think you're one of these lefties. you want to abolish lefties. do you want to abolish everything? andrew you want to aboush everything? andrew you want to abolish everything. abolish abolish everything. i don't abolish democracy abolish abolish everything. i don'accountable.lish democracy abolish abolish everything. i don'accountable. nick. iemocracy abolish abolish everything. i don'accountable. nick. okay. acy abolish abolish everything. i don'accountable. nick. okay. all and accountable. nick. okay. all right. well, i'm coming from. maybe a lefty. maybe you're not a lefty. then the for one thing, the look well, for one thing, they've watched they've obviously watched game of and they're shouting they've obviously watched game of at and they're shouting they've obviously watched game of at and thithat'siouting they've obviously watched game of at and thithat's auting they've obviously watched game of at and thithat's a bit|g shame at people. that's a bit weird, isn't it? >> annoyed but it was a >> that annoyed me. but it was a bit strange. >> rishi held this press conference a sort of vaguely threaten the house of lords, and people understand people can really understand what he was getting at necessarily, because he, you know, better be know, he said they'd better be careful respect the will of know, he said they'd better be carepeople. respect the will of know, he said they'd better be carepeople. some:t the will of know, he said they'd better be carepeople. some peopleill of know, he said they'd better be carepeople. some people aref the people. some people are theorising, saying he theorising, is he saying that he could potentially an could potentially go into an election know, who election saying, you know, who runs country threaten runs the country and threaten vaguely or vaguely to, you know, abolish or severely reform the house of lords? just he's just lords? so he's just he's just dropping out there just in dropping that out there just in case bully lords case you can't bully the lords there. is the there. i mean, this is the problem. he's famous. he can't bully lords. and they're bully the lords. and they're perfectly happy stand up perfectly happy to stand up against sunak. they're their own masters what masters aren't they. well, what they a danger that they want. there's a danger that they want. there's a danger that they want. there's a danger that they want to delay this. and so it through before the it can't go through before the next election. and that's the other wouldn't next election. and that's the otithrough wouldn't next election. and that's the otithrough because wouldn't next election. and that's the otithrough because you»uldn't next election. and that's the otithrough because you know, go through because you know, labour and want
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labour would be in and they want all the new voters, but that's all the new voters, but that's all do all the lords can do is ultimately i mean, ultimately delay. i mean, there's many times they there's only so many times they can back. so like he can knock it back. so like he can knock it back. so like he can persist and the bill is can just persist and the bill is a a dud as it arrives. a bit of a dud as it arrives. >> i mean, it didn't satisfy, you know, 60 tory mps had real reservations about it. it doesn't who doesn't satisfy the people who should most delighted should be the most delighted about the amendments about it. and the amendments didn't pass that would have toughened up and made sort toughened it up and made it sort of workable as a piece. of more workable as a piece. >> still >> they say they're still troublemaking by not passing it, though, well, though, aren't they? yeah well, you aren't you say labour aren't aren't wouldn't, pass this bill. wouldn't, uh, pass this bill. they interested they wouldn't be interested in this. but they have said that they out the small they want to sort out the small boats and they claim boats crisis, and they claim that how it, if that they know how to do it, if not is their solution? >> they've claimed that they know haven't know how to do it. they haven't told would be. told us what that would be. >> no, no, no, they haven't said if they got got the if they got if they got the answer, why they tell answer, why didn't they tell us? >> they? >> why didn't they? >> why didn't they? >> so impressive >> maybe it's so impressive and interesting. they want to save it big surprise, it like a big surprise, a fun thing. and they'll big thing. and they'll have a big glittery reveal. well, yeah. yeah, that'd be amazing. people are the boats crossings. >> i mean, 72% of britons and 76% of brexit supporters think that pledge that rishi stop the boat pledge is somebody is going badly. so somebody got to not left and right,
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>> it's not even left and right, particularly, think most particularly, i think most people either affiliation people of either affiliation are feeling the feeling kind of the same at the moment. we're to moment. anyway, we're going to move cover of move on to the front cover of the nick has the the telegraph. nick has the details. is nato warns details. yeah this is nato warns of russia next of war with russia in the next 20 years. story for anyone 20 years. fun story for anyone getting a.m. 20 years. fun story for anyone getting am. watching 20 years. fun story for anyone gett facing am. watching 20 years. fun story for anyone gett facing theira.m. watching 20 years. fun story for anyone gett facing their day. watching 20 years. fun story for anyone gett facing their day. but hing 20 years. fun story for anyone gett facing their day. but you this facing their day. but you know, i mean, where know, i mean, this is where we are. comes from are. i mean, this comes from admiral who is a admiral rob bauer, who is a dutch admiral, of dutch admiral, chairman of nato's military committee, and he's , look, we follow the he's saying, look, we follow the follow. sweden's example. brace for all potentialities. we can't rely on peace anymore. you know, he doesn't talk about fukuyama, but we had that period of sort of end of history, didn't we? we felt we were all just chilling. i people say that's i know some people say that's not meant, but not what fukuyama meant, but anyway, all anyway, the point is, we all felt was a nice time end felt like it was a nice time end of war. but you of the cold war. but don't you think? 911 whatever. think? to about 911 or whatever. a official within nato a senior official within nato starts talking about russia and how there's going to be a war. i mean, russia had been going on for now about nato for a long time now about nato expansionism. this just expansionism. isn't this just kind confirmed their expansionism. isn't this just kind andinfirmed their expansionism. isn't this just kind and moreed their expansionism. isn't this just kind and more likely their expansionism. isn't this just kind and more likely ineir expansionism. isn't this just kind and more likely in fact, fears and more likely in fact, to put them on a footing for war? yeah it's a good point. if you like that, can you could say like that, can you? some people say you? that's some people say you're putin apologist if you
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you're a putin apologist if you say nato say that, andrew, they nato nato had never attacked russia. >> never >> nato would have never attacked russia. nato still hasn't like nato hasn't attacked russia like nato countries weapons to countries have given weapons to ukraine so defend itself ukraine so it can defend itself like no russian like there's no russian territory taken. territory being taken. >> a perception >> but there is a perception within that nato have within russia that nato have been perception been encroaching perception expanding, deliberately. the policy perception within, you know, a few , a few paranoid know, a few, a few paranoid nationalists like dugin and strelkov and putin and doyle, the rest is the rest is nonsense. >> the real problem the west has is that military recruiters has been dropping and they can't know arms of the military, the navy, the marines can can fill their their ranks. and this is this is in america. and in, in europe. and it's because we've had we've a decades of sort of diversity and you know, being told, you know , to the only sort told, you know, to the only sort of outreach they do, the only advertising they do is for trans gender people or whatever it is. >> do you want a more masculine military? the traditionally the military? the traditionally the military has quite military has been quite masculine . masculine. >> and, you know, the vikings were god,
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were never like, oh my god, we're not not diverse we're not we're not diverse enough , guys. enough, guys. >> what the amazons? they >> what about the amazons? they were pretty tough bunch of women, mean , if there's >> yeah. i mean, if there's any in britain then. you in britain then. yeah. if you want to sign up, i'm sure. i'm sure bit. sure they'd love you a bit. i mean, is is part of mean, this is this is part of the of the problem. it's an the part of the problem. it's an ideological problem. all the patriotism, has patriotism, the nationalism has been of the people in been beaten out of the people in this country. >> thing, aside from the >> and one thing, aside from the alarmism, though, isn't this just it's kind just the normal state? it's kind of plans of well known that russia plans 50 for wars. 50 years in advance for wars. they with the us as they see war with the us as inevitable. every inevitable. they plan for every outcome. kinetic spying, outcome. kinetic war, spying, cyber actually cyber attack. so actually the idea war idea of being ready for war itself is just isn't that just normal ? you know what i itself is just isn't that just normal? you know what i mean? we of course we have to be ready for potential war with russia. of course we have to be ready for |why1tial war with russia. of course we have to be ready for why sweden with russia. of course we have to be ready for why sweden inth russia. of course we have to be ready for why sweden in particular? but why sweden in particular? i mean, go through mean, they have to go through finland so there's a bit finland first. so there's a bit of buffer. so yeah, took of a buffer. so yeah, they took a territory from, a big chunk of territory from, from and finland from finland before and finland they itself really they did defended itself really well ukraine is well like, like ukraine is doing. scared of doing. they're scared of finland. okay. doing. they're scared of finifair. okay. doing. they're scared of finifair enough. okay. >> fair enough. >> fair enough. >> we're going to move the >> we're going to move on to the front of friday's times. front cover of friday's times. leo, what is the headline here? >> so this is teachers locked in for their own safety. this is locked rooms at schools , in locked in rooms at schools, in case wondering. case you're wondering.
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>> safe sort of. >> well, like a safe sort of. >> well, like a safe sort of. >> like a safe room like >> yeah. like a safe room like that. jodie. >> foster, jodie foster >> jodie foster, jodie foster for panic room. yeah. panic room. for panic room. yeah. panic r001so this is the new ofsted new >> so this is the new ofsted new head of ofsted who says the behaviour of pupils at some schools he doesn't name them is so bad that there are no go areas and teachers lock themselves in classrooms for safety . safety. >> do you believe this? this sounds . sounds incredible. >> it sounds he's hamming >> it sounds like he's hamming it leader it up. he says, uh, as leader of an trust, had taken an academy trust, he had taken on broken where students on broken schools where students were and saying were stopping staff and saying this is a no corridor. it this is a no go corridor. it belongs to the children. you know, don't lord of the flies know, i don't lord of the flies stuff . i know, i don't lord of the flies stuff. i don't know, i don't lord of the flies stuff . i don't know if they, you stuff. i don't know if they, you know, had paint smeared their know, had paint smeared on their faces just, know, faces and just, you know, a loincloth faces and just, you know, a loinc mean, we locked our >> i mean, we locked our geography teacher in the cupboard there go cupboard once. well, there we go . talking about. >> it you . >> it was you. >> it was you. >> it was people like people like i mean, nick, this is like us. i mean, nick, this is concerning, though. you know, i used i never used to be a teacher. i never feared for my safety, particularly. one kid squared up feared for my safety, pa mejlarly. one kid squared up feared for my safety, pa mejlarly. but�* kid squared up feared for my safety, pa mejlarly. but i
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this is where we are in the culture, isn't it? we've got this degenerate culture we side with side with children, we side with criminals. you think the criminals. don't you think the leftist culture always sides with kind of so—called with the kind of so—called oppress? we've had a conservative government for 30 years. they're years. but they're not. they're not we need not real conservatives. we need the patriarchy, not real conservatives. we need the proper patriarchy, not real conservatives. we need the proper patriwhere the proper patriarchy, where a teacher told you to do something and were scared . yeah. and you were so scared. yeah. let you where that let me tell you where that does exist. michaela, exist. michaela. michaela, that's a that's not a patriarchy. it is a matriarchy. i'll tell that matriarchy. i'll tell you that as by katharine as a second run by katharine birbalsingh, someone birbalsingh, as long as someone gets caned, i'm all right. >> strachan is one >> michaela strachan is one person. can't run every school. >> michaela. yeah, she was good, though. i just say that? but though. can i just say that? but that is the point. katharine. katharine school katharine birbalsingh school does discipline does have the kind of discipline that talking about. the that nick is talking about. the kids love it. they do really well. the results are absolutely residual payments from them. like about like you're talking about them every now. because every night on here now. because do you get kickback because every night on here now. because do you int kickback because every night on here now. because do you in the kickback because every night on here now. because do you in the news|ck because every night on here now. because do you in the news whenevere they're in the news whenever there's about something they're in the news whenever there's obviouslth something they're in the news whenever there's obviously that�*nething they're in the news whenever there's obviously that�*nethe g like this, obviously that is the paradigm be paradigm that we need to be talking about. why just talking about. why can't we just reintroduce is not reintroduce and this is not discipline. is a right reintroduce and this is not discijidea. is a right reintroduce and this is not discijidea. left is a right reintroduce and this is not discijidea. left wing a right reintroduce and this is not discijidea. left wing peoplet wing idea. left wing people have always you need always been aware that you need to children to socialise children effectively . why can't we have effectively. why can't we have discipline schools? discipline in schools? >> can't we not have >> why can't we have not have teachers themselves in
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teachers hiding themselves in rooms terrified? >> left love >> the left love authoritarianism. stalin authoritarianism. look at stalin as nick says, we've had a succession of left wing governments, including the current conservatives, and they call themselves conservative. >> i mean, whoever margaret thatcher her thatcher must be spinning in her grave. but you know, they're never going to for never going to go for the michaela strachan school because they ban, uh, they ban praying they ban, uh, they ban praying they banned, you know , remind me they banned, you know, remind me who michaela strachan was she in countdown? it's fine to ban christian prayings, but they also ban muslim praying, which is kind of praying, is the best kind of praying, according readers. according to guardian readers. >> a victorian about >> we need a victorian about carrying head. carrying books on your head. standing caning standing really straight, caning india would bring india. would you bring back corporal serious corporal punishment? serious question. would. yeah. question. yes you would. yeah. would because not i'm would you? because i'm not i'm not. corporal is where you kill me. are they . yeah. i mean, me. are they. yeah. i mean, could harsh no capital could you bring harsh no capital is children. all is killing the children. all right? is right? corporal punishment is where them with where you merely whack them with some instrument with a ruler. yeah, yeah. okay. i'm not so sure. the times i'm not so sure. yeah. okay, let's move on to, uh, the guardian. nick friday's guardian. what have they got on
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the front cover? they've got netanyahu. accept netanyahu. we will not accept a palestinian state after gaza war. so basically, the bullet points are netanyahu has told the white house that's not going to happen. no two state solution us says we continue to seek a two state solution. lots of people not realistic people think it's not realistic anymore. lots of people say palestine are the ones that rejected the state solution. rejected the two state solution. but the word here is, you know, all territory west of the jordan river under israeli river will be under israeli control. it's control. and that's how it's going. because going. and because because it's the guardian, they attack netanyahu repeatedly and say that to obstruct that he's sought to obstruct the, uh, palestinian state the, uh, the palestinian state throughout career, and he's throughout his career, and he's evil bad. been here evil and bad. we've been here before, though. i remember a conversation netanyahu before, though. i remember a conversatiorwhere netanyahu before, though. i remember a conversatiorwhere net.sorthu before, though. i remember a conversatiorwhere net.sort of and obama where obama sort of mooted the idea a two state solution. >> netanyahu proceeded to lecture at length about lecture him at length about that. possibility. >> however, leo, is it not the case that netanyahu is pretty much discredited now within israel? yeah. i mean, israel? yeah, yeah. so i mean, it's it's not likely it's not like it's not likely he's retain for he's going to retain power for long anyway. >> on his >> yeah, he was on he was on his way but now , way out anyway. yeah. but now, you know, this hasn't this whole thing more thing hasn't made him more popular the, with israelis. popular with the, with israelis. uh, and you know, he's touting
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occupation, but , uh, and you know, he's touting occupation, but, um, that's very difficult because, you know, then you're losing israeli lives all the time. it's you know, the conflict. >> but if you don't, i mean, he they withdrew in 2005, they withdrew from gaza in 2005, 2006, and the result was , uh, 2006, and the result was, uh, further terrorist attacks. so it's not as though withdrawing from these territories is actually helping. i mean, his argument actually argument is that that's actually argument is that that's actually a has been a security risk, as has been proven by the october 7th parliament. >> i don't if there's a way >> i don't know if there's a way of, uh, just helping to create a government that doesn't government in gaza that doesn't hate israel as much. maybe they just, you know, it's more more of a sort of rivalry like scotland england. of a sort of rivalry like scotldon't england. of a sort of rivalry like scotldon't knowgland. of a sort of rivalry like scotldon't know howi. of a sort of rivalry like scotldon't know how you would do >> i don't know how you would do that, part of the that, leo. um, part of the problem the government in problem with the government in gaza opponents gaza is they shot the opponents as fighting as well. so there's fighting within seems like a within as well. it seems like a bit a mess , but you're the bit of a mess, but you're the one solve think. well, one to solve it, i think. well, what sent in michaela strachan? >> michaela strachan, clearly. >> michaela strachan, clearly. >> with >> i mean, you're obsessed with her. picture her. i'm still trying to picture who is it big who she is quite. is it big breakfast? she on that? no breakfast? was she on that? no really wild. really wild. really wild well, i wild show. okay, well, i wouldn't it wouldn't watch something. it sounds appalling to me. that sort sounds out of sort of show sounds out of control. scared of control. you're scared of animals. it animal show?
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animals. is it an animal show? oh, not going oh, i'm definitely not going near right, those near it. all right, those are the all tied and the front pages all tied up. and now who now we've worked out who michaela can go michaela strachan is. we can go to the break, but coming up, we've the tories are we've got why the tories are toast. playing toast. humza yousaf playing political how the home political chess and how the home office lost 6000 asylum seekers
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>> earlier on, gb news radio . >> earlier on, gb news radio. welcome back to headliners. >> your first look at friday's newspapers with me, andrew doyle. i'm still here with the great thinkers leo kearse and nick dixon. major philosophers of our time is the way i like to think of them. the independent now and more evidence to show the tories could lose the next election. nick how about that? firstly, i don't like your joke because it implies i'm not a deep thinker, so i'm offended i was okay, was being sincere. okay, you decided as sardonic decided to read it as a sardonic comment. it wasn't we're comment. it wasn't good. we're all same page, so this is devastating. >> poll result shows only 10% of voters support voters under 50 would support conservatives at next election. voters under 50 would support conso vatives at next election. voters under 50 would support conso this es at next election. voters under 50 would support conso this comes ext election. voters under 50 would support conso this comes after ection. voters under 50 would support conso this comes after the on. >> so this comes after the
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devastating poll from lord frost and the conservative britain alliance , which was devastating alliance, which was devastating enough. this is a new, devastating of devastating poll. so a lot of devastating poll. so a lot of devastating polls and it's a yougov than yougov survey. more than 2000 adults, only said they would adults, only 20% said they would vote tories , while fewer vote for the tories, while fewer than of those backed than half of those who backed the intend the tories in 2019 intend to support again. that's support them again. so that's pretty this is pretty well pretty key. this is pretty well every you see about every poll that you see about the conservative party is not good them. not good news for them. it's not great. farage great. and i watched farage earlier asking jacob earlier and he was asking jacob rees—mogg must be rees—mogg has this must be unprecedented for the tories? this worst ever this must be the worst it's ever been. no, been. and mark's like, no, no, not all. between and not at all. between 1846 and 1874. oh there we go. it was worse. woi'se. >> worse. >> there was a split and there was the split over the corn laws and sort of stuff. and all this sort of stuff. >> it's got a point. but >> so it's got a point. but listen, they've been there before. people more right before. people became more right wing they older. wing as they got older. this poll even poll would suggest that even people under 50, that's why people under 50, like that's why they tories, they don't like the tories, because becoming because they're becoming right wing. our wing. am i right? because our left discussed left wing, as we discussed earlier, you know, it's a big problem. earlier, you know, it's a big problethat trusts farage thing that 54% trusts farage this poll versus 35% this was another poll versus 35% trust so they're trust rishi sunak. so they're not doing very well. they really they the right sort they were in the right sort of place were place with boris. they were doing know, doing pretty well. you know, they decided self—destruct
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they decided to self—destruct for unknown reasons. and now this is where they are. should they not have got rid of liz truss? i don't know. truss? well, i don't know. it was of that was part of the was sort of that was part of the self—destruction was already underway it, underway then, wasn't it, because boris, because they got rid of boris, who basically could have won again, the 2019 people liked him. the right him. he had broadly the right idea, . is that idea, vaguely patriotic. is that your view, leo, or do you think ? your view, leo, or do you think? >> yeah, i think i think boris would be doing a lot in would be doing a lot better in the moment. i'm not would be doing a lot better in the that moment. i'm not would be doing a lot better in the that boris moment. i'm not would be doing a lot better in the that boris isnoment. i'm not would be doing a lot better in the that boris is actually i'm not sure that boris is actually a better minister wasn't better prime minister he wasn't really right . and really a details man. right. and he did sort of fold when he should have, when he should have stuck to his instincts, like with covid. we should have with covid. and we should have had swedish light had a sweet swedish style light lockdown, you know, he folded and around. and let them push him around. yeah. a sort of yeah. but this there's a sort of underlying assumption here that, you voters you know, uh, only 10% of voters under 50 would vote conservative. so the rest, 90% must wing voting for must be left wing or voting for laboun must be left wing or voting for labour. and i don't think that's true okay. i a true at all. okay. i think a lot would be voting for, you know, crazy parties like the green party actually party and a lot are actually right and don't a right wing and don't have a party for. that's the problem. >> plus, you can't hold a majority in parliament with only
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10% vote. voters behind 10% of your vote. voters behind you. conservatives you. and also the conservatives isn't concerning it's isn't it concerning that it's tory voters not voting tory? i mean , that's the major problem, mean, that's the major problem, isn't it? yeah >> i mean, older people >> although i mean, older people do still tend to vote tory. that's habit though. and they're the ones who, you know, they get out the actual young out the actual vote. young people, make a lot of people, you know, make a lot of noise online. yeah but don't actually they can't be bothered. what can they do. >> what can they do. i'm not sure. mean wanted to sure. i mean i just wanted to add that reform are up to as add that reform are up to 12% as well. is that so people well. so is that so people will be reform. what can they be voting reform. what can they do? they can't do much now because left it too late. because rishi left it too late. i think his last ditch thing i've before would been i've said before would have been to cummings and to bring in dominic cummings and really do something really try and do something radical, missed radical, which he's missed out on rishi talks on that sometimes. rishi talks as not worried about as if he's not too worried about losing about losing and he just talks about we about the long losing and he just talks about we and about the long losing and he just talks about we and do about the long losing and he just talks about we and do these bout the long losing and he just talks about we and do these carefule long tum and do these careful economic things, as if he's just thinking, well, civil thinking, well, the civil service cover it service will cover this and it doesn't or doesn't matter if it's me or starmer saying he starmer that's i'm not saying he is that. it'sjust it is doing that. it's just how it sounds. yeah, it sounds like someone realise someone who doesn't realise he's heading or heading towards a cliff or doesn't know what's weird. yeah, he's he's he's obviously over. yeah, he's not frost
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not behaving. as lord frost spoke complacency his spoke about. complacency in his recent article. he said that strangely tone recent article. he said that stioneely tone recent article. he said that stione ely complacency. tone recent article. he said that stioneely complacency. it's tone is one of complacency. it's like, realise like, why don't they realise what's don't care? what's happening or don't care? or just not stop it? or can they just not stop it? very strange javier milei to come in. yes is that right? javier milei with javier milei or someone with a baseball chainsaw? what baseball bat or a chainsaw? what is carrying these days? is it he's carrying these days? some scare, some scary implement. anyway, we're going to move on to telegraph now. humza your favourite humza yousaf leo, your favourite subject? playing chess. subject? playing 4d chess. what's going here? what's going on here? >> the >> so humza yousaf, who's the first scotland ? uh, first minister of scotland? uh, allegedly, from his allegedly, although from his tweets you'd think he was the first minister of gaza. he, uh, hasianed first minister of gaza. he, uh, has invited , uh, erdogan, the has invited, uh, erdogan, the turkish president , has invited, uh, erdogan, the turkish president, um, to uh, to see him in scotland and he's denied that this invite is unked denied that this invite is linked to turkey helping his family flee gaza. so he had quite a lot of members of his wife's family were stuck in gaza . i think his her parents went over there. they've got other members that were over there. they told not to go, but they were told not to go, but they still and the they still went and so the turkish organised this turkish president organised this sort of midnight flight from, uh, from from gaza . yes. got uh, from from gaza. yes. got them out of there. um and what's
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interesting is , you know, humza interesting is, you know, humza criticises israel, he's constantly hammering on and this war crimes and you know, we need to stop the bombing in gaza . to stop the bombing in gaza. this is this is horrific. and all the rest of it. uh, but i mean, the turkish president has been doing equally , if not been doing equally, if not nastier things. >> oh, the man's a tyrant to the kurds. >> he's a dictator. >> he's a dictator. absolutely. but i'm going to have to stop you this you there, leo, because this article, yousef you there, leo, because this ar saying yousef you there, leo, because this ar saying pledging’ousef you there, leo, because this ar saying pledging’ou raise is saying he's pledging to raise human rights concerns if erdogan comes over, he's going to use the opportunity to challenge him on precisely in precisely the way that he should. way that you think he should. >> to he's going >> no, he's going to he's going to a selfie and going to get a selfie and he's going to get a selfie and he's going to him the back, and he's to pat him on the back, and he's going to try and try and suck up to him. and he says, humza to him. and he says, so humza said, would said, why on earth would scotland to with scotland not seek to engage with a and of course, with a nato ally? and of course, with somebody we would seek to do business and trade with. so, i mean, need somebody mean, i guess they need somebody to the heroin import to replace the heroin import businessout . that's the major dropped out. that's the major business. you're very cynical. the business in scotland. the major business in scotland. it's one humza's it's certainly one that humza's family involved in. family seems to be involved in. and also scotland isn't a nato
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partner scotland like the uk partner of scotland like the uk is. the nato partner. >> we didn't devolve the military right, but is it not the case that countries on the international stage that to international stage that want to be invite, international stage that want to be invite? invite, international stage that want to be invite? i'm invite, international stage that want to be invite? i'm talking nvite, international stage that want to be invite? i'm talking about do, invite? i'm talking about scotland. yeah. do do invite leaders from other countries that are perhaps sometimes controversial. we've done it with arabia, instance. with saudi arabia, for instance. i would argue that the i would i would argue that the saudi government or saudi arabian government or regime has done an awful lot even think we even more. i think that we should be worried. >> awful lot of money should be worried. >> oil. awful lot of money should be worried. >> oil. okay awful lot of money should be worried. >> oil. okay so, ful lot of money should be worried. >> oil. okay so, nick,: of money should be worried. >> oil. okay so, nick, comeoney should be worried. >> oil. okay so, nick, come on.( and oil. okay so, nick, come on. >> it cannot be the case, can it, that he's just sort of inviting him over as a little thank you for helping his family. it would be too transparent know transparent and obvious. we know andrew. the snp are never corrupt . that's the first thing andrew. the snp are never cor know. that's the first thing andrew. the snp are never cor know. that'firste first thing andrew. the snp are never cor know. that'first thing.thing we know. the first thing. exactly. maybe , maybe exactly. and look, maybe, maybe it's understandable. know, it's understandable. you know, i'm the fan of humza i'm not the biggest fan of humza yousaf, if it was yousaf, but if it was your family, you would get family, maybe you would get involved with the leader of turkey. what mean ? turkey. you know what i mean? it's kind of like a neighbourhood gangster, like he's you know he's a nice guy, you know what i mean? helping mean? like, he's helping out your turn a your family. you sort of turn a blind to those things blind eye to all those things that done. what would that he's done. what would you do? do you know, well, do? do you know, i mean, well, i think was first minister of think if i was first minister of scotland, um, which could
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actually weirdly could scotland, um, which could actualhappen weirdly could scotland, um, which could actualhappen one eirdly could scotland, um, which could actualhappen one day.y could could happen one day. >> i was first minister >> but if i was first minister of might look of scotland, i might also look out scotland's interests out for scotland's interests and look for 1400 babies look out for the 1400 babies born addiction . born with drug addiction. >> i think very cynical. i think he surprise you. i'll he will surprise you. i'll invite over. he'll invite him over. he'll do like a cook. report kind of thing. he'll be i've been wanting he'll be like, i've been wanting to on the ropes to get you on the ropes for years. have you this, years. why have you done this, this david this and this? i think david cameron's been threatening cameron's now been threatening them in reprisals. them as a sort of in reprisals. it me who it made me think, who do i dislike more, or humza dislike more, cameron or humza yousaf? still humza yousaf, yousaf? it's still humza yousaf, but close. but it's quite it's quite close. yeah, okay. yeah, it's a close one. okay. we're to move on now to we're going to move on now to the 6000 going the telegraph. 6000 people going missing the and it's the missing in the uk and it's the home office's fault. nick. we've all stuff. andrew it's the all lost stuff. andrew it's the home office admits 6000 failed asylum are missing in asylum seekers are missing in the uk this is a michael tomlinson, the minister for countering . illegal migration. i countering. illegal migration. i thought it would say counting for a minute that would be handy. they handy. just counting the they learnt how to that. it would learnt how to do that. it would be start. yeah i mean be a start. yeah i mean look there this that 17 there was this idea that that 17 withdrawn asylum seekers had disappeared no, disappeared and they said no, no, where some of those no, we know where some of those are. a thousand are. there's a few thousand of those know but those that we know about, but
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there's no knows those that we know about, but there'sthey no knows those that we know about, but there'sthey are. no knows those that we know about, but there'sthey are. quite knows where they are. quite disturbing. they seem to have disappeared into underground disappeared into the underground economy. what's mean? is it economy. what's that mean? is it just live just a demolition man? they live on ground and rat on the ground and eat rat burgers stuff. it's burgers and stuff. and it's a whole separate parallel economy. i don't know, that. mean, i don't know, is that. i mean, is it just that they've literally lost files? i literally lost the files? i mean, lost mean, they can't have lost physically 6000 people. well, my favourite quote, sorry, comes physically 6000 people. well, my favolsii�*! quote, sorry, comes physically 6000 people. well, my fav0lsir robert sorry, comes physically 6000 people. well, my fav0lsir robert chote comes physically 6000 people. well, my fav0lsir robert chote who'ss from sir robert chote who's saying this episode may saying that this episode may affect public trust. haha, yeah , affect public trust. haha, yeah, it may do. leo. >> previously they said they didn't where 17,000 didn't know where 17,000 withdrawn asylum seekers . so withdrawn asylum seekers. so sometimes people apply for asylum. they don't get it. and then like you. you then it's not like you. you don't it and you get put don't get it and you get put back you came from. you back wherever you came from. you just . you're on back wherever you came from. you justground, .you're on back wherever you came from. you justground, like.’ou're on back wherever you came from. you justground, like. likez on back wherever you came from. you justground, like. like the on back wherever you came from. you justground, like. like the end the ground, like. like the end of, um, suspects. you of, um, usual suspects. you know, keyser soze. walks off know, keyser soze. he walks off down the street. >> never see him a movie >> we'll never see him a movie references man. >> we'll never see him a movie refeand es man. >> we'll never see him a movie refeand sometimes man. >> we'll never see him a movie refeand sometimes masometimes >> and sometimes they. sometimes they like they get up to no good, like emad the liverpool emad swealmeen the liverpool maternity hospital bomber. he'd been refused his asylum. >> yeah, but it's never good when someone goes missing. you've got no records of who they are. they are or where they are. absolutely. you this is
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absolutely. you know this is madness, when they madness, especially when they come from, you know, medieval regimes might regimes that, you know, might ideologies that might hate us and want to destroy us. i hate to sort of draconian, but to sound sort of draconian, but we vigilance squads to go we need vigilance squads to go around deporting people . i think around deporting people. i think that's a very bad idea. nick i'm going put the kibosh that going to put the kibosh on that one we're going one straight away. we're going to now with to end this section now with someone a storm in someone who's causing a storm in both red sea and online. both the red sea and online. leo, handsome houthi . yeah. leo, a handsome houthi. yeah. >> so this is the hot houthi . >> so this is the hot houthi. uh, timothee chalamet lookalike who says longing for who says he's longing for martyrdom as 19 old pirate martyrdom as 19 year old pirate goes viral . martyrdom as 19 year old pirate goes viral. he's warned us and uk they face their end and he hates his comparison to the willy wonka star. i don't know if he's seen willy wonka. he might change that, but he's rashid we've rashid al—haddad. i think we've got images. a got some images. maybe he's a 19 year from from yemen. year old, uh, from from yemen. there he is there a lovely there he is there in a lovely ball gown. i think that's vera wang. >> you w.- w.“ >> but you can't really see him close can't tell if he close up. i can't tell if he looks timothee chalamet. looks like timothee chalamet. it's to see they're it's just nice to see they're a bit closer up. >> it's to uh the >> it's nice to see uh the yemeni houthi rebels embracing transgenders in the military as well. is delightful well. that is a delightful
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headdress and long ball. >> he's angry at this uh, being sexually objectified from the sound of things. because he's a man, isn't he? he's like a he's a he wants to be a warrior. and everyone's look everyone's just saying, oh, look at him. he looks nice. doesn't he? that way he? yeah. not in that camp way necessarily. know, necessarily. but you know, there's translation of there's a direct translation of what he said. >> yeah. i mean, he's a self—confessed self—proclaimed red sea pirate. he's longing for martyred . um, you know, the last martyred. um, you know, the last thing wants for. but thing he wants is for. but obviously, know, western obviously, you know, western liberal they're liberal women, they're all gushing i don't gushing over him. and i don't mean verbally. it's just it's. >> doesn't it feel quite inappropriate ? i remember when, inappropriate? i remember when, um, the ran off to syria um, the girls ran off to syria to isis. shazia mirza was to join isis. shazia mirza was saying because they find saying it's because they find these . it's like, these men attractive. it's like, yeah, find yeah, how can you find a terrorist? a terrorist? well, ted bundy had a loyal girlfriend, remember? you know mean? women they're know what i mean? women they're just all guy like. oh, yeah, just all any guy like. oh, yeah, i like the look him. it's i like the look of him. it's like killed women. like. >> e- e.- 9 they find >> yeah. and then if they find looking, he's a killer and he wants destroy they wants to destroy the west, they fancy wants to destroy the west, they fanithey like it even more. >> they like it even more. these lefty i didn't. lefty women i know i didn't. well, it was hard for well, i didn't it was hard for me because i didn't even know who chalamet either. who timothy chalamet was either.
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so carlito's so because he's not in carlito's way godfather he's way or the godfather or he's obviously not watching way or the godfather or he's obviou it. not watching way or the godfather or he's obviou it. he's not watching way or the godfather or he's obviou it. he's in not watching way or the godfather or he's obviou it. he's in call watching way or the godfather or he's obviou it. he's in call me tching way or the godfather or he's obviou it. he's in call me bying any of it. he's in call me by your name. that that very gay. i don't anything 90s don't watch anything post 90s because you can't trust any of it. hasn't al pacino it. if it hasn't got al pacino in can't trust it. so in it. you can't trust it. so anyway, mean, anyway, yeah, i mean, i've already my bundy. that's already said, my bundy. that's all got, really? he all i've got, really? women. he wants west, they wants to end the west, but they still can do? wants to end the west, but they stillhe can do? wants to end the west, but they stillhe doesn't can do? wants to end the west, but they stillhe doesn't want do? wants to end the west, but they stillhe doesn't want to do? wants to end the west, but they stillhe doesn't want to be io? but he doesn't want to be fancied. that's the point. like he that he doesn't like the fact that he's he doesn't like the fact that he'ithat makes him him more >> that makes him like him more because he's aloof and cool. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> if any women are watching like is bad he like nick is a bad boy, but he doesn't the like nick is a bad boy, but he doesn so the like nick is a bad boy, but he doesn so that's the like nick is a bad boy, but he doesn so that's a the like nick is a bad boy, but he doesn so that's a balance. west, so that's a nice balance. >> okay. yeah. light >> yeah. okay. yeah. so light and a maybe and shade. we'll get a maybe we'll get a partner for nick out of all right, let's of this show. all right, let's move on. are at the halfway move on. we are at the halfway point, up world point, but coming up we world war step closer to war three takes a step closer to a bad night at the baftas for british the uk town british men and the uk town demolished before it even began . demolished before it even began. see you in a
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again earlier on gb news radio show . show. >> well , come show. >> well, come back to headliners with me, andrew doyle. >> these are your first look at
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friday's newspaper, the independent , now. and this friday's newspaper, the independent, now. and this is perhaps a bit dodgy. pakistan and iran getting a bit scary there. yes there's conflict between pakistan and iran. >> uh, so iran bombed pakistan and then pakistan conducted, uh, retaliatory strikes and, uh, tehran said at least nine have been killed in pakistan's air strike. the victims three women, four children and two men. yeah um, and what's interesting, we've got so we've got civilians, children being killed here, and all the people have been tweeting relentlessly about israel and how it's horrific. the, you know, civilians and children are dying. uh, the most they've tweeted about this is like, uh, is , you know, oopsie. like, uh, is, you know, oopsie. you know. yes >> so why is that? you would have thought that. i mean, this could be could escalate. could be this could escalate. it could be this could escalate. it could really bad. nick. any could be really bad. nick. any thoughts? up thoughts? not really. i used up all this last all my thoughts on this last night. the only thing i'll say all my thoughts on this last ni thatthe only thing i'll say all my thoughts on this last ni that ite only thing i'll say all my thoughts on this last ni that it didn't thing i'll say all my thoughts on this last ni that it didn't happenll say all my thoughts on this last ni that it didn't happen under is that it didn't happen under trump. the world so trump. that's the world was so much you actually much safer. do you actually think he gets in i think when he gets in and i do think when he gets in and i do
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think be win , think it's going to be a win, uh, it be a world peace uh, it will be a world peace time? mean, will time? yeah. i mean, putin will get sure. get back in his hole. sure. >> there conflict between >> there was conflict between a lot under trump, lot of countries under trump, which look, which you know, look, it says here fully respects the here pakistan fully respects the sovereignty and territorial integrity islamic integrity of the islamic repubuc integrity of the islamic republic of iran. >> bombed them >> they just bombed them sometimes, but totally sometimes, but they totally respect that's main respect them. that's the main thing. let's move on thing. all right. let's move on now times. a gender now to the times. a gender clinic having some trouble, leo, as . as usual. >> f- as usual. >> nhs children's >> so a new nhs children's gender clinic has been beset by rows and resignations. this is after the tavistock clinic closed amongst, you know, a huge amount of controversy and scandals. staff quitting and whistle blowing around, concerns that children were being railroaded into the treatment that could have long standing, life changing effects but might not be best for them. you know, including puberty blockers and drugs and hormones and surgery as well. and now we've got this new this replacement, um, gender clinic. however, at least four members of the team resigned in late 2023 after disagreements over how children with children, children with gender dysphoria
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should be treated. so this tells you that the science still isn't cut and dried, but it is. >> i mean, this is the point. we've had the cass review, which is the biggest report and most rigorous report into paediatric gender medicine. these guys rigorous report into paediatric gensaying�*dicine. these guys rigorous report into paediatric gensaying , icine. these guys rigorous report into paediatric gen saying , well, these guys rigorous report into paediatric gensaying , well, maybe ase guys rigorous report into paediatric gen saying , well, maybe we guys are saying, well, maybe we should adhere to the cass recommendations. and there's other activists within these new institutions and saying, no, let's not do that. why don't we just top down, just take a strict top down, follow up? cass says that would seem the obvious thing to do, right? should it all down? number it illegal for number one, make it illegal for minors transition in and then minors to transition in and then stop covering it in the media, including us? this is my solution because people are just thinking, oh, i must be trans because of it is social because a lot of it is social contagion or they don't cover it. it's not social it. that i mean, it's not social contagion gb news. it's contagion from gb news. it's going to be tiktok. you've got to the other two parts. to do the other two parts. first. you've got exactly. look, to do the other two parts. fjust you've got exactly. look, to do the other two parts. fjust thinke got exactly. look, to do the other two parts. fjust think it'st exactly. look, to do the other two parts. fjust think it's quite tly. look, to do the other two parts. fjust think it's quite obvious, i just think it's quite obvious that kids, that affirming gender for kids, all evidence saying all of the evidence is saying it's to do. it's it's the wrong thing to do. it's a bad thing. a really bad thing. >> mean , if you >> yeah. but i mean, if you don't, don't let , uh, you don't, if you don't let, uh, you know, scientists and doctors with oversight , um, sterilise
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with oversight, um, sterilise and maim these children , they're and maim these children, they're going to go to the private sector get done. sector and get it done. there they've this a they've opened this week a private young private hormone clinic for young people became the first based people became the first uk based provider to be registered. uh to prescribe, prescribe cross—sex hormones for patients over over 16. so not you're not hugely young, but still. yeah they should put, um, sean strickland in charge of it. >> have you seen him? the mma fighter. have you seen his viral rant? >> see that? yeah >> see that? yeah >> he just said, well, can't >> he just said, well, i can't repeat actually. but repeat any of it actually. but has a good take on has he got a good take on paediatric on trans on trans paediatric on trans on a trans issue. got very staunch issue. he's got a very staunch take. so yeah i think take. yeah okay. so yeah i think just you know just follow the, the you know the review i mean that what the review i mean that was what it for. there's it was for. but there's a lot there's a big industry. it was for. but there's a lot the it's a big industry. it was for. but there's a lot the it's a multi—billion dollar >> it's a multi—billion dollar industry. you want industry. now do you want especially in america. >> yeah. do you want those doctors and those hormone manufacturers their manufacturers to not get their bonuses year ? that's bonuses this year? that's correct. i do not want that to happen absolutely. let's happen. absolutely. okay. let's move to bafta news from move on now to bafta news from the telegraph . apparently a bad the telegraph. apparently a bad night for male actors . night for male british actors. really, well, obviously no really, nick? well, obviously no one this stuff, but it's one watches this stuff, but it's male actors overlooked male british actors overlooked for bafta nomination first
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male british actors overlooked for b.inta nomination first male british actors overlooked for b.in nearly ination first male british actors overlooked for b.in nearly 50tion first male british actors overlooked for b.in nearly 50 years. first male british actors overlooked for b.in nearly 50 years. last: time in nearly 50 years. last time in nearly 50 years. last time happened was when al time this happened was when al pacino told you was good. won pacino told you he was good. won leading actor in 1976. and so a few british women have got in there. rosamund pike , she's very there. rosamund pike, she's very good she's in reacher, which good and she's in reacher, which is a good film, but no, no men. and because british men are and it's because british men are the best, but they can't admit that, you know, because it's all woke. so they have to just not give us any awards because we just win all. otherwise just win them all. otherwise yeah, it not just yeah, but, nick, is it not just the case that this year it happened be case that the happened to be the case that the best from abroad? happened to be the case that the bestbecause from abroad? happened to be the case that the bestbecause mean,1 abroad? happened to be the case that the bestbecause mean, leo,oad? happened to be the case that the bestbecause mean, leo, the’ no, because i mean, leo, the baftas just to award baftas are not just to award british actors. is this british actors. so why is this a problem? i don't, i think be though is it. that's what i thought was. it's not thought it was. no, it's not i mean it's not. so i mean, isn't this just a non—story? to borrow louis demand representation. >> oh , is what want? >> oh, is that what you want? yeah, yeah. like, where's >> oh, is that what you want? yea diversity?3ah. like, where's >> oh, is that what you want? yea diversity? equity .e, where's >> oh, is that what you want? yea diversity? equity and here's the diversity? equity and inclusion committee? making sure that scottish people are represented now , nobody cares represented now, nobody cares about it's the baftas. about it. it's the baftas. nobody about the baftas. nobody cared about the baftas. even ceremonies were even when award ceremonies were important the important and the oscars was the big the, you big one. and maybe the, you know, the, the mobo or
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something. if you, you know, as a runner up. but the baftas are now, you know, it used to be the chance to see celebrities when they're film . yeah. they're not in a film. yeah. see. on they're not in a film. yeah. see. oh look there he is. he's wearing a suit and sitting wearing a suit and he's sitting in now you've got in a chair and now you've got social so see social media. so you see that they're on. social media. so you see that the they're on. social media. so you see that the they're posting about israel >> they're posting about israel all don't actually all day. and i don't actually want about that. i'm want to hear about that. i'm actually these are award ceremonies generally have become hugely oscars hugely unpopular. the oscars as well since. well. and it's ever since. i think you're right the think you're right about the woke element. i mean with the baftas you baftas started saying you wouldn't be eligible unless you had you had a certain number of or you had a certain number of or you had diversity boxes had to tick diversity boxes in order to be eligible. doesn't order to be eligible. it doesn't really with an really make any sense with an artist. the baftas really make any sense with an arti�*oscars? the baftas really make any sense with an arti�*oscars? it the baftas really make any sense with an arti�*oscars? it was; baftas really make any sense with an arti�*oscars? it was both.tas really make any sense with an arti�*oscars? it was both. it; really make any sense with an arti�*oscars? it was both. it was the oscars? it was both. it was both. oscars have ludicrous both. the oscars have ludicrous rules yeah, rules now, don't they? yeah, they do, but the baptists rules now, don't they? yeah, they it, but the baptists rules now, don't they? yeah, they it, bwell the baptists rules now, don't they? yeah, they it, bwell .the baptists rules now, don't they? yeah, they it, bwell . so baptists rules now, don't they? yeah, they it, bwell . so isaptists rules now, don't they? yeah, they it, bwell . so i don'tts rules now, don't they? yeah, they it, bwell . so i don't care have it as well. so i don't care if british like six if british people like six awards. lighting awards. native american lighting operators and all this now. and the although they're operators and all this now. and the good although they're operators and all this now. and the good athat. gh they're very good at that. >> culture, oscars >> in that culture, the oscars have to include have been pressured to include jews in the minorities are jews in the minorities that are represented in the in the awards . so it'd be great to see some jewish representation in hollywood. >> excellent. let's move now >> excellent. let's move on now to a hit bbc to the telegraph. a hit bbc series is probably matic. i hate
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this word. leo problematic, i hate it. yeah the traitors is problematic , admits claudia winkleman. >> i think she presents it and it's all to do with who's being murdered. so the traitors is like the sort of murder mystery thing you can win money. it's like, know, they the like, you know, they play the murder weekend it's murder mystery weekend and it's an parlour game , right? murder mystery weekend and it's an it'sparlour game , right? murder mystery weekend and it's an it'sparold game , right? murder mystery weekend and it's an it'sparold parlour right? murder mystery weekend and it's an it'sparold parlour game. >> it's an old parlour game. >> it's an old parlour game. >> you've faithful >> yeah. so you've faithful players getting murdered by traitors? don't understand how traitors? i don't understand how it works, but apparently , um, it works, but apparently, um, claudia winkleman wants conversations about why four out of five contestants were eliminated. so far, and the show's second series have been female . female. >> male? isn't it just that they weren't game? weren't as good at the game? well, how she how they identify? >> why? >> why? >> well, there's there is >> well, there's that there is that, i was thinking of that, leo. but i was thinking of the idea of looking for sexism where possibly be the where it cannot possibly be the case.is where it cannot possibly be the case. is this not a game where the best players is it not the best players win? is it not a meritocracy? >> just >> don't they just select randomly select? >> about meritocracy >> great point about meritocracy and why, shouldn't and also why, why, why shouldn't women have representation in being mean , why being murdered? i mean, why can't they probably just as good as out of five
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as men, right? four out of five women, they're not women, you know, they're not actually right actually murdered. no. right it's a fake. oh, really? they've they've yeah i thought they've got it. yeah i thought it's outrageous , i don't watch. it's outrageous, i don't watch. i can't believe you said that . i i can't believe you said that. i can't believe that's kind of. i forgot we were on air for a second. we are on air. i was like, that's an air like, that's an off air joke. but it's proper. it's but look, it's not proper. it's not problematic, is it? it's just in particular just that in this particular game, watch the bbc. it's game, don't watch the bbc. it's an left network. no game, don't watch the bbc. it's an watches left network. no game, don't watch the bbc. it's an watches it left network. no game, don't watch the bbc. it's an watches it anymore.»rk. no game, don't watch the bbc. it's an watches it anymore. it's no one watches it anymore. it's dying do. this is dying out, i do. this is interesting though. winkleman says. traitor, interesting though. winkleman says. tap traitor, interesting though. winkleman says. tap dancingaitor, interesting though. winkleman says. tap dancing all', interesting though. winkleman says. tap dancing all the time. interesting though. winkleman says. �*that'sncing all the time. interesting though. winkleman says. “that's why] all the time. interesting though. winkleman says. “that's why more he time. interesting though. winkleman says. “that's why more of time. maybe that's why more of them are they're maybe that's why more of them are at they're maybe that's why more of them are at tap they're maybe that's why more of them are at tap dancing.�*|ey're maybe that's why more of them are at tap dancing. yeah, better at tap dancing. yeah, that's the that's not true. some of the best dancers the world best tap dancers in the world have really yeah, have been men. really yeah, well, lost. don't well, i know i'm lost. i don't know right. don't know them. right. well, i don't understand know them. right. well, i don't under�*let's let's move on to the okay, let's let's move on to the daily uh, now, this daily star. now, uh, now, this is that's so bad, it's is a town that's so bad, it's being knocked down before anyone can nick, going can move in. nick, what's going on? yeah, i'm still laughing at myself last so myself from the last section, so it's uk town crap, uk town it's crap. uk town crap, uk town deemed so crap that it's demolished before anyone even moved it's darwin green in moved in. it's darwin green in cambridgeshire. going to cambridgeshire. they're going to knock down 36 homes. uh, because they such bad foundations, they had such bad foundations, they had such bad foundations, they realise the most effective
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course just to course of action is just to demolish rebuild them, demolish them and rebuild them, because about £20 demolish them and rebuild them, be build about £20 demolish them and rebuild them, be build anyway, about £20 demolish them and rebuild them, be build anyway, is about £20 demolish them and rebuild them, be build anyway, is the about £20 to build anyway, is the implication there? yeah. i'll implication there? yeah. so i'll just we'll get it just start again. we'll get it right this time guys. but i mean it's implication it's not like the implication of the this town the headline is that this town was and so rough and so was so bad and so rough and so awful, it to be, awful, no one wants it to be, just it. it's not that just demolish it. it's not that it an actual safety risk. it was an actual safety risk. they were going they found the houses were going to crush the to fall down and crush the occupants, people occupants, and the people weren't when they weren't in the houses when they bulldozed weren't in the houses when they bulright. so sounds like, >> right. so it sounds like, you know, they the know, they sent they sent the bulldozers into a town that's already there. although there are houses already there. although there are and houses already there. although there are and they're houses already there. although there are and they're like, houses already there. although there are and they're like, well,uses there. and they're like, well, what about all this dust? i don't know, breathing this don't know, breathing all this dust. yeah, that's that's essentially stories essentially what the stories story of to fact that sort of point to the fact that new tend to very new builds tend to be not very good. like old houses good. you get like old houses that in the georgian good. you get like old houses that and in the georgian good. you get like old houses that and they're the georgian good. you get like old houses that and they're decent. rgian good. you get like old houses that and they're decent. new era, and they're decent. new builds they've got builds are small. they've got thin walls bit rubbish. thin walls a bit rubbish. >> they be building thin walls a bit rubbish. >> like ey be building thin walls a bit rubbish. >> like they be building thin walls a bit rubbish. >> like they used be building thin walls a bit rubbish. >> like they used to. building thin walls a bit rubbish. >> like they used to. yeah,1g houses like they used to. yeah, absolutely. i agree, haunted using . okay, we're going using haunted. okay, we're going to move on now. the final section is coming up very soon. we're going to be talking about very news for ocd sufferers. very bad news for ocd sufferers. and correct way to and also the correct way to pronounce scone. scone whatever.
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see you
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welcome back to headliners your first look at friday's newspapers . so the telegraph now newspapers. so the telegraph now bad news for ocd sufferers. leo >> yeah. so ocd sufferers are 82% more likely to die from anything. anything at all. study. so that's something to obsess about tonight if you've got if you've got ocd. so apparently your 31% more likely to die from a natural cause and 92% more likely to die from an accident . so i guess people with accident. so i guess people with ocd are probably a bit sicker, a bit more sickly , and they're bit more sickly, and they're also a lot more clumsy now. >> but isn't it also saying it's to do with suicide, as they're more to themselves? more likely to kill themselves? >> an accident? >> no , that doesn't count an >> no, that doesn't count as an accident. fact, yeah, accident. so in fact, yeah, that's this. that's what's odd about this. is that's what's odd about this. is that category of that any possible category of death affect ocd death seems to affect ocd people, right, nick? no, i don't believe it. unless your ocd quirk that you like to, like,
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quirk is that you like to, like, check train tracks check if train tracks are straight something. don't straight or something. i don't believe be believe that you're going to be that. about this that. i'm annoyed about this story. sometimes story. our producers sometimes put stories in to hurt me personally obviously know personally. obviously they know i've got health anxiety. obviously i've got ocd. i only have a mild case, but my grandad had pretty bad ocd. he would check the door repeatedly millions, times. millions, millions of times. died no died at 93 instantly. no problems. you know i don't believe this nonsense . i have to believe this nonsense. i have to not believe this. he was in. he was in the war. >> yeah. is that how he got it? no, was just. >> yeah. is that how he got it? no,i was just. >> yeah. is that how he got it? no,i think; just. >> yeah. is that how he got it? no,i think it'st. >> yeah. is that how he got it? no,i think it's just genetic >> i think it's just genetic because i've got it as well. but no doing this to attack no one's doing this to attack you. really not. you. they are. it's really not. i'm attacked, it's. don't i'm attacked, but it's. i don't believe it anyway, luckily, because i think it's nonsense. and the thing there are and the good thing is, there are 10% io% and the good thing is, there are 10% 10% likely to and the good thing is, there are 10�*%from 10% likely to and the good thing is, there are 10�*%from cancerous likely to and the good thing is, there are 10�*%from cancerous tumours. to die from cancerous tumours. probably them probably because they check them constantly. would be constantly. yeah, that would be my so i believe it. my guess. so i don't believe it. and ernest becker and you know, ernest becker talks the denial of talks about it in the denial of death. as you all know, andrew and coping strategy and it's just a coping strategy for existential that for the existential reality that we with. the we that we live with. the reality death. you come up reality of death. you come up with rituals to just make with little rituals to just make yourself you yourself feel better. and if you don't, there don't, you're a bit thick. there we mincing we go. okay, nick. not mincing his words there, we're going to
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go to on the telegraph now. we're going try and end this we're going to try and end this age old debate. so is scone? age old debate. so is it scone? is scone ? where do where is it scone? where do we where do scots stand on this? do the scots stand on this? >> so the countdown presenter susie know this susie dent, who should know this the has given a ruling the most, has given a ruling on how pronounce word scone how to pronounce the word scone or scone. so she interestingly, she says it's not going to end the debate any , any time soon the debate any, any time soon because according to her etymology, uh, it's a viking word. it's pronounced scone. so isn't it a scottish word? so no , isn't it a scottish word? so no, it's a rye bun. and apparently it's a rye bun. and apparently it was filled with fermented puffin and because they didn't have, uh , this is made up. it's have, uh, this is made up. it's a mixture of clotted cream and fermented puffin. >> is true . but, you >> this is not true. but, you know, do. have stone know, you do. you have the stone of scone. scone isn't scoon a scottish castle? >> scone was. it >> the stone of scone was. it was the first manufacturer of scones. >> they were. so it should be scone scoon . i'll have a scone scone scoon. i'll have a scone and cream. yeah that's okay. nick, what would you clear here? the britain it should be said scone. so the north winds . scone. so the north winds. because that's how we pronounce scone yet again. the north winds
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where as in the us, that's that's how the us pronounce it . that's how the us pronounce it. and they don't understand scones anyway. they'll do them wrong . anyway. they'll do them wrong. >> into scone over >> turn them into scone over there. yeah, yeah. >> turn them into scone over there. we h, yeah. >> turn them into scone over there. we wineah. >> turn them into scone over there. we win the north wind is >> so we win the north wind is what i've taken from this. so after don't know is after all this we don't know is the answer know. the is the answer we know. scone. yeah no in scone. scone? yeah no scone in the uk, according cambridge the uk, according to cambridge dictionary in britain, scone should scone it's should be pronounced scone. it's there. say it . it there. the more you say it. it sounds the article, it sounds weird. in the article, it all sounds weird to me. all right. i got really . all sounds weird to me. all right. i got really. i right. josh, so i got really. i think there's avoid them . think there's avoid them. they're disgusting things. anyway, going move on anyway, we're going to move on to this next story. now, this is a libraries from the a review on libraries from the government . nick. who? you got government. nick. who? you got this? really? we're this? really? yeah. we're gonna do on. want do the apple woke on. you want to the libraries? all right to do the libraries? all right then review finds libraries in england lack of england suffer lack of recognition england suffer lack of recogis tion england suffer lack of recogis ti(very exciting to this is a very exciting story to have it's an have in the fun section. it's an independent libraries independent review of libraries for minister stephen for culture minister stephen parkinson, conducted by baroness sanderson . as far as i can see, sanderson. as far as i can see, the underlying issue is underinvestment. they don't have enough well, of course we enough money. well, of course we knew obviously libraries enough money. well, of course we kne so obviously libraries enough money. well, of course we kne so nothing/iously libraries enough money. well, of course we kneso nothing has;ly libraries enough money. well, of course we kneso nothing has enough'ies enough money. well, of course we kneso nothing has enough money. are so nothing has enough money. libraries so not anti
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libraries are. so i'm not anti library. covering this library. i'm anti covering this story in the light hearted section boring. section because it's boring. well you can make of well you can make fun of libraries if want. go on or libraries if you want. go on or in any section because it's also boring. >> don't believe in books >> you don't believe in books though. well believe every though. well don't believe every people looking. they people are always looking. they need money. more need more money. we need more money it's like , no, money for this. it's like, no, you don't need more money. everybody's you don't need more money. every of iy's you don't need more money. every of knowledge that was ever mote of knowledge that was ever created their phones. created through their phones. >> they don't have created through their phones. >> to they don't have created through their phones. >> to drugsey don't have created through their phones. >> to drugs .( don't have created through their phones. >> to drugs . queen have created through their phones. >> to drugs . queen story created through their phones. >> which ugs . queen story created through their phones. >> which iss . queen story created through their phones. >> which is what|een story hour, which is what libraries are doing now. >> or the monkey book guy. >> or the monkey book guy. >> right. exactly. so what about those to those people? they need to be supported as well. >> go down the new >> they can go down in the new gender clinic. >> they can go down in the new ger okay, inic. >> they can go down in the new gerokay, let's have a look at >> okay, let's have a look at the apple has the daily mail now. apple has gone . yeah. so gone woke apparently. yeah. so this apple woke this is good. apple goes woke with new option to add pronouns in your iphone contacts as users joke steve jobs would die again if he this he writes if he saw this and he writes this the update. yes, and this with the update. yes, and i've it tonight on i've checked it tonight on my own actually got own phone because i actually got given christmas. given a phone for christmas. i've out of the the i've come out of the having the flip and i finally got flip phone and i finally got a good iphone, but got the good iphone, but it's got the pronouns in it. you can add pronouns. so annoying. do pronouns. it's so annoying. do you don't you have to though? you don't have you know, it's like have to. but you know, it's like number what?
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number email pronouns. what? and it's , you know, on date. it's like, you know, on date. i don't dating apps, don't go on dating apps, but i've heard women put their pronouns. them pronouns. i've seen them on instagram. put their instagram. they just put their pronouns in. the problem is, when you that, when you when you do that, you're buying into an you're already buying into an ideology. so by apple adding this, like this, it's prompting you to like follow it's follow wokeness. i think it's useful dating because useful on dating sites because you automatically dismiss you can automatically dismiss who those individuals. yeah who to those individuals. yeah someone would stop you someone said this would stop you answering that answering the phone, but that stuff come when they answering the phone, but that stuff that come when they answering the phone, but that stuff that would 1e when they answering the phone, but that stuff that would be when they answering the phone, but that stuff that would be good.en they call. that would be good. yeah, that would leo her a good that would leo she her a good way screen people but way to screen people out. but you a religious you know, this is a religious belief effectively belief system effectively the pronouns ideology. so pronouns the gender ideology. so are put like are they going to put like favourite stuff. favourite saint and stuff. they should that. should do stuff like that. favourite deity. yeah. favourite greek deity. yeah. >> favourite child slave that made something like made your phone something like that i don't know, i feel like the fad dying and the pronoun fad is dying out and i think , you know, saying a i think, you know, saying that a big lump in corporation like this is, know, suddenly this is, you know, suddenly trying it, that's a sign trying to make it, that's a sign that, it's going that, you know, it's going jumped i think jumped the shark. i think it's becoming naff now. yeah, yeah. >> throw my brand >> and i had to throw my brand new phone into the sea because of i so yeah. of this. i was so angry. yeah. rebecca vardy i'm do over rehash of people say gb news of what people say or gb news typekit. angry about typekit. i'm so angry about wokeness to throw a new wokeness i have to throw a new
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phone very phone into you. you're very dramatic heterosexual . i dramatic for heterosexual. i have you. yeah. have to say thank you. yeah. let's final let's have a look at this final one. got time one. i think we've just got time . this a story in the daily . this is a story in the daily star a williams. he star about a mark williams. he got seven point penalty for a practical joke on a snooker referee. what's going on? that's right. >> the snooker player mark williams joke williams plays a practical joke on it lost him on a referee. but it lost him seven points. he was competing against hossein vafaei and the world grand prix. grand prix and uh the official was moving the balls around on the table doing his, you know, official stuff with gloves. and while he with the gloves. and while he wasn't looking, this guy mark williams, the white ball williams, grabbed the white ball and in his pocket. and stuck it in his pocket. and then like, oh god, then the guy's like, oh my god, where's gone? and then the guy's like, oh my god, wher he gone? and then the guy's like, oh my god, wher he around gone? and then the guy's like, oh my god, wher he around g0|the and then he turns around and the quy's then he turns around and the guy's stuff, he guy's laughing and stuff, but he said, actually a said, no, that's actually a serious touched the serious point. you touched the ball during consultation ball during a consultation period. know period. you know what? >> referee was just >> that referee was just humiliated he wanted get humiliated and he wanted to get his own back. >> the same was to >> the same thing was said to me at you touched at the doctors. you touched the ball consultation at the doctors. you touched the ball uh, consultation at the doctors. you touched the ball uh, i'm)nsultation at the doctors. you touched the ball uh, i'm gonnation at the doctors. you touched the ball uh, i'm gonna have to period. uh, i'm gonna have to give you points. well, give you some points. well, i think fair enough. think that's fair enough. >> what about you, nick? yeah, i watched he german >> what about you, nick? yeah, i wasomething? he german >> what about you, nick? yeah, i wa something? he iierman >> what about you, nick? yeah, i wasomething? he i hatein >> what about you, nick? yeah, i wa something? he i hate to or something? i mean, i hate to just sort of be a stereotype, but. he couldn't
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but. yeah, because he couldn't take overreacted . yeah. take a joke, overreacted. yeah. yeah, exactly. he said yeah, exactly. rules. he said it's in the rules. which is just such it's just not an english such a it's just not an english thing. we don't don't do thing. we don't we don't do that. have thought they that. i would have thought they want snooker. want more fun in snooker. i mean, no the mean, there's no fun. the only fun i've snooker is when fun i've seen snooker is when just jump the just stop oil, they jump on the smoke. drunk smoke. and they were drunk the whole were the whole time. and those were the great days of snooker, right? you inside. alex great days of snooker, right? you and inside. alex great days of snooker, right? you and all. inside. alex great days of snooker, right? you and all. should alex great days of snooker, right? you and all. should ale uh. higgins and all. should be, uh. >> i know. mean, like, >> i don't know. i mean, like, the sport is if you the thing with sport is if you don't stick to the rules. oh, for god's sake, end. where does it it's germans the >> it's the germans and the scots. you're all sticklers. it's boring. yeah. anyway it's very boring. yeah. anyway that's all we've got time for. thanks. so much for thanks. ever so much for watching. we're gonna have another at friday's another quick look at friday's front the mail front pages. uh, the daily mail is don't defy will is leading with don't defy will of rishi warns of the people. rishi warns lords. the telegraph nato warns of war with russia in the next 20 years, since the stuff the guardian has netanyahu . we will guardian has netanyahu. we will not accept a palestinian state after gaza war. the times is leading with a story about teachers locking themselves in classrooms and cupboards because they're scared of the pupils . they're scared of the pupils. the i news has got government
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orders inquiry into second post office. scandals and daily office. it scandals and daily star. thou shalt have rumpy pumpy star. thou shalt have rumpy pumpy a message from the pope. there that's all we've got time for. but thanks ever so much to my guests leo kearse and nick dixon. going be back dixon. leo is going to be back tomorrow and paul. dixon. leo is going to be back tomorrcthe and paul. dixon. leo is going to be back tomorrcthe way and paul. dixon. leo is going to be back tomorrcthe way , and paul. dixon. leo is going to be back tomorrcthe way , you're’aul. and by the way, if you're watching the am, watching us for the 5 am, repeat tuned because repeat, do stay tuned because now time for breakfast. now it is time for breakfast. looks like things are heating up i >> -- >> boxt boilers sponsor us of weather on gb news is . weather on gb news is. >> good evening. welcome to your latest gb news weather update. friday will be another dry and sunny day for most and showers are becoming much more limited to the far north, but there's still a snow and ice warning in force for many areas of northern and scotland. high and western scotland. high pressure is centring itself more centrally across the uk. overnight tonight and through friday. will bring the friday. that will bring the dner friday. that will bring the drier weather. so through the night it will turn dry night tonight it will turn dry for areas . plenty of long for many areas. plenty of long lived clear spells , some mist lived clear spells, some mist and freezing fog , in fact, and fog, freezing fog, in fact, for areas of wales and
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for some areas of wales and inland england the inland england along the pennines, well . but in the pennines, as well. but in the far of scotland, we'll far north of scotland, we'll see that continued risk of heavy snowfall . the snow will turn snowfall. the snow will turn a little bit slushy as the night progresses, there'll be some progresses, but there'll be some ice untreated roads by ice on any untreated roads by the morning. it's going to be another cold tomorrow another very cold start tomorrow morning, nine in morning, as low as minus nine in southern but southern rural areas, but there'll be plenty of sunshine once another bright and once again. another bright and sunny the bulk of the sunny day for the bulk of the uk. got a bit of uk. we've got a bit more of a westerly wind, so it will be a bit breezier on the coast, but that does mean that the temperatures will be a little bit days. bit higher than recent days. 6 or the south—west, or 7 degrees in the south—west, but gloomy day but still a fairly gloomy day with plenty more snow showers to come in the north—west. a very unsettled day on saturday for nonh unsettled day on saturday for north and western areas, with the winds picking up as we see a marked change in for weather marked change in our for weather the quite the weekend. so quite heavy rainfall for parts of rainfall to come for parts of northern ireland and very many north western areas of the uk. and as the temperatures start to climb weekend the climb through the weekend, the snow melt across snow will start to melt across much of scotland. so that could bnng much of scotland. so that could bring flooding issues. bring some flooding issues. see you . you later. >> a brighter outlook with boxt
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gb news. >> well, the prime minister insists that the conservative party is united. all is going well and that we will stop the boats. and yet, latest polling suggests they're in bigger trouble than i've ever seen them. i'm going ask today is them. i'm going to ask today is them. i'm going to ask today is the conservative party in terminal decline? we then go to south wales to tata steel, where inevitably we will cease to be primary steel producers in britain as a cost of going green . is it really worth it? and joining me on talking pints, my campmate from a jungle of war winning actress danielle harold . winning actress danielle harold. but before all of that, let's get the news with polly
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middlehurst . nigel thank you and middlehurst. nigel thank you and good evening to you. >> well, the top story from the gb newsroom tonight. the prime minister is calling on the house of lords do what he of lords now to do what he says is right and pass his is the right thing. and pass his rwanda bill. rishi sunak, who says he's determined to control the uk's borders. says he's determined to control the uk's borders . we're speaking the uk's borders. we're speaking to officials at gatwick airport this afternoon to highlight, he said, the importance of border security. well, the third reading of the rwanda bill passed through the commons unamended last night with a majority of 44 dup, dozens of conservative had threatened to rebel. but in the end only 11 voted against. mr sunak says peers must now support the legislation as an urgent national priority and the prime minister's plan to stop the boats comes as the home office confirmed today, 358 people were into trying to cross the english
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channel yesterday in eight small boats. that means 621 people have arrived in the uk so far this year, despite more than two weeks of poor weather, the aslef train union has announced that drivers will go on strike for five days next month. lner drivers will walk out from february the 5th in their long running dispute over pay. the latest strike action is in addition to a series of walkouts against train operators across england. previously announced by the union . and as you've been the union. and as you've been hearing, thousands of jobs are at risk as tata steel has decided to push ahead with plans to close both blast furnaces at its port talbot plant in south wales. the decision comes despite unions today putting forward proposals aimed at saving jobs, which tata has rejected. the redundancies , rejected. the redundancies, which will be completed by march next year, will see three quarters of 4000 staff on site at risk of losing their jobs.
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