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tv   Patrick Christys Tonight  GB News  January 30, 2024 3:00am-5:01am GMT

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next. >> patrick. thank you and good evening to you. will. the top story from the newsroom tonight is that leicestershire police has referred itself to the independent watchdog over its investigation of assaults allegedly committed by valdo calocane saini, before he went to on kill three people in nottingham. a few months later, he'd attacked two work colleagues at a factory in kegworth in leicestershire in may of the same year, the prime minister said today he hadn't ruled out an inquiry into the nottingham attacks . the families nottingham attacks. the families of the victims have angrily questioned the mental health support given to calocane, condemning the disgusting lack of a public inquiry into the murders of their loved ones within the last hour, the three american soldiers killed in a drone strike on the syrian jordanian border have been named sergeant william jerome rivers special list kennedi saunders and brianna moffatt belonged to and brianna moffatt belonged to an army reserve unit based in the us state of georgia . the the us state of georgia. the pentagon says it's not looking for a war with iran, but will do
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what is needed to protect troops. earlier, tehran said it wasn't behind the attack , wasn't behind the attack, instead accusing america of trying to expand the crisis . the trying to expand the crisis. the house of lords is once again tonight debating the government's anti—illegal migration rwanda bill, with peers unsure of whether or not the country is safe. the archbishop of canterbury today criticised the principles of the bill, while the liberal democrats are trying to bring it down altogether over the government's plan, aims to halt legal challenges against sending asylum seekers to rwanda . asylum seekers to rwanda. however, peers have indicated they will try to strip out its key powers. is, meanwhile, more than a thousand illegal migrants have crossed the english channel so far this year , as new home so far this year, as new home office figures show 388 people made the journey just this weekend. the highest number to cross in a single day so far this year was 358. they came in eight small boats on january the 17th. two weeks ago. so now a
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conservative mp has resigned because he says he can't afford to pay his mortgage on his annual salary of £118,000. mid—norfolk mp george freeman quit as science minister in november , citing his mortgage november, citing his mortgage rising from 800 to £2000 a month. downing street has says it has no plans to change its approach to ministerial pay when weather records were broken in scotland today, with temperatures reaching an almost summer like 20 degrees aquarii in sutherland recorded a temperature of 19.9 degrees, beating the previous high of 19.6, which was recorded yesterday in the north western highlands and lastly, king charles has left hospital in central london after three night stay there. following treatment for an enlarged prostate . it's for an enlarged prostate. it's expected his majesty could take up to a month off public duties while he continues with his recovery. meanwhile the princess
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of wales, who's been recovered from planned abdominal surgery , from planned abdominal surgery, has also been discharged from hospital and is now recovering at home in windsor. if you want the latest new gb news alerts, scan the qr code on your screen . scan the qr code on your screen. if you're watching tv, this is gb news britain's news channel . gb news britain's news channel. >> we are too woke to win a war. former president donald trump is the latest to say world war iii is about to kick off. >> i will prevent world war three and we're very close to world war iii. we're very close to world war iii. senior nato generals have just warned that putin could attack germany in the coming years, and that could lead to the next world war. >> the head of the british army, general sir patrick sanders, said need to and equip said we need to train and equip a army tens a citizen army of tens of thousands. is how gen z thousands. this is how gen z responded. bear in mind that a
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recent report found around 35% of them think hamas are freedom fighters and close to 20% of them would back palestinians in a war over israel. >> so they still got ready for the battlefield. i didn't get to finish my bronzer, though, because started because i literally started getting what i was getting shot at like, what i was wearing for the day. i can't believe they gave us these cargos because they are cargos for free because they are so luckily, the french cargos for free because they are so on luckily, the french cargos for free because they are so on our> good grief. sweden has told its citizens to ready for its citizens to get ready for war the military in any war and join the military in any capacity well here's capacity they can. well here's how preparing for war how we've been preparing for war in britain. we spent £1.6 million advert million on a recruitment advert that showed this. >> network was late. we went to the. we're gonna have a couple
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bannau ally pally father diab with. salaam we are . with. salaam we are. >> yes. a recruitment campaign based around a muslim soldier being able to remove his shoes, helmet and weapon to pray during a battlefield exercise . guys, a battlefield exercise. guys, the raf has described recruits as being useless and white and then unlawfully discriminated against white men. 31 white men were held back in training and have now been compensated. they are, af says, a target for 40% of the force to be female and 20% from an ethnic minority background. by 2030, they've now admitted that's unrealistic . and admitted that's unrealistic. and the only thing that's happened here as far as i can tell, is that perfectly willing and able white men have essentially been blocked from serving king and country the royal is country. now the royal navy is advertising for serving sailors and marines to go and work as part of their diversity and inclusion team. in september 2020, three, sailors were told to introduce their pronouns at the start of meetings and to
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avoid microaggressions . bear in avoid microaggressions. bear in mind that in the year to march 2023, the royal navy and royal marines failed to hit their recruitment targets by 27. represent a shortfall of 1037 personnel, both organisations have failed to hit their recruitment targets every year since 2011. calls earlier this year to send the aircraft carrier hms queen elizabeth to the red sea following airstrikes on the houthi rebels in yemen, were denied and due to staff shortages . and now we're taking shortages. and now we're taking people out of active service so they can educate the royal navy on the lived experience . on the lived experience. audience as being a member of a diverse community. so wang keir starmer says the culture wars don't matter. this is literally the culture wars making us more likely to lose an actual war. forget fixed bayonets. it's now put your lippy on, slip into your tutu, bit of dusky eyeshadow. ask that haughty fighter what their preferred
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gender is, and then apologise for the microaggression before you probably switch sides and fight for them you think fight for them because you think they're victims of british they're the victims of british backed zionist oppression . i backed zionist oppression. i repeat, we are too woke to win a war, but let's get the thoughts of my panel now on the panel tonight we are going to be joined by top daily express columnist carol maloney. we've also got journalist and commentator mike buckley and former brexit party mep belinda de lucy. carol i'll open up with you. are we too woke to win a war.7 >> you're out of breath there. that's that little run across the studio. um, yes. i mean, i mean, what you said there was very but there's huge very funny, but there's huge elements of truth in what you just too. you know, just said there, too. you know, if about if you're worrying about how many black, brown white many black, brown and white people in fighting people you have in your fighting force, you're you're not going to building effective to be building an effective fighting force. you know, it's where to bring the nhs into . but where to bring the nhs into. but the nhs this year have vowed to cut their diversity officer. the amount of people they have by
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40, because in england alone they have 800 and it costs £480 million last year. this is what what's going to happen here. you know, they're taking serving officers off jobs and giving them diversity jobs, which is just kind of beyond. and what's the colour of a person's skin got to do with their ability to fight, fly a plane, sail a boat, whatever. it's got nothing whatsoever to do. and it's a kind of bizarre sort of racism. you said there that white men were effectively being blocked from fighting for, for king. >> well, they've had to pay. they've had to pay compensation out as a result of it. mike. i mean, this isn't just what's going navy. it seems going on in the navy. it seems to happening across our to be happening right across our armed at the moment. armed forces at the moment. and frankly, is the culture frankly, this is the culture wars costing us a war, isn't it.7 well interests hearing you wars costing us a war, isn't it.7 weyour nterests hearing you wars costing us a war, isn't it.7 weyour introduction.�*|earing you do your introduction. >> there was one organisation you the you didn't mention in the entirety your introduction, you didn't mention in the entiretis your introduction, you didn't mention in the entiretis the )ur introduction, you didn't mention in the entiretis the government.on, which is the government. i suspect it's no surprise. and not the fact not a sps unrwa stated the fact that been having a that they've been having a recruitment is 2011. this recruitment crisis is 2011. this government we government came in in 2010. we know government has know that this government has actively to reduce the actively chosen to reduce the size army since 2010, size of the army since 2010, assuming the world going to
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assuming the world is going to stay, safe as it stay, stay as safe as it was back then. but course it back then. but of course it hasn't we are now hasn't at all. we are now living in more dangerous in a more dangerous world. i don't think that we are heading into imminently, don't think that we are heading into i imminently, don't think that we are heading into i think imminently, don't think that we are heading into i think the imminently, don't think that we are heading into i think the governments], don't think that we are heading into i think the governments of and i think the governments of the including ours, can the world, including ours, can still make to ensure still make choices to ensure that happen. but that that doesn't happen. but that doesn't mean that we shouldn't acting to increase shouldn't be acting to increase the size of our reality. its competence to just in case that it terms of this, it does. but in terms of this, it does. but in terms of this, it makes complete sense the it makes complete sense for the navy part of navy and any other part of the army include diversity army to include diversity and inclusion officers because why inclusion officers, because why haven't we rishi sunak.7 >> an advert for the >> why have an advert for the army would see someone army that would see someone stopping a battlefield exercise for the call to prayer? i mean, you would that in battle. >> i presume they on a >> i presume they were on a training exercise, on training exercise, not on an actual exercise, what actual battle exercise, but what they're from they're saying to people from muslim you can muslim communities is you can have a home here, you can be yourself, but you can't pray on the on hold. the battlefield, on hold. >> the point, that >> but that's the point, that that silliness because it that was silliness because it also hasn't won battlefield. also hasn't won the battlefield. >> question as to >> there was also question as to whether training >> there was also question as to whether or training >> there was also question as to whether or about training >> there was also question as to whether or about does ng >> there was also question as to whether or about does it m atter? >> matter? >> doesn't why are you >> it doesn't matter why are you saying if in training saying even if it is in training when you can't do it in battle, what's the point if training is
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for battle? what's the point if training is for evene? what's the point if training is for even if it is a battlefield >> even if it is a battlefield exercise? are in that exercise? say they are in that valley and they're in the middle of they're of a battle, or they're preparing for a battle, it's perfectly reasonable think perfectly reasonable to think that team—mates will, that that guy's team—mates will, you essentially you know, essentially look out while a problem. while he has a problem. why wouldn't they do? don't think every prayer every soldier says a prayer before they go into battle. well i if i was soldier. i would if i was a soldier. >> well, exactly. >> yes, well, exactly. >> yes, well, exactly. >> i suspect do. in fact, >> i suspect many do. in fact, belinda, members belinda, we've got members of our who are being our royal navy who are being asked their asked to introduce their pronouns start of meeting pronouns at the start of meeting and avoid microaggressions. >> meanwhile , we can't deploy >> meanwhile, we can't deploy certain ships in the middle east because of staff shortage. because of a staff shortage. >> and iran >> i mean, russia and iran must be giggling, their be giggling, rubbing their hands with so with glee. this is so embarrassing and doing such bad , embarrassing and doing such bad, huge the reputation of huge harm to the reputation of our armed forces. and let's be honest, diversity . inclusion honest, diversity. inclusion equals discrimination against white men and discrimination against women's rights. >> that's all. it's ever meant. it's infected our public sector. it's infected our public sector. it's done huge damage to our police. this is all down. so police. this is all top down. so these brave service men and women are being infected by this. who's going to sign up this. and who's going to sign up if they're terrified saying if they're terrified of saying man the ship man overboard or man the ship
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and going to suddenly man overboard or man the ship and a going to suddenly man overboard or man the ship and a massive|g to suddenly man overboard or man the ship and a massive hissy;uddenly man overboard or man the ship and a massive hissy fit denly man overboard or man the ship and a massive hissy fit about have a massive hissy fit about using gendered language, this is embarrassing. they are destroying our reputation. we used fierce and respected , used to be fierce and respected, and i think we need to flush it out. you can equal out. you can have equal opportunities appeal to all opportunities and appeal to all races i don't races and both sexes. i don't want our army to reflect the wider want 51% wider society. i don't want 51% of in the army. they're of women in the army. they're amazing brave women, amazing, brave women, warrior soldiers. but not many can compete same level of compete at the same level of physicality as men. we need the best macho best of the best rambo, macho alpha males, please. you've got to keep the patriotism going. but the left have have decoded patriotism as being far right and fascist. and it's on them because patriotism is a good thing and we should all feel proud of our culture. it's interesting. >> lord was the first >> lord west, who was the first sea 2002 and 2006. sea lord between 2002 and 2006. he has said the navy has lost the plot. he said. it's just ridiculous. he said you know, taking people from key important roles to focus on diversity is nuts . why aren't we listening to nuts. why aren't we listening to people who know services people who know how the services work? we're not. we're work? but we're not. we're listening to the to woke listening to the to the woke bngade listening to the to the woke brigade who are telling us how to and
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to run our army, navy and military . it's crazy. military. it's crazy. >> the demographic of people that would normally join the military. okay. i mean, literally one of the adverts that i think all right was, that was, i think all right was, you know, i was born carlisle you know, i was born in carlisle , was made in the royal , but i was made in the royal navy it is. do you navy or whatever it is. do you really you know, really think that, you know, pints carlisle pints willing lads from carlisle are want to join if are going to want to join if they to introduce they have to introduce their pronouns of pronouns at the start of a meeting and, you know, avoid microaggressions and all of this stuff. mean , who are they stuff. i mean, who are they actually targeting here? >> apparently the >> well, apparently the guidance, including you guidance, including saying you need to introduce personal pronouns and against microaggressions that was withdrawn being withdrawn and is now being reviewed. so i don't think that's policy . but reviewed. so i don't think that's policy. but in that's current policy. but in terms where the navy is and that's current policy. but in ter did where the navy is and that's current policy. but in ter did the here the navy is and that's current policy. but in ter did the other he navy is and that's current policy. but in ter did the other armedy is and that's current policy. but in ter did the other armed forces,d he did the other armed forces, they've a recruitment they've got a recruitment crisis . therefore incumbent on . it's therefore incumbent on them reach out to every part them to reach out to every part of society . i would them to reach out to every part of society. i would imagine them to reach out to every part of society . i would imagine the of society. i would imagine the vast majority army out of vast majority of army out of navy pretty much as they navy ads are pretty much as they were, it's only right that were, but it's only right that they reach out to me. >> the raf. the they reach out to me. >> held the raf. the they reach out to me. >> held back the raf. the they reach out to me. >> held back male, re raf. the they reach out to me. >> held back male, white. the raf held back male, white recruits they've had to pay. if that happened. >> that was clearly there are lots what you haven't done is lots of what you haven't done is demonstrate causality, like
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there problem with there is a problem with recruitment. fine. there's recruitment. fine. and there's diversity and inclusion for people navy . and in people inside the navy. and in terms out to new terms of reaching out to new people, terms of reaching out to new peofdiversity, inclusion has that diversity, inclusion has caused the recruitment crisis . caused the recruitment crisis. >> it means discrimination. also, i think it's delusional to think the armed forces are suffering recruitment crisis because it's not woken up. i think because gone woke. it think because it's gone woke. it is young lads from is putting young lads from from up and down the country from signing up. >> bear they've had >> bear in mind they've had a recruitment crisis since 2011 andifs recruitment crisis since 2011 and it's suffering. >> and it's not >> it's suffering and it's not helping. just appeared. helping. no, not just appeared. it's been woke few years how. >> now. >> obviously being woke since 2011. you're saying. 2011. i see what you're saying. >> saying we need to >> i'm just saying we need to champion masculinity. need champion masculinity. we need to champion masculinity. we need to champion and champion men again and thank them courage them for their courage and bravery, painting bravery, not painting their nails and doing pronouns, denying that. >> actually some are >> but actually some people are masculine they also, to be masculine and they also, to be fair, not in not. >> i'm sorry. that cannot be a priority when you're on training, know that priority when you're on trairwell know that priority when you're on trairwell that know that priority when you're on trairwell that i know that priority when you're on trairwell that i would ;now that priority when you're on trairwell that i would say' that full well that i would say christians same christians do not get the same level respect it as other level of respect it as other religions do . religions do. >> the christian stuff is they can pray on every time so they don't have to kneel down. can pray on every time so they don'tstill,�* to kneel down. can pray on every time so they don'tstill, i:o kneel down. can pray on every time so they don'tstill, i stilleel down. can pray on every time so they don'tstill, i still think»wn.
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>> i still, i still think the army and the armed forces is a place where you have be place where you have to be machines, machines place where you have to be machinesthank machines place where you have to be machinesthank you machines place where you have to be machinesthank you for:hines place where you have to be machinesthank you for their; first and thank you for their sacrifice and their duty and service. i don't them service. i don't want them sacrifice politically correct. >> they sacrifice their life and limb for us. >> leave them alone . >> leave them alone. >> leave them alone. >> it doesn't matter what colour or religion they are. why do they have a diversity quota? the colour of your skin should not matter when you're fighting. and i the government i think what the government could think could do, and i think you're right wages have right on this. their wages have been because of been falling because of inflation in the armed services. and they should. if you expect someone for your country, someone to die for your country, you well, yeah. you should pay them. well, yeah. no absolutely. no i agree absolutely. >> and accommodation and the accommodation is absolutely appalling as well. and the aftercare is shocking. so yeah there there is there are, there are there is more to this than just the old wokery. but i do think that was a big part to play. thank you very firecracker of very much. firecracker of a star. uh, time for our brand new great though great british giveaway, though your an incredible your chance to win an incredible wait £18,000 cash. wait for it. £18,000 in cash. that's like having £1,500 to play that's like having £1,500 to play with each month for an entire year. it's almost exactly like that, isn't it? imagine
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now . look still to come. this >> get involved. make it yours now. look still to come. this is big i've got the new conservative party chairman richard holden. he's joining me richard holden. he'sjoining me live in the studio. he's got a massive job on hands trying massive job on his hands trying to the warring factions in to unify the warring factions in the backbenches . it's a no the tory backbenches. it's a no holds barred interview , so make holds barred interview, so make sure you stay tuned for that. but churchill but next, should churchill be played by a black actor, what do you think? should a black actor actually play churchill? henry bolton goes head to head with activist femi nylander . this is activist femi nylander. this is patrick and we patrick christys tonight and we are only on gb
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>> the camilla tominey show sunday mornings from 9.3 on gb
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news . news. >> this is patrick christys tonight only on gb news and it's time now for our head to head . time now for our head to head. now black actors playing white historical figures is nothing new, is it? indeed, in recent history , channel five chose to history, channel five chose to cast a black actress jodie turner—smith as tudor queen anne boleyn. but now has been suggested that winston churchill could be the next focus of colour blind casting, as it's called . in an interview with the called. in an interview with the telegraph, actor danny sapani said would be okay for said that it would be okay for a black actor to play churchill, but it would have to work both ways, suggesting that a white actor could play a black historical figure too. but do you agree? should a black actor play you agree? should a black actor play sir winston churchill? let me know your thoughts. email me gbviews@gbnews.com. tweet me at gb news. and while you're there, go and take part in our poll. i'll bring you the results very
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shortly this. i'm shortly to debate this. now i'm joined femi nylander joined by activist femi nylander and leader henry and former ukip leader henry bolton. thank you bolton. both of you, thank you very, much. henry. would very, very much. henry. would you agree black churchill ? >> 7- >> no, not 7— >> no, not for 7_ >> no, not for a ? >> no, not for a moment. >> no, not for a moment. >> and it's nothing about prejudice. >> churchill . >> churchill. >> churchill. >> churchill. >> churchill was white. >> churchill was white. >> george washington, would you have a black actor playing george washington or or or napoleon? no of course you wouldn't. and what would you have? a white actor playing indira gandhi the longest serving prime minister of india? no of course you wouldn't. it makes a mockery of the whole history. and if it was some total fiction that you were trying to sort of make a film or a programme about, then absolutely fine. i don't have a problem with that . um, and, you problem with that. um, and, you know, if you've got a black personality history, like personality in history, like indira gandhi or, you know , indira gandhi or, you know, there are many, many others you could look at luther king, you could look at luther king, you could look at mandela . i know could look at mandela. i know there was some race elements in there was some race elements in there know , there background, but you know, there background, but you know, the whole of perverting the whole idea of perverting history in that way, i think is
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flawed and fiction is a different matter . different matter. >> okay. all right. femi you're go now. do you think a black churchill will be a good thing ? churchill will be a good thing? >> i think the key part of this is to the part that says it should both ways. should work both ways. >> personally think a black >> i personally think a black churchill strange churchill would be very strange seeing as one of the core parts of churchill's personality was that was a white supremacist that he was a white supremacist and believed in the racial superiority of whites . superiority of whites. >> it's well documented . but let >> it's well documented. but let me just let me just let me just finish my head. >> i'm going to come. >> i'm going to come. >> henry, let me, let me. henry, let me make my point. >> henry. stop. henry! >> henry. just stop. henry! henry come back to henry and then i'll come back to you. henry. thank you. me you. henry. thank you. let me make point. you. henry. thank you. let me ma i; point. you. henry. thank you. let me mai can point. you. henry. thank you. let me mai can give |t. you. henry. thank you. let me mai can give plenty you. henry. thank you. let me ma i can give plenty of >> i can give plenty of examples, but i don't really want question want to want to question that. >> stick to the >> let's let's stick to the point. the point is that if we look the history, where are look at the history, where are the egregious the worst egregious examples of this? egregious this? are the worst egregious examples of anne boleyn, or examples of this anne boleyn, or is ridley scott film is it the ridley scott film exodus where exodus gods and kings, where moses played christian moses is played by christian bale pharaoh rameses is bale and pharaoh rameses is played by joel edgerton, who
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come from wales and australia. like, obviously the pharaoh of eqypt like, obviously the pharaoh of egypt did not look like a guy from australia. or even if you look in our churches and you look, mean, jesus christ came look, i mean, jesus christ came from jerusalem . so those people from jerusalem. so those people you get being blown up your you get being blown up on your screen that's what jesus screen today, that's what jesus looked like, because that's the part of the world came from. part of the world he came from. so deeply embedded in our so when deeply embedded in our culture, it, culture, is the reverse of it, we santa claus, who comes we have santa claus, who comes from basically modern day turkey, who's portrayed as an old white man with a with a big beard. key point? all right, beard. the key point? all right, all both ways. all right, fine. work both ways. >> i'll go to >> i'll go back. i'll go back to henry. henry, you come back henry. henry, can you come back to fermi's first point, which is that view, would be that in his view, it would be absurd a black person to absurd for a black person to play absurd for a black person to play winston churchill predominately because winston churchill a churchill was, as he says, a white supremacist who got very exercised that. henry exercised about that. henry >> do, yes, very . um, >> yeah, i do, yes, very. um, because churchill absolutely was not he tried to do a there's a lot of misinformation out there, particularly going out at the moment with regards to the, the, the impact on famines in india and so on. and it's absolutely
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false. and, you know , femi could false. and, you know, femi could come out with examples. i'm sure , because they'll they'll be based on, on falsities. but what worries me about this whole discussion is exactly what femi has just revealed to us all. it is about making a point, a point of race. my point is that let's just stick to factual accuracies and not change it by changing the ethnicity of factual figures in history and in fairly modern history . if we want to say that history. if we want to say that somebody was a white supremacist and that , you know, and you and that, you know, and you bnng and that, you know, and you bring that into the discussion then we're bringing in in a whole political angle that i think is really the basis of this whole thing. it is to make a point about race, and we need to keep that out of the historical portrayal in television and films and in more modern times . modern times. >> femi, are we not now seeing more people ? no. more people? no. >> well, no. >> well, no. >> i can't give you more modern times, tomi, are we not now
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seeing more people who are of an ethnic minority community playing white characters? whether or not it's idea whether or not it's the idea that scrooge is now going to be played and quoting the played by. and i'm quoting the creator now someone creator of this now, someone of indian who indian heritage who hates migrants . apparently, uh, migrants. uh, apparently, uh, we've potentially. anyway, we've now potentially. anyway, if we have black churchill, we if we have a black churchill, we have churchill. we've have a black churchill. we've had black boleyn. it had a black anne boleyn. does it not to be going that not seem to be to be going that way more now? do you think ? way more now? do you think? >> think, um, we look at >> no, i think, um, we look at examples. we've got film examples. we've got the film argo um, affleck argo where, um, ben affleck character just again , can i ask characterjust again, can i ask you guys, both of you , all of you guys, both of you, all of these films, we see historical films we see of jesus, where he stayed blonde hair blue stayed with blonde hair and blue eyes. that since eyes. do you think that since we've said that historical figures portrayed figures should be portrayed accurately, go into accurately, should we go into all change our all churches and change our pictures jesus middle pictures of jesus to a middle eastern man? because he came from jerusalem the middle from jerusalem in the middle east people, because east to question people, because that's that's basically what i'm saying is, should we apply our rules ? should we apply rules equally? should we apply our rules? okay consistently? so should we take someone who historically is from the middle should we take someone who histoand ly is from the middle should we take someone who histo and ly is frcput he middle should we take someone who histo and ly is frcput that.iddle should we take someone who histo and ly is frcput that toile east and let me put that to henry, then. >> look, henry, we've got
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>> look, henry, if we've got a white why can't white jesus, why can't we have a black churchill? >> yeah, because first all, >> yeah, because first of all, we don't know exactly jesus we don't know exactly what jesus looked secondly, looked like. but secondly, there have played have been jesus has been played by people who are not caucasian whites . so that's a fact. now, whites. so that's a fact. now, i asked femi this in response . do asked femi this in response. do you think the indians would respond ? respond well to a respond? respond well to a female white actor acting or filling the role or playing the part of indira gandhi ? uh, tell part of indira gandhi? uh, tell me that would be. i think it would be silly. >> the point is, consistency. the point i think i said i think a churchill would silly a black churchill would be silly historically. again, the historically. but again, the main historically is not main problem historically is not black playing anne black people playing anne boleyn. the main problem is that people from the middle east, people from the middle east, people um, from people from, um, people from kind of various people, even ben.the kind of various people, even ben. the film about gandhi was played. he was played by who was played. he was played by who was played by banks. gandhi, played by ben kingsley, who , who is not by ben kingsley, who, who is not does not look like gandhi and who . precisely. yeah that's the who. precisely. yeah that's the point. i'm making consistency
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and indira gandhi consistency. >> a different history, but no. >> a different history, but no. >> exactly. but but that's the point i'm making, is we're being consistent. gandhi was consistent. ben gandhi was played by ben kingsley. so let's be . if churchill be consistent. if churchill can't play, played by a can't play play, be played by a black which think black character, which i think would then why do would be silly, then why? why do we this history white we have this history of white actors minority kc? actors playing minority kc? >> be silly. so let's >> it would be silly. so let's just not silly. okay, great just not be silly. okay, great point to end. >> let's, let's let's end this head to head on a point of agreement, which is let's try to not be silly. thank you very much. it's going long much. it's going to be a long hour and a of this show as hour and a half of this show as i desperately try not to be silly, but chaps, thank you. that activist family that is activist family islander, ukip leader islander, former ukip leader henry you really henry bolton. both of you really enjoyed that. so look, who do you agree okay as actor you agree with? okay as actor danny a black danny sapani says that a black actor play churchill actor can play winston churchill , both ways. do , but it must work both ways. do you russell on x says you agree? russell on x says like has to work like danny said, he has to work both but i'm sceptical. both ways. but i'm sceptical. it would the uproar if tom would imagine the uproar if tom cruise played nelson mandela. it wouldn't happen, would it? he's not nearly enough anyway. not nearly tall enough anyway. um lennox says if you're um scott lennox says if you're casting famous and casting for such a famous and historical figure , then the sex,
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historical figure, then the sex, ethnicity and age should all be as as possible. yeah as accurate as possible. yeah otto says, of course it can work in the proper context. cinema and theatre are realms of fantasy. has already fantasy. churchill has already been into work been turned into a work of fiction , so why not? all right, fiction, so why not? all right, look, verdict in 33% of you look, your verdict in 33% of you think that black actors can play winston churchill, 67% of you say that they cannot. so there we go. your results are in. look, coming up fleet street legend kelvin mackenzie has humza yousaf and labour mp kate osamor in his sight after deeply offensive statements about the holocaust. but next, a general election is looming. the tories are still fighting like rats in are still fighting like rats in a sack . can they pull rank are still fighting like rats in a sack. can they pull rank and mount the ultimate comeback? i am joined by the new conservative party chairman, richard holden. he's got a massive job on his hands. he's going to explain to you how on earth he can keep the tories show on the road. a no, show on the road. it's a no, holds bars interview. you have been sending me questions all day to day that you would like me to ask him, will put some ask him, and i will put some of them to. patrick christys them to. it is patrick christys tonight on gb news, the
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isabel monday to thursdays from 6:00 till 930. >> welcome back to patrick christys . tonight we're only on christys. tonight we're only on gb news in a moment. kelvin mackenzie reacts to kate osamor suspension. why did the labour mp use a holocaust memorial day message to accuse israel of genocide ? you might ask, but genocide? you might ask, but before that i'm joined now by the new chairman of the conservative party. it is richard holden. richard, thank you very much for joining us
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here patrick christys here on patrick christys tonight. look, the iceland tonight. um, look, the iceland ceo defected to labour. ceo was defected to labour. you've got tory councillors joining reform at the moment, the prime minister is obsessed with banning disposal all vapes. which party can't even agree on at the moment. i mean, can you party at the moment. i mean, can you party govern itself , let alone party govern itself, let alone the country? >> i think it's pretty clear we can. i think you can see from what done the last what we've done over the last few months, actually last year and bit when we've really and a bit when we've really tackled those issues tackled some of those big issues which were affecting my constituent s head on things like issue like inflation, a big issue affected countries around the globe. >> we've really taken that head on, it down from now on, tackled it down from 11, now down to 4. interest rates are now predicted to fall over the coming months. really helping mortgage payments for people across the country. i think in other areas as well, you're seeing progress being made. you're seeing since the end of the pandemic. indeed, since 2010, economy has grown 2010, the uk economy has grown faster than other major economies europe as well. economies in europe as well. >> yeah, we are worse off per capita, aren't we? >> well, not not worse off per capita, but some have grown
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slightly quicker per capita . but slightly quicker per capita. but overall we're doing pretty well. and the pandemic , i think and since the pandemic, i think per do you think people per capita, do you think people going into this next election feel like they're. >> off? >> well off? >> well off? >> think the start think >> i think the start i think what we're doing is starting to see turning a corner, and see we're turning a corner, and we've that inflation. we've seen that with inflation. and to get and rishi's plan was to get inflation down first and then start at doing tax cuts start to look at doing tax cuts when we could do them sustainably, because there's no point cut, which point in doing a tax cut, which then eaten by then either gets eaten up by inflation or isn't sustainable inflation or isn't sustainable in the long terme we've seen the start and it very much start of that, and it very much is the start. patrick, with the 2% off, um, uh , of national 2% off, um, uh, of national insurance and that i'm sure we're going to see more of that down the line in the march budget going to of budget and going to the 1st of january is looming large. >> to pay huge >> people are about to pay huge sums in some more sums of tax in some cases more tax than they have ever paid. and would what, as and i would argue for what, as of 2023, got 22.5 of august 2023, we've got 22.5 million benefits million people claiming benefits in , scotland wales, in england, scotland and wales, £8 million day on illegal £8 million a day on illegal immigrants living hotels immigrants living in hotels record nhs waiting lists. the trains don't run. there's a housing social housing crisis is the social contract broken in this country?
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>> think so. i think >> no, i don't think so. i think what you're reflecting that what you're reflecting is that actually the country has been through tough and through a pretty tough time. and you've remember you've got to remember back in 2010 into office, 2010 when we came into office, the government was spending for every was spending. every £4. it was spending. one of borrowed. if of those was borrowed. and if you in household which you were in a household which had of, say, 30 grand had an income of, say, 30 grand a were spending 40, a year and you were spending 40, you'd able live in you'd never been able to live in a terme . what we managed to a long terme. what we managed to do of years was do over a period of years was get that really down. then we obviously by the global obviously hit by the global pandemic top of that, russias pandemic on top of that, russias illegal invasion of ukraine, plus war in the middle east really energy prices. but really drove energy prices. but because those, took because we took those, took those decisions that those tough decisions over that decade , going up that, we've decade, going up to that, we've been to support families. been able to support families. now, what we're able to do now, inflation under inflation is getting under control able provide control. we're able to provide sustainable long terme tax cuts, which is what i want to see, because the truth is that any conservative should tell you this. the pounds this. you know, the pounds belong people's pockets. belong in people's pockets. it's actually government actually for the government to take necessary to take a little as is necessary to run public services, defend the country rather the other country rather than the other waythen what tax cuts are we >> then what tax cuts are we going before november, going to get before november, which people think
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which is when most people think the well, look, you can't expect >> well, look, you can't expect me reveal contents of me to reveal the contents of the budget, much trust me to reveal the contents of the bud as , much trust me to reveal the contents of the bud as much much trust me to reveal the contents of the bud as much as much trust me to reveal the contents of the bud as much as i much trust me to reveal the contents of the bud as much as i trust ch trust me to reveal the contents of the bud as much as i trust you.jst me to reveal the contents of the bud as much as i trust you. it's you as much as i trust you. it's going to happen. as as i'd going to happen. as much as i'd love won't have to love to. well you won't have to wait too long, patrick. it'll be about five and a half weeks now until march which until the march budget, which you'll see you'll then be able to see what's going forwards. and i think after you've seen inflation starting to fall, interest to interest rates now starting to come under predicted to come under control. predicted to fall coming months, that fall in the coming months, that alongside for working alongside tax cuts for working families, already started to be delivered . some people seen delivered. some people have seen them they're paid them already. if they're paid weekly, of people will be weekly, a lot of people will be seeing in the next couple of days they're paid at the end days if they're paid at the end of going to days if they're paid at the end of to going to days if they're paid at the end of to make going to days if they're paid at the end of to make a going to days if they're paid at the end of to make a difference; to days if they're paid at the end of to make a difference to) start to make a difference to people's lives. look, one thing we is that we can't get around is that rwanda is in the house lords rwanda is in the house of lords at moment. at the moment. >> party split it. >> your party is split on it. who deputy went over who deputy chairman went over it. record it. people have seen record legal under legal immigration under the tories, record illegal immigration, rapid demographic and is, and cultural change. there is, in irreversible . in many cases irreversible. well, would like to well, would you like to apologise for that? well, would you like to apowell,e for that? well, would you like to apowell, well, for that? well, would you like to apowell, well, let's for that? well, would you like to apowell, well, let's just:hat? well, would you like to apowell, well, let's just unpack >> well, well, let's just unpack some of those points. i think the that the truth is that all conservative you could see conservative mps you could see that the second reading. no that from the second reading. no conservative or
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conservative mps rebelled or what we all want to see is actually immigration, particularly illegal immigration. really like 100% clamped down on and obviously a managed migration situation more broadly with migration to the uk. what we've seen from the other side of the argument is labour mps basically voting over 80 times. now, since we got into government to stop those restrictions. i do understand with respect you have been in power now for 30.5. no, you know, and people have seen their their communities decimated in many cases, you know, record levels of net migration. >> now the party is apparently willing to settle for around 400,000, given what james cleverly has if you do cleverly has said, if you do claim to really be so desperate about it, be kept awake at night by why is james cleverly already rowed on visas on rowed back on student visas on the salary threshold? and we're talking about letting illegal immigrants work? >> let's look at let's >> no, no. let's look at let's look unpack that. look at, let's unpack that. actually over actually what we've seen over the years is two the last couple of years is two particular, difficult particular, uh, difficult issues. one is obviously the war in ukraine. around 200,000 people coming in from that one,
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in ukraine. around 200,000 prhistoric ming in from that one, in ukraine. around 200,000 prhistoric debt in from that one, in ukraine. around 200,000 prhistoric debt to from that one, in ukraine. around 200,000 prhistoric debt to then that one, in ukraine. around 200,000 p> courses. >> that's been delayed, hasn't it? >> no . well, no. >> no. well, no. >> no. well, no. >> i mean, we're supposed to come in and now i'm hearing that there's to a review on there's going to be a review on it, review is going it, and that review is going to take year, won't be. >> no. we've we've already seen significant number reductions in those coming. genuinely. those people coming. genuinely. it's that it's because it's an issue that i've raised from own i've raised from my own constituency. of constituency. i've got one of the durham the colleges of durham university's right in my own
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constituency. i've up constituency. i've been up to newcastle impact up newcastle and sydney. impact up there as well, and it's right that we tackle those things absolutely because we absolutely head on because we cannot have a situation. >> going to when are >> when are we going to when are we start see fewer we going to start to see fewer students? mean, we've just had we going to start to see fewer stcash ts? mean, we've just had we going to start to see fewer stcash for mean, we've just had we going to start to see fewer stcash for courses. we've just had a cash for courses. >> it's well, it's not about seeing it's seeing fewer students. it's about shouldn't be about seeing they shouldn't be able bring dependents with able to bring dependents with them. students them. i don't mind if students want uk, want to come to the uk, contribute for years and contribute for three years and then move on, or if they're really good, you stay and really good, you can stay and get in the uk and get a job in the uk and contribute to the economy. but what see is what i don't want to see is people able over people being able to bring over family actually just family and then actually just disappearing economy family and then actually just disap|they're economy family and then actually just disap|they're going conomy family and then actually just disap|they're going to |omy when they're not going to contribute. and that's i think, what people want to what what most people want to see well. see as well. >> voted for brexit, >> when people voted for brexit, they were not voting to see record levels people from the record levels of people from the subcontinent. africa , were subcontinent. in africa, were they? has happened they? and that has happened again . would conservatives again. would the conservatives like that ? like to apologise for that? >> think what i think >> i think i think what i think you're that issue you're right to bring that issue of in to the fore. but of migration in to the fore. but what i would also say is we've seen, you know, 200,000 people come ukraine as part of come from ukraine as part of that. and i would also say that
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people will be happily to people there will be happily to accept a decent number of students from across the globe. you of brexit was you know, part of brexit was britain out the world, britain out into the world, reaching out right around the world to people to come the world to people to come to the uk, if they're to uk, but only if they're going to come or if come and contribute or if they're study , come they're coming to study, come here then go back their here and then go back to their country came from, country where they came from, which well. and one of which is not well. and one of the big things we've the big things that we've started do well, which has started to do as well, which has never tackled, for example, never been tackled, for example, since of the nhs, since the formation of the nhs, is nhs workforce, is around the nhs workforce, what traditionally what britain has traditionally done, , ever since done, you know, ever since the 19405 done, you know, ever since the 1940s around the 1940s was go out around the world, try and pull in doctors and nurses rather than training our the uk , what our own here in the uk, what we've seen in the last year or so government deciding so is the government deciding finally take that on, finally to take that head on, say to have a long say we've got to have a long for long workforce plan , train long time workforce plan, train our own people here in the uk, rather going rather than always going overseas to fill those vacancies. whether in vacancies. and whether it's in apprenticeships or whether it's in i think that's what in the nhs, i think that's what people want to see. >> the red wall lent you their vote the last election. what vote at the last election. what have them? have you done for them? >> mean, look, look at >> well, i mean, look, look at my patch as well. right.
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my own patch as well. right. somebody who earning, um , go somebody who is earning, um, go back to 2010 minimum wage in 2010. today they're earning in real terms 30% more. real terms, real terms 30% more. thatis real terms, real terms 30% more. that is a significant boost for a lot of people in lower paid jobs in my neck of the woods. another thing , uh, schools another thing, uh, schools always seen outside of the home counties and the leafy suburbs as you know, not something we're going to look at. conservative party seen a huge shift from under two thirds of schools. good or outstanding, to almost 85, i think over 85% today. that's transforming the life chances of kids in this country, enabung chances of kids in this country, enabling them to get good jobs for the future as well. look at the investment in my part of the world. the government supported into the next into nissan delivering the next generation for generation of manufacturing for cars. you know, hugely important. something which was actually started under a conservative government back in the 80s, now is being the 80s, but now is being renewed under this conservative government, and you can government, too. and you can also see some of the things like levelling up projects in specific the specific towns across the country well, like country as well, places like port talbot, of the port talbot, because of the green there. green agenda there. >> look, there's i'm you
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>> well, look, there's i'm you know, i'm absolutely convinced we need maintain steelmaking know, i'm absolutely convinced wetheed maintain steelmaking know, i'm absolutely convinced wethe uk, maintain steelmaking know, i'm absolutely convinced wethe uk, but|intain steelmaking know, i'm absolutely convinced wethe uk, but where steelmaking know, i'm absolutely convinced wethe uk, but where you lmaking know, i'm absolutely convinced wethe uk, but where you know,|g in the uk, but where you know, and you can look on teesside right it's been. right where it's not been. >> right in the long tum actually you can see transformation change in terms of getting new jobs in there. mayors houchen really mayors like ben houchen really delivering something quite different but also good different and new, but also good jobs for the future. and i think that's as i'm that's what look, as far as i'm concerned , i'm a, you know, from concerned, i'm a, you know, from a working class background in the of england, now the north—west of england, now representing a in the representing a seat in the north—east of england. but what i is jobs and i want to see is jobs and opportunities spread right across country. i think across the country. i think we're a direction we're moving in a good direction on we've been on that. obviously we've been hit pandemic. hit a bit by the pandemic. obviously we've been hit by energy the energy prices, but i think the full shift of the government now, now we've dealt with that is towards delivering for working people. >> if rishi sunak loses the next election, will you run to be party leader? >> that is definitely not on >> uh, that is definitely not on my not my agenda at all and not something interested in something i'm interested in doing. interested in, doing. what i'm interested in, what i'm interested, what? >> tory party? >> tory party? >> that's definitely not something i'd ever consider. what am interested in is
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what what i am interested in is fighting the next election and winning. and what's clear to me is that government is that a labour government would absolutely cripple this country , not just in terms of country, not just in terms of the economics , because we know the economics, because we know they extra they want to borrow that extra £28 billion a year going forwards, which would basically mean on the basic mean an extra 5% on the basic rate of income tax for everybody in country, also that in the country, but also that other they've got, other agenda they've got, you know, you know, know, votes at 16. you know, unlimited migration. i think it's a really dangerous mix that they've got. and we've got no clear policy platform from them. whereas at least when you look at us, we've got a plan for the future already looking at cutting tax cutting inflation and moving tax , cutting taxes long terme. >> thank you much. >> thank you very much. that was the conservative the chairman of the conservative party richard holden. great to have the show. much have you on the show. much appreciate it. we're back again, patrick. appreciate it. we're back again, patall. appreciate it. we're back again, pat all right. >> all right. >> all right. >> all right. well, >> all right. well, up, >> all right. well, coming up, the justin the archbishop of woke, justin welby, nose in where welby, stuck his nose in where it wasn't wanted . it wasn't wanted. >> it damaging for asylum >> it is damaging for asylum seekers need of protection seekers in need of protection and safe and legal routes to be heard . heard. >> did the house of lords need to back the rwanda bill? i will
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be joined by a labour peer shortly who genuinely gave me one of the most unhinged interviews i've ever done, interviews that i've ever done, and is saying and that really is saying something. but before that, after asamoah after labour mp kay asamoah weaponised the holocaust memorial table memorial day to table accusations of genocide in gaza is starmers passably, visibly unfit to govern fleet street icon kelvin mackenzie is next in the studio to respond, and i'll also him if british also ask him if british universities are selling immigration instead of
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tick. this is patrick christys tonight. we're only on gb news coming up, should the house of lords be allowed to thwart the government's rwanda bill? i have got an incredibly unhinged interview with a labour peer. i cannot believe that these people have when it comes to have a say when it comes to controlling borders. controlling britain's borders. but kate osamor but first, labour mp kate osamor has the whip suspended after has had the whip suspended after suggesting war in gaza suggesting that the war in gaza should be remembered as a genocide , just like the genocide, just like the holocaust. in an email her
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holocaust. in an email to her constituents sent out on the eve of holocaust memorial day, she said international said there's an international duty the victims of duty to remember the victims of more recent genocide. cambodia rwanda, bosnia and now gaza. indeed ofsted more is not the only politician in hot water over her attempts to mark holocaust memorial day, scottish first minister humza yousaf delivered a two minute long speech to the occasion but speech to mark the occasion but crucially failed to say the word. jews once . i'm joined now word. jews once. i'm joined now by former editor at the sun, kelvin mackenzie kelvin. let's start with labour. is his party visibly unfit for government, do you think? well there are. >> those are two shocking examples , right? the first one, examples, right? the first one, the reason . so it's all it's the reason. so it's all it's like a little cabal. she says to her whips , i'm going to make her whips, i'm going to make this speech , um, effectively this speech, um, effectively attacking um, uh , jews in this attacking um, uh, jews in this country. and it's going to cause a lot of problem. you suspend me, right? i then apologise, guys. right. and then i'll come back again. okay? which is what's going to happen. but the
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other she says it is other reason that she says it is because her constituency has a big muslim vote in there . and big muslim vote in there. and what she's saying to them is don't put up . don't you? the don't put up. don't you? the muslims , you don't need to put muslims, you don't need to put up anybody against me. i'm on your side . so they're all in it your side. so they're all in it together . so the number, the together. so the number, the starmer's in it. she's in it, the whips are in it and actually it's all designed to keep her in her job. >> i mean, herjob. >> i mean, obviously labour aren't here to defend that allegation, i suppose. i mean, it's your view, isn't it . labour it's your view, isn't it. labour and no doubt. would and small no doubt. would probably all of that. but i probably deny all of that. but i see you're saying there. see what you're saying there. and problem and he does have a problem though. starmer though. doesn't see starmer because is going to because this stuff is going to keep happening. is. and if he keep happening. it is. and if he had noting if had it's worth noting this. if keir had in power keir starmer had been in power when october 7 happened, there is a good chance he would have lost half his cabinet within about week. and you can't about a week. and you can't govern a country like no govern a country like that. no >> we all >> and the reality is, if we all accept that in november that there some kind of there is some kind of destruction of conservative destruction of the conservative party labour, from day one will
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have no honeymoon and they will have no honeymoon and they will have every single problem that this current administration faces . and i know it sounds faces. and i know it sounds terrible , but in some ways terrible, but in some ways i look forward to two things happening. one, one starmer looking like the lightweight that he is, and the second one is the audience of gb news literally literally doubling or trebling as people want to see news which is more balanced than they get from sky or the bbc. all right. >> look, gary lineker has just like to tweet labelling chaos amoore's suspension, losing the whip as insane . what do you make whip as insane. what do you make of that? what >> do you know what he's doing? all he's doing tweaking the all he's doing is tweaking the tail the tiger. so i am told tail of the tiger. so i am told that the bbc are less worried about those tweets than they are about those tweets than they are about his commercial successful commercial ventures, where he is doing podcasts, which are getting massive numbers and they're saying to him, you're competing against us. so i fully expect, right, okay, i have been
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wrong in the past. i fully expect lineker to not have his contract renewed more for the commercial than for the tweets , commercial than for the tweets, but he's doing it deliberately. he is literally. i can't do the finger that he is using to his bosses , but that finger is very prominent. >> okay. all right. look, i've just got a little message here from kate osamor who said holocaust memorial day is a day to remember the million jews to remember the 6 million jews killed holocaust and the killed in the holocaust and the genocides have occurred genocides that have occurred since. for any since. i apologise for any offence my reference offence caused by my reference to ongoing humanitarian to the ongoing humanitarian disaster in gaza. as part of a penod disaster in gaza. as part of a period of remembrance. right. okay, covm period of remembrance. right. okay, covid another story i want to get you on. it's emerged top united are paying united cities are paying middlemen to recruit wealthy overseas students by letting them in on far lower grades. basically thick, rich, foreign kids. >> okay. right. okay so if you if you wanted your kid to go to bristol durham , manchester, bristol durham, manchester, exeter. right for you to get most of the degrees, you'd have
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to have three a's and possibly one of them a star. if you are foreign because you're paying 38 grand a year rather than 9500 pounds a year. you say you turn up pounds a year. you say you turn up with three c's and actually not even three c's. for some of those economics degrees you can get you can get a c and two d's, and you can get in. >> just so just let me just say this. so if you're applying to exeter university for some courses you would need to get three an overseas three a's. but an overseas student is only required to obtain an e. yeah obtain two d's and an e. yeah and look you can see some of the stuff on the screen there if you're watching us on television. if not i'll read it out. three a's for uk out. birmingham three a's for uk students, three for overseas students, three c's for overseas students. got that one students. yeah they got that one there. that is there. durham a star aa that is bloody difficult that. bloody difficult to get that. and go . if you're and then there you go. if you're a foreign student two seas and a d right. >> so it's a shocker . and there >> so it's a shocker. and there are aspects to this . first are two aspects to this. first of all um there are a number of examples in which what happens to the overseas students is they like it a lot more than their
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homelands. and then at the end of their visas, their education visas, they disappear. so the other issue is , is how is it other issue is, is how is it that these very poor countries have people have so many people who can afford £38,500 a year, after all, that's over £100,000 for the education. and we struggle and most people's, most families struggle at the 9500 a yean families struggle at the 9500 a year, even if, even if they accumulated and people will be shouting at their tv screens now going, oh, it's only foundation coui'ses. >> courses. >> look, this is basically a back door into britain, okay? yeah. take your foundation yeah. you take your foundation course and then you're at the course and then you're in at the uni. you manage 50 odd uni. if you manage to get 50 odd percent which let's percent or whatever, which let's be honest, you'd have to be doubly right? have a doubly thick, right? to have a family you hundreds family worth, you know, hundreds of pounds abroad of thousands of pounds abroad managed yourself least managed to get yourself at least a couple of d's and an e and then pass a foundation then not pass a foundation course, for goodness sake. i mean, you'd have to really, mean, you'd have to be really, really a joint really thick. anyway, in a joint statement, the russell group
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university international university said international students important students are an important part of i'm of our student body. i'm not surprised wages, surprised they pay your wages, bnng surprised they pay your wages, bring diverse perspectives bring in diverse perspectives that enrich the learning environment. revenue from international is international students is reinvested into high quality teaching and learning the teaching and learning for the benefit students . look, benefit of all students. look, i'll just this i was in i'll just say this i was in a class with nine chinese kids who didn't speak a of english didn't speak a word of english at uni, did not at my uni, and it did not benefit experience whatsoever benefit my experience whatsoever . that was former editor of . that was a former editor of the mackenzie. the sun, kelvin mackenzie. kelvin, thank you very much. coming is prince harry coming up, why is prince harry sitting on the board of an african charity that stands accused of raping and beating indigenous next, the indigenous people? but next, the rwanda bill has been debated in the lords . tonight the house of lords. tonight i have for you that have an interview for you that just shows how unhinged some of these labour peers really are. patrick christie's tonight only on news on gb news >> that feeling inside from >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers , sponsors of boxt boilers, sponsors of weather on gb news . weather on gb news. >> evening i'm alex deakin. this is your latest weather update from the met office for gb news. a bit of a drab start tomorrow ,
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a bit of a drab start tomorrow, but it should cheer up in many locations with sunny spells locations with some sunny spells and to get very windy and it's going to get very windy once across scotland during once more across scotland during tuesday into wednesday tuesday night and into wednesday . the winds light at the . the winds pretty light at the moment. many isobars moment. it's not many isobars across chart, but this low across the chart, but this low has a very wet has been making for a very wet day over parts of wales and northern england. the rain is going to start to through going to start to ease through this evening. we do still have a met yellow in met office yellow warning in place stays soggy place and it stays pretty soggy over england over much of northern england and wales the night in and wales through the night in the far south, generally dry and cloudy . further north it's dry cloudy. further north it's dry and clear and cold. a frosty night across much of scotland and northern ireland. so a cold start here, but we should see plenty of sunshine tuesday. plenty of sunshine on tuesday. good chunk of england and wales will drab to start. will be fairly drab to start. pretty dank and drizzly , still pretty dank and drizzly, still over england, but the over eastern england, but the rain light and rain will be light and continuing to peter and the continuing to peter out and the cloud should start to melt away. so certainly for wales, a much brighter day and brightening up over northern england too, it may fairly cloudy in the may stay fairly cloudy in the southeast. ten celsius here. so cooler . elsewhere, cooler than today. elsewhere, sixes sevens and then the sixes and sevens and then the winds start to pick up later in
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the northwest. getting very windy across scotland on wednesday we'll see a spell of heavy rain coming through as well. there's a met office yellow warning for yellow warning in place for northern scotland for the strength but also strength of the wind, but also turning and windy across turning wet and windy across northern and late in northern ireland. and late in the that the day we'll see some of that wet windy weather in wet and windy weather in northern england a good part northern england for a good part of day, though, of of the day, though, most of england be dry, england and wales will be dry, but goodbye looks like but cloudy. goodbye looks like things heating up . things are heating up. >> boxt boilers spotty hours of weather on gb news as
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well -- well . well. >> it's 10 pm. i'm patrick christys tonight. it is damaging for asylum seekers in need of protection and safe and legal routes to be heard . welby was at routes to be heard. welby was at his woke worst today and next. i go head to head with a lovely baroness who wants to block rwanda in one of the most unhinged interviews that you will ever see. plus . what billy will ever see. plus. what billy burke , what billy burke . ali burke, what billy burke. ali harbi ali. prince harry's charity is embroiled in a massive scandal involving rape and torture. can harry survive this? paul burrell wades in and miss. >> you're not allowed to think you are church songs outside of church grounds . church grounds. >> does that police officer actually know the law? plus a knifeman allegedly goes on the rampage against jews , got a
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rampage against jews, got a knife ? i've got the latest and knife? i've got the latest and i will have all of tomorrow's newspaper front pages for you tonight i am joined by daily express columnist carole malone, journalist mike buckley and former brexit party mep belinda de lucy. oh, and find out why sky news are being absolutely smoked for this ridiculous video . so get ready britain here we go. i go to war with a lovely lord. that's . next. that's. next. >> good evening. the top story from the gb newsroom tonight. a move to block the government's flagship rwanda bill in the house of lords tonight has been voted down by a majority of 122 peers, voted . 206 to 84 against
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peers, voted. 206 to 84 against a motion designed to block it . a motion designed to block it. earlier, the archbishop of canterbury, justin welby, accused the government of outsourcing , forcing the outsourcing, forcing the country's legal and moral responsibilities, saying that britain could do better . well, britain could do better. well, in other news today, leicestershire police has referred itself to the independent watchdog over its investigation of assaults allegedly committed by valdo calocane before he went on to kill three people in nottingham . kill three people in nottingham. a few months later, he'd attacked two people at work in a factory in kegworth, where he was working. in may, the same yean was working. in may, the same year, the prime minister said today he hasn't ruled out an inquiry into the nottingham attacks. the families of the victims visited downing street today and angrily questioned the mental health support given to calocane condemned condemning the lack of a public inquiry into the murders of their loved ones. into the murders of their loved ones . the three american ones. the three american soldiers killed in a drone strike on the syrian—jordanian border were named tonight . border were named tonight. sergeant william jerome rivers,
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specialist kennedy saunders and brianna moffat belonged to an army reserve unit based in the united states . in georgia, the united states. in georgia, the pentagon said it's not looking for a war with iran, but will do what's needed to protect its troops . earlier, tehran said it troops. earlier, tehran said it wasn't behind the attack, instead accusing america of trying to expand the crisis . trying to expand the crisis. more than a thousand illegal migrants have crossed the engush migrants have crossed the english channel so far this yeah english channel so far this year. home office figures showing 388 people made the journey just this weekend. the highest numbered across in a single day so far this year was 358, in eight boats on january the 17th, two weeks ago , two the 17th, two weeks ago, two more people , aged 20 and 22, more people, aged 20 and 22, were arrested in connection with the deaths of two teenage boys who were fatally stabbed in bristol at the weekend. floral tributes were laid at the scene where 15 year old mason rist and 16 year old max dixon died after
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being attacked on saturday night . a 44 year old man and a 15 year old boy have been arrested and they remain in custody , and they remain in custody, where the records were broken in scotland today, with temperatures reaching an almost summer like 20 degrees a fairy in sutherland recorded a temperature of 19.9 degrees, beating the previous high of 19.6 degrees, which was recorded yesterday in the north western highlands. and people in the scottish highlands. the village of kingussie are looking for a monkey which has escaped a wildlife park. the japanese macaque escaped from its enclosure in the highland wildlife park this morning . wildlife park this morning. residents in nearby kincraig report spotted the monkey roaming through garden was tucking into bird food. well the royal zoological society of scotland is in talks now with a drone company to try to locate the animal. zoo has advised the pubuc the animal. zoo has advised the public not not to approach the monkey, but report sightings if
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possible . if you're watching on possible. if you're watching on tv and you'd like to sign up for gb news alerts, scan the qr code on your screen right now you're watching gb news. britain's news channel. >> okay, brace yourselves. so today saw the government's rwanda bill faced its first of several key tests in the house of lords, and it went just as bad as well as you'd expect. our country's lords and barons of great virtue us that great virtue told us that rwanda, in their view , isn't rwanda, in their view, isn't safe. why, they no better, and why we should just allow illegal migrants onto our shores without any whatsoever. where any deterrent whatsoever. where better to start than the archbishop of woke welby ? archbishop of woke justin welby? >> it is damaging for asylum seekers in need of protection and safe and legal routes to be heard . for this it and safe and legal routes to be heard. for this it is damaging for this country's reputation , for this country's reputation, which it contradicts even as late as last week, where the
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prime minister himself spoke eloquently on the value and importance of international law for this country. >> but welby was positively tame compared to labour member and human rights lawyer baroness helena kennedy kc, now i interviewed baroness kennedy earlier this evening . i was earlier this evening. i was supposed to just be a bit of a back and forth, and we were going to play a couple of clips out of it now, really. but that was only after she'd said her piece in the unelected upper chamber. it's contravenes international law . international law. >> it contravenes our own laws. >> it contravenes our own laws. >> it contravenes our own laws. >> it is unworkable. it is unaffordable . unaffordable. >> double. and in my view , it is >> double. and in my view, it is immoral because it involves taking incredible risks with human life. we should think again . but let's be clear , the again. but let's be clear, the purpose in this, this is because we have an election coming up
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and the government wants to run up the flag. the old subject of immigration, and to put people in fear of what that might mean . in fear of what that might mean. >> okay. so just moments later, i got the opportunity to probe baroness kennedy on some of her claims. and let's put it this way, she didn't like being questioned. i started by asking her if the lords is out of touch, given that almost half of brits said they support the rwanda bill, while 35% said they did not. >> can you say that the majority of the general public are in favour of the rwanda deal? i think the general public, by and large, want to see the crossings stopped and they want to see the exploitation of people by traffickers stopped. and i think that there are ways that you can do that, that don't involve sending people off to rwanda . sending people off to rwanda. and, and i the majority of and, and so i the majority of the speeches in the house of lords tonight were to say this was hugely expensive, and i think the general public should be much be told just how much it's costing to take very few people to rwanda to in rwanda, that
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they might in a lot of danger they might be in a lot of danger because rwanda a very because rwanda is not a very safe and just calling it safe place. and just calling it safe place. and just calling it safe doesn't make it safe. and the other thing is that we there's a reciprocal arrangement and nobody talks about this, which is that we are going to accept people that rwanda want to send to us because they're vulnerable. asylum seekers from perhaps the congo and places that have gone where people have fled to rwanda , and they want to fled to rwanda, and they want to send them here and i hope that the general public know that, especially gb listeners, because i don't think you're busy telling them on this massive, massive issue , which clearly we massive issue, which clearly we cannot get right at the moment, ping cannot get right at the moment, ping pong in the house of lords. >> the public just wants it sorted out. okay. why would you be opposed to a referendum? is it you think you would it because you think you would lose ? lose? >> no, i don't think. i don't think that we would lose at all if there was a proper, uh, discussion and and discussion and debate and all the to the the facts were given to the general public. don't believe general public. i don't believe that that general are that that the general public are being informed on this. i
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being well informed on this. i think that is a flag that think that this is a flag that is being run up the flagpole. um um, based on a deception of the general public, because they're being told that that this is a way of dealing with the problem, it's only going to mean a very small number of people will be sent to rwanda . they're talking sent to rwanda. they're talking about a couple of hundred people . scheme things, . in the scheme of things, that's nothing . and it's costing that's nothing. and it's costing us £400 million. when people are living in, in, in, in facing hardship every day in this country, £400 million into the pocket of kagame , who runs pocket of kagame, who runs a very authoritarian regime in africa. and do you think the people of africa are going to benefit from that money? i don't suspect so . so i mean, i mean, suspect so. so i mean, i mean, let's get the facts right and we're going to be receiving their asylum seekers who have got problems . and it's because got problems. and it's because we've got a health system that can deal with them and a mental health system that can with health system that can deal with them, and they have them, and they don't have any psychiatrists , psychiatrists or psychologists, and have anybody to and they don't have anybody to help who got help people who have got psychological help people who have got psych(a)gical that had
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that's a country that had genocide 30 years ago, and where a quarter of the population has mental health problems is okay. >> yeah. no. okay yeah. no fair points. but do you think the rwanda plan shames us all? do you not think it's shameful that we spend £8 million a day on housing illegal immigrants ? housing illegal immigrants? people feel safe in housing illegal immigrants? peop communitiesfeel safe in housing illegal immigrants? peop communities because in housing illegal immigrants? peop communities because of their communities because of things migrant hotels and things like migrant hotels and housing, saying illegal immigrants . immigrants. >> so you're saying there are people applying for asylum? you're making a judgement. >> people who have people facing you're making a judgement. >.judgementho have people facing you're making a judgement. >.judgement already people facing you're making a judgement. >.judgement already ,eople facing you're making a judgement. >.judgement already , iople facing you're making a judgement. >.judgement already , i am, facing you're making a judgement. >.judgement already , i am, yes,1g a judgement already, i am, yes, no, i am, and i'm not making any bones that. i don't mind bones about that. i don't mind you that because that is you saying that because that is exactly what i'm doing. all right. who have right. so people who have entered britain illegally, in accordance with the illegal migration and people are migration bill and people are now using up housing stock for some people, do you not some of these people, do you not think that shames britain do think that shames britain or do you care ? you not care? >> no, i think i think i don't think it shames britain. i think it's actually one of the things that's a great about that's a great value about a young, single, young young, a young single, a young single who's fleeing single mum who's fleeing domestic can't domestic violence, can't get a flat because somebody who's just arrived can you think
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arrived here can you think that's something that you value about that britain is a about britain, that britain is a country trying solve about britain, that britain is a cotsocial trying solve about britain, that britain is a cotsocial problems1g solve about britain, that britain is a cotsocial problems ? solve about britain, that britain is a cotsocial problems ? and olve about britain, that britain is a cotsocial problems ? and there its social problems? and there are many and i have argued for domestic violence , uh, people domestic violence, uh, people fleeing them to be given accommodation, of course. but you're really not arguing this fairly, you know, that you're being you're you're being controversial just for the sake of it . i'm not controversial just for the sake of it. i'm not being controversial for being controversial for being controversial for being controversial for the sake of it. >> i it.- >> i am, it. >> i am, with respect. i think i'm holding a mirror up to the population more than you are. >> stop it. >> stop it. >> just stop it and listen. there are people who are fleeing syria. syrians syria has the worst reputation in for torture of probably most countries. there are people who are fleeing afghanistan who basically worked for the british army, but who couldn't get out in the evacuations. and we have left them stranded. and so they are them stranded. and so they are the people and often they're joining members of their family here. they would they're clever, smart people . and we have a smart people. and we have a shortage of certain kinds of skills. so in fact , these people
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skills. so in fact, these people want to work. so most immigrants who come to this country who have come to this country have to this country, have have come to this country, have evidence evidence. evidence to evidence. >> evidence to evidence. » m evidence to evidence. >> do you >> do you what evidence do you have the people who've have that of the people who've come britain the come to britain across the channel so any of have channel so far, any of them have been benefit economically been a net benefit economically to this country ? to this country? >> well, they're not allowed to work . we've made a rule in work. we've made a rule in britain to say that asylum seekers are not permitted to work, and many of them become depressed that, depressed because of that, because they work and because they want to work and make contribution . they want make a contribution. they want to be able to evidence . to be able to pay evidence. >> evidence is there >> what evidence is there seriously? what evidence is there suggest that if we there to suggest that if we allow them to work, they would go on a net benefit? go on to be a net benefit? because i interviewed former because i interviewed the former immigration minister, robert jenrick, said to on jenrick, who has said to me on record that there are people who, way , include who, by the way, include murderers and rapists who come across channel, he across the channel, who he thinks majority across the channel, who he thinks eh, majority across the channel, who he thinks eh, can't majority across the channel, who he thinks eh, can't speakty across the channel, who he thinks eh, can't speak english them, eh, can't speak english and b will never be a net benefit economically to this country. so what evidence do you have that contradicts a guy who has seen the data from inside the home office? with respect ,
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the home office? with respect, said exactly the same thing about the many jews who came to this country in the 30s fleeing persecution . persecution. >> and they have and they have added hugely. they have added hugely to the to the benefit of this country and this country. excuse me. don't tell me. >> absolutely outrageous accusation that you say people like me have said that jews fleeing the holocaust . no, no, fleeing the holocaust. no, no, no were in the same. >> you've not said about no, no, no as people coming over you're saying country . you're saying this country. you're saying this country. you're saying people. saying it about people. >> quoted . know, >> i've quoted. you know, our former immigration minister, i know i have quoted to you that our former immigration minister has done an interview with me, dunng has done an interview with me, during which he has said that people who are rapists, murderers and terrorists have come across the channel and we were unable to deport them. and now you're telling me that i would have said same thing would have said the same thing about the about jews fleeing the holocaust? about jews fleeing the holmany:? about jews fleeing the holmany people were absolutely >> many people were absolutely hostile to the arrival of jews in the 30s, and they have benefited this country. you asked me for evidence that i could give you that, that immigrants coming to immigrants
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coming to a country that i wouldn't have allowed jews to flee the holocaust. >> that's ridiculous. that's thatis >> that's ridiculous. that's that is not what i said to you. >> and you're twisting words. >> and you're twisting my words. so, there's no point in so, i mean, there's no point in having a debate someone having a debate with someone like if you don't listen to like you if you don't listen to what saying. what someone is saying. you benefited from benefited hugely from immigration country. immigration to this country. think of all of the people who are cabinet parents are in our cabinet whose parents came immigrants to this came as immigrants to this country. so many people come to this country and contribute hugely, and when they arrive here, speak here, they often don't speak engush here, they often don't speak english very well at all. so please that. my mother please don't say that. my mother in law, my mother in law came here talking about leaving, not talking immigration though. >> and that's different, isn't it? immigration to people. it? legal immigration to people. and actually we are worse off gdp per capita . we are not doing gdp per capita. we are not doing better. gdp per capita. and you must know that it. >> sorry, i've got to go back into the chamber and i really find that you're not someone who debates fair way. and you debates in a fair way. and you should do. it's disgraceful. you're not you're not you're not an interviewer that i respect . an interviewer that i respect. and to close this down and i'm going to close this down
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now. okay >> it's worth noting that baroness kennedy appears to be running a charity that helps refugees bring their relatives over to this country. she was asked a very basic question about whether people who come across the channel will ever be across the channel will ever be a net benefit to this country, financially, and she proceeded to to nazi to compare me to a nazi sympathiser. i think that that says a heck of a lot about the state of debate by our unelected peers in the house of lords right now, she also said that she didn't want the public to have a vote on it, which is interesting because she sits in a chamber. of course, that is unelected. i'm very, very sorry, but think the things she but i think the things that she said there were absolutely vile. her volumes her arrogance speaks volumes. and somebody and the idea that somebody like that should having a say over that should be having a say over our borders or indeed anything in country, i think, tells in this country, i think, tells you a lot about the you a heck of a lot about the entitlement and the attitude of some you pay out of some people that you pay out of your pocket to help run this country. my view , an country. she is, in my view, an absolute disgrace . the safety of absolute disgrace. the safety of rwanda bill, though , has cleared rwanda bill, though, has cleared its first hurdle the its first major hurdle in the house lords. now after peers
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house of lords. now after peers voted 206 to 84, a majority of 122 against the motion designed to block it. joining me to react to block it. joining me to react to that interview, there is my panel and tonight i am, of course, joined by top daily express columnist carole malone. we have journalist and commentator mike buckley and former brexit party mep belinda de lucy, carol. what we saw there was a labour peer denying evidence refusing to answer bafic evidence refusing to answer basic questions, calling me a nazi and then leaving you kind of summed it up. >> there's not much left to say. you know. i suppose what got me was patronising, you know, you know. i suppose what got me was said patronising, you know, you know. i suppose what got me was said shetronising, you know, you know. i suppose what got me was said she was sing, you know, you know. i suppose what got me was said she was tryingou know, you know. i suppose what got me was said she was trying to know, she said she was trying to suggest that the, the british people think the they do people think the way they do about immigration, ian, because they're informed. the they're not well informed. the implication too implication being that too stupid what's in stupid to understand what's in the papers , what they see on the the papers, what they see on the too news stupid to do their own kind of research look into too news stupid to do their own kind ofhappening. look into too news stupid to do their own kind ofhappening. it'syk into too news stupid to do their own kind ofhappening. it's justto what's happening. it's just outrageous that she suggests, like she knows and we don't . i like she knows and we don't. i mean, i've never heard such kind of privilege my life . and you of privilege in my life. and you
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were right to pull her up on, on on comparing what's happening now with what happened after the she said. >> to be clear, she said people like you said this about the jews during world war ii in, in the 1930s. mike, look , you're the 1930s. mike, look, you're a you're a labour man . how do you you're a labour man. how do you feel about her. they're saying that i mean, i think you're entirely misrepresenting her. >> i thought she was perfectly reasonable, do you think, to be honest, calling me a nazi? >> basically. >> basically. >> i don't think she was calling you you asked her you a nazi. you. you asked her to please demonstrate how margarets have contributed to the this country. the economy of this country. she said , look jews said, well, look at the jews coming the 30s. coming across in the 30s. they've immeasurably they've contributed immeasurably to . and indeed, she to our society. and indeed, she said, people like you have said the same about the jews. similarly well, maybe that was slightly insulting towards you. i me to i mean, it's not for me to apologise eleanor kennedy. apologise for eleanor kennedy. i've never met eleanor kennedy. um, she just as you're um, but she just as you're opposing people coming across the channel now to seek asylum in was saying there in the uk, she was saying there were those were people then opposing those people . people. >> those people were fleeing different. people were fleeing nazi germany, and b have
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contributed massively to our society since. >> and gave a second >> and she gave a second example. you mean the parents of many members of the persecuted example. you mean the parents of man have �*nbers of the persecuted example. you mean the parents of man have alsos of the persecuted example. you mean the parents of man have also contributed?3cuted who have also contributed? >> but she she then dodged the question, she? question, though, didn't she? because legal because that's legal immigration. not illegal immigration. that's not illegal immigration. that's not illegal immigration. and at the point where i said illegal and i said to her, illegal. to her, not illegal. >> the i keep making this >> the point i keep making this point, to come point, it's not illegal to come to to claim asylum. to the uk to claim asylum. >> don't about if >> i don't care about that. if you break into a country, you all just tend to illegal. all just tend to be illegal. >> illegal. the >> that is not illegal. the illegal that is illegal migration point that is legal migration bill. >> trying to say that >> she is trying to say that every single person coming across on those boats is an engineer or a neuro surgeon and all of this stuff, we know that 70% of the people on those boats are migrants, and we are economic migrants, and we see that is young men between 18. >> that is completely not. >> that is completely not. >> it is true. it is completely. >> it is true. it is completely. >> we have a home office that is, as we all know, not majorly invested in giving these people asylum. they determined that 84% of them were genuine asylum seekers, which means that's because they have no bar, no standard for who an asylum seeker accept , of
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>> that's why we accept, of course, three times more than france procedure. >> and this this years >> and this this over many years , had , the system we've had a government that wanted to exclude people as possible. >> excuse me. >> excuse me. >> this government, they still give 84% of them to thought liberal thought the case law in this country is so lax when it comes to who gets granted asylum. >> compared to many other european countries. so it is absolutely true. our case law is so weak we allow pretty much anyone in and anyone we reject we can't deport anyway. this blind virtue signalling, self—righteous bleeding, heart liberal claptrap believing just because you're an asylum seeker that makes you a good person. the parsons green bomber, the maternity hospital bomber, the man that killed three gay men. men in redding , all asylum men in redding, all asylum seekers. i'm not saying they're all like that, but the fact is, we do not know. they are not documented. so preach thing and patronising presume patronising us to presume they're doctors and nurses they're all doctors and nurses wanting goodness in wanting to give us goodness in their work and time and energy. no, it's burden the no, it's a burden to the taxpayer. putting lives taxpayer. it's putting our lives at risk. they're at risk. risk. and they're putting dangerous
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putting bad, dangerous international law front of international law in front of pubuc international law in front of public outrageous public safety. it's outrageous and despicable. >> okay. all right. now look, we obviously to carry this on obviously got to carry this on for of long time. my obviously got to carry this on for is of long time. my obviously got to carry this on for is thisyf long time. my obviously got to carry this on for is this i long time. my obviously got to carry this on for is this i do ong time. my obviously got to carry this on for is this i do think me. my obviously got to carry this on for is this i do think that’viy view is this i do think that perhaps they are perhaps somebody, if they are helping charity that helping to run a charity that helps quote unquote, refugees bnng helps quote unquote, refugees bring members the helps quote unquote, refugees brin maybe members the helps quote unquote, refugees brin maybe mesomewhat the helps quote unquote, refugees brin maybe mesomewhat of the helps quote unquote, refugees brin maybe mesomewhat of athe uk, maybe has somewhat of a conflict interest when it conflict of interest when it comes voting on a bill that comes to voting on a bill that might toughen that up, but time for british away for the great british give away now. there go. we're now. oh, there we go. we're running the channel running one in the channel and you win £18,000 totally you could win £18,000 in totally tax to spend however tax free cash to spend however you the to you like. fancy the chance to make how we make it yours. here's how we wanted ten, 2024 into 2020. >> more with your chance to win £18,000 in cash to spend. however you like, you really could be the next big winner of our great british giveaway. phil from west yorkshire won our last one. listen to his reaction when we gave him the news. >> i never won a penny in my life. well congratulations, you've won £10,000. >> oh my god. >> oh my god. >> wow. for your chance to win £18,000 in tax free cash text gb
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win to 84 902. >> text cost £2 plus one standard network rate message or post your name and to number gb zero two, po box 8690. derby dh1 nine two. uk only entrants must be 18 or over. lines closed at 5 pm. on friday. the 23rd of february for full terms and privacy notice at gb news. com forward slash win good luck . forward slash win good luck. coming up it's the uk right to withdraw aid to the unrwa unrwa. >> i think i was supposed to be said, but is gaza after it was alleged that staff were involved in the october the 7th hamas attacks? pack cover attacks? my press pack cover that and we delve into tomorrow's newspaper front pages. man the pages. but first, a man from the repubuc pages. but first, a man from the republic given republic of congo has given a desperate to the duke of desperate plea to the duke of sussex prince that's sussex, prince harry. that's because prince harry is on the board of an african charity which has been accused of raping and beating indigenous people . and beating indigenous people. more on this shocking royal story . coming next is patrick story. coming next is patrick christys tonight we're only christys tonight and we're only
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on .
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sunday mornings from 930 on gb news is . this news is. this is patrick christys tonight. >> we are only on gb news. my press pack are coming up very shortly for all of tomorrow's front pages today. but right now it's for the royal dispatch it's time for the royal dispatch . well prince harry is facing
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growing calls to resign from the board of a conservation charity , board of a conservation charity, african parks, after allegations emerged that its park rangers raped and tortured the indigenous baka people in the congo basin. indeed, i olivia utley back a man issued a heartfelt plea directly to the duke of sussex, prince harry. watch and listen below to come back. >> billie barker , billy bob >> billie barker, billy bob barker , billie . barker, billie. >> human rights charity survival international wrote to harry last year to highlight the allegations . opens with the duke allegations. opens with the duke initially promising to escalate the concerns , so it appears he the concerns, so it appears he was aware of them . but he then was aware of them. but he then went on to join the board of african parks. well i'm joined now by princess diana's former butler, paul burrell. paul, thank you very, very much . thank you very, very much. should he resign ? should he resign? >> well, patrick, rape is a very serious allegation. and i believe harry should step down
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from the board until this issue is resolved. he was president, as you say, of the african parks charity , but. charity, but. >> and he knew about this allegation instead of stepping down. then he took a position on the board . now, if harry doesn't the board. now, if harry doesn't want the responsibility, he shouldn't be involved with charities because it takes a lot of hard work and commitment. he's been very badly advised , he's been very badly advised, and he should really take a page out of his mother's book because when she was asked to be on the board of the red cross in in switzerland, she said, no, i think my work is best valued on the factory floor. and i think that's where harry should be on the factory floor. i mean, he's becoming an embarrassment not only to the royal family, but to the country. do you think he has any right now to lecture the world on anything, especially when it comes to women's rights and human rights, etc, when it appears he's happy to be sitting on the board of a charity that stands accused of rape and torture . absolutely, patrick.
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torture. absolutely, patrick. i mean, he has no right to stand on that platform on the world stage. and the only reason he's standing on that platform is because he has a royal title , because he has a royal title, and charities are all too happy to have him on board because he's duke of sussex and he's he's the duke of sussex and he's diana's son. but step back from that and look at the tremendous work which diana did during her lifetime. she never got embroiled in this sort of scandal, and neither should harry. he should back away from it. he should step down from it. this charity should be investigated. i mean, this is a man who happily stands beside the prime minister of jamaica, a man who clearly wants to remove his father as head of state. but he's all too happy with that, is all too happy to fly in a private jet to attend that meeting, and what happens to his carbon footprint? so how he's making mistakes all the way down the line. who is advising him? his mother was advised. well, by our government and by the foreign office. but who's
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advising harry? it doesn't seem that anyone's advising him. quite frankly, he's a wild card. >> do you think diana would be bitterly disappointed in his current position here? >> i think he i think she would, because, you know, patrick, i travel with her around the world and i saw these indigenous people of different countries , people of different countries, and she supported them wholeheartedly. harry listen to what your mother did . look at what your mother did. look at what your mother did. look at what your mother did. look at what your mother did and follow her example. don't head for the boardroom because in the boardroom because in the boardroom you can't make a difference . on the factory difference. on the factory floor, you can. but you have to be advised properly by the right people . and a scandal like this, people. and a scandal like this, you can't afford to be involved with, back away from it . with, back away from it. >> i just find it remarkable because if harry was aware about it, i mean, we've had the old subpostmasters scandal recently in this country, haven't we. and now the blame game is starting about who knew what, when and didn't mean it's didn't do anything. i mean it's appears moment that harry appears at the moment that harry was aware this and then
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was made aware of this and then decided to go and be on the board, which is absolutely astonishing, isn't it? >> yes, he was president of the african parks charity. he he apparently was informed about this problem. but instead of deaung this problem. but instead of dealing with it there and then , dealing with it there and then, he decided to head for the boardroom and a much comfier seat. boardroom and a much comfier seat . that's not how to govern seat. that's not how to govern a charity. paul can i just ask you to stay where you are? >> because i'm just going to read a little comment from african parks. right. so they've said we are aware of the serious allegations said we are aware of the serious allegaabuses eco guards rights abuses by eco guards against local people living in congo. aware these congo. we became aware of these allegations last year via a board member received a board member who received a letter from survival international. immediately international. we immediately launched an investigation through law firm through an external law firm based the information we had based on the information we had available, also urging available, while also urging survival international to provide any and all facts that they had. it's unfortunate they've chosen not to cooperate . they've chosen not to cooperate. despite repeated we despite repeated requests. we continue to their continue to ask for their assistance. the active investigation our investigation will be our highest priority. we also contacted archewell , which the
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contacted archewell, which the duke and duchess of sussex foundation , but we have received foundation, but we have received no response. look quickly, paul, because we are bit pressed for because we are a bit pressed for time. just would ask time. i just would like to ask you, you got any well you, have you got any well wishes kate and for king wishes for kate and for king charles as well, both of whom now we believe are out of out of hospital? >> yes. um, i, the king has used his condition for the first time everin his condition for the first time ever in royal history. he's brought his condition to the people and said, look, i have an enlarged prostate. 1 in 3 men will have this condition. so follow my example. i think it's brilliant news. i'm a little more worried about kate because it that she's going to it seems that she's going to take quite while to convalesce take quite a while to convalesce and get better . take quite a while to convalesce and get better. i hope take quite a while to convalesce and get better . i hope she does. and get better. i hope she does. please god, she does because she is our queen in waiting and never put a foot wrong and we're sending all our love to you, kate, to get better as soon as possible. >> well, i'm sending all my love to you , paul, so thank you very to you, paul, so thank you very much. that is paul burrell, the one and only taken time one and only who has taken time out of evening to come and out of his evening to come and join here on gb news.
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join us right here on gb news. so you very, very much. so thank you very, very much. look, coming up, christian gospel our gospel singers silenced by our country's very own police force. don't miss. >> not allowed to sing >> you're not allowed to sing a song. songs outside of song. church songs outside of church grounds . church grounds. >> how was it for robbie williams? angels then, isn't it? stick around to see that sinister confrontation. but next i've got all of tomorrow's newspaper front page for you today, my press pack. and today, in my press pack. and after a un agency sacked staff members over allegations that they were actually involved in they were actually involved in the hamas october 7th attacks, has the united nations now lost all moral authority ? this is all moral authority? this is patrick christys tonight. we're only on
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radio. as patrick christys tonight. >> we're only on gb news and i've got tomorrow's front pages for you now in the liveliest paper of you anywhere on the telly. if my press pack . right, telly. if my press pack. right, the metros front page royals on roads to recovery. great stuff,
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king and kate leave hospital after surgery . the eye cameron after surgery. the eye cameron to warn that uk facing biggest threat since the cold war . it's threat since the cold war. it's another world war three thing that's, isn't it? it's coming from everywhere now. the guardian as households guardian dismay as households face £2 billion council tax increase. yet absolutely. tell me about that. anyone who's about to fill in a tax return knows that. don't think we're knows that. i don't think we're getting of for getting a lot of bang for our buck. badenoch on tory buck. badenoch and gove on tory group called evil plotters. yet i that might be ironic, i suspect that might be ironic, but the sun but there we go. the sun exclusive man united shock . this exclusive man united shock. this is marcus rashford's 12 hour tequila party before calling in sick. he passed out at 3 am. this is according to the sun and yeah , there we go. i mean, as a yeah, there we go. i mean, as a manchester united fan, i would actually rather he was taking shots at goal as opposed to shots at goal as opposed to shots at goal as opposed to shots at a bar in. i think it might have been northern ireland. anyway, daily ireland. but anyway, the daily telegraph siege telegraph the farmers lay siege to with vow to cut off to paris with vow to cut off food . the capital only has food. the capital only has suppues food. the capital only has supplies for three days as tractor protein blocked the main roads. i'm laughing . not because
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roads. i'm laughing. not because it's but because it's it's funny, but because it's such actually. such a strong story, actually. essentially paris appears to be under siege from a load of french farmers. good for them. i think biden draws up plans for iran revenge strikes. and obviously the picture story there is the king and queen camilla. right. okay, so those are your front pages and i'm going to be getting stuck into some other news now with my fantastic panel. i've got top daily express columnist carole malone , journalist and malone, journalist and commentator mike buckley , and commentator mike buckley, and former brexit party mep belinda de lucy. i'm focusing on a story that's going to be on the inside of couple of papers of a couple of the papers tomorrow. it's quite unbelievable, really. it's concerning unrwa concerning the un agency unrwa 12 members of that group are facing allegations of actively taking part in the october 7th attacks, with hamas. you heard that right . unrwa has sacked that right. unrwa has sacked nine of those employees and says that it's investigating . while that it's investigating. while several nations have now withdrawn funding. so these nafions withdrawn funding. so these nations include the uk , the us, nations include the uk, the us, germany and italy. so this is the same united nations, he
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slammed our rwanda plan and labelled government's labelled the government's crackdown protesters crackdown on climate protesters as and draconian. ah, as regressive and draconian. ah, the irony there. you won't be surprised to hear that scottish first minister humza yousaf is not these claims stop first minister humza yousaf is not governmente claims stop first minister humza yousaf is not government from ms stop first minister humza yousaf is not government from funding his government from funding unrwa in gaza. his government from funding unrwa in gaza . uh, my panel says unrwa in gaza. uh, my panel says to get stuck into this right now. i mean, carol, i'll start with you. is the prime minister right help funding at this right to help funding at this particular right to help funding at this particuléone i mean, the >> he's one of i mean, the number of countries doing it is growing. i think there's about ten moment, but it's ten at the moment, but it's getting know, getting bigger. you know, if i mean, you mentioned who mean, you mentioned 12 staff who a few of whom have been fired, nine have been fired, nine of whom have been fired, but dossier that's come but this dossier that's come from intelligence from israeli intelligence says there were 190 of staff from this charity who were who were accused being involved in the accused of being involved in the october 7, um, atrocity . now, if october 7, um, atrocity. now, if thatis october 7, um, atrocity. now, if that is the case, this is a huge number. there are i think it's, i don't know, 13,000 members in this this charity. if that many people are, are behaving as jihadi soldiers and hamas soldiers, well then yes , we have soldiers, well then yes, we have to stop the money. we have to investigate. it's i was i'm
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going to make a little comparison with oxfam back in 2018 when workers for oxfam were accused of raping and abusing young girls. >> yes, in haiti, i think wasn't it? >> it was. it was in haiti. yeah. and and we stopped funding for a period of time until the investigation and, and this is exactly what we should be doing here. you know, these and, you know, i know this this charity suppues know, i know this this charity supplies help for a lot of palestinians, not palestinians, but it's not us that's it that's stopping that's doing it that's stopping the hamas in the the thing. it's hamas in the jihad groups that have done it. >> mike, we right to >> mike, are we right to withdraw do you think withdraw funding? do you think i'm very worried about this? >> mean, this is nine people >> i mean, this is nine people or people. an or 12 people. i have an organisation that employs 30,000 people, it's about people, 190 region. it's about 12 people. >> they've named 12 of the dossier, says 190 people. >> well, yeah , but it's 100 and >> well, yeah, but it's100 and 188 theoretical people. >> so they're just making it up. >> so they're just making it up. >> they may be i mean, we don't know, do we? >> well, do they're not >> well, we do know they're not making in the meantime, this is nine people 12 people that making in the meantime, this is nine beene 12 people that making in the meantime, this is nine been actuallyeople that making in the meantime, this is nine been actually named1at making in the meantime, this is nine been actually named ,it have been actually named, investigated, nana have been sacked. >> em-
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>> they're all under investigation, innocent until proven guilty. but this organisation employs 30,000 people. a tiny , tiny people. it's a tiny, tiny proportion. course, if this proportion. of course, if this happened it's and those happened, it's awful. and those people should face justice. absolutely. don't think that absolutely. i don't think that necessarily. don't necessarily. well, i don't think it that you stop funding it means that you stop funding unrwa a particularly in the middle sound like you're middle of you sound like you're excuse happened here. >> e- e not that important. >> like it's not that important. >> like it's not that important. >> not excusing it's >> i'm not excusing it. it's incredibly what's >> i'm not excusing it. it's increimportant? what's also important? >> were murdered on >> 100 people were murdered on october. the 253 were kidnapped. excuse girls were raped and excuse me. girls were raped and tortured . tortured. >> we'll go back to you. >> we'll go back to you. >> 25,000 people killed is my final there in gaza. final point. over there in gaza. and humanitarian aid. >> if they hadn't done this, we're now talking about famine right? >> f need help from >> people of gaza need help from this, this few bad apples thing. >> just ain't going to work. because the report also says that 1400 unrwa staff are celebrated on social media for the mass rape and murder and slaughter of innocent civilians. this is an infection that they're allegedly in bed with hamas , but have been for years. hamas, but have been for years. donald trump cut funding to unrwa back in 2018 because he
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was worried about it. there have been articles through papers 2020, 2021 saying this lot are in bed with hamas educating palestinian children to hate jews. there is evidence , report jews. there is evidence, report after report, this dodgy global international organisation that get infiltrated by islamist terror. they you need to cut funding to all of them. stop it now until we can go directly to those in need. come on. >> what isn't being done is humanitarian help to gaza and not only is israel accusing all these people , or we don't know these people, or we don't know whether accusation whether the accusation or whether they're not, they're also humanitarian also refusing humanitarian access, particularly the access, particularly in the north, but also in the middle of gaza well, not just to unrwa, gaza as well, not just to unrwa, but to other agencies as but also to other agencies as well, that humanitarian access needs provided. has needs to be provided. israel has been told to do that by us. but unrwa about the unrwa don't care about the palace course they do. palace of course they do. >> the whole point there exactly like hamas. don't care what like hamas. they don't care what happens the happens to palestinians. the whole which is why is whole point which is why is that? >> it's a relief agency. >> it's a relief agency. >> linda. it was established after 1945. >> linda , for palestinian people >> linda, for palestinian people and about these not more and talk about these not more than rumours that have been
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going for years. going on for years. >> must have known, >> and the un must have known, unless they've it unless they've taken it seriously enough funding i >> -- >> and you're trying to say that that happen. that shouldn't happen. >> i just ask if you've got >> can i just ask if you've got any experience of working in the middle what's got middle east? oh what's that got to price of eggs? to do with the price of eggs? >> stupid argument. it's >> what a stupid argument. it's not argument . i >> what a stupid argument. it's not argument. i don't, not a stupid argument. i don't, but i when i, when ten but but i when i, when ten countries have have been talking about this for years and documentation happened and documentation has happened and research has been done, i'm going believe not you. going to believe them, not you. >> what? fine. i don't >> well, what? fine. i don't really if you do believe really mind if you do believe me. >> stupid question. have i worked in middle what? >> stupid question. have i worke apply middle what? >> stupid question. have i worke apply that ddle what? >> stupid question. have i worke apply that question what? >> stupid question. have i worke apply that question to alhat? you'd apply that question to everybody who has an opinion? that's yours? if that's different to yours? if i haven't worked there, doesn't count. >> but i have lived and worked in the middle east. good for you. lebanon, in gaza, you. in lebanon, in gaza, in syria, so you'll have you. in lebanon, in gaza, in syria, with so you'll have you. in lebanon, in gaza, in syria, with palestine,|'ll have you. in lebanon, in gaza, in syria, with palestine, which 'e worked with palestine, which case, worked there, case, if you have worked there, i lived, you know, that i have lived, you know, that hamas don't a what hamas don't give a toss what it's the ground. it's like on the ground. >> know that i don't give >> so you know that i don't give a toss. >> i w.- hamas. >> well, you sound like you are. i'm course i'm not defending hamas. >> these people have been accused hamas and jihad. >>
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e“- jihad. >> it's important is that >> well, it's important is that the 2 million people gaza and the 2 million people in gaza and their needs are their humanity needs are not being to being addressed. tell that to the saying, well, the people. you're saying, well, let's the help let's remove some of the help that they've got without no, let's redirect it. >> is not reasonable. >> no, which is not reasonable. >> no, which is not reasonable. >> we didn't say that. >> we didn't say that. >> we didn't say that. >> we said, let's investigate. no, didn't, this has no, i didn't, i said, this has to the whole time. to be said the whole time. >> let's stop. >> say, let's stop. >> say, let's stop. >> hell i said, did i say it >> the hell i said, did i say it has to we to keep has to be no, we need to keep the to be cannot be going the help to be cannot be going to organisation in bed with hamas. >> so they're not bed with >> so they're not in bed with hamas? are literally hamas? well, they are literally 12 people that we're talking about. going in circles. >> e i'iow. e now. i mean, >> we are a bit now. i mean, i was gripped by that. i think our viewers listeners would have viewers and listeners would have been byit viewers and listeners would have been by it as but been gripped by it as well. but i look, that perfectly i think look, that is perfectly something i think look, that is perfectly so each ng i think look, that is perfectly so each other over this, right? at each other over this, right? right now. and it's probably right now. and so it's probably important that we replicate that on gb sofa. coming on the gb news sofa. um, coming up, rail use up, did failing network rail use its installing its money wisely by installing this pillar? there go. its money wisely by installing thisthat pillar? there go. its money wisely by installing thisthat celebrates. ere go. its money wisely by installing thisthat celebrates. ere what's uh, that celebrates. oh, what's that ? demi sexuality . all right. that? demi sexuality. all right. i'm quite keen to learn what that is. actually, at london bridge station. my panel debate that greatest that in tonight's greatest britain and union jackass. but before have more before that, i do have some more
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of newspaper front of tomorrow's newspaper front pages this pages to show you. and this shocking a british shocking clip of a british police officer silencing a christian gospel singer. >> you said you're not allowed to sing church songs of to sing church songs outside of church. church, outside of church. our church, outside of church. our church, outside of church grounds , unless you have church grounds, unless you have a soledar authorised by the church to do this kind of song. are you saying that you don't care about the human rights act? >> you're lost, are grave ? >> you're lost, are grave? >> you're lost, are grave? >> oh, okay. >> oh, okay. >> all right. it's garnered a furious reaction online. i want to hear your thoughts. should she struck off? this is she be struck off? this is patrick christys tonight , and patrick christys tonight, and we're only on .
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gb news. this is patrick christys tonight. we're only on gb news. it's time to return now to our press pack. here we go. more front pages . the times did front pages. the times did agents in britain warned of iran threats, regime using proxies
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for assassination attempts. okay, so iranian dissidents living in the uk have been warned by counter—terrorism police in the past fortnight that they are at increased risk of violence and kidnap. so very, very disturbing story there. picture of charles there leaving hospital . and we also go to the hospital. and we also go to the sorry the independent. now at last afghan hero safe sanctuary in uk . last afghan hero safe sanctuary in uk. hundreds of special forces soldiers abandoned by britain after fighting alongside our troops have applications to settle in the uk. reviewed isn't it absolutely amazing? there are people here who helped us during the war genuinely in need of our help. these afghan interpreters, people we can demonstrably people who we can demonstrably prove this country prove helped us in this country and over there, we've made and over there, who we've made jump and over there, who we've made jump through unbelievable hoops to try and get sanctuary here. meanwhile, you at meanwhile, you know, you look at some the that we allow some of the way that we allow other it's remarkable other people in. it's remarkable that remarkable . and that absolutely remarkable. and let's the mirror home let's go to the mirror now home to and both to recover king and kate, both out hospital after ops okay. out of hospital after ops okay. and also kyle walker. what are you doing, lad ? honestly, kyle you doing, lad? honestly, kyle walker and his lovers . war of walker and his lovers. war of words the story that
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words is the story that apparently we all need to hear about now. but there we go. right. okay my is still right. okay my panel is still here me. i'm joined again here with me. i'm joined again by daily express columnist here with me. i'm joined again by maloney. press columnist here with me. i'm joined again by maloney. press cgotnnist carol maloney. we've got journalist broadcast mike journalist and broadcast mike buckley former brexit party buckley and former brexit party mep belinda de lucy. now this has got people talking. this story volunteer story. a volunteer police officer gone viral for officer has gone viral for stopping christian girl stopping a christian girl singing songs. surely it singing gospel songs. surely it can't be right. well, let's watch a lesson. >> you said you're not allowed to sing church songs outside of church. our church outside of church. our church outside of church grounds. unless you have a authorised by the church to do this kind of song. are you saying that you don't care about the human rights act? >> you're lost. are >> you're lost. are >> well, former prisons minister ann widdecombe told gb news that the officer should be struck off the officer should be struck off the force , his habit strong and the force, his habit strong and the force, his habit strong and the met responded to the people's channel, saying look at the heart of this is a specific bylaw relating busking. the bylaw relating to busking. the officer have officer knows she could have handled is handled this differently and is speaking manager. all speaking to her manager. all right, look, should be right, so look, should she be allowed on patrol allowed back out on patrol panel? thoughts?
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allowed back out on patrol parwell, thoughts? allowed back out on patrol parwell, i thoughts? allowed back out on patrol parwell, i mean ughts? allowed back out on patrol parwell, i mean ,ghts? allowed back out on patrol parwell, i mean , she's just been >> well, i mean, she's just been a bit jobsworth. i mean, i think we should have gospel singing on every frankly, we should have gospel singing on every not frankly, we should have gospel singing on every not enough frankly, we should have gospel singing on every not enough fr'it..ly, there's not enough of it. doesn't harm it's does . doesn't harm anybody. it's does. >> it makes me want to go and sing jerusalem tomorrow on the tube. >> it really does. i think we should all put it to the test and start singing. and help and start singing. and god help carol time, carol singers at christmas time, if they're going get accosted if they're going to get accosted by police for singing by by the police for singing in public. that's public. um, yeah. no, that's that trip. and you that was a power trip. and you know wouldn't know what? she wouldn't have done don't so easily done it. i don't think so easily to other religions. i think we're easy target christians. we're an easy target christians. >> or i strike her >> so she or she or i strike her off leave her alone? off or leave her alone? >> i mean, i think she's probably learned lesson. probably learned their lesson. you know, she's talking to her manager. they you know, she's talking to her manayto. they you know, she's talking to her manayto some they you know, she's talking to her manayto some agreement.hey come to some agreement. >> i do wonder as well >> yeah, i do wonder as well sometimes. look, she she was sometimes. look, she was she was she of order. and she was out of order. and i think i think you're right. i don't think other religions might have been treated that way. the same time, i've way. but at the same time, i've got shortage police got a shortage of police officers. leaves her job. officers. so she leaves herjob. i'm not sure. >> was a volunteer and >> and she was a volunteer and she was a volunteer well. she was a volunteer as well. >> right next time. i >> get it right next time. i think we've had bad day at think we've all had a bad day at the regular viewers of the office as regular viewers of this show will be able to tell,
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right? look, year old right? no. look, a 34 year old man. now. man. very serious story now. okay? year old man has okay? so a 34 year old man has been arrested in connection with the anti—semitic attack the alleged anti—semitic attack at london on. at a kosher shop in london on. >> got a knife. it doesn't look. >> yeah. hello? please you have kc. a kc. look, somebody has got a knife . knife by a shop. >> he's got a knife. >> he's got a knife. >> the met have announced that no one was hurt, and the incident is now not being treated as terror related. but unbelievably concerning. stuff on the streets of britain. well, it's now to reveal today's it's time now to reveal today's greatest britain and union jackass. greatest britain and union jackass . okay, carol starts with jackass. okay, carol starts with you. greatest britain. please. i've got a few. >> okay. it's the customers at that store that you just featured at supermarket. it's featured at k supermarket. it's a group. it's a community group in called shomrim . in golders green called shomrim. and cops who all wait and it's our cops who all wait in to tackle this guy. he was waving a knife around. he walked
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into supermarket. the into this supermarket. the customers were crushing him with trolleys. he got outside the shomrim group put him down as you just saw. and then the cops waded in. this is. this is bravery. >> all right? okay. and obviously, allegedly, a lot of that stuff okay. there we go. mike your greatest breadth sorry. yeah no, no. >> really heartwarming >> really great heartwarming story . uh, 15 year barry story. uh, 15 year old barry wallace. uh , injured wallace. um, he was, uh, injured very, very badly when he was 12, in awful accident on a train in an awful accident on a train station. skull was shot into station. his skull was shot into ten um, the medics ten pieces. um, the medics worked on him afterwards, and, you know, eventually , over some you know, eventually, over some time, fixed him. anyway, is time, fixed him. anyway, this is in the news now because he's gone to hospital gone back to the hospital and he's to guy that he's talking to the guy that fixed his head. and it's just a very heartwarming story. just a lovely been very lovely lad and just been very brave the whole thing. brave through the whole thing. >> well, well, look >> oh, okay. well, well, look all the best, obviously. and i'm really kind all the best, obviously. and i'm rethighlight kind all the best, obviously. and i'm rethighlight as kind all the best, obviously. and i'm rethighlight as sord of highlight that as well. so mike gordon, belinda, uh, mine is a young english is tom hartley, a young english cricketer years old. is tom hartley, a young english cricandr years old. is tom hartley, a young english cricand his years old. is tom hartley, a young english cricand his test years old. is tom hartley, a young english cricand his test debut old. is tom hartley, a young english cricand his test debut at d. is tom hartley, a young english cricand his test debut at the >> and his test debut at the weekend to weekend helped england to victory india . amazing victory against india. amazing stuff. got the team stuff. got the got the team going zero hero
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going. went from zero to hero against all all odds. it was a cracking game and i like supporting all our sporting heroes. they're a great influence on the young. >> right. lovely. um, okay. >> all right. lovely. um, okay. well, i mean very, very difficult choice today, but today's greatest in today's greatest britain are in light the events that took light of the events that took place met police are place today, the met police are now shomrim, uh, for there in london. hopefully we don't see anything else like that in the coming days. we've got time now for the union jack carol mines network rail for braking its own policy of no political posters. >> there's a they've erected a multicoloured pillar in london bridge station, which features flags representing gender fluidity. i've got to read this because i don't know what it means. polly mcgorry i do know what it sleeping what it means. it means sleeping around partners around with multiple partners and so you can't. >> what is demi sexuality? sorry. well, i think does . anyone? >> you can be what you like. basically so they them up a basically so they make them up a british but you can british flag. but you can actually sleeping actually advocate sleeping around the rest of it. so, around all the rest of it. so, you this is the same, you know, and this is the same, you know, and this is the same, you is the same you know, this is the same company that removed a poster of j.k. rowling waverley's j.k. rowling in waverley's edinburgh it
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edinburgh station because it said, so, okay. and said, we love her. so, okay. and her are union jack ass. her views are union jack ass. >> please. >> please. >> uh, jeremy hunt, chancellor >> please. >>the , jeremy hunt, chancellor >> please. >>the exchequer,|nt, chancellor >> please. >>the exchequer, because cellor >> please. >>the exchequer, because we .or of the exchequer, because we refer it earlier on. so refer to it earlier on. so apparently he's trying to cut income tax budget and income tax in the budget and thinking make thinking he's going to make everybody the same everybody happy at the same time, they're forcing councils everybody happy at the same time, tupy're forcing councils everybody happy at the same time, tup council ng councils everybody happy at the same time, tup council tax:ouncils everybody happy at the same time, tup council tax by ncils everybody happy at the same time, tup council tax by even to put up council tax by even more. we're going to be more. so we're all going to be worse off. okay. more. so we're all going to be worse (right(ay. more. so we're all going to be worse (right jeremy hunt not >> all right jeremy hunt not a popular man on this. >> that's good yeah >> that's a good one. yeah yeah. it's women flung it's the two women who flung soup over the mona lisa of all paintings. because of something like healthy and sustainable food in it. throw soup in it. it's the way they do protest these days. they don't . they these days. they don't. they don't study and learn to how how to wonderful solutions to to create wonderful solutions to the world. no, their answer is to throw what to tantrum throw soup. what morons . morons. >> oh, gosh. yeah. i mean , it's >> oh, gosh. yeah. i mean, it's a good job that we've got all these, um, paintings covered, isn't it? i mean, what do they expect achieve of it? expect to achieve of it? >> just. it's just stupid . >> just. it's just stupid. >> just. it's just stupid. >> it's backfired. achieved in their lives , you know, it's their lives, you know, it's like, you know, on telly. like, you know, on the telly. >> fair, beautiful >> now, to be fair, beautiful work art. work of art. >> one of the most expensive paintings in the world. they
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paintings in the world. and they tried i mean, god, tried to trash it, i mean, god, all right. >> w'— >> might your view on that? >> might your view on that? >> mean, i don't really >> i mean, i don't really know what arguing for, to what they were arguing for, to be honest, sustainable food. >> i mean, we want >> i mean, we all want sustainable food. >> the weight off. >> yeah. knock the weight off. >> yeah. knock the weight off. >> right, guys, thank >> all right, guys, thank goodness behind goodness the painting is behind glass. today is glass. all right. um, today is union. is . glass. all right. um, today is union. is. network rail union. jackass. is. network rail for whatever that is. all right. so there we go. um, all right, guys, look, thank you very, very much. really? really enjoyed this panel. it's been feisty . this panel. it's been feisty. it's been at times. but it's been furious at times. but you'd love to see it in a range of views. thank you. you, of views. thank you. thank you, thank you everybody thank you, thank you everybody who's or listening who's been watching or listening in new look patrick in to this new look patrick christys tonight. i will back christys tonight. i will be back again tomorrow 9 again from tomorrow at 9 pm. where have big, big, big where i have a big, big, big exclusive for you involving the manchester bomber. stay manchester arena bomber. stay tuned for that. >> a brighter outlook with boxt solar sponsors of weather on . gb news. >> evening i'm alex deakin . this >> evening i'm alex deakin. this is your latest weather update from the met office for gb news
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a bit of a drab start tomorrow, but it should cheer up in many locations with some sunny spells andifs locations with some sunny spells and it's going get very windy and it's going to get very windy once scotland during once more across scotland during tuesday night and into wednesday. winds pretty wednesday. the winds pretty light moment. not light at the moment. it's not many across chart, many isobars across the chart, but low been making for but this low has been making for a day over of a very wet day over parts of wales the wales and northern england. the rain going to start ease rain is going to start to ease through evening . we do through this evening. we do still have met office yellow still have a met office yellow warning and it stays warning in place and it stays pretty over much of pretty soggy over much of northern and wales northern england and wales through in the far through the night in the far south, generally dry cloudy . south, generally dry and cloudy. further north it's dry and clear and a frosty night across and cold. a frosty night across much of scotland and northern ireland. so a cold start here, but we should see plenty of sunshine tuesday . good chunk sunshine on tuesday. good chunk of wales will of england and wales will be fairly pretty fairly drab to start. pretty dank and drizzly. still over eastern england, but the rain will be light and continuing to peter out and the cloud should start to melt away . so certainly start to melt away. so certainly for wales, a much brighter day and brightening up over northern england may stay fairly england too, it may stay fairly cloudy in the southeast. ten celsius cooler celsius here. so cooler than today sixes and today. elsewhere, sixes and sevens and then the winds start
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to pick up later in the northwest. getting windy northwest. getting very windy across on wednesday across scotland on wednesday we'll see a spell of heavy rain coming through as well. there's a met office yellow warning in place for northern scotland for the strength wind, but the strength of the wind, but also windy also turning wet and windy across ireland and late across northern ireland and late in day see of in the day we'll see some of that windy weather in that wet and windy weather in northern for a good part northern england for a good part of day, most of of the day, though, most of england wales will be dry, england and wales will be dry, but goodbye that but cloudy. goodbye that warm feeling boxt boilers feeling inside from boxt boilers sponsors of weather on .
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gb news. >> good evening. it's 11:00 gb news. >> good evening. it's11:00 here with gb news tonight and a move to block the government's flagship rwanda bill in the
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house of lords was voted down tonight by a majority of 122 peers, voted 206 to 84 against a motion design to block it earlier , the archbishop of earlier, the archbishop of canterbury, justin welby, accused the government of outsourcing the country's legal and moral responsibilities, saying britain could do better . saying britain could do better. meanwhile, more than a thousand illegal migrants have crossed the english channel so far this year , new home office figures year, new home office figures show 388 people made the journey just this weekend. the highest numbered across in a single day so far this year was 358. in eight boats, which was on january the 17th. now the three american soldiers killed in a drone strike on the syrian—jordanian border have been named tonight . sergeant been named tonight. sergeant william jerome rivers , william jerome rivers, specialist kennedy saunders and brianna moffat belonged to an army reserve unit based in the us state of georgia. the
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