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tv   Patrick Christys Tonight  GB News  February 7, 2024 9:00pm-11:01pm GMT

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and allowed people to come in and literally kill us. >> yeah, foreign criminals are killing brits and we can't deport them. but breaking tonight a refugee from afghanistan is suspected of being a russian spy who worked for mi6 and met the king. more on that . and you could be paying on that. and you could be paying for the nottingham knife monsters benefits . a tv monsters benefits. a tv exclusive with one of the victims mothers as she doesn't hold back , but also that wears hold back, but also that wears the sense of justice. >> um , he's a malicious. he >> um, he's a malicious. he predetermined murderer . predetermined murderer. >> also, suella is back and she wants to ban the marches . wants to ban the marches. >> i mean, there's only one way to describe those marches. they are hate marches . are hate marches. >> should we ban protests? plus . >> should we ban protests? plus. i'm pretty sure that coal 100 million years ago was trees and plants. >> is that right, jacob? it was. so i would argue that that's sustainable. all lee anderson
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live and pumped up shortly and another gb news exclusive for you. >> we expose britain's benefit cheats live on air on my panel tonight express political supremo christian corgi man of the people adam brooks and author rebecca reed. oh, and someone put biden in a home with someone put biden in a home with some movement. >> and i don't want to. i don't want to . maybe choose my words . want to. maybe choose my words. >> well, get ready britain . here >> well, get ready britain. here we go. alleged fake asylum seekers at the heart of british society. next . next. >> the top story from the gb newsroom tonight. the us secretary of state says that
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hamas's proposal for a ceasefire in gaza has clear non—stop martyrs, but does leave space for an agreement to be reached. anthony blinken said in the last half hour that more aid was still needed in gaza . and he still needed in gaza. and he said the palestinian authority needs renewal. he also said the focus remains on bringing the hostages home. israel's prime minister benjamin netanyahu , who minister benjamin netanyahu, who has rejected hamas's proposed ceasefire, saying total victory in gaza is possible within months . here in gaza is possible within months. here at home, in gaza is possible within months . here at home, police months. here at home, police hunting a suspected chemical attacker say he was in a relationship with his victim. a new video has been released of the afghan asylum seeker abdul ezedl the afghan asylum seeker abdul ezedi, nearly a week after a corrosive liquid was thrown at the woman in south london, police say she'd agreed to meet him on the day of the attack, and they believe a breakdown in their relations may have been a motive. the 31 year old mother, who may lose the sight in her right eye, remains under sedation in hospital. darius
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nasimi , of the afghan and nasimi, of the afghan and central asian association here in london, says fellow afghan afghans should not be helping him . him. >> someone like him should not be harboured . um, he himself be harboured. um, he himself needs help as well . i don't know needs help as well. i don't know if he has any mental health problems or issues for the afghan community. the message is , um, please stop harbouring him if anyone is and please stop helping him if they are the prime minister has been accused of letting parts of the country go without basic dental care. >> so keir starmer claims the nhs has been neglected by the conservatives while they've been in power. that is after the government announced new plans to boost the number of appointments across england by offering to pay dentists for every new nhs patient. speaking to gb news, shadow health secretary wes streeting says the government's taken too long to recognise the problem . recognise the problem. >> um, it's the worst of all worlds, terrible for patients and we've heard some horrific
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examples of diy dentistry, but also bad for taxpayers because if you don't get there early with dental problems and regularly maintaining your teeth and looking after them, you end up with conditions that take you to a&e, which costs an arm and a leg for the nhs to deal with in hospital. so it's bad for patients and bad for the taxpayer. and frankly, after 14 years conservative government years of conservative government promising the nhs promising to reform the nhs dentistry contract back in 2010, what we got today was too little, too late . little, too late. >> wes streeting and finally, spanish farmers have been blocking major roads in spain with tractors and burning tyres , with tractors and burning tyres, protesting against . european protesting against. european union bureaucracy and market competition. more than a dozen major roads were blocked this morning as convoys of tractors converged on barcelona to confront their local authorities . the farmers want better prices for their produce, less red tape and protection against cheap imports . it's and protection against cheap imports. it's the and protection against cheap imports . it's the latest sign of imports. it's the latest sign of growing anger across europe after similar protests took
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place in germany, france and belgium in recent weeks. for the very latest stories, do sign up for gb news alerts by scanning the qr code on your screen or go to gb news. com slash alerts . to gb news. com slash alerts. >> this news has just landed . it >> this news has just landed. it is alleged that a refugee from afghanistan who lied his way through our asylum system is a russian spy who worked for the foreign office , accessed british foreign office, accessed british military and intelligence secrets, met the now king charles and the then prime minister david cameron. he was reportedly stripped of british citizenship in 2019 after m15 . citizenship in 2019 after m15. claimed he was working for russian secret services. these allegations, if true, highlight how foreign actors can use and abuse our asylum system to plant spies right at the heart of britain. he reportedly claimed that he was fleeing the taliban and had come straight from
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afghanistan, despite living in russia years. apparently he russia for years. apparently he went on to work for gchq , m16, went on to work for gchq, m16, the ministry of defence, the home office . but is it any home office. but is it any wonder when you consider that a skint asylum seeker with a potentially fatal injury is currently outwitting our metropolitan police? abdul ezedi is still at large now this is a sorry tale about the decline of britain. take a look at this cctv footage from him wandering around tescos. okay what does it say about britain that a man with half of his face hanging off due to what looks like chemical burns, can just stroll around and nobody bats an eyelid like it's normal, isn't it? but the big story here is britain's deep portation scandal. even if we caught abdul ezedi tomorrow and even if he was found guilty of the horrific crimes that he's been accused of as it currently stands, we still couldn't deport him afterwards. he's failed an asylum bid twice. he's committed asylum bid twice. he's committed a sexual offence. he stayed in britain and went on to allegedly
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tried to kill his ex—partner with acid and harm children. but let's just add him to the list, shall we? the reading jihadi who murdered three people during a knife rampage. kyrees saadallah had his deportation dropped a year before his attacker, ernesto elliott, was on a deportation flight . a load of deportation flight. a load of luvvy celebs and supposedly some labour politicians as well , labour politicians as well, protested flight. he protested against the flight. he stayed britain and then went stayed in britain and then went on commit a murder. we need on to commit a murder. we need to deport foreign criminals before they have the chance to commit crimes. now tory mp commit more crimes. now tory mp for redditch and deputy party chair rachel mclean put forward a debate in parliament on this today. now i actually caught up with mrs. mclean, she said that allowing criminal asylum seekers and immigrants to stay in britain is tearing this country apart . apart. >> we're talking about something very precious. that's our sense of nationhood, our precious democracy, and that's an inheritance that we've had from previous generations who fought for this country and have fought for this country and have fought
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for the peace that we enjoy at home. and when we have allowed people to come in and literally kill us, we have been literally killing ourselves with kindness in some cases , she says, there's in some cases, she says, there's concerns that institutions like the church of england provide a massive loophole for criminal asylum seekers to stay in britain . i asylum seekers to stay in britain. i think asylum seekers to stay in britain . i think the one that asylum seekers to stay in britain. i think the one that is really concerning is the one about conversion to christianity, because it is right that we have a system that allows people to have a well—founded fear of persecution , even if they are sent back to that country, they would be tortured and lives would tortured and their lives would be and this part be in danger. and this is part of international law , it's of international law, and it's something we're of. something that we're part of. however it's also it's not true to say that there aren't loopholes in that system . loopholes in that system. >> she went on, quite unsurprisingly, to say that she thinks things will be worse under labour. >> uh, they have got the wrong priorities and they've always sided with the victims . i'm sided with the victims. i'm sorry, with the people committing the crimes rather than the victims of those crimes. they put those foreign
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national offenders above our own citizens. and that's why i believe they are a risk to our national security. obviously labour would deny that. >> but former home secretary priti patel has now weighed in, explaining how victims have to live through the trauma of being abused by foreign national offenders is traumatised and do you what? you know what? >> there are even more traumatised. they relive that traumatised. they relive that trauma over again when they trauma all over again when they see of parliament, see members of parliament, celebrities, the media, the bbc, so—called expert witnesses . is so—called expert witnesses. is as exposed by the mail on sunday this weekend campaign owners and lawyers backing the rights of criminals them . criminals over them. >> well, there is a heck of a lot to go out there and here to do it with me are my wonderful panel do it with me are my wonderful panel. and tonight i am joined by senior political correspondent at the express christian, kalki. we've also got businessman and activist adam brooks, an author and journalist , look adam, i'll , rebecca reid. look adam, i'll start with you. i mean, foreign powers, if this story is true, are now taking the absolute mic
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to the point where they can plant fake asylum seekers right at the heart of our intelligence. >> it just shows how ridiculous our home office and our immigration system is. we've allowed , rapists, allowed gangsters, rapists, terrorists , you know, terrorists, you know, paedophiles and god knows what else into this country . we don't else into this country. we don't know where half of them are or what their background is. you know, the public is at risk. the government's job is to protect its citizens and they're putting us at risk. now we've got spies. this is like a bad version of a carry on movie. you know, this really is sick . this. and i really is sick. this. and i believe it's a national emergency . yeah. emergency. yeah. >> christine, i'll throw it over to you and just read out the introduction to this story, which is in times. okay. an which is in the times. okay. an alleged russian spy lied to gain asylum in the uk before he worked the foreign office. worked for the foreign office. access and access british military and intelligence and met intelligence secrets and met with future king. mean , with the future king. i mean, it's isn't it? this it's bingo, isn't it? this point? it's bingo, isn't it? this poiii:? he's lived life >> i mean, he's lived a life that many british citizens would like to. and we don't get a look in right. and this isn't just, uh, and uh, a civil service failure. and an failure. and, my
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an asylum failure. and, my goodness, more than goodness, we've seen more than enough those lifetime . enough of those for a lifetime. um, over the last few years. it's intelligence it's also an intelligence failure. it's failure. i think it's astonishing. line from astonishing. one line from the article claimed that article that he claimed that he'd directly from he'd come directly from afghanistan, he afghanistan, even though he lived russia in six years. lived for russia in six years. so this is a major failure by our intelligence services who are meant to keep us safe, a failure by the border force, who are meant to keep us safe, and a failure by the civil service who are supposed to be in charge of all of this. it is a disgrace. and we keep seeing it. it's a government failure. it's a legal failure, and the whole thing should make everybody furious. failure, and the whole thing sho rebeccaa everybody furious. failure, and the whole thing shorebeccaa ev�*smuggler.rious. failure, and the whole thing shorebeccaa ev�*smuggler. uh s. failure, and the whole thing sho rebeccaa ev�*smuggler. uh who >> rebecca the smuggler. uh who he right? supposedly he employed. right? supposedly allegedly to get into britain, obtained him a fake russian passport caribbean passport and bought a caribbean houday passport and bought a caribbean holiday package for him . he then holiday package for him. he then transited through heathrow , and transited through heathrow, and instead boarding his instead of boarding his connecting he handed connecting flight, he handed himself into immigration officials in london claimed officials in london and claimed asylum, saying he'd come directly afghanistan . we directly from afghanistan. we are for the taking, aren't are there for the taking, aren't we? i would argue that >> i mean, i would argue that also a russian passport shouldn't have shouldn't necessarily have helped in the helped you to get a job in the
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secret service here because we're besties them we're not besties with them right but this is this right now. but this is this specific is a failure from specific case is a failure from from m16. this is a failure of policing, a of policing, a failure of background like it's background checks like it's honestly harder. apparently background checks like it's ho get:ly harder. apparently background checks like it's ho get:ly a harder. apparently background checks like it's ho get:ly a wetherspoonszntly background checks like it's ho get:ly a wetherspoons with to get into a wetherspoons with a fake id than it is to get into mi6. a fake id than it is to get into m16. is necessarily the m16. that is not necessarily the suggestion our immigration suggestion that our immigration system. i think our system. i mean, i think our immigration system has lot of immigration system has a lot of problems the current tory problems under the current tory government. i to government. however, i think to suggest consistent suggest that this is consistent with that. this is a very specific, high level case. specific, very high level case. it high level. specific, very high level case. it but high level. specific, very high level case. it but mean, avel. specific, very high level case. it but mean, surely the >> but i mean, surely the russians here again, if this is true, are absolutely rubbing their hands with glee. and i just adam, it raises just think, adam, it raises serious questions about whether or not nefarious actors or not nefarious foreign actors seriously that they can seriously think that they can just plant someone in britain. i mean, does say about, mean, what does that say about, you the idea that isis you know, the idea that isis could thing? could do the same thing? >> how many, how many people have come from iran and are in this country we know this country that we don't know about, saying they're about, you know, saying they're from another country and they've got motives. got ulterior motives. >> i suppose the problem >> but i suppose the problem with if i was a woman with that is if i was a woman living in iran, right who with that is if i was a woman livin been ran, right who with that is if i was a woman livinbeen an, right who with that is if i was a woman livin been an outspoken who with that is if i was a woman livinbeen an outspoken feminist, had been an outspoken feminist, who believes in woman's right
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who believes in a woman's right to i would to to choose, i would be put to death. so i would need to be able to come live somewhere else. >> women do you see those >> women do you see on those boats? because never see any. boats? because i never see any. >> for iran, generally >> well, for iran, generally speaking, is not the main feeder for for the and for the for the boats and certainly everybody's certainly the everybody's consistent with the boats consistent issue with the boats is, men are coming not is, is men who are coming not from iran but what i'm is from iran but what i'm saying is you robust policy you have to have a robust policy where are where people who are unquestionably going to be political prisoners or going to be put to death have be abused or put to death have to able to come. to still be able to come. >> got fake christians, you >> i've got fake christians, you know, fake gay men. they're using book using every loophole in the book to this country and to get into this country and they're away with they're getting away with it. >> how do you maintain >> but how do you maintain i agree, i don't think it's an ideal system, how do you ideal system, but how do you maintain in a world in which real men can come here and real gay men can come here and real gay men can come here and real christians come real christians can come here and come here? and real women can come here? >> is the problem that the >> that is the problem that the left have confront, because left have to confront, because there clearly a lot there are clearly a lot of fakers, uh, taking the mic and abusing the asylum system. right now. going to now. if many people are going to start and going, start turning around and going, the way to do this or, you the only way to do this or, you know, to secure our borders, to make safe is to not
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make sure we're safe is to not accept then is going to accept any then that is going to lead to harming actual asylum seekers. right? but the people who will shout and scream the most are the sort of left wingers, the sort of labour mps who signed letters to stop deportations of foreign national criminals, who then stay on and commit further crimes. they are contributing to an environment in which the british public are getting sick of the whole system. >> but arguably i'm one of those people. i'm a bleeding heart bleeding hearted who would bleeding hearted lefty who would not to take to not like planes to take off to rwanda, and i think personally, i that there are things rwanda, and i think personally, i can at there are things rwanda, and i think personally, i can at there (internally to that can be done internally to make country more robust make the country more robust against who come as against people who come here as bad labour while maintaining. >> so this is so lazy. >> but so this is so lazy. >> but so this is so lazy. >> labour. won't we don't >> labour. labour won't we don't know what labour are going to do. they haven't had a chance interject on this because the thing could presumably interject on this because the thi domestically�*uld presumably interject on this because the thi domesticallyrul�*actuallylably do domestically is actually be in of our own laws. in control of our own laws. >> when people decide that >> and when people decide that somebody needs to be deported, that we deport them. no, we can't, the moment, can't, because at the moment, because when because what will happen when somebody when a somebody like that, when, when a bloody alkaline, alkaline attack
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guy do really guy got deported, do you really think to detain think they're going to detain him him serve for him and make him serve time for what he did? >> of course not deport >> of course they're not deport him. we shouldn't deport him. he should stay here and sentence. >> let's have it right. labour mps will probably petition to stop deported. stop him being deported. >> petition to stop him >> i would petition to stop him from being deported because i want commits a crime want anybody who commits a crime here for that here to serve time for that crime, not get off a plane and do whatever they want when they get there. >> let's just roll back bit >> let's just roll back a bit here. so let's say that. so here. so let's just say that. so we currently have a bloke with what be chemical burns what appear to be chemical burns on face, who alleged to on his face, who is alleged to have committed this alkaline attack woman children attack on a woman and children who asylum claim, who has failed his asylum claim, twice, dumped for sexual twice, been dumped for a sexual offence possibly lied offence and quite possibly lied about a christian faith in order to asylum claim whilst to create an asylum claim whilst in country and you wouldn't in this country and you wouldn't deport him, should be in deport him, he should be in prison country. prison in this country. >> want him getting off >> i do not want him getting off a plane and walking free when he gets back, and that is what will consistently happen. do you know why consistently happen. do you know wtho know someone >> do you know why someone hasn't rung and said, i've hasn't rung up and said, i've seen a guy with a burn all over his face because they would be
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accused racist? if not, accused of being racist? if not, why? called, know, if i why? if i called, you know, if i put on twitter that i've seen a man with burns on his face of asian descent, i would be called racist. wouldn't. racist. you wouldn't. >> literally they're >> that's literally they're asking call. we've got asking people to call. we've got rebecca here saying that rebecca here who's saying that she to not she would campaign to not have this deported that he this man deported so that he serves time. >> i don't understand the point of asylum that of an asylum system that once you've rejected once, you've been rejected once, you're then not allowed stay you've been rejected once, yo the then not allowed stay you've been rejected once, yo the countryt allowed stay you've been rejected once, yo the country and owed stay you've been rejected once, yo the country and reapply stay you've been rejected once, yo the country and reapply asay in the country and reapply as many as you want until many times as you want until you're finally accepted. firstly, gone firstly, you should have gone immediately. secondly, how many illegal taking illegal migrants are we taking in we don't in every year? we don't have enough space it is. enough prison space as it is. that's why probably the guy involved in the clapham attack got a suspended sentence for his sexual rather than an sexual assault, rather than an actual sentence, because sexual assault, rather than an act don't sentence, because sexual assault, rather than an act don't have ;entence, because sexual assault, rather than an act don't have theznce, because sexual assault, rather than an act don't have the space.ecause sexual assault, rather than an act don't have the space. imagine we don't have the space. imagine having tens of having to lock up tens of thousands more with more, you thousands of more with more, you know, more prison than country at point. yeah quite. at that point. yeah quite. >> are off to absolute >> we are off to an absolute flyer tonight. you are just flyer tonight. if you are just joining this is the breaking joining us this is the breaking news will be able news that you will be able to see bottom of your see on the bottom of your screens. you're watching us screens. if you're watching us on or on youtube, which on telly or on youtube, which again, that a suspected again, is that a suspected russian for in russian spy worked for m16 in the foreign that
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the foreign office? that suspected allegedly obe, suspected spy is allegedly obe, uh, refugee from afghanistan. he went meet david cameron went on to meet david cameron gordon brown, the future king. so is now our king and so who is now our king and prince william? and prince william? uh, and supposedly essentially lied his way through work for gchq and mi6 way through work for gchq and m16 had full access to our m16 and had full access to our military intelligence and secret service intelligence as well. we stripped him of his citizenship in 2019 after we thought he was working for the russian secret service . we are absolutely there service. we are absolutely there for the taking, but there's still plenty more to come here on patrick christys tonight. a heck of a lot to get through. but first it time for this but first it is time for this because you can grab a chance to win in cold, hard cash in win £1,000 in cold, hard cash in our british giveaway. our great british giveaway. here's details you need here's all the details you need to this is your chance to to enter this is your chance to win £18,000 cash in our very latest great british giveaway . latest great british giveaway. >> cash to spend on anything you like. that's like having an extra £1,500 in your bank account each month for a whole year. account each month for a whole year . what would you use that for? >> well, congratulations , you've
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>> well, congratulations, you've won £10,000. oh my god, that's unbelievable . unbelievable. >> so that's brilliant for news another chance to win £18,000 in tax free cash . tax free cash. >> text gb win to 84 902. text cost £2 plus one standard network rate message or post your name and to number gb news zero two. po box 8690 derby dh1 nine, double t, uk only entrance must be 18 or over. lines close at 5 pm. on friday. the 23rd of february. good luck . february. good luck. >> good luck indeed. now still to come , there's yet another to come, there's yet another breaking development on keir starmers £28 billion green pledge. could a labour government actually bankrupt this country? we've got red wall, rottweiler . at lee wall, rottweiler. at lee anderson. he's got his own strong opinions on climate policy, hasn't he? he's live in the studio. he joins us very, very soon. next, though, is it ever ban a protest very soon. next, though, is it eiwell, ban a protest very soon. next, though, is it eiwell, suella ban a protest very soon. next, though, is it eiwell, suella braverman protest very soon. next, though, is it eiwell, suella braverman says st ? well, suella braverman says yes. activist tatchell is yes. activist peter tatchell is going head with the
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going head to head with the former aide to margaret thatcher. gardiner. that's former aide to margaret thatcand gardiner. that's former aide to margaret thatcand i gardiner. that's former aide to margaret thatcand i gijustier. that's former aide to margaret thatcand i gijust want|at's former aide to margaret thatc and i gijust want to s next. and i also just want to mention to you as well, something i've got coming a little later on in the show. little bit later on in the show. i down and spoke to the i sat down and spoke to the mother of barnaby who mother of barnaby webber, who was very sadly one of those victims that depraved victims of that depraved nottingham she is nottingham attacker. she is talking out because apparently we could still be paying this quy's we could still be paying this guy's benefits whilst he's in a secure mental hospital and could end up coming out with as much as £150,000 worth of taxpayers cash in his back pocket. it's an absolute disgrace she doesn't hold back this is patrick christys tonight and we're only on .
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you, but we want to keep you entertained. >> the camilla tominey show sunday mornings from 930 on gb views . news. there's loads . on tonight. >> it's time now though, for our head to head . former home head to head. former home secretary suella braverman is back and she has called for new laws allowing ministers to ban protests. she's criticised police for failing to tackle hate filled pro—palestinian marches . braverman says that marches. braverman says that home secretaries should be able to ban those hate filled and disruptive marches outright to outlaw any expression of support for terrorism and to make it easier to prosecute anti—semitic chants such as from the river to the sea. but tonight i am asking, is it everjustifiable asking, is it ever justifiable to ban the protests ? yes. all to ban the protests? yes. all right. and tonight i, i am
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joined by activist and campaigner peter tatchell and the former aide to margaret thatcher. of course, i've got nile gardiner. look, nile, i'll start should we be start with you. should we be banning marches. banning hate marches. >> patrick, thanks very much for having on the show today. >> and yes, absolutely, we should be banning these hate marches. >> uh suella braverman is 100, uh, right. >> uh, these marches that we've seen by pro—hamas mobs on the streets of london over the course of the last few months. absolutely unacceptable. really. these marches filled absolutely unacceptable. really. thes anti—semitism,�*|es filled absolutely unacceptable. really. thes anti—semitism, filledled absolutely unacceptable. really. thes anti—semitism, filled with with anti—semitism, filled with menacing, a threatening language towards jews, support for genocide, support for terrorist organisations , actions he should organisations, actions he should not be allowed on the streets of london. this is not a free speech issue. this is a matter of dealing with pro—terrorist mobs and groups who . pose a mobs and groups who. pose a fundamental threat. i think, to the british security, uh, and their their hate speech should not be tolerated on the streets of london. >> peter, your views . >> peter, your views. >> peter, your views. >> well, i can assure you that
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is absolutely factually incorrect that the pro—palestinian marchers have called for a ceasefire and humanitarian aid to civilians in gaza. humanitarian aid to civilians in gaza . they have not supported gaza. they have not supported hamas . they have not promoted hamas. they have not promoted terrorism . they have not said terrorism. they have not said a single thing . they have not said single thing. they have not said a thing. people have been arrested for this. >> sorry. you cannot ignore this. i'm sorry, i am not. you've said you started out with saying this factually incorrect . saying this factually incorrect. okay, i'm not going to have you come here and lie. people have been arrested for showing support for hamas , for flagrant support for hamas, for flagrant anti—semitism . i'm for having anti—semitism. i'm for having things like swastikas in the jewish colours and all of this. you you have seen that. in fact, peter, you've marched, you've marched at these protests, haven't you? >> absolutely. and out of the million plus people who've been marching in the last few weeks , marching in the last few weeks, there have been a tiny number of people who been rightfully people who have been rightfully arrested . but that not arrested. but that is not a reason to say that the march is a hate march. they are not hate marchers. they're for a
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ceasefire and civilian aid. >> so they're just they're just happened to attract hateful people . peter. people. peter. >> no, you cannot judge the whole marchers on the basis of what a tiny minority has done just because a handful of people drive cars recklessly . we don't drive cars recklessly. we don't demonise all car drivers. it's the same with this march. i have been on those marches i've never seen or heard a single person express support for hamas or terrorism . terrorism. >> not if you've not seen or heard that you must be blind and deaf. no i haven't seen it, but i accept that there are like a minority, like a response to that because there's so much nonsense there coming from from peter here, uh, you know, completely divorced from reality. >> frankly, i think, peter, you're living in the twilight zone. if you think that you're not witnessing huge amounts of hatred and anti—semitism on the streets of london, there should be tolerance for this. be zero tolerance for this. actually, not friendly be zero tolerance for this. a peaceful not friendly be zero tolerance for this. apeaceful marches. tol friendly be zero tolerance for this. apeaceful marches. they endly be zero tolerance for this. apeaceful marches. they are. y , peaceful marches. they are. they are spreading hate, fear and intimidation, which is why so many british jews are afraid to go into central london over
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the weekends. actually, in order to avoid these, these hate filled mobs. so it's an appalling situation where you have the cenotaph war memorial being cordoned off in order to protect it from these these violent hate filled protesters. churchill statue has to be protected. this is a terrible state of affairs. unacceptable and the british government should be dealing with this very, severely. very, very severely. >> are you shaking head >> are you shaking your head there? i mean, all of that there? but i mean, all of that has happened. there? but i mean, all of that has imean,ed. there? but i mean, all of that has imean, it's absolutely fact, >> i mean, it's absolutely fact, fully untrue. marchers never fully untrue. the marchers never intended to do anything to the cenotaph or the churchill statue. the marchers have been by the police's own acknowledged that 99% peaceful and the police themselves say that the vast majority of people we're talking about, 99.9% of people committed no offences, stirred no hate. there was no anti—jewish sentiment and i marched with jewish people on those palatine marches. those jews were welcome and they were accepted and
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embraced. they shared the same concern. >> look at that, peter . that concern. >> look at that, peter. that is a that is a flag of jihad. and you know who else carried that flag? uh, usman khan, the bloke who was responsible for the fishmongers hall attack. so there you go. >> i agree, i agree there were some instances. excuse me, but they were tiny alongside them. >> look at it. free palestine , >> look at it. free palestine, free gaza. oh, look at that. we'll just wander along with the bloke who's waving the flag of jihad. . jihad. peter, those. >> those flags are wrong . but >> those flags are wrong. but only a tiny number of people , only a tiny number of people, all expressed, held them . all expressed, held them. >> how many flags of jihad peter , do you need before it becomes unacceptable to march at something you cannot ban a whole march the basis of the march on the basis of the behaviour of a handful . just one flag. >> if that was the case, we would have banned the suffragettes. we would have banned the black hats. >> ridiculous. that's ridiculous. >> comparing these these hate hate mobs to the suffragettes is just incredibly insulting towards the suffragettes. uh, frankly. and uh, these islamist
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mobs have no respect. of course , mobs have no respect. of course, for the british people, they have no respect for british history, which is why you have to have these memorials protected from them. it's a damning indictment of what these marches are all about, actually, and fundamentally and they're fundamentally un—british. actually, they're anti—british . they should have anti—british. they should have no place in british, uh, british society at all. >> peter, can i just ask if you wore that? peter, if you wore that gaza, would happen? >> that's the different issue. i have been stridently . no, it's have been stridently. no, it's not, i have been i have been longer than you or anyone rainbow coloured tie in gaza . rainbow coloured tie in gaza. >> what would happen to you, peter? >> longer than you or your other interviews? me? i've been campaigning against hamas and against islamism. i've been beaten up by islamists for taking a stand for human rights in palestine and other places where muslim majority countries rule . i do not, therefore rule. i do not, therefore believe that it's right to damn me and others who also condemn
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islamism and terrorism to damn us as hate mongers. we're not hate. i'm not calling you a hate. i'm not calling you a hate. we want peace. i just wondering what we want. peace. >> if you wore a rainbow coloured tie out and about in gaza, well, of course you'd end up being arrested, tortured and possibly killed, right? >> and unlike other people, i've actually defended lgbt, plus palestinian people and helped get some of them out of prison in palestine. i do the action, others use mere words . others use mere words. >> right. okay. all right. nihal i just do put it to you. if you're all for banning these marches, what happens when you want to take to the streets about something that you really care about, and you feel passionately about? and then a serving home secretary at that time decides that they want to ban that. presumably you'd be miffed. is this do you just want to ban it because this is an issue that don't agree with? issue that you don't agree with? >> is not a free speech >> this is not a free speech issue at all. it's about what really individuals walking on
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the are the streets of london who are supporting movements. supporting terrorist movements. some them calling for some of them calling for genocide . and there have been genocide. and there have been reports that former hamas leaders have actually been involved in some of these , these involved in some of these, these marches. i don't know why peter is marching alongside these people , actually. so this is not people, actually. so this is not a speech it's about a free speech issue. it's about standing for law and order, standing up for law and order, standing up for law and order, standing up for law and order, standing up against supporters of not be of terror who should not be allowed to roam around freely on the streets of london. allowed to roam around freely on the nihal,; of london. allowed to roam around freely on the nihal, the london. allowed to roam around freely on the nihal, the march. allowed to roam around freely on the nihal, the march theme was >> nihal, the march theme was a ceasefire and humanitarian aid. it was to protect and defend all jews and all arabs in israel. that's ridiculous. >> i'll tell you what. a ceasefire in favour of a clip. so this is so the theme of this was what was it, a ceasefire or a ceasefire? and to protect all jews and everything . let's just jews and everything. let's just play jews and everything. let's just play the clip . here . for play the clip. here. for scampton sharm el sheikh a throw i >> -- >> yemen. yemen. make a throw . >> yemen. yemen. make a throw.
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yemen. yemen. make a proper yemen. yemen. make a proper yemen . yemen. make a call. yemen. yemen. make a call. >> so yemen. yemen. make us proud. turn another ship around. peter. that is i absolutely condemn that . i've been missiles condemn that. i've been missiles and things at ships. >> i've been campaigning against the houthis since they were established there . an extremist established there. an extremist terrorist , uh, organisation . terrorist, uh, organisation. there's a threat above to all the people of yemen. we must oppose the houthis. but most people on that march had nothing to do with those kind of slogans , and did not support taking part in those marches. >> uh, peter, why on earth are you out there with them? these are supporters terrorism who are supporters of terrorism who are supporters of terrorism who are supporting the enemies of the united kingdom. frankly why are you out there marching alongside them ? alongside them? >> because the march theme , >> because the march theme, which everybody signed up to , which everybody signed up to, apart from a tiny minority, was apart from a tiny minority, was a ceasefire to end the civilian deaths, to protect both jewish and arab people. >> when you see it week after
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week, peter, the themes gone, hasn't it? the theme is whatever the theme was when you got there, is now vacated. there, the theme is now vacated. the building . the building. >> no, no. if you look at >> no, no, no. if you look at 99% of the placards and slogans , 99% of the placards and slogans, it was ceasefire now. all right . it was ceasefire now. all right. in order to protect civil, jewish and arab lives , both are jewish and arab lives, both are important. we cannot condemn a protest on the basis of the bad behaviour of a minority. they are not representative now . are not representative now. >> final word. yeah, i think that, you know, peter's views here have have no relation whatsoever to, to reality. >> we should all be condemning these hate marches on the streets london. they are streets of, of london. they are unacceptable . they are unacceptable. they are fundamentally anti british as well. they're hate marches filled with fear and intimidation. there should be no place for this on the streets of london or any british city. >> all right, both of you, spirited discussion. who do you agree it ever justified agree with? is it ever justified to ban a protest carrying on x says to protest is the says the right to protest is the
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cornerstone of our democracy . cornerstone of our democracy. take that away. and what do we have, corinne? what i will agree with is what i put to with you. there is what i put to nigel is that is nigel is that there is a slippery slope potentially at play slippery slope potentially at play ban something you play here. you ban something you disagree with and you find vehemently disgusting, but then all what happens all of a sudden, what happens when out and when you want to go out and protest something you care protest about something you care about? yes. if about? chris on x says yes. if they a threat to our they are a threat to our national security and our way of life. and he says, unless the protesters are violent or protesters are being violent or calling violence, then no. calling for violence, then no. so of you think it is so 75% of you think that it is justifiable ban a protest. justifiable to ban a protest. 25% you say it is not coming 25% of you say it is not coming up news exclusive of we up in a gb news exclusive of we expose best efforts expose britain's best efforts cheats. but next is keir starmer finally ditch his £28 finally about to ditch his £28 billion green pledge ? and which billion green pledge? and which international celeb has slammed the woke ideology of the left? find out. as the one and only lee anderson joins me live in this studio. that's next on patrick christys tonight and we are only
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isabel monday to thursdays from . isabel monday to thursdays from. six till 930. >> it's patrick christys tonight we're on gb news and i will bnng we're on gb news and i will bring you an exclusive expose on disability fraud from the dwp very soon. department for work and pensions. but first, it's time for former tory deputy chair lee anderson , and keir chair lee anderson, and keir starmer continues to flounder over his landmark net zero plan. so labour are now reportedly scaling back rather than scrapping entirely their muddled manifesto pledge to borrow £28 billion to boost green investment .
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investment. >> and we're going to need investment . that's where the 28 investment. that's where the 28 billion comes in, that investment that's desperately needed that mission of clean power by 2030 hasn't moved that date back . at all. it's very and date back. at all. it's very and i'm very clear we need investment to do that. we need to borrow to invest, to do that. that's a principle i believe in, and i'm absolutely happy to go out and defend well. >> hang on. i think the u—turns in, i think the u—turns in, because breaking because supposedly breaking tonight, scrapping it, tonight, he's now scrapping it, is think scrapping is he? i think he's scrapping it, scaling it back. goodness knows that's going be knows what that's going to be announced senior announced tomorrow. senior labour saying labour sources are saying that starmer the decision starmer will pin the decision on economic by economic uncertainty caused by the yeah, look, this the tories. yeah, look, this changes literally every day. what are they going to do with this £28 billion and where are they going to get that money from. meanwhile at pop con yesterday, very only yesterday, our very only anderson a different anderson offered a different vision for britain. anderson offered a different visi the or britain. anderson offered a different visi the bigritain. anderson offered a different visi the big problems is this net >> the big problems is this net zero. now i've been knocking on doors like many colleagues in here for donkey's years, talking
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to people on the doorstep. and it never up. once on the it never comes up. once on the doorstep , you might the odd doorstep, you might get the odd weirdo the corner with the weirdo in the corner with the green candidate who's got about 20 votes. he might just start banging on about it. we should have an opt in opt out on our fuel bills. if you want to pay the levy, you tick that box. if you don't want to it. now, you don't want to pay it. now, i'm pretty sure that coal 100 million years ago was trees and plants. is that right, jacob? it was i would argue that that's was so i would argue that that's sustainable . sustainable. >> there we go. right, lee. first things first. it's hard to keep up, but we think that labour are now going to scale back or scrap this £28 billion green investment pledge that they were definitely in favour of just a couple of days ago. but weren't a couple of days before that. but i think were again a couple of days. well, what's going on? well what a slippery, sneaky is. slippery, snivelling, sneaky is. >> keir there >> patrick. um, sir keir there is again . he's is backtracking again. he's looking bandwagon to looking for another bandwagon to jump looking for another bandwagon to jump on. they've not got one clear policy on net zero. there
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is a populist leader. is sir keir . um, you is a populist leader. is sir keir. um, you know, i spoke yesterday at the popcorn conference on on net zero. i've got my doubts about this journey. we're going on like anybody else. i think we need to leave this planet in a better condition than when we arrived. we are guardians of this planet. but the net zero journey. um, i think, you know, it's costing far too much. we don't know the total cost. and the constituents that i deal with in ashfield, they're they're very upset about they're they're very upset about the amount of money it's costing them in their bills. 5 or £600 a yeah them in their bills. 5 or £600 a year. it's costing them. and like i said on that clip, when i knock on doors in ashfield and they never bring this up, they never mention it at all. what they're interested patrick, they're interested in, patrick, is their fuel bills, is the cost of their fuel bills, not this race to net zero. not this. this race to net zero. >> look, i do want to at some point try and offer some balance when it comes to keir starmer. no doubt will say he's been very clear about his billion clear about his £28 billion pledge. he's not. but pledge. but no, he's not. but it's for me say it's difficult for me to say that because hasn't. he that because he hasn't. he really every single day really hasn't. every single day in office, when we talk
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in this office, when we talk about we're going to do about what we're going to do on this show, we're at what this show, we're looking at what he's the £28 he's saying about the £28 billion, it seem to billion, and it does seem to change. so look, keir starmer would what lee would possibly refute what lee anderson there. anderson has had to say there. but there go. can i just ask but there we go. can i just ask you you got a lot of stick for this coal used to be what was it. wood all of this stuff. it. wood and all of this stuff. now i was at that popcorn thing. no, was a joke, wasn't it? no, that was a joke, wasn't it? i a joke because i was, um, i made a joke because i was, um, talking about power station talking about drax power station in which burns. in yorkshire, which burns. >> was a coal fired power >> uh, it was a coal fired power station back in the day. patrick. now burns patrick. it's actually now burns wooden pellets. these this wooden pellets. these are. this is is, uh, it's is wood. this is, uh, it's chopped trees, basically chopped down trees, basically from america. it's shipped from north america. it's shipped over diesel over the atlantic in diesel guzzling crushed guzzling tankers, then crushed into to and into powder, set fire to and burned, you know, burned the power station to produce electricity . and the experts , electricity. and the experts, the so—called experts say this is sustainable energy because it's trees being chopped down that can grow again. well, i say, well, drax power station used to be powered by a coal mine just a few miles away. and you what coal 100 million you know what coal 100 million years was ? trees and plants.
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years ago was? trees and plants. and i was making a little bit of a joke. but the imbecile at papers like the independent and whatever was saying that was a bit thick. i was retarded and didn't know what i was talking about. i was just making a joke. >> do you think they did that because you're northern? yeah it's northern racism. >> this is what it is. they are attacking northern humour and they frankly, patrick, they quite frankly, patrick, they quite frankly, patrick, they ashamed themselves. >> right. and now we >> okay. all right. and now we also another, um , a special also had another, um, a special guest because there guest yesterday because there was glamorous australian was the glamorous australian holly valance . now she well and holly valance. now she well and truly nailed her political colours firmly to the right wing mast. here we go . mast. here we go. >> everyone starts off as a lefty and then wakes up at some point after you start either making money, working, trying to run a business, trying to buy a home, and then realise what crap ideas they all are and then you go to the right , just like to go to the right, just like to say something very quickly as well. >> apologies if anybody was offended particular word >> apologies if anybody was offerwas particular word >> apologies if anybody was offerwas said particular word >> apologies if anybody was offerwas said justticular word >> apologies if anybody was offerwas said justticfew word >> apologies if anybody was offerwas said justticfew moments that was said just a few moments ago. move on and lee, holly
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ago. we move on and lee, holly valance saying that the left is full of, um, crap ideas. >> well, i mean, holly's quite, quite she's an astute, quite clearly she's an astute, uh , actress. um, i mean, i'm uh, actress. um, i mean, i'm a big fan of holly's and it's quite clear looking at that clip. and i spoke to her yesterday at, uh, at a party after after the event . and it's after after the event. and it's quite clear to me that she, she knows the politics. she's quite switched on. and she had plenty to say to me after the event. and uh, you know what? she's a big supporter of the conservative party, concerned values, conservative values conservative values. um, and yeah, i mean, i mean, it's just a great woman. yeah. >> i mean, well, she was making the point there that when people she was putting kind of getting to the real world and start wanting to pay for things or run a business, know that she a business, etc. i know that she got a lot stick people got quite a lot of stick people said, well, you know, you've married a very wealthy man. what do so again, just do you know? so again, i just wonder offensive wonder if that's quite offensive really to holly. >> well, it is offensive. i mean, you don't i don't think you because of you marry somebody because of
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their patrick? i their wealth, do you, patrick? i don't their wealth, do you, patrick? i dont you their wealth, do you, patrick? i don't you somebody, don't know if you meet somebody, you fall in love, you meet, you know, you married that person because you've got in because you've got a lot in common you to common with them. you want to have with them and have have a family with them and have a future with them. the people who this are just jealous who say this are just jealous and normally people on and it's normally the people on the quite spiteful. the left are quite spiteful. okay, all right. >> thank you very much for >> lee, thank you very much for your time. this evening. that >> lee, thank you very much for y0|oftime. this evening. that >> lee, thank you very much for y0|of course, is evening. that >> lee, thank you very much for y0|of course, lee lening. that >> lee, thank you very much for y0|of course, lee anderson.1t >> lee, thank you very much for y0|of course, lee anderson. how is, of course, lee anderson. how come to get through? come a lot more to get through? because next monday prime because next monday the prime minister take in minister will take part in a special forum live here special people's forum live here from north east. and it's from the north east. and it's only news it's going to be only on gb news it's going to be box this over the course box office this over the course of houn he box office this over the course of hour. he will take of the hour. he will take questions directly from you. the great british public. we the great british public. we are the people's putting people's channel. we're putting on you. so look, on this event for you. so look, come get yourselves come on, get yourselves involved. right. if want involved. all right. if you want to there, head to gb news to be there, head to gb news .com forward pm. that's .com forward slash pm. that's gbnews.com forward to gbnews.com forward slash pm to register your interest today. or you qr code. it's you can scan that qr code. it's on screen right now if on your screen right now if you're watching us the telly, you're watching us on the telly, if you're listening to us the if you're listening to us on the radio, turn italy on, the radio, turn italy on, get the qr code, use it. get there now. coming up at ten with triple killer valdo calocane entitled
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to pounds in to claim thousands of pounds in state benefits whilst he is in a secure hospital. i speak to the mother of one of the nottingham victims, barnaby. mother of one of the nottingham victims, barnaby . webber. victims, barnaby. webber. >> i want valdo calocane . to be >> i want valdo calocane. to be done for murder because that's what he is. >> don't miss that tv exclusive . >> don't miss that tv exclusive. she really does not hold back and who could blame her? but next it's another gb news exclusive on a £40,000 disabled benefits will not benefits cheat and you will not believe they were caught. believe how they were caught. this
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gp news. well it's time now for another exclusive and i'm about to lay bare the brazen corruption of britain's benefits cheat, including the latest case of a fraudster who stole £44,000 worth of taxpayers money and disability payments, whilst taking part in gruelling christmas walks. dressed as an elf . kelly christmas walks. dressed as an elf. kelly simpson said that she suffered from severe mobility
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issues due to a degenerative disc disease in her back. she claimed tasks such as using the bath independently , climbing bath independently, climbing stairs and putting on socks and shoes were employed . possible, shoes were employed. possible, but the department for work and pensions investigators saw her on social media that simpson took part in two festive walks , took part in two festive walks, each more than seven miles long, dressed as a christmas pudding and santa's little helper. simpson was sentenced to 18 weeks in prison, suspended for 18 months last month. the dwp is working on recovering the money that's been stolen, but the scam bust comes as the department is spending £900 million on counter fraud operations , with spending fraud operations, with spending across three years more train specialists will be recruited to review millions of universal credit claims. the dwp said that its enhanced counter fraud programme and wider benefits checks helped to prevent losses of at least £18 billion last yeah of at least £18 billion last year. but christmas pudding kelly wasn't the first, nor will she be the last of britain's
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benefit swindlers. in 2014, janet curtis, then 64, pocketed 144 grand in disability benefits after saying she could barely walk , yet was caught out when walk, yet was caught out when fraud investigators found proof that she'd been water skiing in 2019. nasreen akhtar, aged 50, was filmed dancing at a wedding despite claiming benefits worth 260 grand by saying she was too ill to work and had poor mobility . in 2017, married belle mobility. in 2017, married belle milligan from county durham, was jailed for three years for swindling £540,000 in disability payments by saying she couldn't move a judge ordered her to repay 190 grand or face extra jail time , and she was rumbled jail time, and she was rumbled because she was caught on film dancing to michael jackson and cumbrian man neil flyer claimed almost 30 grand in benefits for life limiting medical conditions before secretly splashing out on drugs and a lavish lifestyle that included an action packed houdayin that included an action packed holiday in florida. pictures on facebook showed him on a 90 foot
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drop slide at an orlando water park. water skiing and swimming with dolphins . park. water skiing and swimming with dolphins. i'm joined now by author and broadcaster jenny barnet. jenny, thank you very, very much. we have just got so many people on the take in britain, haven't we benefit britain? jenny >> no, you're totally wrong. >> no, you're totally wrong. >> and i watched your debate with peter tatchell . i thought with peter tatchell. i thought it was very interesting because he was saying you do not ban a protest because of a handful of idiots. >> we have a population of 67.5 million and half of that 54.2. i'm reading this are on benefit kits. so we're already living in a country where the government has presided over for 14 years, and many millions of people , 36 and many millions of people, 36 millions of people are on benefits. >> jenny. >> jenny. >> no. yeah yeah, that's because jobs , the whole thing has gone jobs, the whole thing has gone to pieces, as you know. but the latest national statistic , acas
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latest national statistic, acas confirm that in the last year, fraud and error rates in 2023 fell to 3.6. and with universal credit that went down right . credit that went down right. >> honestly, are you are you telling me, jenny, seriously, that you think 54% of this country really need to be on benefits ? if yes , yeah. benefits? if yes, yeah. >> i think if they you hard to imagine when you are a young affluent man working or you're like me with a history behind me. but when we went through a difficult patch of trying to get our council tax rate reduce boost, we had a 48 page document that came in and in the end , we that came in and in the end, we threw it up in the air and said, we can't do it, because ironically, you didn't want to do a bit of work that's not know . the answer is, is that people don't go on benefits. most
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people, 54% of people don't go on benefits. if they don't have to. the handful of people like the ones you've just cited, they make it rubbish for absolutely everybody. but not everybody is a criminal and not everybody is taking benefits because they're swindling the country. >> jenny. come on, come on. it is clearly far too easy to sign on in this country and to get the old giro or whatever it is these days, get your benefits and all of that, you know, and it is removed. if 54% of people in this country are on benefits, right? what's the point? why do we get up and go to we bother to get up and go to work? are we paying our work? what are we paying our taxes highest tax taxes for now? highest tax burden since world war two. you taxes for now? highest tax burcwalk nce world war two. you taxes for now? highest tax burcwalk into norld war two. you taxes for now? highest tax burcwalk into a)rld war two. you taxes for now? highest tax burcwalk into a tesco's two. you taxes for now? highest tax burcwalk into a tesco's and. you can walk into a tesco's and steal whatever food you want. i don't why any us bother don't know why any of us bother jenny. what? >> version our country >> your version of our country comes musty eyeballs , as comes through musty eyeballs, as you have. you know, i was thinking when you phoned me up to do this, it used to be all for one and one for all. now it's all for one and one for
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one. because if you're a heroine, margaret thatcher, who described as no such, uh, they're is no such thing as society. but the trussell trust and the joseph rowntree foundation, this is important for you as a young, decent human being , a for you as a young, decent human being, a single person needs £120 a week to afford the essential things. okay, a couple needs £200 a week. universal credit claimants will be at least £140 short. and you heard the news today about pensioners. you've got to have £59,000. jenny, we've got it. >> we've got to go. i get i'm sorry, we're bang out of time but thank you. good points made at the end. all right jenny barnett that look coming up coming up, coming up i have got an interview a tv exclusive with the mother of the victims the mother of one of the victims of killer. she of that nottingham killer. she does not hold back. find out how much you could be paying him whilst hospital . whilst he's in hospital. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers sponsors of weather
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on gb news . on gb news. >> hello again and welcome to the latest forecast from the met office. i'm aidan mcgivern cold in the north for the next 24 hours, mild and wet in the south in between. the risk of disruptive snow in places . disruptive snow in places. here's the setup as we end the day, we've got clear spells across northern parts of the uk. further snow showers into the north of scotland , a widespread north of scotland, a widespread frost across many parts of northern england, scotland and northern ireland, but further south, rain, wind and milder air arrives into parts of south wales , southern england. some wales, southern england. some heavy and persistent rain . first heavy and persistent rain. first thing mild air in the south clashes with cold air further north. the band of rain in between turns increasingly wintry as we go through thursday morning. so across mid and north wales, parts of north midlands into northern england and then northern ireland, we're going to see rain at lower levels, perhaps some sleet in some parts
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at lower levels, but certainly some disruptive snow over any hills above 100 200m. and for parts of north wales, the peak district, into the south pennines, the risk of very disruptive snow , 25cm and some disruptive snow, 25cm and some freezing rain in places as well. all of this pushes north. we've got much milder but wetter weather into the south for friday and the rain and hill snow moves through northern england and into southern and central scotland by this stage. further wintry showers for the far north scotland, but far north of scotland, but bright between. bright weather in between. milder air for most of us this weekend , but with further rain weekend, but with further rain and showers at times. >> looks like things are heating up . boxt boilers spot hours of up. boxt boilers spot hours of weather on gb news as
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i >> -- >> well . >> well. >> well. >> it's 10 pm. i'm patrick christys tonight . christys tonight. >> i want valdo calocane rain to
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be done for murder because that's what he is a tv exclusive with the mother of one of the nottingham psycho killers victims. >> what she says will make your blood boil. also >> so all the weeks to say that when brianna's mother is in this chamber, she shame, shame , full sunak. >> or was that shameless virtue signalling from sir keir starmer? plus we really appreciate everyone's kind messages. >> thank you . >> thank you. >> thank you. >> did prince william and the king actually snub prince harry and nurse nurse, there's some movement and i don't want to. >> i don't want to maybe choose my words . my words. >> there is more of that astonishing clip. and i've got all of tomorrow's newspaper front pages for you tonight with express political scoop machine, christian corgi , man of the christian corgi, man of the people, adam brooks and author
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rebecca reid . oh, and what is rebecca reid. oh, and what is wrong with this work of art? any guesses ? okay, get ready britain guesses? okay, get ready britain here we go. the mother of one of the victims of nottingham killer valdo calocane, speaks in a tv exclusive. and that's . next on exclusive. and that's. next on the top story from the gb newsroom tonight. >> police hunting a suspected chemical attacker say he was in a relationship with his victim. new video has been released of afghan asylum seeker abdul ezedi . nearly a week after a corrosive liquid was thrown at the woman in south london. police say she'd agreed to meet him on the day of the attack, and they believe a breakdown in their relationship may have been a motive . the 31 year old
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a motive. the 31 year old mother, who may lose the sight of one eye, remains under sedation in hospital . darius sedation in hospital. darius nasimi, of the afghan and central asian association, says fellow afghans should not be helping azadi. >> someone like him should not be harboured . he himself needs be harboured. he himself needs help as well. i don't know if he has any mental health problems orissues has any mental health problems or issues for the afghan community. the message is um, please stop harbouring him. if anyone is and please stop helping him if they are tonight in the united states, the secretary of state, antony blinken , said that hamas's blinken, said that hamas's proposal for a ceasefire in gaza has clear no non—starters. >> but he said there is space for an agreement. >> but he said there is space for an agreement . antony blinken for an agreement. antony blinken earlier said that more aid was also needed in gaza and the palestinian authority needed renewal . he palestinian authority needed renewal. he said palestinian authority needed renewal . he said the focus renewal. he said the focus remains on bringing the israeli hostages back . israel's prime hostages back. israel's prime minister, benjamin netanyahu, has rejected hamas's proposed ceasefire , saying total victory
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ceasefire, saying total victory in gaza is possible within months. here the prime minister's been accused of letting parts of the country go without basic dental care. sir keir starmer claims the nhs has been neglected by the conservatives while they've been in power . and conservatives while they've been in power. and that's after conservatives while they've been in power . and that's after the in power. and that's after the government announced new plans to boost the number of appointments across england by offering to pay dentists for every new nhs patient . the every new nhs patient. the former pop star and paedophile gary glitter has been denied parole , with his victim's lawyer parole, with his victim's lawyer saying they're glad the parole board has done the right thing. glitter, whose real name is paul gadd, was jailed for 16 years in 2015 for sexually abusing three girls between 1975 and 1980. he was automatically released last year after serving half of his sentence , but put back behind sentence, but put back behind bars less than six weeks later after he breached his licence. one victim's lawyer said they hoped glitter would now serve his full sentence , adding it was
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his full sentence, adding it was completely unfair care that our client had to endure this glitter parole circus over and over again . now snow is on its over again. now snow is on its way and heavier snowfall could cause disruption later this week, with as much as 20cm possibly moving in to more elevated areas of britain. the met office has now expanded its yellow weather warning, with temperatures set to drop across northern ireland, northern wales and northern england later on this week. the met office saying motorists should check air pressure in tyres, oil and screenwash levels and allow longer for journey times. meteorologists are saying the cold spell could linger into late february as well, and tonight the prince of wales has spoken about his father's cancer diagnosis for the first time and thanked the public for their kind messages of support. prince william was at an event raising funds for london's air ambulance charity. hollywood star tom cruise was there , as well as
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cruise was there, as well as arsenal manager mikel arteta. the prince also thanked those wishing his wife a speedy recovery after her abdominal surgery . meanwhile, king charles surgery. meanwhile, king charles has postponed all his public facing duties on the advice of his doctors and it's understood weekly audiences with the prime minister will resume in two weeks for the very latest stories, do sign up for gb news alerts by scanning the qr code on your screen, or go to gb news. com slash alerts . papa for news. com slash alerts. papa for yourselves for a case that shames the british justice system and all common decency, it brings me no joy to present to you the most egregious example of soft touch justice and how victims are treated. >> worse than deranged criminals . a dangerous, paranoid schizo with a history of violence free to prowl the streets despite a warrant for his arrest, who slaughtered three innocent people and tried to kill three more calocane , he was
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more valdo calocane, he was allowed plead manslaughter , allowed to plead manslaughter, for allowed to serve his for he is allowed to serve his time , possibly few years time, possibly just a few years in a secure hospital, and now it has emerged that you could still be paying his benefits. in fact , be paying his benefits. in fact, he could come out of that secure hospital clutching a note from a doctor who says that he's fine now with up to £150,000 worth of benefits in his bank account, calocane went on the rampage in nottingham and among his victims was student barnaby webber . nottingham and among his victims was student barnaby webber. i have a television exclusive now with emma webber, barnaby's mother . the details that she mother. the details that she reveals right now are absolutely shocking. the news today is that valdo calocane could be claiming hundreds of pounds of benefits for him to spend on nice clothes , electronics, anything he likes really , whilst he's in a secure really, whilst he's in a secure mental hospital. how has that made you feel ? made you feel? >> it'sjust made you feel? >> it's just added insult to injury .
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injury. >> uh, on top of everything else to, you know, with the best will in the world, if this monster as we refer to him, stays in for as as long as we hope. i mean, we'd like it for the rest of his life, but i'm very fearful about hospital orders. having read everything in the past couple of weeks. but if he's in there for 30 years, say he'll only be in his early 50s. no yeah, he'll only be in his early 60s when he comes out. and he would have amassed, you know, because benefits will rise. but worked benefits will rise. but i worked out anything out earlier it could be anything up £150,000. and on top of up to £150,000. and on top of his, his , you know, his all his, his, you know, his all inclusive package that he's on, um, which also includes, um, you know, lots of activities, lots of treatment, lots of therapy andifs of treatment, lots of therapy and it's very, very patient, patient, patient. but where's the where's the penal element of this? we don't agree. it's manslaughter. so like i say, it just adds insult to everything else that we've been saying. really >> is there a sense that this monster has been sent to some kind of glorified holiday camp in a way ?
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in a way? >> yeah. i don't want to be like an armchair expert on on psychiatric hospitals or the law , but i, you know, our families and i say that on behalf of the three families of deceased people in nottingham. um, you know, we feel like we've had to come in and we've had to look into things because we just don't system. and don't trust in the system. and i have the things in the have seen the things in the newspaper and the links online of the facilities there, and you know, it's, um , yeah, it's, it's know, it's, um, yeah, it's, it's a well—supported facility, isn't it ? with everything that's on it? with everything that's on offer . offer. >> yeah. and you mentioned there about being quite sceptical about being quite sceptical about these hospital orders, and you said that you've looked into them quite a bit. yeah. what are you fearful of then, what do you think could happen? i mean, we did have a case a couple of weeks ago of some bloke who was also a killer, who was out after just a couple of years. that just a couple of years. is that the fear really ? the fear really? >> yes. spot on. that's exactly what and that's exactly what it is. and that's exactly what it is. and that's exactly what we're terrified of. that
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this this , this monster, this this this, this monster, this individual could be out in society and i think fearful for the public, but also that where's the sense of justice? um, he's a malicious , um, he's a malicious, predetermined murderer . yeah. predetermined murderer. yeah. and he could be out in a number of years. i think we're being supported by a great organisation called 100 families. and the chap that runs thatis families. and the chap that runs that is called julian hendy, whose dad was also murdered by knife crime a paranoid knife crime from a paranoid schizophrenic. this person schizophrenic. but this person got and got a murder got murder and got a murder charge. but julian and i have been talking and looking at figures over the past couple of weeks, and he's more informed than me, but i believe the average time that served for these indefinite orders is between 5 and 10 years. and that's terrifying, right? when you the brutality and you consider the brutality and the impact of what happened in nottingham , not just on the nottingham, not just on the three families who who lost members, but also in those three other victims, who've you know, got life changing injuries and long terme trauma . it's just not long terme trauma. it's just not fair . quite frankly , it's
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fair. quite frankly, it's absolutely not fair. >> it's absolutely not justice at all. but it doesn't really appear to me that there's been much justice from start to finish on this. i mean, there's question marks as to whether or not this guy should have even been the streets. and not this guy should have even bee pretty the streets. and not this guy should have even bee pretty sure he streets. and not this guy should have even bee pretty sure i'mtreets. and not this guy should have even bee pretty sure i'm right. and not this guy should have even bee pretty sure i'm right inrnd i'm pretty sure i'm right in saying he was wanted anyway. and then he's been able to, take saying he was wanted anyway. and the|manslaughterle to, take saying he was wanted anyway. and the|manslaughter charge take saying he was wanted anyway. and the|manslaughter charge and ke saying he was wanted anyway. and the|manslaughter charge and then the manslaughter charge and then into order. look, into a hospital order. look, obviously incredibly difficult time you, but how does it time for you, but how does it feel for you with with that burning sense of injustice there as well? yeah >> yeah. it's it's devastating on top of on top of tragedy. there's layers and layers and layers of trauma. and this final bit, um, and as odd as this sounds, but when we were sat in downing street last monday day in front of the prime minister and, and, you know, the sort of top end of government ministers. and the first thing that we said was , uh, we don't want to be
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was, uh, we don't want to be here. we're actually really angry that we're here. um, i would like to have been invited to downing street, maybe sometime in the future for a positive thing, not to talk about how devastated we are about how devastated we are about how devastated we are about how badly we've been treated. i also think the fact about how badly we've been treatwe i also think the fact about how badly we've been treatwe had;o think the fact about how badly we've been treatwe had an hink the fact about how badly we've been treatwe had an audiencefact about how badly we've been treatwe had an audience with that we had an audience with with keir starmer, the leader of the opposition, varne, followed very shortly by downing street, that around very, that was turned around very, very does give us very quickly, does give us resolve that, you know, there is something really wrong and something really wrong here and it's been wrong for very, very long time with this individual. it's multi—agency failings, but we are not going to become experts. we have to now now work with people that we do trust. um, and, and thankfully we trust the o'malley, kumars and the coates family , and we can work coates family, and we can work together. and i think we're strong because of that. but it does break my heart that we even have to do because we can't have to do this because we can't begin grieve the loss of our begin to grieve the loss of our precious son, um, because we we're having to we're having to fight and garner what strength we've got left to make sure that we've got left to make sure that
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we get listened to . so we get listened to. so >> so what changes do you want to happen so that you feel as though you then can start to grieve ? grieve? >> well, we feel like vindicated . oh gosh. where to start ? . oh gosh. where to start? because i think if you look at it from a wider perspective, um , it from a wider perspective, um, just looking at the failings in the, uh, health system, in mental health, particularly leading up to this event, um , leading up to this event, um, the lack of communication between hospital trusts and police forces, you know, the myth that that that leicestershire had the month before he committed these murders, they didn't bother checking him on the computer properly. if they had, they would have seen the outstanding warrant. and to see how serious it was and i just think that all of it, it it's difficult with this country because we're calling it for it in so many different ways, aren't but different ways, aren't we? but it has to for the of the it has to for the sake of the nafion it has to for the sake of the nation and the safety of the public, everything has to properly be looked at. um, from
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a personal family perspective, i can't have a time machine. so i want valdo calocane to be done for murder because that's what he is . and if our legal system he is. and if our legal system and clever barristers and defence teams , um, and defence teams, um, and ineffective psychiatrists can make it work and make the legal system work as it has for us, then i would suggest the law is wrong and the law needs changing . um, and somebody very high up in the government said to us, just because it's law, emma, it doesn't mean it's right. and just because it's the law, it doesn't mean that they always get it right. and i stand by that. get it right. and i stand by that . and it gives me heart that that. and it gives me heart that we have so much momentum and so much movement. um and that all three families are dedicated towards, you know, what we're asking for, but, you know, don't don't never fear that it's exhausting. and it's taking its toll. but fight we will fight
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you will. >> and so much support. just one last one with you, emma, if that's okay. because as it currently stands, then the system, um, it would seem to me is geared towards more towards maybe , maybe protecting the maybe, maybe protecting the criminal than helping the families. and also until you get the kind of changes that you want, this could happen again, right ? right? >> i think this will happen again . and i would say from that again. and i would say from that perspective , it's a really valid perspective, it's a really valid point. patrick i'm glad you asked me because victim support in this country, whilst there is some it's wholly inadequate and it's very, very much geared towards , um, the defendant or towards, um, the defendant or perpetrator . uh, towards, um, the defendant or perpetrator. uh, how towards, um, the defendant or perpetrator . uh, how as an perpetrator. uh, how as an example , in our family, there's , example, in our family, there's, um, barney's younger brother charlie , there's david, my charlie, there's david, my husband and myself, and we've been given a victim support caseworker , a wonderful woman caseworker, a wonderful woman who's been with us since the outset. well about a week after, it's a bit late in coming. she's
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got 55 other families. she has to look after. so we don't have non—stop contact. it's only monday to friday, nine till five. on top of that, the therapy that we are offered, we're allowed to have 12 paid for sessions each. and then after that you're on your own. so calocane can can sit and be rewarded potentially with £3,400 a month. um, on top of everything else that it's cost , everything else that it's cost, um, to keep him alive after his, after his murder of my son. but we could be faced with if we want to try and survive this through no fault of our own putting ourselves through therapy. i know 50, £80 a session, whatever it is. um, but, you know , times that by but, you know, times that by three times that by. however long it's going to take, you can do the maths. it's i can see why victims and victims families lose . as i said in a quote this lose. as i said in a quote this week , i think i can see why week, i think i can see why relationship apps fail, why businesses fail, and why sometimes people themselves lose themselves or even their lives because it's that bad . and
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because it's that bad. and really, we need to be fully supported . so i do call for supported. so i do call for a complete overhaul of that to. but it just feels like we've got so much to say. um, we've got to deal with it bit by bit at the moment . moment. >> um, well, can i just say thank you very, very much for coming on the show and for articulating that so well and for being look so strong and brave about it all. i really hope that we can talk again, and i really hope that you can get the change that you want. and if there's any way whatsoever that we with anything in we can help with anything in that regard, then then really we would love to be a part of that with you. so thank you very, very much, emma, and love to you and as well. so and all the family as well. so take care. >> thank you. and to you. thanks, patrick. >> incredible lady, eh? >> what an incredible lady, eh? what absolutely remarkable what an absolutely remarkable lady. huge amount of that lady. but a huge amount of that made me incredibly angry and i dare say it did to you as well. i'm joined again by my panel. now we've got christine, adam brooks and rebecca reid. adam, i'll start with you on this. this guy should never have been
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allowed out on the streets. essentially, he was wanted. he's then been able to plead manslaughter. he's then gone to quite a cushy mental facility . quite a cushy mental facility. he could end up with 150 grand of taxpayers cash in his back pocket, and maybe even be out in a few years. >> look, i'm not sure if the viewers know, but he was detained four previously detained four times previously in hospitals , and he was in mental hospitals, and he was it was concluded that he was a low risk to people. now, how wrong can the authorities be with that ? this is cost, lives . with that? this is cost, lives. you know, this man is evil personified. now the fact that he's he's getting benefits because he's in a hospital and not a prison , you know, it's not a prison, you know, it's terrible what's happening to these victims families , these victims families, essentially, indirectly, they are contributing money to this man via their taxes. >> well, they could be. we should we should just be clear here. we don't know whether or not he is claiming benefits. and we don't know how much they make the point. >> make the point, rebecca,
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>> they make the point, rebecca, that are they get something that they are they get something like 12 worth of therapy like 12 hours worth of therapy sessions guy gets. that's sessions this guy gets. that's medicaid uh, three therapy medicaid open. uh, three therapy sessions a or whatever. she sessions a day or whatever. she said it was that she'd looked into. know, it's just they into. you know, it's just they are treating the criminal better than victim . than the victim. >> arguing that the >> nobody is arguing that the victim support in this country is appropriate. is robust or appropriate. i wouldn't second. issue wouldn't for a second. my issue here if you are detained here is that if you are detained under a mental health act and therefore you are sectioned, you cannot have a process where you immediately people's immediately stop people's benefits when they're sectioned, because result in because that will result in people are mentally who people who are mentally ill, who are coming out and are sectioned, coming out and being immediately, being impoverished immediately, which cycle. he which creates a worse cycle. he should sectioned under should be sectioned under a different mental health act, which claim which means he cannot claim benefits . that a very easy benefits. that is a very easy thing change. that could be thing to change. that could be changed all right. changed like that. all right. >> i'll find it remarkable >> um, i'll find it remarkable that wasn't done for murder. that he wasn't done for murder. >> this discussion >> i find this discussion remarkably similar to we remarkably similar to the one we had previous hour about had in the previous hour about the spy, as the as the the russian spy, as the as the mother of barnaby said her words multi—institutional failure, which is exactly what's happened.a which is exactly what's happened. a failure with the police. a failure with the
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justice system, failure with the health service. and you know, similar to similar to that spy story earlier and really, the thing that is the most frustrating is that it's the worst of all worlds, right? it was both incompetence and it was a malign sort of values and morals that these institutions have, which as you say, places the rights and freedoms of the perpetrator of crime above those of the victims. and i think it makes people incredibly angry. and, you know , once again, it's and, you know, once again, it's a damning reflection on where the country is, i think. >> all right. >> all right. >> well, well, sorry. look, we are we are out of time and i've just got to i've just got to read this. but, look, we will have time to come back to it a little bit later on the show, but, janine mckinney from but, uh, janine mckinney from the prosecution service the crown prosecution service said calocane pleads to said valdo calocane pleads to manslaughter were accepted manslaughter were only accepted after analysis of manslaughter were only accepted afteevidence. analysis of manslaughter were only accepted afteevidence. we analysis of manslaughter were only accepted afteevidence. we reached of manslaughter were only accepted afteevidence. we reached this the evidence. we reached this conclusion expert conclusion because the expert medical evidence was overwhelming. they said, namely medical evidence was overcalocane. they said, namely medical evidence was overcalocane. theacting namely medical evidence was overcalocane. theacting underly that calocane was acting under the serious the influence of a serious
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mental condition and mental health condition and responding to criticisms that his force have his police force should have done arrest calocane on done more to arrest calocane on an warrant. an outstanding warrant. assistant chief constable rob griffin said i've personally interviewed or reviewed, i should say this matter , and we should say this matter, and we should say this matter, and we should have done more to arrest him. in my opinion, it is highly unlikely would have unlikely that he would have received custodial sentence received a custodial sentence for initial assault . for the alleged initial assault. of course, an arrest may have triggered a route back into mental health services, but as we from his previous we have seen from his previous encounters those services, encounters with those services, it seems unlikely that it would have this process. have engaged with this process. well, sorry . well, so you well, i'm sorry. well, so you just it wouldn't have just watch it wouldn't have wouldn't custodial wouldn't have had a custodial sentence, have engaged. wouldn't have had a custodial senteijust have engaged. wouldn't have had a custodial senteijust wash have engaged. wouldn't have had a custodial senteijust wash ourhave engaged. wouldn't have had a custodial senteijust wash our handsngaged. wouldn't have had a custodial senteijust wash our hands with ad. we'll just wash our hands with it and, know, we are it then. and, you know, we are where we are and three where we are now. and three people so coming up, people are dead. so coming up, shifting tone, but biden's shifting tone, but joe biden's at there's some movement and >> there's some movement and i don't want to i don't want to. probably choose my words . okay probably choose my words. okay >> all i'm more in the very first half of my press pack shortly. but first, should prince william put the past
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behind him now and finally make up with harry because the prince of wales actually spoken out of wales has actually spoken out tonight and can hear what he tonight and you can hear what he had in royal dispatch had to say in the royal dispatch with lady colin campbell and phil yes, we will be phil dampier. yes, we will be heanng phil dampier. yes, we will be hearing from prince william in just a second. patrick christys tonight. we're only on
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sunday mornings from 930 on gb news news . news news. >> patrick christys tonight and
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it's >> patrick christys tonight and wsfime >> patrick christys tonight and it's time for the royal dispatch . prince william has spoken publicly for the first time since his father, king charles's shock cancer diagnosis and his wife's abdominal surgery as he resumed work this evening, attending a gala dinner. >> what we really appreciate everyone's kind messages. thank you . you. >> well, while it was back to work for wills, it was back to the us for his brother, prince harry, who travelled to california this morning after a mere 24 hours in the uk, it's emerged that harry's meeting with his father, the king reportedly lasted just 30 minutes and that he would gladly have accepted a reunion with his brother, but instead spent last night in a london hotel. brother, but instead spent last night in a london hotel . well, night in a london hotel. well, i'm joined now by my royal mastermind , this lady, colin mastermind, this lady, colin campbell and phil dampier. lady c campbell and phil dampier. lady c thank you very much. do you think wills and charles actually snubbed harry a bit here or. well, i'll fit you in for 30
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minutes. and then william's saying, no, i'm not seeing you at all. >> well, my understanding is that actually the meeting lasted for exactly 12 minutes, not 30 minutes or 45 minutes. >> and also that harry took it upon himself without an invitation to get on a plane, fly over and inform the king's office that he was arriving. so no one could actually almost wonder who was the visit for? was it for harry, or was it for the king, or was it for netflix or was it a combination of all three? i don't think anyone is particularly convinced that harry has done this for any other reason but to work himself into the narrative and keep himself at the forefront of the public's attention. look just before i go to phil, i've got to ask lady c because you seem to know in your views that this meeting lasted for 12 minutes. >> do you have any idea what was
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discussed ? discussed? >> no , sorry . >> no, sorry. >> no, sorry. >> well worth an ask. phil look, i'll go to you on that one. so 12 minutes. apparently, this meeting, i mean, goodness me, is it time for them to make up a bit? or should they have spent longer with harry, do you think, or agree with lady celia? yeah >> good evening. patrick. >> good evening. patrick. >> well, as if he hasn't got enough prince enough problems. prince william's villa william's team aston villa have crashed of the fa cup crashed out of the fa cup tonight to chelsea, so i'm happy. he won't be happy happy. but he won't be happy with he's been with that. but he's been hobnobbing cruise hobnobbing with tom cruise tonight. meeting tonight. but as for meeting up with think was with harry, i think that was going to be mission impossible, wasn't it? i mean, his priority at to look after at the moment is to look after kate, after the children. kate, look after the children. he's the mood. he's not he's not in the mood. he's not in a forgiving mood for harry at the moment. and i don't think anyone blames him, be honest. anyone blames him, to be honest. and king saw him. and yes, the king saw saw him. um down from 45 to 30 to um gone down from 45 to 30 to 12 minutes. it? mean, minutes. hasn't it? i mean, probably it was probably here it was five minutes. so. and i don't know. but i do find that extra ordinary such ordinary that it was such a short i mean, coming short meeting. i mean, coming 5000 miles and then knowing that short to most short meeting, i mean, to most
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of it just incredible. of us, it just seems incredible. but obviously a first step. but obviously it's a first step. the king has left the door open, so can't really complain so we can't really complain if harry tries step through it, harry tries to step through it, i so it's a first tiny i suppose. so it's a first tiny step. for william, i step. but as for william, i can't see it. >> he spent the night lady >> and he spent the night lady c, in a london hotel, c, supposedly in a london hotel, could they not have found him a room somewhere ? room somewhere? >> of course they could have found him a room somewhere . so found him a room somewhere. so could his friends have put him up. but the fact is , nobody up. but the fact is, nobody wants to put him up . up. but the fact is, nobody wants to put him up. i up. but the fact is, nobody wants to put him up . i mean, the wants to put him up. i mean, the message is loud and clear. he is a pariah. he's a pariah because of his conduct and because of his wife's conduct . you know, his wife's conduct. you know, the press can go on and on. all they want about reconciliation and all of that rubbish. the fact of the matter is that as far as most people are concerned, harry's a treacherous little sod. and that and he's getting his justice. arts and anything else is nonsense . it's okay.
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>> and, um, phil, do you think that when it comes to harry trying to nudge his way back in, lady c made the point that she wonders whether or not this is actually more for harry than it was really for the king. do you agree with that ? agree with that? >> lady is not holding back >> lady c is not holding back tonight, i think i think tonight, is she? i think i think the proof of the pudding is going to be in the next few weeks. actually, he goes back weeks. actually, if he goes back and starts some of and he starts leaking some of the details, absolutely the details, he's absolutely finished. genuinely finished. if he's genuinely trying make it up with the trying to make it up with the king, then he'll be a king, then i think he'll be a penod king, then i think he'll be a period will will period of silence. will will suffice, later in the suffice, and maybe later in the yean suffice, and maybe later in the year, because i'm i'm year, because i'm sure, i'm sure, charles would, despite all the he would like to the problems he would like to see his grandchildren. would see his grandchildren. he would like archie and lilibet, like to see archie and lilibet, and only going to come and they're only going to come over come over with over if they come over with meghan well. so let's hope meghan as well. so let's hope that once, give that just for once, let's give him benefit of the doubt and him the benefit of the doubt and hope genuine. but if he hope he's genuine. but if he starts that's the starts leaking stuff, that's the end i'm afraid it's never end of it. i'm afraid it's never going yeah, okay. going to recover. yeah, okay. >> on, lady c. go on. >> yeah. go on, lady c. go on. >> the proof of the pudding is in the eating. i love phil, but i'm not going to agree with him.
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the fact of the matter is, harry is the one who took it upon himself. come uninvited. he leaked that he was leaked the fact that he was coming. therefore for presenting the palace with no option but to receive him. what you know and i agree, it's the king as all parents will want to have a rapprochement eventually with their children . if there there's their children. if there there's a problem . and i think good luck a problem. and i think good luck to the king in that regard. but the fact of the matter is that harry is playing the system game. he and meghan are operators and they are playing the system. and i'm afraid having had a mother like meghan , having had a mother like meghan, i know the games and i have to tell you, the harry and meghan's behaviour is so transparent . behaviour is so transparent. they are they. it's clearer than freshly cleaned glass . freshly cleaned glass. >> it's okay. well look both of you, thank you very much. i mean, phil, do you want to refute any of that or are you
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are you on board with lady c? what do you think is the argument? might be the argument might be filled, but you know, look, you finds out his look, you just finds out his dad's got cancer. you know, you'd wouldn't you'd hop on a plane, wouldn't you? >> yeah. you know this lady c might well be proved to be right, i think just for right, but i think just for once, got to give him once, we've got to give him a chance. you know, the end of chance. you know, at the end of the day, charles has never hit back. reason he hasn't back. and the reason he hasn't hit because wanted hit back is because he's wanted to door open to him. to leave the door open to him. so if harry actually takes, takes that up and tries to have some sort meeting with him, i some sort of meeting with him, i don't we can criticise don't think we can criticise him for i am surprised for it. what i am surprised about having done that. about is having done that. charles him for charles didn't see him for longer. could have invited charles didn't see him for longer. to could have invited charles didn't see him for longer. to sandringham|vited charles didn't see him for longer. to sandringham forzd him up to sandringham for a couple of days. they could have had a proper sit down discussion, but the fact that they show they didn't does go to show there's a lack of trust there's still a lack of trust there. >> absolutely, absolutely. 100, both you very both of you. thank you very much. you, much. thank you, thank you, thank the king is thank you. now the king is continuing recuperate at continuing to recuperate at sandringham his sandringham today, holding his weekly prime weekly audience with the prime minister well. so it looks as minister as well. so it looks as though it looks as though he's keeping normality. keeping an element of normality. so lady colin campbell
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so that was lady colin campbell and now pm is and phil dampier. now the pm is under after making a, well, under fire after making a, well, a a jibe whilst, um, a bit of a jibe whilst, um, murdered trans teenager brianna ghey, his mother was alleged idly watching at prime minister's from the minister's questions from the gallery. apologise ? or gallery. should he apologise? or is actually keir starmer? who is it actually keir starmer? who should there is should apologise? and there is the liveliest newspaper of you. you will find anywhere on the telly. that's all coming your way. reveal tomorrow's way. when i reveal tomorrow's front pages. so stay for front pages. so stay tuned for that christys tonight
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>> you're listening to gb news radio . tomorrow's newspaper radio. tomorrow's newspaper front pages for you right now. >> let's do it. so the daily telegraph migration won't save uk from debt crisis. the obr executive says that the for bill benefits must be cut and claimants brought back into work. the picture story there is of prince william and tom cruise a bit on starmer abandoning the green pledge. just go to the metro . king's cancer divides metro. king's cancer divides brothers duty calls harry jets
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home to family in la after a 24 hour trip. the scoop, if indeed it is true from lady c that you just heard here on gb news, is that apparently the meeting lasted 12 minutes. let's go to the sun now . prince back to work the sun now. prince back to work as harry jets off top. sun. they've gone for with that picture of prince william and tom cruise, both wearing lovely tuxedos . i tell you what, tuxedos. i tell you what, william does look great in a tux, doesn't he? uh, let's go to the guardian. uh, reveal eamonn told government she wouldn't benefit from ppe. deal. so this is a leaked document which allegedly shows that the tory peer denied a conflict of interest ahead of that £203 million contract. um, and there is a story on the front there which is also on the front of the mirror, which we'll go to now. shame on you two tone deaf tories. this is what the mirror says. pm's trans jibe as murdered brianna's mum visit s the commons. okay, so that does lead us on to the story that i'm going to be talking about with my press pack. now. we do, of
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course, have the wonderful christine cowie, senior political correspondent at the daily businessman daily express, businessman and activist brooks, and author activist adam brooks, and author and journalist rebecca reid. now rishi accused of being rishi sunak was accused of being insensitive at prime minister's questions when he mocked starmer's defining starmer's stance on defining what woman whilst the what a woman is whilst the mother of a murdered trans teenager, brianna ghey, was listening the commons it listening in the commons here it is a bit rich. >> mr speaker, to hear about promises from someone who has broken every single promise. he was elected on. i mean, i think i counted almost 30 in the last yeah i counted almost 30 in the last year. pensions planning, peerages, public sector pay, tuition fees, childcare, second referendums to fining a woman. although although in fairness, that was only 99% of a u—turn on. >> on. >> of all of all the work of all the weeks to say that when brianna's mother is in this chamber for shame .
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chamber for shame. >> okay, well, sunak later praised esther, brianna's mother , but did not apologise for his comments. however peter spooner, brianna's father, has demanded an apology from sunak adam should rishi apologise? >> no, i personally don't think he should. it wasn't a trans jibe at the end of the day, there are many, many thousands if not millions of women out there that are annoyed that keir starmer couldn't define what a woman was or is, and that's very important. and that could put off a lot of voters. now we're in a parliament chamber where we talk about policies and we talk about politics. i'm sorry, but we have to put facts sometimes over feelings . and i do not over feelings. and i do not believe it was a jibe at the trans community. okay. um, and i think the hysteria is being weaponised. i mean, i'm even i'm shocked that starmer didn't get on his knee and start you know, when he started his virtue signalling, um, he played it. starmer he's playing this and
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doing it very well. >> starmer is pearl clutching his virtue, signalling he's playing it. >> i don't i think that was genuine. i really do think it was genuine from him. i sort of agree in the sense that you can't wrap debates around is can't wrap debates around who is in gallery, so you don't in the gallery, so you don't hurt feelings. however, this was not have a debate not a space to have a debate about trans issue. this an about trans issue. this was an unnecessary that didn't unnecessary jibe that didn't need there. he had made need to go there. he had made his point. he didn't have say need to go there. he had made hi andint. he didn't have say need to go there. he had made hi and it. he didn't have say need to go there. he had made hi and i don't didn't have say need to go there. he had made hi and i don't think have say need to go there. he had made hi and i don't think itave say need to go there. he had made hi and i don't think it was say it and i don't think it was malicious from sunak either. i just think it was gauche and i think it kind of shows he he consists. he shows a lack of sort of political nous and this just the other more just wasn't the other more polished wouldn't just wasn't the other more polisidone wouldn't just wasn't the other more polisidone that. wouldn't have done that. >> christine, you know >> okay, christine, do you know what agree that. what i actually agree with that. this wasn't a debate, you know, which absolutely which you're absolutely you have every have on on trans every right to have on on trans issues and women's rights that issues and women's rights that is still a debate that needs to be had in this country. but it was it was a throw away attack that actually weather, um , that actually weather, um, brianna ghey jais mother was in the chamber or not. and i know there's been some confusion about whether she was actually
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in the gallery at the time. >> well, was she i mean, do we know my understanding is that she, turned up late. she, uh, turned up late. >> too late to hear the actual comment. she was when comment. but she was there when a mp asked him, gave a labour mp then asked him, gave him opportunity to apologise him the opportunity to apologise . right. um, i wouldn't. . right. um, so i wouldn't. i honestly, i wouldn't have made it. i think, i think, i think it lacked, um, political intelligence and emotion , uh, intelligence and emotion, uh, you know, just just too soon after, after what's been quite a, you know, a lot of coverage about a major transition very quickly , adam, very quickly. quickly, adam, very quickly. >> has been >> rishi sunak has been on record women cannot record saying that women cannot have we've got have a penis yet. we've got starmer , obviously, that didn't starmer, obviously, that didn't know was . i think know what a woman was. i think it's important that we know what a pm's feelings are on a future pm's feelings are on such an important matter. >> okay, okay. all right. um, now, sleepy joe biden made it on to our screens yesterday after mistakes emmanuel macron for the dead. former french president francois mitterrand. but here he is again, struggling to string a coherent sentence together while forgetting the name of the terrorist organisation .
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terrorist organisation. >> hamas is some movement and i don't want to i don't want to maybe choose my words . there's maybe choose my words. there's some movement . there's been some movement. there's been a response from from the, uh . the response from from the, uh. the there's been a response from from the opposition foreign. but, um , yes . from the opposition foreign. but, um , yes. i'm sorry from but, um, yes. i'm sorry from hamas , but it seems to be, uh, hamas, but it seems to be, uh, a little over the top. we're not sure where it is . sure where it is. >> i mean, that guy's just gone, hasn't he? he's just gone. you know, i actually seriously think it's cruel to have this guy up there. he cannot run again , can there. he cannot run again, can he? i mean, i've heard a lot of chatter about this today. not just today. the last couple of days, especially from people on the left and the right saying that this is just that actually, this guy is just not fit anymore. what do you
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think? um, but look, we just think? um, but look, we are just going you little bit going to tell you a little bit now, you haven't heard, now, in case you haven't heard, you've been living on the moon with your fingers on your ears. uh, because have rishi uh, because we have got rishi sunak people's uh, because we have got rishi sunak for people's uh, because we have got rishi sunak for you. people's uh, because we have got rishi sunak for you. so people's uh, because we have got rishi sunak for you. so a people's uh, because we have got rishi sunak for you. so a little)le's uh, because we have got rishi sunak for you. so a little bits forum for you. so a little bit later on, i'll show you how you can get in touch and try and be on that and pose these questions for think what for you. i think that's what that qr is on your screen that qr code is on your screen now. it is if you're watching us on telly, use that qr code. get yourself but coming up yourself involved. but coming up as cuz fury among as dentist cuz spark fury among brits immigration to blame brits is immigration to blame for health care? it for squeezing health care? is it time actually front time that we now actually front up and blame immigration up to it and blame immigration for queues at dentists will for long queues at dentists will be into this after be diving into this after my break newspaper front break and more newspaper front pages including one on pages for you, including one on the which is not to be the express which is not to be missed. i'm reliably informed patrick christys
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gb news. yes, it's magic christie. tonight i've got some more from pages for you, including an absolute stonker, but we'll
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start with this one. okay, so we are going off with the eye. yes. the eye. they're saying viagra unked the eye. they're saying viagra linked to reduced risk of alzheimer's . all right. that's alzheimer's. all right. that's something isn't it. then we go to the daily mail. thank you so much for all your kindness. that is what prince william said to crowds as he attended an event this evening. and the daily express . here we go . this evening. and the daily express. here we go . has pm express. here we go. has pm opened door to an amazing boris johnson come back christian kc are senior political correspondent at the express , correspondent at the express, joins us now. what's this then ? joins us now. what's this then? >> this is hot off the press, isn't it? well this is a very interesting, uh, sort of diplomatic non—denial during an itv, uh, into view in which rishi sunak speaks of with pride of the work that he and boris achieved together in government , achieved together in government, and he specifically asked , you and he specifically asked, you know, would you have him back and he doesn't say no. so i think given the astonishing return of david cameron , uh,
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return of david cameron, uh, however, however long ago it was, um, it raises all sorts of questions. could boris come back in the lords, in the commons? could he go back into cabinet? you know, my initial thought is actually , you know, what does actually, you know, what does bons actually, you know, what does boris johnson owe the party at this point? you know, they should be coming to him on bended knees to, to bring a bit of that magic that is so sorely neededin of that magic that is so sorely needed in an election campaign. and after they stabbed him in the back, he better get offered a pretty good job. it's got a lot of school fees to pay, though, and, uh, on carrie's instagram you don't instagram story, if you don't follow really recommend it. >> it's a fascinating insight into she's asking into their life. she's asking the other day for a hotel recommendation that wasn't too expensive, so clearly, you know, they're the they're thinking about the they're thinking about the they're purse they're thinking about the purse strings household. >> look, what do you make of this boris johnson? the possibility i've possibility of a comeback i've loved, haven't we? >> i've loved boris and i've hated boris over the you hated boris over the last, you know, four years. and i go up and down how i feel about and down with how i feel about him. at the end the day, and down with how i feel about hdon't at the end the day, and down with how i feel about hdon't think he end the day, and down with how i feel about hdon't think you nd the day, and down with how i feel about hdon't think you have the day, and down with how i feel about hdon't think you have to e day, and down with how i feel about hdon't think you have to be ay, and down with how i feel about hdon't think you have to be a', i don't think you have to be a rocket science to realise he's
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the only person could stand the only person that could stand as conservative and as a conservative leader and run an election close . they're an election close. they're annihilated with whoever they put up. so is rishi sunak trying to bring him in the team? you know, just to get a few more votes and sell the conservatives as you know, as something else, as you know, as something else, as you know, as something else, as you made the point though, christian, if boris johnson really feels like rishi sunak stabbed him in the back , why stabbed him in the back, why would he help this guy out? >> you've made your bed lie in it. >> yeah, i mean, it.— >> yeah, i mean, i it. >> yeah, i mean, i this this this might be sunaks desperate. uh attempt to claw back some points in the opinion polls. of course, this doesn't cover boris's response, which may be an emphatic no. a two word headline. yeah, exactly. or two letters. it might be, um, my personal bet is that actually, i think a few years into opposition, when the polls haven't shifted and starmer is still irritatingly ahead, i think mps will panic and they'll go, let's get a by—election. let's get boris back. >> was someone. if >> if only there was someone. if only there was someone who could win as red but now win as the red wall. but now look, thought for the
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look, spare a thought for the hundreds of people queuing very much appointments much coveted nhs appointments as a bristol a new dental practice in bristol . as 4 in 5 practices . it comes as 4 in 5 practices are now refusing to accept new patients. in england, sharp rise in decay, especially in tooth decay, especially apparently among school in apparently among school kids in recent years . well, the labour recent years. well, the labour party, assigned blame on party, they've assigned blame on britain's, , conservative britain's, uh, conservative party, of course, saying the dentistry isn't working and look, christine, again, thousands of illegal immigrants arriving, thousands of legal migrants as well. we can't surely just ignore rapid population growth when it comes to our crumbling public services. >> i think there's been a myth that's far too that's continued for far too long in this country that , uh, long in this country that, uh, immigrants pay for themselves . immigrants pay for themselves. uh, and, you know, that may have been true 15 years ago when on net immigration was at 200,000. right now it's at 600, 700,000 a yeah right now it's at 600, 700,000 a year. a lot of them students, a lot of them co—dependents without jobs, and they are under a net drain on public services. and this is a debate that, you know, we really need to wake up and have, because i think a lot
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of the prevailing establishment, the left politicians on the conservative party and in labour and in the media continue, you know, refuse to accept that actually, yes, immigration is draining public services. absolutely. >> and the front of the telegraph migration won't save uk from debt crisis. so this is the office for budget responsibility saying that the bill for benefits must be cut and claims must be brought back into work and that, um, you know, maybe relying on immigration shock, horror, arade dam is not the best way of trying sort our economy out . trying to sort our economy out. >> who knew , you know, >> who knew? who knew, you know, and we speak about and we're called racists. but what going back to the nhs and dentistry and all that . it was it started and all that. it was it started with covid, you know, the health service become the covid health service. everything else went, went to the side and we haven't recovered from that. so it's immigration and the response to covid that has led to this. >> i mean, they were already staggering problems with waiting lists before covid hit, and there problems there are staggering problems with finding an nhs dentist in
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areas that don't have particularly high levels of immigration. enough people immigration. not enough people are trained become dentists. are trained to become dentists. there it's it's very, there is it's not. it's very, very similar to funded childcare places. as places. dentists don't make as much non—private much by treating non—private patients. there are patients. absolutely. there are a why. and it's a lot of reasons why. and it's at the moment dentistry is more of a commercial proposition, which so i think, suggest of a commercial proposition, whicit's so i think, suggest of a commercial proposition, whicit's just think, suggest of a commercial proposition, whicit's just immigrationjgest of a commercial proposition, whicit's just immigration iszst of a commercial proposition, whicit's just immigration is a: that it's just immigration is a false equivalence. it's false equivalence. but also it's a cell phone, whose a cell phone, because whose immigration? who in charge immigration? who was in charge when thing happened. yeah, that is true. and >> yeah, that is true. and seriously, go into seriously, if you go into dentistry you're not dentistry now, you're not working in the nhs, you? working in the nhs, are you? let's be honest, you're absolutely you're driving a porsche right? are. porsche anyway, right? you are. >> botox as well. >> i'm doing botox as well. >> i'm doing botox as well. >> i'm doing botox as well. >> i'm doing botox well. yes. >> i'm doing botox as well. yes. there well, not there we go. well, they're not for right now it's for me anyway, right now it's all up in smoke for the all gone up in smoke for the creative frenchman richard blood. i'm fluent. who blood. i'm. i'm fluent. who spent a pain staking eight years building a 23 foot tall replica of the eiffel tower out of matchsticks , only to find out matchsticks, only to find out that his dreams had been flamed when the guinness world records rejected his entry because he used matches that were not commercially available and had
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been changed beyond recognition from their original form. so he used the wrong matches. eight years of your life wasted . but years of your life wasted. but monsieur blood is not going down without a fight. no, he's labelled the decision. i won't do the accent despite pointing frustrating, incomprehensible and very much not fair play. so, uh, there we go . eight years of uh, there we go. eight years of a french man's life. complete down the toilet . oh, well, now down the toilet. oh, well, now it's down the toilet. oh, well, now wsfime down the toilet. oh, well, now it's time to reveal today's greatest britain and union jack ass . christine, who's your ass. christine, who's your greatest britain? >> that's a very good question, my friend . do you want to make my friend. do you want to make the matchstick man? i got it right. my, my, my greatest britain is liz truss . uh, for britain is liz truss. uh, for one simple reason, which is that without her, my week would have been a complete write off. you know, let's be honest, i'm not a royal reporter. the express loves its royal stories. there wasn't much a politics game wasn't much of a politics game in and along and in town, and she came along and gave some headlines, and she gave us some headlines, and she kept me busy. >> right, mine is >> all right, guys, mine is rachel mclean, mp wanting rachel mclean, mp for wanting foreign criminals out of our
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country and to strengthen our borders. >> okay, go on. rebecca. >> okay, go on. rebecca. >> mine is philosopher and poet taylor swift, who has announced that her new album is dropping on the 19th of april. i will obviously always got an album out. yes, that's why we love her. also, it's actually been nearly two years and i've had a very significant break—up since then, need oh, okay. then, so i need it. oh, okay. >> well, would to >> well, so i would like to point out was already laughing point out i was already laughing before rebecca talking about her divorce . nothing about her. divorce. nothing about her. right? rachel mclean is the right? okay rachel mclean is the is briton for is the next greatest briton for well , just saying the obvious, well, just saying the obvious, really. we need really. which is? we need to deport criminals before really. which is? we need to depocan criminals before really. which is? we need to depocan go criminals before really. which is? we need to depocan go on:riminals before really. which is? we need to depocan go on to ninals before really. which is? we need to depocan go on to commitafore really. which is? we need to depocan go on to commit more they can go on to commit more crimes. um, right. who is your union jackass? christine, i remember union jackass? christine, i renthis er union jackass? christine, i renthis is susanna reid, who , >> this is susanna reid, who, you know, who went beyond what i think is acceptable for broadcast impartiality this week when she when she told a cabinet minister that apparently labour do have a plan on immigration, their plan is to smash the gangs, uh, which , you know, and gangs, uh, which, you know, and she had to then clarify that i'm not a labour party spokesman.
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well, forgive me, that sounded pretty similar to labour party spokesperson. like saying spokesperson. it's like saying labour policy the labour do have a policy on the nhs. stop people dying. nhs. it's to stop people dying. okay. right. we'll okay. brilliant. right. we'll move then, you know, no move on then, you know, no questions. move on then, you know, no queall�*ns. move on then, you know, no queall right. okay. go on. >> all right. okay. go on. >> all right. okay. go on. >> is the arrogant >> alan. mine is the arrogant and london mayor and despicable london mayor sadiq khan. uh, he's invested 150 in secret technology 150 million in secret technology that could deliver pay per mile road charging myself and the together declaration warned of this when the ulez , uh, got this when the ulez, uh, got expanded out to the mile road charging. >> all right. okay go on. >> all right. okay go on. >> uh, mine is , uh, greg wallace >> uh, mine is, uh, greg wallace , uh, who gave an interview about his average saturday in which he doesn't mention that he has a child until 1:30 pm. in the morning. he wakes up, he reads his book, he goes to the gym, takes a meeting, goes to a harvester, and then in the middle of the day, mentions he has a four year old son, then explains didn't really explains that he didn't really want more children, but want to have more children, but oh well. he's got sun. it's oh well. he's got the sun. it's unbelievable. freely unbelievable. it's freely available internet. find available on the internet. find it. man. it. it's man. >> right. okay. today's >> all right. okay. today's union is sadiq khan. union jackass is sadiq khan. there go. why not? why not?
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there we go. why not? why not? right. can just right. well, look, can i just say thank you to my say a massive thank you to my wonderful christine adam wonderful panel? christine adam and rebecca really, really enjoyed please and rebecca really, really enjgoed please and rebecca really, really enjgoed and please and rebecca really, really enjgoed and watch please and rebecca really, really enjgoed and watch aplease and rebecca really, really enjgoed and watch a couple of do go back and watch a couple of those scoops that had those big scoops that we had right at the start. but this remarkable story of an afghan asylum apparently asylum seeker apparently managing right to managing to con his way right to the of our intelligence the top of our intelligence services. and of course, that very the very moving interview with the mother barnaby webber, who very moving interview with the mot sadly barnaby webber, who very moving interview with the mot sadly killedby webber, who very moving interview with the mot sadly killed bywebber, who very moving interview with the mot sadly killed by the ber, who was sadly killed by the nottingham monster. up was sadly killed by the nottirit'sim monster. up was sadly killed by the nottirit's headliners)nsteh up was sadly killed by the nottirit's headliners until. up was sadly killed by the nottirit's headliners until next next, it's headliners until next time, the good time, keep fighting the good fight. >> a brighter outlook with boxt solar sponsors of weather on . gb news. >> hello again and welcome to the latest forecast from the met office. i'm aidan mcgivern cold in the north for the next 24 hours. mild and wet in the south in between the risk of disruptive snow in places. here's the setup. as we end the day, we've got clear spells across northern parts of the uk. further snow showers into the north of scotland, a widespread
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frost out across many parts of northern england, scotland and northern ireland. but further south, rain , wind and milder air south, rain, wind and milder air arrives into parts of south wales southern england. some heavy and persistent rain . first heavy and persistent rain. first thing mild air in the south clashes with cold air further north. the band of rain in between turns increasingly wintry as we go through thursday morning. so low across mid and north wales , parts of north north wales, parts of north midlands into northern england and then northern ireland. we're going to see rain at lower levels, perhaps some sleet in some parts at lower levels, but certainly some disruptive snow over any hills above 100 200m. and for parts of north wales, the peak district into the south pennines, the risk of very disruptive snow, 25cm and some freezing rain in places as well. all of this pushes north. we've got much milder but wetter weather into the south for friday, and the rain and hill snow moves through northern england and into southern and central scotland. by this stage. further wintry showers for the
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far north of scotland, but bright weather in between , then bright weather in between, then milder most of us this milder air for most of us this weekend, but with further rain and at times . and showers at times. >> that warm feeling inside and from boxt boilers . sponsors of from boxt boilers. sponsors of weather on
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gb news. >> good evening and the top story from the gb newsroom tonight. labour will reportedly
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abandon its policy to spend £28 billion on environmental projects, much reports are suggesting tonight sir keir starmer is due to confirm the major u—turn in labour policy, saying the pledge is being scaled back due to the changed economic landscape since it was first unveiled in 2021. last year , labour adjusted its year, labour adjusted its original plan by saying the spending target would likely be met in the second half of a first parliament if the party won the next election. an official announcement is expected to be made tomorrow, so police hunting a suspected chemical attacker say he was in a relationship with his victim. new videos being released of afghan asylum seeker abdul ezedl afghan asylum seeker abdul ezedi. nearly a week after he threw corrosive liquid across a woman in south london. police say she'd agreed to meet him on the day of the attack and they believe a breakdown in the relationship may have been a motive . the 31 year old mother, motive. the 31 year old mother, who may lose sight in her right eye, remains under

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