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tv   Patrick Christys Tonight  GB News  January 22, 2024 9:00pm-11:01pm GMT

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news. >> a very good evening. this is patrick christie's tonight. i'm angry that we struggle with the housing crisis and the near impossible situation of having soaring monthly rents . loudmouth soaring monthly rents. loudmouth radical labour mp apsana begum is still living on the taxpayer, taking a council house despite earning nearly 90 k a year. welcome to starmer's welfare britain. plus does this offend you .7 renee forget peter murrell you.7 renee forget peter murrell for base you? renee forget peter murrell for base . rate of seven adam ant for base. rate of seven adam ant or shall we say , well, it or shall we say, well, it offends the green party. apparently who seemingly want to ban our union flag. >> its needlessly divisive to introduce um, flags to um taxis as well. >> thankfully, the brits i
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spotted today have some common sense. >> every country has their own flag and it's not at all racist. it should be proud of it. tonight i am asking should we be prouder of our union flag? >> also on the way the rwanda rebels were hauled in to see the chief whip today, andrea jenkins will exclusively reveal right here on this show what actually went on behind closed doors and went on behind closed doors and we sent someone undercover to exclusively reveal how kids are being indoctrinated with stuff like this in an arts museum for children. on my panel tonight, it is columnist carole malone . it is columnist carole malone. we've got former brexit party mep belinda de lucy and journalist mike buckley. are you ready? britain here we go. whether warnings everywhere and another storm prepares to batter britain. but not everyone is
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taking it seriously . stop taking it seriously. stop bombing my man. stop bombing. i'll see you after the . news. i'll see you after the. news. >> patrick. thank you. good evening to you. will. patrick's right. new weather warnings have been issued with a new storm. storm? josh heading for the uk. just as the country recovers from storm isha . two people died from storm isha. two people died and tens of thousands of people remain without power. after the uk was battered with high winds last night. gusts of more than 100 miles an hour and heavy rain caused major travel disruption, with flooding and fallen trees forcing planes to be diverted and trains to be cancelled , and trains to be cancelled, scotrail has announced today it's again suspending services from 7:00 tomorrow, right through to wednesday morning as the new weather front approaches. there will be no trains on wednesday as the lines are having to be checked for damage . downing street has damage. downing street has denied that the government's
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pursuing an anti—bbc agenda. after announcing a raft of reforms as part of a review into the corporation . under new the corporation. under new plans, ofcom could gain more powers over bbc news website articles if it doesn't meet relevant standards. government recommendations imply ofcom should be given increased oversight over the bbc's online services, including its youtube channel. the prime minister said today that the bbc isn't immune today that the bbc isn't immune to scrutiny. british farmers have been calling on mps to support tougher regulations to protect them from what they're calling unfair treatment by the so—called big six supermarkets. a dozen scarecrows were placed outside parliament as mps debated reforms to the grocery supply chain . it's after 110,000 supply chain. it's after 110,000 people signed a petition urging the government to overhaul the grocery supplies code of practice. well, riverford organic, the company which started the petition, said the
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scarecrows represented farmers they claim could go out of business in the next 12 months because of the big six supermarkets buying practices . supermarkets buying practices. labour has accused the government of turning a blind eye to corruption , after new eye to corruption, after new data showed water bosses have been pocketing millions of poundsin been pocketing millions of pounds in performance bonuses despite being in charge while they've been illegal sewage spills . new figures showed. spills. new figures showed. water chiefs have received more than £10 million in bonuses and nearly £15 million in incentives since the last general election in 2019. labour says if it gets to power, it'll give the regulator the power to ban senior executives bonuses if their companies are illegally polluting waterways . queen polluting waterways. queen camilla toured today a domestic violence refuge in wiltshire to celebrate the service's 50th anniversary. her majesty met with staff, volunteers and families at the swindon domestic
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abuse support service . asked abuse support service. asked about the king, queen camilla said he's fine as he prepares to undergo treatment for an enlarged prostate. this week, king charles saying earlier on he wants to be more open about his condition to encourage other men to get themselves checked out . that's the news on gb news out. that's the news on gb news across the uk , on tv, in your across the uk, on tv, in your car, on digital radio and on your smart speaker. this is britain's news channel . loud britain's news channel. loud mouth, hard left labour mp apsana begum is still living in a taxpayer funded council house despite earning mega money. >> is this a window, do you think, into the socialist entitled benefits britain that awaits us under labour? it certainly raises serious questions about how people can game the system and live a life on the taxpayer. take which of course is not what miss begum is doing here at all. radical pro—palestine begum the pro—palestine begum attacked the tories last week for having no
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solutions the housing crisis. solutions to the housing crisis. in fact , it's been a theme of in fact, it's been a theme of her as an mp since she was her time as an mp since she was elected 2019. in london. elected in 2019. in london. >> we have a very, very severe housing crisis. we know that 800 people alone died rough sleeping last year. we know that homelessness has gone up. we know that there isn't enough social housing being built. i'm angry that we struggle with the housing crisis and the near impossible situation of having soaring monthly rents, which all too often means people, particularly those on low incomes, are faced with an increased risk of homelessness . increased risk of homelessness. and we must be very clear that those with the broadest shoulders and with the deepest pockets must pay their fair share . share. >> oh, really? well now it's turned out that despite being on just under £90,000 a year, and there are question marks over whether or not she's actually on more than that, she's living in a flat that's supposedly we're all paying for, in a sense. she's got a hand out twice, hasn't she? our wages and hasn't she? we pay our wages and then we pay for our house. i've
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got solution. go and rent your got a solution. go and rent your own home. stand on your own two feet. woman was feet. now, this woman was endorsed radical left wing endorsed by radical left wing group momentum. nominated on an all woman she's all woman shortlist. she's escaped for standing escaped punishment for standing alongside palestine alongside the palestine solidarity campaign. that responded hamas attack by responded to the hamas attack by organising demonstration organising a demonstration outside embassy . outside the israeli embassy. let's take a look at some of the numbers here, shall we? because they pretty damning. the they are pretty damning. the average salary where begum lives is £30,000 year. the is just over £30,000 a year. the average salary in the uk is just shy of £35,000. that's nearly a third of her 86,500 pound salary as an mp in her area. there are around 20,000 people on the housing waiting list and she is living in a council flat . living in a council flat. despite being an mp, she said years ago that she thought she didn't really need the council flat . well, she's part of the flat. well, she's part of the problem though. then isn't she? many people will find it absolutely insane that somebody earning roughly 90 k a year can still benefits , but here still claim benefits, but here we are in modern britain and
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people are happy to do it now. in august 2023, 22.6 million people were were claiming some form of benefits in england, scotland and wales. in london, 47.6% of social housing occupants are reportedly immigrants . occupants are reportedly immigrants. it is expected occupants are reportedly immigrants . it is expected that immigrants. it is expected that £14.3 billion will immigrants. it is expected that £143 billion will be spent on housing benefit this year. that includes people like miss begum, apparently . analysis of office apparently. analysis of office for national statistics data from 2020 2021 showed a record 54.2% of people. that was 36 million at the time. now live in households which received more in benefits than they contributed in taxes in places like lambeth in london, where the average rent is £2,745 a month, people who've just arrived to this country can get it subsidised at around £487 a month, and today it's emerged that migrants are being given taxpayer subsidised social
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housing. just off the portobello roadin housing. just off the portobello road in london. they can pay £151 a week for a three bedroom property, apparently normally that will be £860 a week and they are allowed to sublet their spare rooms to rent them out and to keep the profits. this is an absolute mickey take. people are bang at it in this country when it comes to claiming benefits. we have the highest tax burden since world war two and your taxes are paying for people like apsana begum. are you happy about that now? we approached apsana begum for comment and she failed to get back to us. but let's get the thoughts of my panellist, daily express columnist carole malone. i've got commentator and journalist mike and former brexit mike buckley and former brexit party mep belinda de lucy. thank you all of you. carole you know, is this typical labour always got a handout or not? typical. >> you know, one set of principles for labour, another set for the rest of us. this woman is a towering hypocrite. >> she talks about the tories not tackling the housing crisis and part it, filling and she's part of it, filling her boots courtesy the state
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her boots courtesy of the state out grand, as you say, out on 90 grand, as you say, nearly 90 grand because she has her mp salary. plus she has the four grand £4,300. i think it is the london, what they call london . and, you london waiting. and, you know, this a case, you know, if this is a case, you know, if there's 23,000 people in your area desperate people on the housing list and she knows that, she absolutely knows that it's a matter of moral morals , a matter matter of moral morals, a matter of principle, a matter of duty to give up that flat. she admitted two years ago. she doesn't really need it, she said very glibly. i don't really need this now. so why is she selling it? probably because , it? well, probably because, as you been paid by you say, it's been paid for by the state. it's a nice riverside property . so she maybe couldn't property. so she maybe couldn't afford for that by afford to pay for that by herself. but it's astonishing that that got with that that she has got away with this. was a tory mp this. if this was a tory mp living in a in a council flat place, whatever it is, there would be hell to pay and there's also questions raised over how she got this flat in the first place that she was. she was a former housing adviser in the borough, and it was said at the
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time that she had an understanding of how the system worked. that ought to be worked. so that ought to be looked as well. but shocking. >> all right. i'll come back to you, you this is you, mike. you know, this is a pretty bad luck, is it not? i mean, is this not a window into benefits britain that awaits us if a starmer government? if we have a starmer government? i exactly right in i mean, she's exactly right in saying the government have saying that the government have no the housing no solutions to the housing crisis. haven't built enough >> we haven't built enough housing last 13 years. housing for the last 13 years. lots of people can't get on the housing ladder. and not housing ladder. and that's not just across just in london. it's across britain. near britain. there's nowhere near enough social housing, as evidenced the fact that in evidenced by the fact that in tower there's 20,000 tower hamlets there's 20,000 people waiting and people on the waiting list. and that, in every other that, again, is in every other part britain well. it is part of britain as well. it is odd, i admit, is odd, i admit, that an mp is living in social housing, but it's say that we it's important to say that we are not paying for it. she is paying are not paying for it. she is paying rent on that property and that go to the social that rent will go to the social housing provider, that's housing provider, whether that's the subsidised rent. housing provider, whether that's the it's subsidised rent. housing provider, whether that's the it's subsidised,ed rent. mike, it's a subsidised, subsidised rent. but also she's not either. not receiving benefits either. so said both those so and you said both of those things your introduction. so things in your introduction. so she's for it out her she's paying for it out of her salary. we are not paying her benefit. no it isn't. >> is the benefit. >> that is the benefit. >> that is the benefit.
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>> she has. >> that is the benefit. >> a1e has. >> that is the benefit. >> a job as. >> that is the benefit. >> a job is. >> that is the benefit. >> a job is a benefit. >> a job is a benefit. >> she has a job and she gets paid for that job out of her, out of payment. but she is out of her payment. but she is paying out of her payment. but she is paying on that property as paying rent on that property as everybody social everybody else in social housing. says she housing. she has says she doesn't need it. >> that she shouldn't really. >> i mean, one thing that you guys have expanded this evening and not know this, and you may not know this, i fully understand. she fully understand. and she is currently mp, but she's been currently an mp, but she's been what's called deselected by her local labour party. she's got local labour party. so she's got to a reselection to go through a reselection process. remember process. i can't quite remember the reasons that. she may the reasons for that. so she may be a job in six months be out of a job in six months time when we get to the general election. so she's probably sitting there right now thinking, to face thinking, i'm going to face reselection. i might live, i might to live in this house. >> why has she been discharged? >> why has she been discharged? >> remember the >> i can't actually remember the reasons why. >> but linda, your views on this. mean, i think most this. i mean, i think most people will sticky in people will find it sticky in the somewhat. there's the craw somewhat. there's somebody shy reported of somebody on just shy reported of £90,000 could have any £90,000 a year. could have any kind leg up whatsoever. kind of leg up whatsoever. >> love to on grand >> i'd love to be on 90 grand a year and subsidy and rent. year and have subsidy and rent. i mean, so would everyone. i think it is a moral issue. >> as carol said. and i also
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think, i mean, god forbid socialists ever practice what they preach, be standing they preach, but to be standing there for the there as if you're for the working the working working class, the working people, the poor, what see working class, the working peiabusing poor, what see working class, the working peiabusing poctaxpayeriat see working class, the working peiabusing poctaxpayer because as abusing the taxpayer because it abusing the taxpayer, this it is abusing the taxpayer, this it's for me in my it's almost like for me in my opinion, money. saw opinion, stealing money. i saw it going lot in the eu it going on a lot in the eu parliament as as if it was parliament as well as if it was just a monetary and not actually the wages of, you know, nurses and and men that and teachers and bin men that are going to subsidise are actually going to subsidise this highly paid mp a council this highly paid mp in a council house. massive. house. i think it's massive. she's the female version of she's like the female version of gary lineker, it's gary lineker, gary lineker, it's massively hypocritical that there's how much you there's a limit to how much you can earn. >> w n ew— e i looked, you >> right. well i looked, you know, i looked into the, the limit is 90 grand in this particular borough, which is shocking in itself. >> that needs be >> shocking. that needs to be changed. >> it's shocking in itself. >> it's shocking in itself. >> actually find that >> i actually find that staggering that it should be. i don't know if that's per flat or per person. if it's per flat, it should be that. per should be half that. if per person should about a third person should be about a third of that. >> because my that's my >> because that's my that's my wider right. really. wider point. right. really. which points out which is and it points out a kind of benefits britain thing, which clearly, clearly which is that clearly, clearly it to find it is incredibly easy to find yourself on some form of
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benefits. i mean, something like 30 million in were 30 million people in the uk were on 50 odd on some form of benefit, 50 odd percent are on some kind of, but we are under a tory government. >> know, there has >> i mean, you know, there has to some responsibility taken to be some responsibility taken by power this is by those in power that this is allowed happen because people allowed to happen because people will loophole, every will use every loophole, every little can to little sneaky way they can to get system and abuse get around the system and abuse the taxpayer they can. the taxpayer if they can. they've green lighted. they've been green lighted. that's it's that's the reason why it's benefits. britain at the moment. >> low view human nature >> very low view of human nature and british people. well, and of british people. well, i do at the moment. >> find that quite >> i genuinely find that quite i think taxpayers being think the taxpayers being abused. i have a much higher opinion people. abused. i have a much higher 0p11|0n people. abused. i have a much higher oplii don't people. abused. i have a much higher oplii don't think people. abused. i have a much higher oplii don't think people eople. abused. i have a much higher oplii don't think people are e. >> i don't think people are scrooge. i think people generally hard and generally want to work hard and get in life. you know, there get on in life. you know, there are million people currently are 2.5 million people currently not value not working. the value of benefits this country benefits in this country is absolutely a cliff absolutely falling off a cliff in last 30 years. you are in the last 30 years. you are joking. i mean, was joking. i mean, there was a there was a big piece about it on sunday. gordon brown was talking about it. and the fact that benefits that poorer people on benefits now they're paying a staggering amount income on basic amount of their income on basic needs energy fuel, needs like energy and fuel, partly and fuel partly because energy and fuel pnces prices have gone up. >> of people in this
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>> odd percent of people in this country are on some. most of those, most of those be top those, most of those will be top ups, not most of those. >> that is because generally say this result of this is another result of government the real the government failure. the real the real this real value of wages in this country hasn't gone up since 2006, staggering 2006, which is a staggering indictment on the failure of this government to manage the economy properly, which does, of course, that then course, mean that people then need to apply benefits need to apply for benefits that does a higher does not mean we have a higher burden since world burden than i think since world war anyway, of tax of war ii, anyway, of tax of people. >> yeah, but but that tax is paid by people do go out and paid by people who do go out and earn money. >> vast majority people on benefits working benefits are also working because and work because people go out and work where they get a where they work. but they get a low well, can say it low wage. well, i can say it because it's true. >> not a they get paid >> it's not a they get paid a low wage and then they then need to go on benefits that you think the vast majority on will check it. >> what is what is the percentage you are on percentage you think are on working benefits? working and on benefits? >> what does can't >> what does that i can't remember top remember the start off the top of my head, but i'm very happy to it in the break. to look into it in the break. >> am i. to look into it in the break. >> am 1. yeah. >> yeah, so am 1. yeah. >> all right. well i mean there are are some stats. are look there are some stats. there are 22.6 million people
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were claiming some of were claiming some form of benefits were claiming some form of ben> is a real problem >> now, there is a real problem in country, those in this country, 18% of those able to in the working age able to work in the working age group and that don't have a disability , 18% of the disability, 18% of the population manchester are on population of manchester are on benefits. this is not right. it is not healthy. there's so much dignity to work as well. i think throwing people on the scrap heap of never ending, never ending benefits rather than saying you've got to, you've saying no, you've got to, you've got a job and you talk got to get a job and you talk about wages. well, if labour gets think inflation is gets in, i think inflation is going go through going to go through the roof again they're to again because they're going to submit the unions. submit to all the unions. >> word to >> final, final quick word to you, this. i mean, the you, mike, on this. i mean, the overarching concern is that overarching concern here is that if in, it would be a if labour come in, it would be a green who green light for anyone who fancies claiming benefits.
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>> well, of course it won't. i mean, it. i mean, what mean, far from it. i mean, what labour is invest in the labour will do is invest in the economy jobs economy so that more jobs are created. mean, was created. i mean, there was something the other day say what it stat was, but again, it what the stat was, but again, i look in the break, but i look at it in the break, but there's, there would have been millions more jobs had the government job government done it, a betterjob managing and did managing the economy and did a better with the brexit outcome. >> all right. okay. look, all of you.thank >> all right. okay. look, all of you. thank you very much. finally we'd see finally start. we'd love to see it. to come though. are we it. still to come though. are we joined tory joined live by leading tory rebel jenkyns. the rebel andrea jenkyns. will the dame i have my dame finally behave? i have my doubts. going be doubts. she's going to be revealing actually said doubts. she's going to be reitheing actually said doubts. she's going to be reithe whips actually said doubts. she's going to be reithe whips office. actually said doubts. she's going to be reithe whips office. howally said doubts. she's going to be reithe whips office. how is/ said doubts. she's going to be reithe whips office. how is our d in the whips office. how is our government those government now treating those rwanda as a rwanda rebels? but first, as a green says this about rwanda rebels? but first, as a greeunion says this about rwanda rebels? but first, as a greeunion flag says this about rwanda rebels? but first, as a greeunion flag . says this about the union flag. >> it's needlessly divisive to introduce, um flags to um taxis . introduce, um flags to um taxis. >> do we need to have more pride in our country's flag ? falklands in our country's flag? falklands hero simon weston defends our beloved union flag against anti—racist activist ken haynes. don't go anywhere. this is patrick christys tonight and we are only on
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sunday mornings from 930 on gb news is . well came back to news is. well came back to patrick christys tonight only on gb news. >> now coming up dame andrea jenkins is live from westminster to spill the beans on the rwanda rebel's latest meeting earlier today. but first it's time now for our head—to—head. today. but first it's time now for our head—to—head . this got for our head—to—head. this got loads of you going online today. a shropshire taxi driver with decades of military service has been left baffled after a local
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green party councillor said displaying a union flag in taxis was needlessly divisive . was needlessly divisive. >> watch and listen, they sent me an email stating that i was in breach of advertising standards and i had to remove the cross of saint george and the cross of saint george and the union jack from my vehicle. >> it's needlessly divisive to introduce , um, flags to um, introduce, um, flags to um, taxis , so i find it unfair , taxis, so i find it unfair, discriminatory, and i'm surprised it would even be legal to do this ridiculous . to do this ridiculous. >> so to restore my faith in the great british public, i had it out to east london earlier today to see what people there thought of our union flag. it shows unity, right? >> so i don't think there's anything wrong with it. i think you need to brownite where you live in it. i was born and raised the respecting the raised the way respecting the flag protecting the flag. >> they do try and ban it. it will cause it will cause massive drama . drama. >> every country has their own flag and it's not at all racist. it should be proud of it. and you palestine flags, you can't see palestine flags,
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so not british flags? so why not british flags? >> would you ever vote for a party that said that this was divisive, that they thought that they thought that this flag was divisive ? divisive? >> i w because divisive? >> i because they've no >> i wouldn't because they've no sense of worth, really, have they literally couldn't find anyone who thought it was a bad thing. >> so tonight i am asking, should we be more proud of our country's flag? let me know your thoughts. email me gbviews@gbnews.com. you can tweet at gb news. go and take tweet me at gb news. go and take part our poll right now, part in our poll right now, bringing results a few bringing those results in a few short first, going short moments, but first, going head to head on this. our anti—racism activist haynes, anti—racism activist ken haynes, and the falklands veteran simon weston. shapps, thank you very much. great to have you on the show, simon. i will start with you. we be more proud of you. should we be more proud of our flag, do you think? and what do make of these calls to do you make of these calls to ban because it's divisive? ban it because it's divisive? live well, first foremost live well, first and foremost i don't think we should be ashamed of flag . of our flag. >> it's part of our national identity. it's our symbol. what went many ago is went on? many many years ago is of it's not my responsibility
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andifs of it's not my responsibility and it's not today's society's responsibility . if people are responsibility. if people are offended by it, they have a problem . it's their problem. it problem. it's their problem. it shouldn't be our problem . shouldn't be our problem. please. you know, it shouldn't be banned. people are entitled to display anything they want as long as there's nothing in there which is directly attacking anybody of any other ethnicity , anybody of any other ethnicity, they should be. people should be allowed to live as free and as happy a life as they possibly can. i have absolutely no problem with that. i am a complete anti—racist. i do not like racism at all, but i do not see that our flags in this country are any more divisive than flags from other countries, and we allow lots of people to do it. we even allowed all the those politicians, palestinian supporters to do that at the cenotaph , which caused great cenotaph, which caused great outrage amongst veterans. but it still went ahead. i don't see why we should ban anybody. i
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identity or visions of any symbolism that identifies the country they are from, and especially if you've served in the armed forces, you are entitled to show that your support is for your country. you don't ban football supporters, so why should you ban a taxi driver that has served , that has driver that has served, that has served, put his life on the line for his country? he should be entitled to do this. can do you find the union flag, the union jack, divisive ? jack, divisive? >> um, in some situation. >> um, in some situation. >> but as simon quite clearly state, and i agree with everything that he says in regards that there situation when people use it for ulterior motive to cause fear alarm and distress. we saw that with the far right when they came up to say, protecting the churchill statues and things of that nature, but largely on the large whole, even i wave the saint george's flag on a sport sporting occasion , and i don't
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sporting occasion, and i don't see anything wrong in in raising the union jack or the saint george's flag . uh, on so long as george's flag. uh, on so long as the intention is correct and as he says, mr brockhurst, he served for the country and he should have every right to be proud of what he's done and the way that he wants to display it . way that he wants to display it. >> all right, simon, what do you make of this kind of i would argue it as like, student social media based politics, where you get these pillocks from the green party ever saying, oh, it's divisive , and i can't it's divisive, and i can't believe it. it will be legal in this country to do . do those this country to do. do those people need to get out more? i was on the streets of stratford earlier, an incredibly diverse place. speaking a massive place. speaking to a massive range right across range of people right across different demographics. different age demographics. i couldn't find a single sausage who said to me that they thought that guy from the green that this guy from the green party right. party was right. >> guy from the green party >> the guy from the green party obviously absolutely no obviously has absolutely no attention from anybody , and this attention from anybody, and this is his way of finding attention
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on both ken and myself. we both agree that nobody should use any symbol of national identity to offend others deliberately, because that's just inflaming a situation . there's so much sense situation. there's so much sense around so many things today , and around so many things today, and people do get offended by so much, so quickly, without any rhyme or reason. but this is this is a situation where nobody has done a single thing to anybody . all it is, it says anybody. all it is, it says england . it's the cross of saint england. it's the cross of saint george. look the welsh aren't even represented on the on the union flag . we aren't even union flag. we aren't even represented. northern ireland is scotland. england but not wales. but we don't go around banning flags . we don't go around flags. we don't go around banning anybody sort of celebrating their identity. i think , you know, we see jamaican think, you know, we see jamaican people who go to the cricket. we see pakistani people, indian people all dressed up in the national garb. and why not? i think it's a wonderful
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spectacle. i think, to see people celebrate their cultural heritage is right. but we as brits should not be denied from doing exactly the same thing in our own country . our own country. >> can you? does anyone do you think have a right to be offended in this country about our national flag? i mean, you know, you were alluding to, i think, a historic time, thankfully, historic time where, you know, maybe it was it was monopolised by people who were racist . do you think ? racist. do you think? >> look, my thing is, i understand that the union jack has got , you know, certain has got, you know, certain symbols around , and, um, symbols around, and, um, colonialism and the effects that that has had. but the fact of the matter is we have to move on from those dark days because then they know britain is no longer a superpower. and the fact of the matter is, the people of today should not be held accountable for the people who have done things over historical, uh, historical time.
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so my thing is that we simon, 1, you know, i, i feel i feel his emotion , i feel his passion. and emotion, i feel his passion. and i think he's absolutely, 100% right to have that. and express it as he feels fit . it as he feels fit. >> all right, look, both of you, can i just say thank you very, very much for coming on really great to get both of your views there. that is anti—racism activist ken and activist ken haynes and falklands simon weston. activist ken haynes and falklewe; simon weston. activist ken haynes and falklewe contacted imon weston. activist ken haynes and falklewe contacted shropshire)n. look, we contacted shropshire council they told look, we contacted shropshire c0|shropshire they told look, we contacted shropshire c0|shropshire council they told look, we contacted shropshire c0|shropshire council strategic us shropshire council strategic licensing met on the licensing committee met on the 11th of january to discuss a change to its hackney carriage and hire licensing and private hire licensing policy . from 2023 to 2027, policy. from 2023 to 2027, following concerns raised about the council's position on the display of national flags. can i just interject here at this point and just say, i think it will come as a surprise to many people learn that on the sh people to learn that on the sh t, it was initially passed that there should be no representation, it should not be allowed have any allowed to have any representation of a union flag in a in a black cab. i don't remember there being a massive hoo that at the time. i hoo ha about that at the time. i
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think long way to just think it goes a long way to just showing what can actually be swept through during the back doon swept through during the back door. actually swept through during the back door. it. actually swept through during the back door. it. but actually swept through during the back door. it. but anyway,ually swept through during the back door. it. but anyway, they on top of it. but anyway, they continued meeting. it was continued at a meeting. it was agreed to the display agreed to permit the display of the taxis and the union flag on taxis and private vehicles, private hire vehicles, an amendment that was put forward by local market drayton councillor who do you councillor look, who do you agree with here? should have agree with here? should we have more this country's more pride in this country's flag? says i do not flag? jackie onyx says i do not have pride in what our flag has been made to represent. i am engush been made to represent. i am english to the core, but i'm also the core. after also european to the core. after sadly, is being misused to represent far right extremists who to do with who want nothing to do with jackie. can i also just push back a bit on that and just say, you there extremists you know, there are extremists in eu movement, are in the eu movement, there are extremists comes to the extremists when it comes to the lgbtq+ agenda as well. they all use flags . the palestine use those flags. the palestine flag, at the that you're flag, at the moment that you're seeing everywhere you seeing literally everywhere you go. you not think that is go. do you not think that is being used extremists? i'm being used by extremists? i'm not saying that people of the far right haven't at times obviously used our national flag, but i'm saying, you not flag, but i'm saying, do you not think it's just a thing with flags in general? adam onyx says, world war
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says, let's ask some world war two iraq two falklands, iraq and afghanistan veterans if they find quite. find it divisive. no, quite. simone onyx says. i genuinely can't understand the obsession with flags. our verdict is now in 71% of you think that we should have more pride in our country's flag. 29% of you say that we shouldn't . now, coming that we shouldn't. now, coming up as it's revealed that the student taking her high school to the high court was recently suspended for threatening to stab a classmate. the prayer ban fallout consuming britain has taken yet another controversial turn . fleet street kingpin turn. fleet street kingpin kelvin mackenzie joins me in the studio to react to these latest developments and mark my words, this is going to be a case that defines britain going forward. and i will also be telling you about some very interesting developments of our own. i know you're going to love and be revealing to you little revealing them to you a little bit later but first, ehm, bit later on, but first, ehm, andrea jenkins beams live andrea jenkins beams in live from westminster to give us an exclusive update after the rwanda were called into rwanda rebels were called into the chief whips office. okay, they were called in today one by
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one. was it a rap on the knuckles or was it a peace offer 7 knuckles or was it a peace offer ? now on sky news ? now she was on sky news earlier on and she gave them the bum's so she could tell you bum's rush so she could tell you exactly what is happening. so this place this is the only place to be patrick tonight on
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isabel monday to thursdays from. six till 930. >> this is patrick christys tonight . we're only on gb news. tonight. we're only on gb news. coming up. kelvin mackenzie weighs in on the reports that the schoolgirl suing katharine birbalsingh in a muslim prayer
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row was previously suspended for threatening to stab a fellow pupil. do not miss that. but first, i'm joined by former education minister dame andrea jenkins . dame andrea, thank you jenkins. dame andrea, thank you very, very much. you were one of only 11 tory rebels who actually voted against rishi sunak's rwanda bill last week. and i understand that you were called into the whips office for a meeting just hours ago. can you reveal to us what went on, please ? please? >> um, i, i mean, let'sjust say >> um, i, i mean, let's just say it's standard practice. patrick, i mean, i was in the whips office. you know, if you vote against the government, it's normal practice to be called into the office. i mean, i think if anything, i see the media today have been saying that even the prime minister himself, um, called people in, but that wasn't the case. so we each had a meeting with the chief at and, um, yeah, it was just a usual bog standard thing, really , you bog standard thing, really, you know, why did you vote against the government ? um, i understand the government? um, i understand that some colleagues are getting frustrated and things that the
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1111 of you should be losing the whip . um, he didn't agree with whip. um, he didn't agree with it himself. um, but but i guess it's the one nation lot who's saying that. and, um . yeah, all saying that. and, um. yeah, all about party unity. saying that. and, um. yeah, all about party unity . we need to about party unity. we need to pull together and take the fight against starmer, which we do need to take the fight against starmer. i was quite myself , starmer. i was quite myself, very honest and said about what my views are about party leadership and everything, but no, i mean, and we left the meeting at the end. i shook the chief's hand and, you know, all's fair in love and war and this is politics. and he was just doing his job. in all honesty. >> they asked you they asked you why you voted against the government . and what did you say ? >> 7- >> oh, 7— >> oh, what ? >> oh, what did i say 7 >> oh, what did i say ? um, well, >> oh, what did i say? um, well, |, >> oh, what did i say? um, well, i, i think the rwanda bill just everything i've said publicly to you on the show, actually, um, patrick, um, you know, there's no back doors about me. it's about actually standing up for the british public. um, what's the british public. um, what's
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the point of having a policy if, um, it's not going to. we're not going to deliver on it. it gets people's hopes up. so it was more that kind of angle . um, if more that kind of angle. um, if anything, i'm more annoyed with the colleagues who wanted the whip removing from 11 of us. um, rather than, um, the chief today , if i'm honest. patrick. well, that's a key point. >> so clearly, the one nation group of tory mps who have actually had it all their own way pretty much when it comes to the rwanda bill. in fact, they have it all their own way , have had it all their own way, wanted rebels to lose wanted the rwanda rebels to lose their whip. so that would be what suella braverman robert jenrick yourself. get a handful of others, i don't know. >> it's the one nation. this is me guessing it's the one nation. because who else could it because to me, who else could it be? um, but but i mean, it's interesting because the lords tonight defeated , um for the tonight defeated, um for the same number of votes virtually. of what? um they wanted by in the commons. and i think if anything, patrick, um , labour's
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anything, patrick, um, labour's really trying to stop it in the lords. um, and, and it'd be interesting how things when it bounces back in the next few weeks to our house. you know what happens also with rebels because they are putting motions in today to weaken it even more. we're not going to vote for stuff to weaken it. i don't like the policy, but we don't want it weakened even more, do we? and give, you know, eu judges, etc. more more waste um, to make sure flights don't get off the ground. so i think we're it's a funny tipping point . but if funny tipping point. but if anything though, patrick, you know, it's i'm always outspoken as, as you know, but i think that clearly there's unhappiness in the party. but i want to start seeing other people put their head above the parapet. patrick it can't always be me and, you know, i've, i've. i fight, but come on, we've got to see the others. now, i, i had a lot of messages from conservative mps the morning
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after the night before, as it were, of the rwanda bill and actually a lot of them were saying the same thing that they said the first time that they marched up the hill and marched back down again, which had in back down again, which is had in hands shouldn't hands moment are we shouldn't have this. have done this. >> we've shown much more loyalty to he's ever to rishi sunak than he's ever shown mean, do you shown to us. i mean, do you think that's true? sunak shown to us. i mean, do you think orat's true? sunak shown to us. i mean, do you think or in; true? sunak shown to us. i mean, do you think or in the e? sunak shown to us. i mean, do you think or in the whips sunak shown to us. i mean, do you think or in the whips office ak there or in the whips office anyway, today oh, come anyway, today saying, oh, come on, we need to unite. on, you know, we need to unite. we need party loyalty . we need to show party loyalty. it to me to have it doesn't appear to me to have been loyalty to the been a lot of loyalty to the people yourself, have people like yourself, who have been spartans . been these rwanda spartans. >> and also point out that >> and i did also point out that where was the loyalty to boris? you know, i'm sure these same people who wanted myself and my colleagues to lose the whip where, where they're saying that about themselves, clearly not when they wanted boris out, when they wanted liz truss out. so one thing i can't stand is hypocrisy, i'm afraid. but but again, we see, um , on the labour again, we see, um, on the labour benches as well. look how starmer backed corbyn. you know, we see complete hypocrisy there .
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we see complete hypocrisy there. and i mean about people marching up. i thought that was um i mean people make their own decisions, don't they. and you know like pretty i can understand pretty because she got an amendment that she wanted in it, one that she had, um, from when she was home secretary, but to me, when people resign when i've resigned previously , what's the point of previously, what's the point of resigning if you're not going to go the whole way? you end up being everybody off your constituents . yes, yourself. constituents. yes, yourself. even so , i'm sure that those who even so, i'm sure that those who decided not to back it and had their head in the hands, as you mentioned, i'm sure they had a pretty few difficult days. >> yeah. and just that news that did break about an hour or so ago is the house ago as well, which is the house of defied rishi sunak of lords, has defied rishi sunak to against the ratification to vote against the ratification of in rwanda of the uk's new treaty in rwanda could prove damaging development of the uk's new treaty in rwanda could psafetyamaging development of the uk's new treaty in rwanda could psafety of aging development of the uk's new treaty in rwanda could psafety of rwanda.velopment of the uk's new treaty in rwanda could psafety of rwanda. billpment for the safety of rwanda. bill uh peers voted 214 to 171 to not ratify the agreement. i mean, everyone could have seen this coming. so we're going to be playing ping pong the playing ping pong with the lords, aren't we? um, going
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forward. >> but can i just want to drag it patrick, won't they? they it on patrick, won't they? they want it we don't want to drag it on so we don't get through, um, through the get it through, um, through the house commons as well. house of commons as well. it's in their interest lords. in their interest in lords. yeah, exactly. in their interest in lords. yeaand exactly. in their interest in lords. yeaand i exactly. in their interest in lords. yeaand i justlactly. in their interest in lords. yeaand i just want to move it to >> and i just want to move it to on something about keir starmer actually, because it's come out in the national trust in defence of the national trust new agenda today. all new woke agenda today. all right. i think we can just take a little a little look at this. can't we. >> of working with the >> instead of working with the national trust. so more people can learn about and celebrate the culture and our history , the culture and our history, they've managed to demean their work and it comes to something when the tories are at war with the national trust, when the tories are at war with the national trust , that's what the national trust, that's what happens when politics of self preservation prevail over commitment to service . commitment to service. >> yeah, okay. i mean, look, i actually think this is a very worrying sign of things to come under labour, okay? if he doesn't think that there's anything wrong with a great traditional british institution
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like the national trust going overtly woke, kind of denouncing its own history, arguably , i its own history, arguably, i would say, anyway, you know, pushing its traditional membership one side, membership base to one side, looking at the desecration of a lot of british history there. if he think there's he doesn't think there's anything then anything wrong with that, then what does that say about a future government ? oh, i future labour government? oh, i think we've lost andrea there. it's hard to say. oh, there we go. andrea, sorry about what? do you think that says about the potential future labour government? doesn't think government? if he doesn't think there's anything wrong about the way that national trust has way that the national trust has been has been alienating members, has been alienating members, has been against been pushing back against british going british history, has been going woke. i mean, that's the problem, it? i mean, problem, isn't it? i mean, starmer, rocha, rocha , rama, starmer, rocha, rocha, rama, rocha, rocha, rama . rocha, rocha, rama. >> um, i say, i mean, i'm not surprised by his endorsement of the national trust because look at his history. i mean, he, he founded he struggled to define a woman . um, founded he struggled to define a woman. um, look at founded he struggled to define a woman . um, look at the stuff woman. um, look at the stuff with the trans community. look how he kneeled with the blm movement. it's indicative that is controlled by this woke agenda.
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is controlled by this woke agenda . actually, patrick and agenda. actually, patrick and i think he is a danger to common sense. and, um , he's so out of sense. and, um, he's so out of touch with the, you know, the, the grassroots members and also in red wall seats like mine , um, in red wall seats like mine, um, they can't abide this wokeness. so actually, it might be setting his stall differently, but i think is actually he not doing himself any favours . himself any favours. >> um, yeah. i mean, the national trust is absolutely embroiled in kind of a non—stop woke agenda. it does appear to highlight issues with the past and all of this stuff. and a lot of people are saying, why on earth are you actually doing this? but dame andrea, look, thank you very, very much. that this? but dame andrea, look, thformerj very, very much. that this? but dame andrea, look, thformer education( much. that this? but dame andrea, look, th former education minister'hat is former education minister dame andrea jenkins coming dame andrea jenkins now coming up rochdale gang up with rochdale grooming gang leader in the country nine leader still in the country nine years was meant be years after he was meant to be deported . should office deported. should the home office be more to kick the be doing more to kick the convicted and others convicted pervert and others like this country ? like him out of this country? hear more from me on that. at 10 pm. and the true cost, by the way, of what it's costing you to keep like that in
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keep people like that in the country. but as country. but next, as the student taking her to the student taking her school to the high court banning muslim high court for banning muslim prayers campaign of prayers after a campaign of criminal damage, intimidation , criminal damage, intimidation, harassment, it's found to have shock, horror, threatened to stab a fellow student. the religious row gripping britain has taken another unexpected twist . no nonsense kelvin twist. no nonsense kelvin mackenzie joins me live next to weigh in. plus, james cleverly shaky record on stopping those small boats . patrick christys. small boats. patrick christys. tonight it's all go
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this is patrick christie. tonight we're only on gb news. more shocking revelations from the rochdale grooming scandal are coming up at ten, but first i'm live in the studio by i'm joined live in the studio by fleet legend kelvin fleet street legend kelvin mackenzie . and it transpired mackenzie. and it has transpired that muslim girl taking that a muslim girl taking her school to the high court over a prayer ban was recently suspended for threatening to stab a fellow student. the pupil and her mother are claiming that the michaela community school's ban is
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ban on prayers is discriminatory, and breaches her right to freedom of religion, while headteacher katharine birbalsingh we believe it birbalsingh said we believe it is wrong to separate children according to religion or race. multiple culturalism can only succeed when we understand that every group must make sacrifices for the sake of the whole. it's been revealed in court that the pupil launching the legal challenge told a classmate she planned to harm the school and threaten to stab her if she told anyone she was suspended anyone where she was suspended for in last april. i'll be bringing you and this is something i'm very pleased to be able to reveal to you. live able to reveal to you. now live on i'll bringing you on air. i'll be bringing you a bombshell with bombshell interview with headteacher katharine birbalsingh on this show birbalsingh herself on this show tomorrow night . and in the day tomorrow night. and in the day i feel honoured to be invited to the school where i'll be going and getting a look around first hand and we'll be doing a piece on that for you tomorrow night. so right here on this show. but kelvin joins me in the studio now . this kelvin joins me in the studio now. this high case could now. this high court case could cost taxpayer up to £1 cost the taxpayer up to £1 million. and actually, i think
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the costs to our country could be much greater if it's successful. your views. right. so it's a fantastic school. >> this is skint. >> so this is skint. >> so this is skint. >> brent is one of the poorest areas of the country. >> there are 700 pupils there, 350 of them are muslims . 350 of them are muslims. >> so how does the school do. fantastic over 80% of the children who go into the sixth form, pupils go on to a russell group, you know, imperial, you know, fantastic universities . know, fantastic universities. those those who just take the engush those those who just take the english and the maths , you know, english and the maths, you know, the five. they're right . they the five. they're right. they about 92% pass it right . these about 92% pass it right. these are unbelievable numbers of people from very poor backgrounds. okay she is doing a fantastic job. suddenly she runs into this issue. it's not only going to be an issue for this school because. right. i bet okay. and i'd like everybody to record this. i bet that they lose. okay however, the muslim
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activist, the girl loses. right. but if it were to go the other way , honestly, it would be an way, honestly, it would be an incredible effect on the schools and it would cause not only trouble. um between teachers and pupils . what about between pupils. what about between pupils. what about between pupils and pupils? right. well i mean, first, for instance, what would happen at that school? there are hindus there are sikhs, there are christians, there are all kinds of people. so so my bet is that they do lose. there is no guarantee . lose. there is no guarantee. there is no underwritten law, which says that a school has to have any kind of religion in its schooling. it doesn't have to have morning prayers , afternoon have morning prayers, afternoon prayers, anything. morning assembly , nothing, right? why assembly, nothing, right? why should the muslim community be different? they say we are disadvantaged because . because disadvantaged because. because we're the only ones that do multiple prayers. what they can pray morning, they can pray in the morning, they can pray in the morning, they can pray they're pray in the evening. they're just not to during just asked, not to pray during school time. just asked, not to pray during sch that's|e. just asked, not to pray during sch that's another fundamental
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>> that's another fundamental precedent potentially, which i think will be used in wider society , which is that it society, which is that it completely separates the category of prayer from other religions to the islamic faith is trying to attempt to set the precedent that it is that the muslim prayer cannot be done within the privacy of one's own mind, and therefore it needs a pubuc mind, and therefore it needs a public display. and if that is the case, then that can be rolled out in every single workplace . it could be rolled workplace. it could be rolled out right across the country. and i think it would pave the way for britain potentially to become unquote, muslim become a quote unquote, muslim country, which which country, which is which is, in fact, what lies beneath fact, actually what lies beneath all this, because, remember, this is not only causing the muslim community are not only just causing a problem in brent, they're causing a problem in leyton at the berkeley primary, hardline elements of it. >> yes and yes. hardline well, are they hardline ? they might are they hardline? they might be. they might be or they might be. they might be or they might be the underpinning of the entire islamic faith. i don't know, i don't know . this is one
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know, i don't know. this is one of the problems. i don't know , of the problems. i don't know, um, islamic activist and perhaps your show should have some on i think. >> well, i think one of the problems with this and other situations like it is that when you get that more radical element and this is something that katharine birbalsingh has alluded to, they then try and pressure other more moderate actors, whether it's in the school or not. so why aren't you wearing a headscarf? or why aren't you attending prayers? where are your prayer mats? why aren't you doing this, this, this and that's that's this and this and that's that's a real problem because we've this and this and that's that's a reait)roblem because we've this and this and that's that's a rea it)roble and ecause we've this and this and that's that's a reait)robleand time.e we've this and this and that's that's a reait)robleand time againfe this and this and that's that's a reait)robleand time again with seen it time and time again with other people who have now been reformed members of extremist groups, said those are groups, who have said those are the that they use . the exact tactics that they use. >> well, why your show >> well, why doesn't your show invite it on active lists invite it on to active lists against other people and try and have the debate at a fairly balanced level since your problem, we have on numerous different occasions and actually done so, especially when the israel palestine thing was
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really, really kicking off. >> and i'm certainly not against it doing in future. it doing it in future. absolutely it can be absolutely not. but it it can be remarkably for a variety remarkably tricky for a variety of reasons. of different reasons. and certainly the, the attitude that is displayed there. and is that is displayed there. and it often make for it doesn't often make for a serviceable. but this is a fantastic school. >> and the idea that instead of it's incredible, by the way , you it's incredible, by the way, you couldn't get these, you couldn't get these marks in any other school in the country. i mean, this is she is a fantastic person. and the idea that the reason it's become even more famous than it actually was, it was famous, is simply because of a religious divide. and it is very upsetting. and do you think that if we do end up in a situation where this is, is, is successful at the high court, are you concerned about what that might mean for britain? >> do you know what i would do right? >> after all, we've seen it with rwanda. we've seen the prime minister act or to act minister act or try to act right. he'll to go. he will right. he'll have to go. he will have he will have push have to. he will have to push through the commons a law banning this. right. no ifs and
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buts about it. cannot have we buts about it. we cannot have we cannot have one religious group having are being entitled to do something which is going to disrupt schooling for the majority. kelvin thank you very much for coming on and talking about this. >> and just want to reiterate as well to everybody watching and listening that listening to this. now that tomorrow going to going tomorrow i am going to be going tomorrow i am going to be going to that school, academy to that school, michaela academy , i'm going to be meeting katharine we're katharine birbalsingh. we're going interview, going to be doing an interview, and going be seeing that and i'm going to be seeing that school firsthand myself and school firsthand for myself and showing to you showing what i can of it to you as well, so we can get a handle, i think, is going be i think, on what is going to be a vitally important a vitally, vitally important court case for the future of this country. kelvin mackenzie there street legend there a fleet street legend himself. you very, very himself. thank you very, very much. i've still got much. right. i've still got loads prince loads coming your way. prince harry's another royal harry's triggered another royal row, this time it's with a row, but this time it's with a fake prince in germany. editor at large mail on sunday, at large at the mail on sunday, charlotte griffiths reports on that. the that that. and the news that sarah ferguson with ferguson has been diagnosed with skin but next, skin cancer. but next, a rochdale grooming gang leader is still in the country. nice nine years after he was meant to be deported back to pakistan. why
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well, i'll tell you all and i'm also going to be revealing the shocking cost to taxpayer of shocking cost to the taxpayer of how costing me how much it's costing you, me and know keep and everyone we know to keep these monsters in britain. patrick christys tonight, seeing a that warm feeling inside a tick that warm feeling inside from boxed boilers. >> sponsors of weather on gb news . evening storm jocelyn will news. evening storm jocelyn will be arriving this time tomorrow on tuesday evening. >> not as intense as storm isha , >> not as intense as storm isha, but nevertheless could cause some further disruption brewing out in the atlantic at the moment there is the next storm system . storm isha continues to system. storm isha continues to clear away. still plenty of isobars on the chart. it is still pretty gusty out there this evening. plenty of showers to packing in across scotland in particular, showers will particular, but the showers will tend ease off in most places , tend to ease off in most places, generally becoming clear overnight the winds will overnight and the winds will ease further until the ease down further until the cloud thickens and we start to see wet weather coming into northern ireland by dawn, with the skies . and as the the clearer skies. and as the winds ease, we could see some
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pockets of across pockets of frost across scotland. most of us, scotland. but for most of us, we'll tuesday or we'll start tuesday at 4 or 5 degrees. the east will degrees. many in the east will start and bright, but the start dry and bright, but the rain will spread into the west and then become much and then become pretty much across lunchtime. and then become pretty much acro heaviest lunchtime. and then become pretty much acro heaviest rain, lunchtime. and then become pretty much acro heaviest rain, thoughtime. and then become pretty much acro heaviest rain, though over the heaviest rain, though over western hills, the rain could cause disruption because cause some disruption because after storm isha, where we had quite a bit of rain falling, extra rainfall may cause some flooding issues and then the winds strengthen. winds continue to strengthen. actually day actually quite a mild day tomorrow, feeling all tomorrow, but not feeling all that the wind and the that mild with the wind and the rain and the winds continue to strengthen during tuesday evening, particularly across the north. winds won't be as north. the winds won't be as strong as with echr , but strong as with storm echr, but because storm isha is only just cleared, it could of course, some structural issues. so do some structural issues. so we do have place . a broad have warnings in place. a broad yellow warning, gusts of 55 to 65 miles an hour, and the amber warning across northern and western , where gusts western scotland, where gusts could miles an hour. could touch 80 miles an hour. >> looks like things are heating up. boxt boilers sponsors of weather on .
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gb news. >> it's 10 pm. and this is patrick christys tonight. clear message. get the grooming gang scumbags out of britain. now i expose how much you are paying so that pakistani child rapists can live a normal life here in britain. and just when you think prince harry couldn't sink any lower, his . lower, his. >> i'll mention i'm only happy when people are well. >> and that's why i have activated and developed the wealth . alexia, for you . wealth. alexia, for you. >> yes, i will show you how harry got conned by a fake german prince who sells dodgy products. talking of dodgy products. talking of dodgy products will reveal what our undercover reporter found at an art exhibition for kids. it is in indoctrination on a grand scale. also . we found out peter
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scale. also. we found out peter murrell gomez . peyton stearns murrell gomez. peyton stearns ella whelan . ella whelan. >> where shall we say pump it into my veins? >> the wokeist wants a council rule, britannia, not on our watch. i'll have all of your newspaper front pages tonight in our press pack here with us. our columnist carole malone. we've got former brexit party mep beunda got former brexit party mep belinda de lucy and journalist mike buckley. are you ready, britain? here we go. you are paying millions of pounds so that grooming gang scumbags can live the life of riley here in britain. i'll see you after the . news. you after the. news. >> patrick. thank you. two sets of breaking news to bring you this hour. let me tell you first
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of all about the uk and the united states carrying out fresh strikes on houthi rebels in the red sea. uh, it's not what you're seeing on your screen right now. this is slightly newer, so i just want to bring you this first. we can tell you that officials saying the us that officials are saying the us and the uk took houthi and the uk took out houthi missile sites and missile storage sites and launchers in the second set of coordinated strikes against the iran backed militants . of iran backed militants. of course, the uk and the us military, working in concert . on military, working in concert. on that one. so let me now bring you that breaking news we received as well about what's happenedin received as well about what's happened in the house of lords this evening. do that this evening. we do know that after reading in the after the third reading in the house of commons, the government's rwanda bill was being peers . well, being discussed by peers. well, it suffered something of a blow tonight in the house of lords. peers were discussing how safe rwanda was as a country, and they to the bill. they voted to delay the bill. 214 votes to 171. that's a majority of 43. until the peers said ministers can show that rwanda is a safe country . you
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rwanda is a safe country. you may rememberjust last week, may remember just last week, rishi sunak urged the house of lords to do the right thing and endorse the government's flagship policy aimed at deterring illegal migrants from arriving on the uk's shores in small boats. well, let's tell you about the new weather warnings that have been issued by the met office and a new storm called storm jostling, heading for the uk just as the country is recovering from storm isha. two people died in 10,000 tens of thousands rather remain without power after the uk was battered with high winds last night. gusts of more than 100 miles, an hour and heavy rain caused major travel disruption, with flooding and fallen trees, while planes were diverted and trains were cancelled. scotrail has announced it's again suspending services from 7:00 tomorrow as that new weather front approaches. they'll also be if you're in scotland, no train as on wednesday morning either . we're being told by either. we're being told by scotrail that's because lines need to be checked for damage .
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need to be checked for damage. in other news today, downing street denied the government's pursuing an anti—bbc agenda after announcing a raft of reforms as part of a review into the corporation . under new the corporation. under new plans, ofcom could gain more powers over bbc news website articles , as it doesn't if it articles, as it doesn't if it doesn't meet relevant standards . doesn't meet relevant standards. the government's recommendation is that ofcom should be given increased oversight over the bbc's online services, including its youtube channel. the prime minister also said today the bbc is not immune from scrutiny . is not immune from scrutiny. well, labour said today the government is turning a blind eye to corruption after new data showed water bosses have been pocketing millions of pounds in performance bonuses despite being in charge while there have been illegal sewage spills , new been illegal sewage spills, new figures showed. water chiefs have received more than £10 million in bonuses and nearly £15 million in incentives since
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the last general election in 2019. labour says if it wins the next election, it'll give the water regulator the power to ban senior executives bonuses is when companies are illegally polluting waterways. we do have another bit of breaking news to bnng another bit of breaking news to bring you concerning events in israel . i can bring you concerning events in israel. i can tell you bring you concerning events in israel . i can tell you that israel. i can tell you that israel. i can tell you that israel has proposed a two month ceasefire in gaza in return for the release of all hostages. that's according to the news agency axios . israel's put agency axios. israel's put forward that proposal through qatari and egyptian mediators. we understand and that includes up to two months of a pause in fighting as part of a multi—phase deal, which would include the release , as i said, include the release, as i said, of all those remaining hostages, a busy news night tonight . we'll a busy news night tonight. we'll have more for you coming up in the next hour . the next hour. >> yeah. busy news night. indeed we're going to have a little bit more on at least two of the
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stories that polly mentioned there that have just broken later on in the show, when we do our newspaper okay, our newspaper review. okay, we'll the laws we'll be talking about the laws knocking we'll be talking about the laws kno
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renounced his pakistani citizenship and is refusing to take it back. and now pakistan are quite rightly saying that they don't want him . his they don't want him. his accomplice, adil khan , who got accomplice, adil khan, who got an underage girl pregnant and trafficked . another, a trafficked. another, has told a judge that he should not be deported because his son needs a role model . deported because his son needs a role model. i'm deported because his son needs a role model . i'm sorry, but the role model. i'm sorry, but the implication here again is that this person is still in the family home, isn't it? in the same community? why has it never spoken about that? these kind of crimes are committed whilst the perpetrators are active members of the local muslim community very often, like ralph, who was an islamic preacher , they do not an islamic preacher, they do not appear to be turned over to police by members of that community. all too often , who community. all too often, who will no doubt claim that they had no knowledge of any wrongdoing. convicted wrongdoing. but these convicted paedophiles then seemingly paedophiles are then seemingly accepted into the family accepted back into the family home. in many cases back onto the same road in rochdale. a new report identified 96 men who could still pose a threat, many of whom are yet to be prosecuted. in telford , the
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prosecuted. in telford, the scene of britain's worst grooming gang scandal. one of the ringleaders, adel eddie ali, served just eight years of a 26 year sentence . he was convicted year sentence. he was convicted of the rape of a 13 year old girl. six offences of underage sex with the same girl, three charges of controlling a child prostitute and sexual activity with a second victim, two offences of sexual activity with a child involving a third girl, and offences of grooming and inciting child prostitution and sexual activity with a fourth victim eight years behind bars for that in rotherham. kurbaan ali and tayyab dad were all automatically released after just five years. it was not even known if they were blocked from returning to their local area, so five years for some of the most extreme child sex offences you can imagine in many cases, victims have not been told that their abusers have been released and in many cases , those abusers and in many cases, those abusers were allowed to just go back home. as we've discussed , i home. as we've discussed, i actually went to telford a good
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number of years ago now , and i number of years ago now, and i spoke to one of the grooming gang victims who told me that her attacker bumped into her in the shops and in some cases, like that of mr ralph , you're like that of mr ralph, you're paying like that of mr ralph, you're paying for their prosecution. you're paying for their prison cells , you're paying for their cells, you're paying for their legal costs . you're paying for legal costs. you're paying for them to fight deportation . and them to fight deportation. and quite possibly now you're paying their benefit . yes. now, their benefit. yes. now, pakistan might not want them. i don't care , we don't want them don't care, we don't want them enhen don't care, we don't want them either. and something has to be done about this. i respond to this now. i'm joined again by daily express columnist carole malone. commentator malone. we've got commentator and mike buckley and and journalist mike buckley and former belinda . former brexit party mep belinda. de lucy. carol, what on earth do we do? i can understand that pakistan don't want them, but we don't want them either. where do they go? >> you know, our deportation laws are a joke and, you know, for that the hatred, the for all that the hatred, the people just named, they're people you just named, they're the hatred and disdain of the hatred and the disdain of the hatred and the disdain of the which they the contempt with which they treated these girls, these young girls authorities in this girls are authorities in this country, are treating them with
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exactly the same content contempt the cops , the contempt the cops, the authorities, the judges, the lawyers, you know, the lawyers who are acting for these guys now to stop them being deported. there's a special thing being a special law being enacted to stop them being identified. so they're being protected there. they are. they are dismissing what happened to these young girls and looking after the men who did it. and yet we're not allowed to know who these people are, which i think is shocking. so are all our authorities are complicit in in putting these girls through hell again, the fact that that girl had to come across her attacker in a shop is beyond shocking. you know, this this guy you've just talked about, ralph went back to his family the rest of it. family and all the rest of it. these girls have got a life sentence you know, just sentence and, you know, you just you prison sentences you detail the prison sentences are serving most of those sentences for most of those guys were served in open prisons. so they're serving a quarter of their sentence in some cases. and they're serving them in
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soft, open prisons . what soft, easy, open prisons. what is society saying about what is our society saying about what it thinks about what happened to those girls? not very much . those girls? not very much. >> okay, mike, your view on this? i mean, it is incredibly difficult to deport these people, but you know, do we have to be paying them benefits? do we have to be paying them legal aid? to be paying for aid? do we have to be paying for all this stuff well? really? all this stuff as well? really? >> mean, times >> well, i mean, at times like this, important say this, it's very important to say that majority of sexual that the vast majority of sexual violence, against violence, including against children is children in this country, is perpetrated people. and perpetrated by white people. and you that is? you know why that is? >> the white population >> because the white population is much than asian is much bigger than the asian and is much bigger than the asian anc but important. >> but it's important. >> but it's important. >> a silly to quote. >> it's a silly fact, to quote. >> it's a silly fact, to quote. >> it's a silly fact, to quote. >> it is not a silly factor to quote, because we've had quote, because we've just had a utany quote, because we've just had a litany brown faces. the litany of brown faces. the country is 82% white. litany of brown faces. the countrcourse% white. litany of brown faces. the countrcourse , white. litany of brown faces. the countrcourse , the te. litany of brown faces. the countrcourse , the people that >> of course, the people that are sexual offence. are committing a sexual offence. >> been indicated >> but what has been indicated for viewers of this show is for the viewers of this show is that all could all these brown people doing that all could all these brown peopl> e- e answer @ answer the >> please let me answer the question. so um, obviously, what >> please let me answer the quethese so um, obviously, what >> please let me answer the quethese men�*n, obviously, what >> please let me answer the quethese men haveviously, what >> please let me answer the quethese men have done.y, what >> please let me answer the quethese men have done is what are these men have done is nonetheless entirely awful , and
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nonetheless entirely awful, and i think we could all recognise that. i think i agree with that. and i think i agree with you wholeheartedly. it's terrible young women terrible that these young women who've don't get who've been abused don't get told by the police or somebody else in authority. on told by the police or somebody else in authority. oh yeah, this person is going to an person is going to push an e—bike, bump into them, the e—bike, bump into them, into the street. absolutely street. but it is absolutely vile part of the problem. i mean, clearly been mean, clearly there's been a specific in rochdale. specific problem in rochdale. i don't details don't know all the details around these people around that about these people not arrested being not being arrested and not being deau not being arrested and not being dealt know, these 96 dealt with. you know, these 96 and is and all of it. there is a problem, of course, with underfunding of the police, which has gone on for the last 13 years. and having spoken to various police various people in the police recently, 2019, recently, obviously since 2019, 2019 the government 2019 came around the government by then reduced the number by then had reduced the number of police by 20,000. they've now raised it. >> i am just going to politely stop not that stop you if it's not that politely. am going politely. no, i am going to stop me because of right, one of me because one of right, one of one major reasons why one of the major reasons why these people were not brought to justice police were these people were not brought to just afraid police were these people were not brought to just afraid of police were these people were not brought to justafraid of stoking lice were these people were not brought to justafraid of stoking racialere too afraid of stoking racial tension, and i and in light of the way you started your answer to can see it's to that, i can kind of see it's the case. is the case. the the case. it is the case. the reports have said it was the case then obviously that needs
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to addressed. to be addressed. >> saying the police >> i'm not saying the police haven't anything wrong. haven't done anything wrong. clearly in this instance they have and have done something wrong and that needs to be straight. that needs to be set straight. >> on this, the >> a report on this, where the police have been roundly criticised a blind criticised for turning a blind eye. you've not these eye. if you've not read these reports, they've been coming for years. >> i haven't the reports years. >> i beginning the reports years. >> i beginning to the reports years. >> i beginning to the rebutts from beginning to end, but i realise there has been a problem. >> belinda, can i can i just >> belinda, can i can ijust just question about this, >> belinda, can i can ijust just is question about this, >> belinda, can i can ijust just is i question about this, >> belinda, can i can ijust just is i don't ion about this, >> belinda, can i can ijust just is i don't thinkiout this, >> belinda, can i can ijust just is i don't think gets:his, which is i don't think gets asked enough, right? is asked enough, right? which is that my local that if, uh, in my local community, i knew that a convicted child sex offender was about to move back into the family home next door and presumably go back into community life, as it were. i think i know a thing or two to say about that . there does not say about that. there does not appear to have been that much pushback in community in in rochdale, rotherham , etc. to a rochdale, rotherham, etc. to a lot of these people going back and just living and rejoining the marital home, i find that quite astonishing. >> i just think it's such an inqu >> i just think it's such an insult to the children that were raped by these men. i think the invertebrates in westminster , invertebrates in westminster, um, refuse to even suspend parts
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of the human rights act. um to deport paedophiles , terrorists, deport paedophiles, terrorists, criminals, murderers . criminals, murderers. >> macron even last year , um, >> macron even last year, um, when a strasbourg ruling tried to stop the deportation of an islamist jihadi, he just ignored it and he deported him anyway. >> ah. uh . government refuses to >> ah. uh. government refuses to do that. and i'm sorry, but the rules, the central thing is disgusting. a handful of years for raping children, that the message that's going out is to that any men that want to do this, or you have to do is spend a couple of years in jail and can do whatever you like to girls, if they're a different colour different colour from a different community cultural community or cultural sensitivities it community or cultural se disgusting. it community or cultural se disgusting. justice it is disgusting. the justice system completely looked system needs completely looked out, investigated , out, looked into, investigated, things need to be made and our government grow government needs to grow a spine. need every tool spine. we need to use every tool we to deport every single we can to deport every single criminal we can. i don't care if it's against their human rights. i don't care if they face degrading time from degrading prison time from wherever they the rights
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wherever they come. the rights of our children the safety of our children and the safety of our children and the safety of british people have to of the british people have to come first. >> forget, w 2020, >> let's not forget, in 2020, starmer 70 labour mps signed starmer and 70 labour mps signed a letter to stop deportation a letter to stop the deportation of convicted criminals from this country. and every one of those criminals who was stopped from being has went on to being deported has went on to commit crimes. one guy even commit huge crimes. one guy even murdered or then drug murdered somebody or then drug dealers were, i think, a guy attacked a 7027 year old woman. these guys were criminals and they went to offend again, they went on to offend again, thanks to labour. and starmer will again. thanks to labour. and starmer wiliwell, again. thanks to labour. and starmer wiliwell, ag obviously get >> well, we'll obviously get more that. now, more pushback on that. now, i would know, would imagine you know, is it fair that that the labour fair to say that that the labour party, when it comes to things like the grooming gang issue, you areas where this was you look at areas where this was taking place and there was a perception that maybe more could have local have been done from local councils, local politicians also, were just in also, often they were just in those labour the those areas. labour and the examples has raised examples that carol has raised there, you know, do you think that problem that there is maybe a problem with the party when it with the labour party when it comes to holding these people to justice no i don't for minute. >> i mean, keir starmer, to take minute. >> iexample,3ir starmer, to take minute. >> iexample,3ir slabour to take minute. >> iexample,3ir slabour party (e one example, the labour party was director of public prosecutions a long time. it
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prosecutions for a long time. it was his job the whole prosecutions for a long time. it was hservice the whole prosecutions for a long time. it was hservice this1e whole prosecutions for a long time. it was hservice this country. legal service in this country. he to do a very good he was deemed to do a very good job it's given an item job of it. it's given an item because it great job of because it did a great job of it. don't know about the it. i don't know about the instance you're talking about, about letter about somebody signing a letter 20, but 20, 20, 70 labour mps, but i would that that was would imagine that that was upholding the law. but again, i don't know the circumstances, actually, no, he said all deportations of foreign criminals be halted. on criminals should be halted. on what grounds as well. >> he didn't give the grounds. you shouldn't be you just said there shouldn't be deported humanity. deported on humanity. >> of the >> it's article eight of the echn >> it's article eight of the echr. right to family life. echr. it's right to family life. so all you have to do get so all you have to do is get someone marry someone pregnant, marry whatever, commit whatever, and you can commit whatever, and you can commit whatever said, no, whatever crimes. all said, no, they're the criminals, they're keeping the criminals, rightly the human rightly so, about the human rights rapists. rights of child rapists. >> how can you talk about human rights? >> charleton the government ? and >> charleton the government? and i'm not often first, governments think broadly speaking, in a terrible over last terrible job over the last 13 years, and i can't wait to see them out of office them chucked out of office at them chucked out of office at the end this year. however, the end of this year. however, in this, in the instance of this, this, you these two who you know, these two people who should be sent back to pakistan, you know, these two people who s agree,3e sent back to pakistan, you know, these two people who s agree,3e and back to pakistan, you know, these two people who sagree,3e an ideal< to pakistan, you know, these two people who sagree,3e an ideal worldikistan, you know, these two people who s agree,3e an ideal world they n, i agree, in an ideal world they would but if would go to pakistan. but if pakistan saying don't want pakistan saying we don't want them, you we the them, you know, we stop the aid, then stop them foreign then we stop giving them foreign aid. return here.
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aid. we return here. >> they were allowed to relinquish dual relinquish their dual citizenship, and they were helped lawyers who citizenship, and they were help that lawyers who citizenship, and they were help that the lawyers who citizenship, and they were help that the lawyers vcould said that was the way they could stay this country, because stay in this country, because they would happen they knew what would happen to them to. them if they went back to. >> that's a loophole that anybody can renounce their citizenship not citizenship if they want to, not when charged with when they've been charged with child rape. >> they should be forbidden to do deported straight away. >> can't forbid somebody. away. >> actually orbid somebody. away. >> actually youi somebody. away. >> actually you can nebody. away. >> actually you can because yeah, actually you can because we're country and we we're a sovereign country and we can an can make laws. that's an independent they independent choice. granted they may done that because may well have done that because they in uk. they wanted to stay in the uk. >> they that because they >> they did that because they were when they're were told that when they're prisoner, their prisoner, when they served their prisoner, when they served their prison sentence, that is an awful we would all awful they would be we would all like it. >> fairness w— like it. >> fairness to the >> but in fairness to the government, if there's no country welcome country saying we will welcome them, of the them, there, kind of the government found them, there, kind of the goveto ment found them, there, kind of the goveto stop found them, there, kind of the goveto stop it. found them, there, kind of the goveto stop it. we found them, there, kind of the goveto stop it. we as found them, there, kind of the goveto stop it. we as a found them, there, kind of the goveto stop it. we as a country way to stop it. we as a country need to work what we're need to work out what we're going people in this. need to work out what we're goiiwell, people in this. need to work out what we're goiiwell, it's people in this. need to work out what we're goiiwell, it's easy,eople in this. need to work out what we're goiiwell, it's easy, lyple in this. need to work out what we're goiiwell, it's easy, i agree. this. >> well, it's easy, i agree. >> well, it's easy, i agree. >> it also isn't ideal that they just wandering around it also isn't they're prison isn't ideal if they're in prison and paying. it's not and we're all paying. it's not it's tens of it's not ideal. tens of thousands year women, young it's not ideal. tens of thousand 5 year women, young it's not ideal. tens of thousand youngir women, young it's not ideal. tens of thousand young whosezn, young it's not ideal. tens of thousand young whose lives?|ng girls and young whose lives? what's tell what's your solution then? tell me what that is. >> love hear a solution. >> i'd love to hear a solution. >> i'd love to hear a solution. >> what your solution >> to what is your solution to these a jail don't these people being a jail don't
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care go, not leave care where they go, not leave the echr and send them. >> country, >> don't care. pick a country, put a plane and get them put them on a plane and get them out. >> ascension island. >> ascension island. >> how do you stop that country sending do you mean? >> what do you mean? >> what do you mean? >> you're being silly. you know i'm you're put on plane, i'm not. you're put on a plane, they go to pakistan. >> don't want pakistani >> you don't want pakistani authorities are going put >> you don't want pakistani autho ones are going put >> you don't want pakistani autho ones planeying put >> you don't want pakistani autho on as plane because jt >> you don't want pakistani autho ones plane because of our them on a plane because of our ridiculous deportation laws. >> forever. because of our ridiculous. >> a sovereign. ridiculous. >> is a sovereign. ridiculous. >> is solutionign. ridiculous. >> is solution for the >> is your solution for the young who comes in? young girls who comes in? >> what is your solution for the young girls who have look young girls who have to look at their every day? wish what's rapists every day? i wish what's your don't have a your solution? i don't have a solution. maybe. maybe they should to city. should be moved to another city. >> about guys? >> what about guys? >> what about guys? >> guys, we have ascension island, british territory overseas. that overseas. we can make that a prison island and send all the. well, wouldn't want to well, i mean, i wouldn't want to do it to the local population, but to make sure that but we have to make sure that when with when you're charged with a serious crime, you are deported. i they don't i don't care if they don't suffer even prison time. they need to be deported and sent back on back if they have keen on deporting people. >> i am. you won't suggest where they're deported. >> i am. you won't suggest where the yes, deported. >> i am. you won't suggest where the yes, i deported. >> i am. you won't suggest where the yes, i am deported. >> i am. you won't suggest where the yes, i am to deported. >> i am. you won't suggest where the yes, i am to stop deported. >> i am. you won't suggest where the yes, i am to stop themyorted. >> i am. you won't suggest where the yes, i am to stop them from. >> yes, i am to stop them from renouncing their citizenship to >> yes, i am to stop them from renoiin:ing their citizenship to >> yes, i am to stop them from renoiin:ing countryizenship to >> yes, i am to stop them from renoiin:ing country where p to >> yes, i am to stop them from renoiin:ing country where are >> yes, i am to stop them from rencgoing] country where are >> yes, i am to stop them from renc going to ountry where are >> yes, i am to stop them from rencgoing to sendy where are >> yes, i am to stop them from rencgoing to send them?e are you going to send them? if we'd
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stop could have sent stop them, we could have sent because we have a returns agreement pakistan. priti agreement with pakistan. priti patel all patel signed it in 2022. all right. >> that f-a f.“ >> well, that is a that is a good thing. right. pakistan good thing. all right. pakistan don't particular don't want these particular people right. we're drawing >> all right. we're drawing a line under there. you line under it there. and you know it. well done. thank know i love it. well done. thank you much. all right. coming you very much. all right. coming up harry and meghan's wedding up as harry and meghan's wedding cellist wades in cancel cellist wades in to cancel culture, he right that the culture, is he right that the song rule britannia should be banned from the proms? we will debate plus we'll have a debate that. plus we'll have a look tomorrow's pages look at tomorrow's front pages tonight pack. tonight in my press pack. bernard with hapless harry being warned from a fake warned to stay away from a fake german prince with a reputation even dodgier than his own, and fergie's second cancer diagnosis in matter of months. making in a matter of months. making the headlines. plenty the headlines. there is plenty for the mail on sunday's editor at charlotte griffiths, at large, charlotte griffiths, to teeth stuck into. at large, charlotte griffiths, to is teeth stuck into. at large, charlotte griffiths, to is tonight'sstuck into. at large, charlotte griffiths, to is tonight's royalinto. at large, charlotte griffiths, to is tonight's royal dispatch that is tonight's royal dispatch . in a.
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the camilla tominey show sunday mornings from 930 on gb news. >> this is patrick christys tonight . we're only on gb news tonight. we're only on gb news now. prince harry has been blasted in german for posing an award ceremony with an alleged royal fraudster . award ceremony with an alleged royal fraudster. here he is with the self—styled prince mario max schaumburg—lippe , who has been schaumburg—lippe, who has been accused by the head of the family of prince alexander of harvesting their name for personal gain. now harry's mate, right, the so—called prince mario max appeared on the german version of celebrity big brother in 2014. flogs his own wealth
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elixir on a german shopping channel. if you don't believe me, take a look and listen to this. this is. >> i'll mention i'm only happy when people are well , and that's when people are well, and that's why i have activated and developed the wealth. >> alexia for you . >> alexia for you. >> alexia for you. >> he says that if you spray it on a lottery ticket, you've got a good chance of winning. i mean, it's all absolutely balm pot stuff. but prince alexander told the mail on sunday prince harry cannot stoop lower than appearing with him and would advise him to stay away from this man. well, i'm joined now by the editor at large at the mail sunday. charlotte mail on sunday. charlotte griffiths. charlotte, thank you very much. i mean, prince harry's reputation well and truly in the toilet here. >> surely it's not great >> surely it's not been great for reputation. for his reputation. >> people have been >> a lot of people have been saying of feather stick together. >> now, obviously this mario max guy is, you know, he's flogging stuff guy is, you know, he's flogging stu�*he's going on celeb big >> he's going on celeb big brother, and harry is in a different league to that. >> but people are saying, are they so very different because
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harry on oprah. they so very different because harwell, on oprah. they so very different because harwell, on opform of >> well, that's a form of reality he's flogging his reality tv. he's flogging his private in his book. he private life in his book. he went his book. went round flogging his book. >> what think shows went round flogging his book. >:that what think shows went round flogging his book. >:that it's|at think shows went round flogging his book. >:that it's onlythink shows went round flogging his book. >:that it's only aink shows went round flogging his book. >:that it's only a hop, shows went round flogging his book. >:that it's only a hop, skip|ows is that it's only a hop, skip and from the top to the and a jump from the top to the bottom . bottom. >> w- w- e“— e sort of it's the >> and it's sort of it's the same isn't it? same thing really. isn't it? selling yourself, selling your royal connections and it's just really unfortunate. they were pictured together for his pr team, who must be holding their head in their hands today. >> harry even doing at >> what is harry even doing at any of these kind of events that this this chap turns up to? it's ridiculous. >> i i emil] elli]- >> i know, i think i think this event particularly bad event was a particularly bad one. get the impression harry one. i get the impression harry started to sense that it started to get a sense that it wasn't exactly a—list event, wasn't exactly an a—list event, because red because he didn't go on the red carpet and he sort of carpet to arrive, and he sort of snuck back snuck out the back door afterwards, they sort afterwards, and they were sort of beauty contestants. >> pageant girls . >> they're pageant girls. >> they're pageant girls. >> it was pretty low rent. yeah, there travolta, it there was john travolta, but it wasn't packed with a—listers and actually, meghan didn't go. she was looking after her kids, and she may have thought, you know, i'm taking for the team i'm taking one for the team here, she actually here, but i'd say she actually was dodging in end. was dodging a bullet in the end. so, know, i don't think so, um, you know, i don't think it done her it would have done her reputation much to good
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reputation that much to good have been there because it was just low rent. just it was just low rent. >> and i mean, >> yeah, indeed. and i mean, harry as well. so, know, harry now as well. so, you know, getting terrible advice. if getting terrible advice. so if he advised to go to, you he was advised to go to, you know, that that shows the kind of calibre of people that are doing the advising for prince harry getting pictured with this essentially low rent essentially fake low rent prince. who flogs were prince. yeah. um, who flogs were health elixir on qvc . the irony health elixir on qvc. the irony overload there is unbelievable , overload there is unbelievable, isn't it? i just wonder who is surrounding harry at the moment who is telling him to be at these events? i mean, it's in a way it's quite sad. >> it's really sad what's happened. >> and he has got amazing >> and he has got this amazing team, he's this amazing team, he's got this amazing hollywood around him. hollywood pr team around him. >> just know >> i just don't know what happened up to happened in the build up to this. but they sort this. but but they sort of appeared to realise, i think, that it might not be the best eventin that it might not be the best event in the whole world because of the way he went about the appearance. was low appearance. it was quite low key, but did manage to get key, but he did manage to get snapped and it is snapped with this guy and it is a sad really. he is getting a bit sad really. he is getting bad advice. i mean, there's no way around it. and he was way around it. and if he was still in the royal family, this would be team of people
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there'd be a team of people vetting he not be vetting him. he would not be allowed selfies, and allowed to take selfies, and royal very rarely royal family members very rarely take of this take selfies because of this exact because you get exact thing, because you get some lunatic who will. now he's already mario mats. already put this mario mats. guys put it all over his social media. absolutely we'll dine guys put it all over his social melon absolutely we'll dine guys put it all over his social melon itbsolutely we'll dine guys put it all over his social melon it forlutely we'll dine guys put it all over his social melon it forluteirest we'll dine guys put it all over his social melon it forluteirest ofwe'll dine guys put it all over his social melon it forluteirest of hisl dine out on it for the rest of his life, which is something we know. hates know. harry hates. he hates people their people dining out on their connection yet connection with him, and yet he's dining out of on his he's dining out sort of on his connection his family. connection with his own family. so, say , the layers of so, as you say, the layers of irony are the shop here. >> yeah, definitely. now, yesterday there was some more astonishing royal health news. it keeps coming at the moment, doesn't it? so sarah ferguson has been diagnosed with has suddenly been diagnosed with skin after skin cancer just months after being diagnosed with breast cancer today has said cancer. well, today she has said that despite the shock, she's in good spirits . charlotte, good spirits. charlotte, terrible time for fergie, isn't it? it's a really terrible time. >> it's so worrying because we all know that if you get a cancer diagnosis very soon after another cancer diagnosis , another cancer diagnosis, there's a risk that it could have and she's on have spread. and she's on tenterhooks now waiting to find out. what's great about out. but what's great about fergie and why think the fergie and why i think the nafion fergie and why i think the nation her is she's being
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nation loves her is she's being really jolly about it. she went on women said, you on loose women and said, you know, bad news, you know, when you get bad news, you turn and just turn the other cheek and just face joy. she's very face it with joy. she's a very joyous person, behind joyous person, apparently behind the scenes. she's actually sort of chipper as , as you of staying as chipper as, as you would imagine from fergie, actually, a good actually, and has kind of a good sense humour around the whole sense of humour around the whole thing. but she's been thing. but she's in she's been in the clinic, which in the mayo clinic, which is a really clinic in really expensive clinic in austria. um, and, you know, she's probably, she she's probably, you know, she said she actually has been getting at worrying getting up at 4 am. worrying a little bit. probably little bit. she's probably incredibly worried now. incredibly worried right now. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> we've got charles and the >> and we've got charles and the enlarged issue. we enlarged prostate issue. we obviously happening obviously whatever's happening with catherine as well. and then now this . do you think this is a now this. do you think this is a bit a symbol that the slimmed bit of a symbol that the slimmed down monarchy is perhaps not the best idea? no >> they're going to need to boost those numbers, because if you think about it, who's left. there's edward going south there's edward going to south africa without sophie. so they probably because sophie needs to stay the cut some stay in the uk and cut some nbbons stay in the uk and cut some ribbons there's an. and ribbons because there's an. and then there's camilla looking after charles as william looking after charles as william looking after catherine. uh, beatrice and eugenie aren't working
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royals. we all know what's happened to and meghan. happened to harry and meghan. i've sort of run out of royals to catch, to count on my fingers here. who here. so um, i mean, but who would thought three would have thought that three senior be ill in senior royals would be ill in such short of time? and such a short space of time? and i know fergie is not a working royal, but she did walk around on day on christmas day and sandringham. nation sandringham. i think the nation have, always considered her have, like always considered her to be a royal. i know she's obviously hrh taken obviously had her hrh taken away, she's, you know, she's away, but she's, you know, she's just of the royal family to just part of the royal family to us. and something to us. and if something were to happen i think it would happen to her, i think it would rock in the rock the royal family in the public's perception, like rock the royal family in the plwould perception, like rock the royal family in the plwould withsption, like rock the royal family in the plwould with any n, like rock the royal family in the plwould with any other like rock the royal family in the plwould with any other royal. it would with any other royal. in strange way. in a strange way. >> and do wonder now, you >> and i do wonder now, you know, with this rubbish know, with all of this rubbish that about the royal that you see about the royal family for people from family and for people from repubuc family and for people from republic stuff republic and all of that stuff saying that we need to tear it all you know, we have now all down, you know, we have now got potentially got three potentially very serious concerns in the serious health concerns in the royal they are family royal family. they are a family just anybody is in just like anybody else is in that sense, health is a great leveller and hopefully can leveller and hopefully we can just exact kind of just give them the exact kind of time need to get time that they need to get through and we all wish them through it and we all wish them well. charlotte, thank you very much to have much as ever. great to have you on the that is, of course,
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on the show. that is, of course, the at large mail the editor at large at the mail on griffiths. on sunday, charlotte griffiths. make keep it make sure that you do keep it mail sunday for all of the mail on sunday for all of the latest as well. there latest royal news as well. there bang the inside of all of bang on the inside of all of this stuff. so there we go. now coming right that the coming up, is it right that the young museum in east london coming up, is it right that the yonow museum in east london coming up, is it right that the yonow promotinng in east london coming up, is it right that the yo now promoting things ast london coming up, is it right that the yonow promoting things like _ondon is now promoting things like trans fear trans ideology and climate fear to british kids ? to impressionable british kids? we undercover . we sent a reporter undercover. the results may surprise you , the results may surprise you, but does this offend you ? we but does this offend you? we found out peter murrell gomez is upset. >> never, never shall we say no? >> never, never shall we say no? >> didn't think so. but harry and meghan's cellist wants it axed from the proms. should we listen to him next? though tonight's panel of top pundits return sofa, going return to the sofa, we're going to go to the very first of tomorrow's front page, which are landing as speak, and it landing as we speak, and it includes a couple, actually a very about the very big stories about the latest incident when comes to latest incident when it comes to bombing the houthis, which will not front pages. but not be in the front pages. but we've scoop that. and we've got a scoop on that. and also as of course, about also as well, of course, about the lords back the the lords knocking back the rwanda very
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rwanda bill. so very, very newsy. hour coming newsy. final half hour coming your stay your way. stay
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>> you're listening to gv news radio . radio. >> all right. welcome back to patrick christys tonight and it's patrick christys tonight and wsfime patrick christys tonight and it's time to bring you tomorrow's news tonight. now in the liveliest paper of you anywhere telly. here go . anywhere on telly. here we go. we start with the metro . fat we start with the metro. fat busting balloon pill on the nhs. hope for millions in cost saving procedure on de morgan tragedy revealed. so we'll have a little bit more on that. um, in the next section . the i uk's worst next section. the i uk's worst storms in a decade will become the norm. britain braced for storm jocelyn after aisha leaves tens of thousands without power and two sadly dead. the guardian medics urged not to report illegal abortions to the police. royal college intervenes amid fear over impact of prosecution for women. um and we're going to go to the mirror now . they also go to the mirror now. they also lead on a version of the weight
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loss story , um, tragic one. this loss story, um, tragic one. this 20 year old morgan was bullied about her size growing up. she hoped an operation would change her life. but now she's just the latest victim of botched surgery in turkey . a lot of horror in turkey. a lot of horror stories coming out of those those turkey surgeries that people are going over there to get finished with the times just for this section of front pages. uh, i won't count on his distinct ditching . sorry, distinct ditching. sorry, saturday post insists sunak the big one. they're going with their leader blood can their leader is blood test can detect early sign of alzheimer's disease. spotted years before symptoms showed there appeared to have been quite a few out breakthroughs in recent years. hopefully they actually really do seriously come to something . do seriously come to something. i'm joined now by my press pack. i'm joined now by my press pack. ihave i'm joined now by my press pack. i have got daily express columnist carole malone , i've columnist carole malone, i've got commentator and journalist mike buckley, former brexit party mep belinda de lucy. and look, i just want to touch quickly on some of the health stories that we've got here actually. so um, you know, this
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idea now, there's one in the independent actually obese nhs patients begin receiving radical balloon weight loss balloon in pill weight loss treatment. right a new type of weight loss pill is being given to nhs patients that contains a gastric balloon which is swallowed and then filled with water. uh, carrie, you're shaking your hand about the gastric balloon. >> i have. you know, i don't trust the stuff. i think that, you know, it's not dealing with the problems that make people overeating place. overeating the first place. so you balloon inside someone you put a balloon inside someone . are they going to stop eating ? . are they going to stop eating? are going to force food are they going to force food down the kind of down because that's the kind of that's of that's the that's the kind of that's the mindset. so i think really mindset. so i think it's really difficult to something difficult to put something inside explode inside someone which can explode and which can cause damage internally. i think a lot of the operations have the operations people have the gastric band, things cause gastric band, things can cause damage. who've damage. i know people who've tried, them . so the tried, who've had them. so the intention is to lose weight and then overeat still and then they overeat still and things happen. so i don't trust this at all. >> i don't trust it. belinda i think it's wonderful that new avenues are being explored to
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find cheaper ways of reducing obesity in this country, and i would may not work for would say it may not work for some, but if it works for others, it is worth it. >> save the more >> we need to save the nhs more money and think of new ways and cheap people lose weight. >> do you stay fit the old fashioned way? >> might i do? haven't >> might i do? i haven't i haven't bubble in my tummy haven't got a bubble in my tummy at all. so i just try and exercise and eat a bit less. however, think this is however, i think this is brilliant obviously brilliant and obviously it's going save of lives and going to save a lot of lives and it's make things a lot it's going to make things a lot easier for the nhs, save a lot of us. money of money, saves all of us. money is can spend that money is the nhs can spend that money on things, a on other things, which is a really good thing. actually really good thing. and actually a really friend of mine, a really good friend of mine, she an version this she had an older version of this a ago and she was very a few years ago and she was very overweight was on. overweight and then she was on. she something put on her she had something put on her stomach a temporary basis. stomach on a temporary basis. she'd weight. she's she'd also it's a weight. she's kept off and it's really it's kept it off and it's really it's changed life. changed her life. >> okay >> all right. okay >> all right. okay >> interesting here's fit because eating because we've been eating biscuits and chocolate. ed davey are you? >> life's fair. there >> life's not fair. there you go. look, go. right now, look, this is a very story, okay? and very important story, okay? and it broke just before i on it broke just before i came on air. a of what is air. so in a sign of what is likely come, the house of likely to come, the house of lords inflicted their
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lords have inflicted their first blow on rishi sunak and his rwanda bill in an unprecedented move, peers voted rwanda bill in an unprecedented m
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the british people want a hard crackdown immigration, and crackdown on immigration, and the lords are going stop it. the lords are going to stop it. >> you know, the >> right. well, you know, the people something people do want something done about illegal immigration. ian, i'm convinced if you put rwanda to win. to a referendum, it would win. where are the lords getting off on just relentlessly on this? just relentlessly frustrating it. >> well, the polls that >> well, the polls say that actually the probably >> well, the polls say that actuathis the probably >> well, the polls say that actuathis policy the probably >> well, the polls say that actuathis policy scrapped. yably >> well, the polls say that actuathis policy scrapped. and want this policy scrapped. and they do want the asylum system deau they do want the asylum system dealt want the cases, dealt with. they want the cases, you who the you know, people who are in the country already, they those country already, they want those cases processed, which the government is singularly refusing obviously refusing to do. and obviously people the boat people do want to see the boat crossings as well. but crossings stop as well. but that needs be in a way needs to be done in a way that is in, in a way that is humane in, in, in a way that saves lives rather than risks lives that the house of lords is looking what looking to revise this. and what they're government they're saying to the government is saying, they is so you're saying, yeah, they are to scrap it. are they want to scrap it. they've so the supreme they've said so the supreme court, haven't said that in court, they haven't said that in the slightest. literally court, they haven't said that in the sligh said literally court, they haven't said that in the sligh said exactlyy >> they said exactly that. >> they said exactly that. >> that guy >> you just heard from that guy saying, not we're not saying, this is not we're not saying, this is not we're not saying never go through saying this going to happen. this is not going to happen. >> how we're >> and this is how we're going to. >> but not all of to. but not all of them or >> yeah, but not all of them or maybe let's get what the supreme court finish maybe let's get what the supreme cothat finish maybe let's get what the supreme cothat rwanda finish maybe let's get what the supreme cothat rwanda is finish maybe let's get what the supreme cothat rwanda is not finish maybe let's get what the supreme cothat rwanda is not a finish maybe let's get what the supreme cothat rwanda is not a safeh is that rwanda is not a safe country. rishi sunak richard
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marcus country. rishi sunak richard maiyes, sends refugees to >> yes, the un sends refugees to rwanda. this total, utter rwanda. this is total, utter nonsense. house of lords nonsense. the house of lords needs reformed. needs completely reformed. i think that's one of the reasons why uk are doing so well why reform uk are doing so well in well. want in the polls as well. they want a second chamber. in the polls as well. they want a goingynd chamber. in the polls as well. they want a going to chamber. in the polls as well. they want a going to delay, )er. they're going to delay, delay, delay, frustrate , frustrate, delay, frustrate, frustrate, frustrate until this wet wipe of a limp biscuit of a a flawed, weak limp biscuit of a policy anyway gets completely watered down to nothing by the lords . the whole thing needs to lords. the whole thing needs to be reset. we just need to deport. what macron did , deport. do what macron did, ignore and deport them ignore the echr and deport them to rwanda. exactly. all of them. as soon as they step foot on our shore, tens of thousands of them. >> what you think? stop >> so what you think? stop messing quite. messing about? well, quite. >> indeed. i mean, there's >> quite indeed. i mean, there's some strong stuff some incredibly strong stuff there to see now there and we love to see it. now look, crowning moment look, it's the crowning moment of last night at the proms. jamie coreth bannau presided over always . over always. >> of his bazball . >> of his bazball. >> of his bazball. >> but rule britannia has come under attack from a woke friend of harry and meghan's , sheku
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of harry and meghan's, sheku kanneh—mason, who . performed at kanneh—mason, who. performed at the sussexes wedding ceremony. back in 2018. there he is has called for it to be axed, so here he is speaking to the bbc. maybe some people don't realise how uncomfortable a song like that can make. how uncomfortable a song like that clotmake. how uncomfortable a song like that (lot ofike. how uncomfortable a song like that (lot of people feel, even if >> a lot of people feel, even if it makes them feel good. >> that's somehow a big >> i think that's somehow a big misunder standing about it. >> belinda. he believes that the songis >> belinda. he believes that the song is offensive . viv what do song is offensive. viv what do you think? >> oh petal, little little thing needs a safe room. i feel the fragile sort of perpetually offended, um, ilk that, um, my generation's probably created. if i'm going to blame anyone of the young who just feel like they're a victim of everything they're a victim of everything they see racism in everything. rule, britannia! the very lyrics are about alfred, the great defending the anglo—saxons and the britons from viking enslavement . because i know the enslavement. because i know the left hate to hear it, but engush left hate to hear it, but english and british people were enslaved and colonised too. we suffered too, and the song is about then the i've
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about that. and then the i've forgotten his name. sorry. can you. yes. well, no, but i was too nervous. yeah shake, shake shake you. i'm. he's done himself disservice. just himself a disservice. he just sounds apparently left sounds silly. apparently he left last night of proms last year's night of the proms before hearing it, because he didn't want to hear the song . didn't want to hear the song. who who are these ? >> 7- >> feel 7 >> feel uncomfortable? ? >> feel uncomfortable? all his mates are suspect. and if he felt that uncomfortable about it, shouldn't have played in it, he shouldn't have played in the year. he the proms. this year. does he not understand it's about? the proms. this year. does he not aboutstand it's about? the proms. this year. does he not about celebrates it's about? the proms. this year. does he not about celebrates british)ut? it's about celebrates british tradition, was patriotic music. that's what it's all about. >> my presumably ode to joy would be your quite a fan of ode to joy. yeah. >> um, i mean, i think it's completely understandable that he's offended by it. and i think this. go on. why why, why ? this. go on. why why, why? because because every it ends every verse with the line, britain shall not be slaves. what's wrong with that? >> obviously, for somebody from a black background , they're a black background, they're going hear that and they'll going to hear that and they'll think, at the think, well, yeah, but at the time was written 1740, time this was written 1740, i think were busy enslaving think we were busy enslaving lots black people. lots of black people. >> you think so? obviously >> do you think so? obviously it's going bring you it's going to bring up the, you know, lots know, just the, the lots of feelings around that which
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should of us, all should be fair. all of us, all of are white knows there's no of us are white knows there's no way we understand how way that we can understand how people that britain people feel, knows that britain abolished slavery in 1806, and 3000 of navy died. 3000 sailors of our navy died. he of that because he he was aware of that because he does doesn't strike me does 3000, he doesn't strike me as idiot. as an idiot. >> members lives . all right. >> saving slaves. it's perfectly understandable every slaves. >> i mean, i suspect within a few years we all have stopped singing it are not mine, not singing it are not on mine, not on my life. >> i tell you what. sung in the schools. >> i'm it. we will find. >> i'm singing it. we will find. >> i'm singing it. we will find. >> we will find out, won't we? whether will stop whether or not people will stop singing coming singing rule britannia. coming up ahead of my interview with katharine birbalsingh tomorrow night britain's strictest night was britain's strictest headteacher, right , who night was britain's strictest headteacher, right, who ban muslim prayer in school, not just muslim prayers. to be fair, it was all prayer. really wasn't it? we'll debate that as i crown tonight's greatest britain on union jackass. but first we take you of sorts to the you on a trip of sorts to the young v&a museum in east london, where aimed at where an exhibition aimed at kids is promoting woke trans ideology and climate fear mongering. we had a man on the inside of all of that as patrick christys tonight, and we are
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only . only on.
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gb news. this is patrick christys tonight we're only on gb news. i've got some more front pages for you now. hot off the press . the now. hot off the press. the independent goes in with starmer ,ignhes independent goes in with starmer , ignites culture war with anti—woke tories labour leader accuses sunak of deliberately stoking division with desperate and divisive mccarthyite attacks on colonial sensitivity. international trust. we're way ahead of the game, i'm afraid, because we spoke about that earlier on. here we go. male starmer wades into culture wars on the side of the woke keir starmer accused of starmer was accused of relentlessly politicising british life yesterday, as he pledged organisations british life yesterday, as he pled goi organisations british life yesterday, as he pled go for organisations british life yesterday, as he pled go for woke. organisations british life yesterday, as he pled go for woke. um,ianisations british life yesterday, as he pled go for woke. um, okay,:ions british life yesterday, as he pled go for woke. um, okay, s0|s that go for woke. um, okay, so similar front pages there. uh, let's go to the telegraph. alzheimer's, blood test revolution for over 50. so they're the same as what i believe is on the times. uh, condition could be detected 15 years before symptoms times
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using much less invasive method. badenoch to intervene in gender pay- badenoch to intervene in gender pay. trans row as well. um, we're going to son camilla's advice to workaholic charles. slow down. it's a royal exclusive. i'm very concerned about the health of the royal family at the moment. i'm sure we all are, but there seems to be a heck lot of them in be a heck of a lot of them in trouble. blitz houses again. trouble. raf blitz houses again. britain launched britain last night launched a second blitz on the iran backed houthi after houthi rebels after they attacked , they refused to halt attacked, they refused to halt ship attacks. big story that the express break through alzheimer's blood test will bnng alzheimer's blood test will bring cure closer. so there we go. alzheimer's leading the way on three national newspapers tomorrow. but something you won't see and you won't see because we have our selves gone out and got it right here at gb news is one of my producers . news is one of my producers. went out and took a trip to the young v&a. so it's a children's museum in east london. they came across display remarkably across a display remarkably promoting political activism. one piece appeared to be promoting black lives matter with the text decolonise . with the text decolonise. everything featured in the
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artwork. another section of the display appeared to encourage children to take part climate children to take part in climate activism, in particular extinction rebellion. this included instructions on how to easily produce flags and wood blocks for printing. extinction rebellion logos and slogans. blocks for printing. extinction rebellion logos and slogans . as rebellion logos and slogans. as a high vis vest with an xr patch on the back was also on display, informing children that patches can identify you as part of that group or movement. this exhibition, by the way, is aimed at children aged 0 to 14, apparently . so, you know, drink apparently. so, you know, drink it in kids . and lastly, another it in kids. and lastly, another section appeared to be promoting trans activism . there we go. trans activism. there we go. featuring a photo of a trans activist holding a cardboard sign reading trans kids are a blessing . write the information blessing. write the information beneath the artwork told children that they can do. they can. they can do it, too. you can. they can do it, too. you can do it. you can do it too. there we go. so if you want to, i don't know , scrawl something i don't know, scrawl something about the trans community on a piece of cardboard and hold it
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up and take a picture of it. you two, could you find yourself in an exhibition for well an art exhibition for kids? well we reached out to young vienna and a spokesperson we have and a spokesperson said, we have created vienna with and created young vienna with and for young children and throughout our co—design process , they asked the museum to engage with topics they felt relevant to their lives in the world around them, including climate change, sustainability, social justice and identity . we, social justice and identity. we, the vienna, a long standing the vienna, has a long standing history collecting and exhibiting art and exhibiting protest art and design objects in the young. design and objects in the young. vienna's design gives people a voice section illustrates how design can be used to raise awareness. there we go. now we are actually going to have to be very quick on this. we've got belinda. very quick on this. we've got beunda. you very quick on this. we've got belinda. you were belinda. i know that you were itching get in about itching to get in a word about this. know, is an art this. you know, this is an art exhibition created for children by and this is the by children. and this is the kind reason those kind of stuff the reason those topics to children topics are important to children or saying they're or if they're saying they're important, adults important, is because adults have indoctrinated. >> and feel deeply >> and i feel deeply uncomfortable with any adult targeting children with gender ideology and wrong body theory. i think in a few years, adults
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that have contributed to children being exposed to this will up in court. will end up in court. >> you think we have to force >> do you think we have to force this stuff kids, mike? this stuff on kids, mike? i mean, go to mean, look, you know, you go to it just it's just it's everywhere, isn't it? >> this exhibition is >> this is this exhibition is just they just explaining things as they are world to kids. are in the world today to kids. i mean, you can't move in the world without talking world without people talking about trans identity or talking about trans identity or talking about the about climate. where were the brexit protests brexit protests? protests were they brexit? they weren't they brexit? they were ago. they probably were years ago. they probably were years ago. they probably were would imagine. were years ago. they probably werhow would imagine. were years ago. they probably werhow can would imagine. were years ago. they probably werhow can how ld imagine. were years ago. they probably werhow can how ld iryou ne. were years ago. they probably werhow can how ld iryou say trans >> how can how can you say trans kids are a blessing? is it a blessing when have their blessing when girls have their breasts they breasts chopped off and they take hormones that make them so dangerous, realise dangerous, and then they realise they're not really trans after all, they just had a problem. is that a blessing you wreck that a blessing where you wreck kids in their lives? is that a blessing where you wreck kids a in their lives? is that a blessing where you wreck kids a blessing?ieir lives? is that a blessing? >> i mean, that's a different debate, it? but what this debate, isn't it? but what this what this what this what this exhibition is educating exhibition is doing is educating kids these are in kids to say these are issues in the today to be. yeah, the world today to be. yeah, well, admittedly saying well, it was admittedly saying that, it's just kind that, but it's just kind of saying that, know, are saying that, you know, these are issues that are debated in the world. dangerous indoctrination. >> great be. all right. >> well, look, m right. >> well, look, i think i do i do think interesting. yes.
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think it's interesting. yes. it's just yet another example, isn't it, of the idea that this isn't it, of the idea that this is most important isn't it, of the idea that this is kids most important isn't it, of the idea that this is kids and most important isn't it, of the idea that this is kids and the st important isn't it, of the idea that this is kids and the way|portant for kids and, and the way it's portrayed, you know, it just seems to a lot of this seems to be a lot of this out there, isn't there? but it is time now reveal today's time now to reveal today's greatest britain and union jackass. with jackass. right? we start with carol's greatest britain minus katharine birbalsingh, who i think you've got an interview with from rac, arguably the best head teacher in britain. >> certainly running one of the best performing schools in britain britain, especially britain and britain, especially among children, among very, very poor children, gets she's gets incredible results. she's in this week in the high court this week because been sued. the because she's been sued. the school been a muslim school has been sued by a muslim student she wasn't student who said that she wasn't allowed pray school allowed to pray on school premises. not premises. um, this this is not this is not, um, you know, for muslims, this she doesn't muslims, this is she doesn't allow any religion to be practised within the school allow any religion to be practisecshe hin the school allow any religion to be practisecshe believes chool allow any religion to be practisecshe believes thatl allow any religion to be practisecshe believes that the because she believes that the kids it she's done it in kids that it she's done it in the name of multiculturalism and integration because she believes kids should not be influenced by other religions anyway. so. but she's now in the high court. it turns out today that the student who was accused um, she she who was accused her, um, she she she threatened to stab someone
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last year and was actually suspended from the school, and she threatened to stab someone who on the who was going to tell on the fact going to fact that she was going to destroy school. destroy the school. >> right, strong >> okay. all right, strong start. here's your greatest britain. >> well, i'll just say, i think banning prayer was absolutely barbaric. but anyway, different banning prayer was absolutely barbarsorry,: anyway, different banning prayer was absolutely barbarsorry, butyway, different banning prayer was absolutely barbarsorry, but my', different banning prayer was absolutely barbarsorry, but my greatest|t point. sorry, but my greatest banning prayer. what secular schools not allowing. >> kidding she's >> are you kidding me? she's >> are you kidding me? she's >> i can't even banned all the kind of thing. jews, muslims, christians. >> the of thing you'd >> it's the kind of thing you'd expect oh, expect in a dictatorship. oh, don't silly. expect in a dictatorship. oh, dorthis silly. expect in a dictatorship. oh, dorthis is silly. expect in a dictatorship. oh, dorthis is a;illy. expect in a dictatorship. oh, dorthis is a this is a secular state. >> this is islamist bullying. >> this is islamist bullying. >> all right, we have we can i just say the church right? can i just say the church right? can i just say the church right? can i just say i've got an exclusive with tomorrow. and so we'll with her tomorrow. and so we'll be this be having a lot more this tomorrow. great. >> the king um, >> great britain is the king um, because because not because he's because not praying. because he's out of praying. not because he's out of the , but because in this the church, but because in this instance, he's being honest about issues . and about his health issues. and that's a spike in people that's created a spike in people searching online prostrate searching online for prostrate issues. really good issues. so that's a really good thing. going public is going issues. so that's a really good thisave going public is going issues. so that's a really good thisave lives. ing public is going issues. so that's a really good thisave lives. okay,|blic is going issues. so that's a really good thisave lives. okay, good.; going to save lives. okay, good. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> mine is basil brockhurst. this is the taxi driver from shropshire, um, wanted had shropshire, um, who wanted had a saint george's flag, a union
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flag in his taxi. shropshire council said no, you're not allowed because it's divisive allowed it because it's divisive or they said. or whatever rubbish they said. and no way, jose. and and he said, no way, jose. and they changed their yes, they changed their mind. so yes, british drivers in british taxi drivers in shropshire can have the union flag . flag. >> today's greatest briton is bafil. >> today's greatest briton is basil . all right. well done basil. all right. well done basil. all right. well done basil. okay right. we're going to go to jacks now. now to go to union jacks now. now let's go on. let's be quick. go on. >> labour mp as apsana begum . we >> labour mp as apsana begum. we know why she's wants to living in a council house. um, two years on, she became an mp years on, after she became an mp and she's 90 a year and now she's on 90 grand a year living after living in looking after a constituency that has 23,000 people the housing waiting list. >> okay. >> okay. >> come on, i'm not going to comment on that. um, good. well, i'm going to say is hmrc so they were powers 2017 were given powers back in 2017 to deal with companies to basically deal with companies that weren't paying enough tax. they haven't used those powers once. on? once. what is going on? >> okay. meanwhile i was on the phone to aren't you? anyway phone to me, aren't you? anyway transport phone to me, aren't you? anyway traryesrt phone to me, aren't you? anyway traryes , the tfl have have put >> yes, the tfl have have put down rules that absolutely absurd and very dangerous. >> they allowing asylum >> they are allowing asylum seekers refugees to apply to seekers and refugees to apply to be taxi drivers without having
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any criminal background checks . any criminal background checks. >> the winner of the union jackass is the labour mp apsana begum. there go. okay, all begum. there we go. okay, all right, so look, thank you very, very much to my wonderful panel this evening . it's been lively this evening. it's been a lively show and you really, really do love to see it. i want to remind her well, the headliners is her as well, the headliners is next, i just want to end on next, but i just want to end on a positive note. a patriotic and positive note. some people like putting some people may like putting this but not here. this country down, but not here. i'll stand by traditions no i'll stand by our traditions no matter i'll be back matter what, and i'll be back again tomorrow from 9 pm. rule britannia . okay, there we go. britannia. okay, there we go. thank you very much, everybody. i will see you tomorrow at night. all right? we're not going to do away with it. not on my watch. lovely stuff. >> thank you guys . we're going >> thank you guys. we're going brighter. outlook the box solar sponsors of whether on . gb news sponsors of whether on. gb news evening storm jocelyn will be
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arriving this time tomorrow. >> on tuesday evening. not as intense as storm isha, but nevertheless could cause some further disruption brewing out in the atlantic at the moment . in the atlantic at the moment. there is the next storm system . there is the next storm system. storm isha continues to clear away. still plenty of isobars on the chart. it is still pretty gusty out there. this evening. plenty of showers to packing in across scotland in particular, but tend to but the showers will tend to ease most places , ease off in most places, generally clear generally becoming clear overnight will overnight and the winds will ease down further until the cloud thickens and we start to see wet weather coming into northern ireland dawn, with northern ireland by dawn, with the skies . and as the the clearer skies. and as the winds ease, could some winds ease, we could see some pockets across pockets of frost across scotland. most scotland. but for most of us, we'll tuesday at 4 or we'll start tuesday at 4 or 5 degrees. many in the east will start dry and bright, but the rain into the west rain will spread into the west and pretty much and then become pretty much across lunchtime . across all parts by lunchtime. um, the heaviest rain, though, over hills the rain over western hills the rain could cause some disruption because storm isha , where because after storm isha, where we had quite a bit of rain falling , extra rainfall may falling, extra rainfall may cause some flooding issues. and then the continue to then the winds continue to strengthen. actually quite a
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mild not mild day tomorrow, but not feeling that the feeling all that mild with the wind and the rain and the winds continue to strengthen during tuesday evening, particularly across the north. the winds won't strong as with storm won't be as strong as with storm isha , but because storm isha is isha, but because storm isha is only just cleared, could of only just cleared, it could of course, structural issues. course, some structural issues. so do have warnings place . so we do have warnings in place. a warning, gusts of a broad yellow warning, gusts of 55 to 65 miles an hour, and the amber warning across northern and western scotland, where gusts could touch 80 miles an houn gusts could touch 80 miles an hour. warm feeling inside hour. that warm feeling inside from as sponsors of from boxt boiler as sponsors of weather on .
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gb news. >> good evening. you're with gb news and the breaking news tonight is that the uk and the united states have carried out joint airstrikes against houthi targets in yemen . they say targets in yemen. they say taking out houthi missile storage strike sites and launchers in the second set of coordinated strikes against the iran backed militants there. the uk and the us once again carrying those joint airstrikes against houthi targets in yemen . against houthi targets in yemen. well, tonight, the defence secretary grant shapps said joint uk us airstrikes against houthi sites in yemen will deal another blow to their limited stockpiles and ability to threaten global trade. that breaking news to us just in the last hour . we'll also happening
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last hour. we'll also happening this evening. israel has

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