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tv   Patrick Christys Tonight  GB News  February 20, 2024 3:00am-5:00am GMT

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him of making up claims accusing him of making up claims that he was told to delay compensation payments . compensation payments. yesterday, mr staunton suggested he'd been made a scapegoat for the post office scandal, and that the government had deliberately delayed compensation payouts . hundreds compensation payouts. hundreds of post office staff are still waiting for compensation, despite the government announcing that those who've had convictions quashed are eligible . speaking in the commons, kemi badenoch said mr staunton's claims were a blatant attempt to seek revenge following his own dismissal . dismissal. >> mr staunton claimed that when he was first appointed as chair of the post office, he was told by a senior civil servant to stall on paying compensation. there is no evidence whatsoever that this is true. in fact , on that this is true. in fact, on becoming post office chair, mr staunton received a letter from the bays permanent secretary, sarah mumby, on the 9th of december, 2022. it welcomed him to his role making it's crystal clear that successfully reaching settlements with victims of the post office scandal should be one of his highest priorities ,
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one of his highest priorities, as kemi badenoch , now three as kemi badenoch, now three children found dead at a home in bristol yesterday have been named by avon and somerset police. >> their siblings , farage bush, >> their siblings, farage bush, who was aged seven, and three year old jouri bush as well as nine month old mohammed bush . a nine month old mohammed bush. a heavy police presence remains in the area after the children were found dead, and police officers responded to a welfare call. a 42 year old woman was arrested at the scene. she's been taken to hospital and remains in custody , and specialist dive custody, and specialist dive teams will continue to search overnight for a two year old little boy who fell into the river soar in leicester yesterday . boy with yesterday. the boy had been with his family when he fell into the water. leicestershire police says river levels and says rising river levels and recent heavy rainfall has resulted in extremely difficult search conditions. however, the force says it's stepping up search efforts to find him . the search efforts to find him. the average asking price for a home in britain has jumped by more than £3,000 this month, according to the property
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website rightmove. falling mortgage rates and more stable conditions are driving the surge to just over . £362,000 per home. to just over. £362,000 per home. however agents are warning sellers to set attractive asking pnces sellers to set attractive asking prices before a potential pre—election jitters. the momentum in the market comes as sales agreed in the first six weeks of 2024 are up i6% on the same period last year. 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. carmelites . go to gb news. carmelites. >> it looks like humza yousaf and the snp might be frothing hypocrites when it comes to channel migrants they talk a good game though, don't they? >> is a bill that this government does not support, will never support , and nobody will never support, and nobody who has any concern for our fellow human beings should ever support such an appalling piece of draft legislation. so the
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entire system is broken. >> so instead of trying to house them in barges or ships or boats , actually, why not look at the system to see how we can fix it? >> a public sector, they need migration . our schools, our migration. our schools, our hospitals, our social care settings . settings. >> they like to make out that they're the kind and compassionate ones. and the rest of us are evil. now, back in 2013, humza yousaf was external affairs he slammed affairs minister. he slammed everyone else, saying we do things differently to the rest of the we welcome asylum of the uk. we welcome asylum seekers. , the snp's own seekers. in fact, the snp's own website currently says scotland stands ready to help to offer sanctuary to refugees who need our help. this is first and foremost a humanitarian crisis and it requires a humanitarian response. the snp scottish government has repeatedly called on the uk government to play a part in a coordinated europe response, and has agreed to take a fair and proportionate share of refugees in scotland. well, it turns out that humza yousaf and the snp aren't prepared to put their money where their mouth is today. the home
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secretary, james cleverly, revealed aren't taking revealed scotland aren't taking their . scotland their fair share. scotland houses eight asylum seekers for every 10,000 people. that is about half the amount that england takes now, according to october figures. the whole of scotland has just ten migrants hotels . for a bit of context, hotels. for a bit of context, london has 86. the south east of england has 50 and the west midlands has 42. in fact, the nonh midlands has 42. in fact, the north west of england has the most asylum seekers living in the community with 14,289. those are people not in hotels, by the way. they're in social housing and long terme accommodation . and long terme accommodation. the snp claimed that they're doing their bit because they've taken more than double the displaced ukraine lions per head of population than any other part of the uk. that's what they're hiding behind. so no, they're hiding behind. so no, they are more than happy to take mostly white ukrainian women and children , no doubt from a mostly children, no doubt from a mostly christian background and probably with a relatively decent grasp of the english language and a fervent desire to go home again when their country
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is safe . but they don't appear is safe. but they don't appear to want young middle eastern undocumented men fresh off the boats in dover, do they know now if this was the tories , they'd if this was the tories, they'd probably be branded racists. wouldn't in fact, we can wouldn't they? in fact, we can actually see that directly because the snp was happy to house migrants on the ms victoria ferry if they were ukrainian , but they didn't want ukrainian, but they didn't want it used and don't want it used for channel migrants. massive hypocrisy. doctor peter walsh , a hypocrisy. doctor peter walsh, a lecturer in migration at university of oxford's migration observatory, said asylum seekers are those who reach the uk under their own steam. sometimes those arriving without authorisation , arriving without authorisation, such as by small boats and then they claim asylum on british shores. if we limit our analysis to just asylum seekers, it is true that scotland hosts about half the number per capita than england does. humza yousaf said scotland is willing to be the first country in the uk to offer safety and sanctuary to those caught up in these terrible
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attacks in gaza. well, the scottish first minister has just been on a family to been on a family holiday to qatar, base for qatar, which is the base for hamas terrorists. and in 2013, when was international when he was international development minister, mr yousaf went to qatar to try to get £1.3 billion for new hospitals and motorways for scotland, and didn't bring up their human rights abuses. humza yousaf and the snp have been caught out shamelessly virtue signalling over asylum seekers and refugees. home secretary james cleverly is right to call them out for it, and he should go one further, move people out of migrant hotels in england , put migrant hotels in england, put them on a bus and drop them off outside humza yousaf house and make him put his money where his mouth . let's get thoughts mouth is. let's get the thoughts from panel now. i've got from my panel now. i've got daily carole daily express columnist carole malone, journalist and malone, i've got journalist and commentator , and commentator mike buckley, and i've commentator mike buckley, and pve the commentator mike buckley, and i've the former brexit party i've got the former brexit party mep belinda deluise. carole, i'll go to you first. is this just frothing hypocrisy and dare i say it as well? maybe even a hint of racism here. they're happy to have the old white ukrainians. don't about
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ukrainians. i don't know about the racism, i think. the hindu racism, i think. >> i mean, have they have >> i mean, they have they have a proud record on the ukraine resettlement . resettlement. >> absolutely. but, you know, look at scotland's land mass at 78,000km2 for 5.4 million people. england's is something like 130,000km2 for 66 million people. of course, they should have more people. scotland has currently 4000 plus unoccupied beds spaces. why are we talking about sending people to rwanda when we could send them to scotland ? that has 4500 spaces, scotland? that has 4500 spaces, you know , you pointed out in you know, you pointed out in your your opener there that he's always criticised, always taking the moral high ground as far as we're concerned, always criticising the home office for handung criticising the home office for handling things badly, criticising the government. they are it that boat you are not taking it that boat you mentioned been sitting empty mentioned has been sitting empty in the phrase in edinburgh and the phrase i read today was the two. the two powers couldn't come to agreement. that means scotland said absolutely. said no. absolutely. so they should said yes. so if they should have said yes. so if they have this proud history that they migrants,
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they want to welcome migrants, they want to welcome migrants, they to start doing it. and they need to start doing it. and we we shouldn't asking we need we shouldn't be asking them. sending them them. we should be sending them there. yeah. it's empty. scotland empty. thousands of scotland is empty. thousands of acres of unused space. >> mike humza yousaf will take ukrainians because they're mostly and children mostly women and children who want one day and want to go back home one day and probably a grasp probably have a good grasp of the english language. probably have a good grasp of the engwantsanguage. probably have a good grasp of the engwantst01uage. probably have a good grasp of the engwants toluage people from >> he wants to take people from gaza his wife had family gaza because his wife had family over he doesn't over there, but he doesn't actually undocumented over there, but he doesn't actually small undocumented over there, but he doesn't actually small boats, jndocumented over there, but he doesn't actually small boats, does umented men on small boats, does he? >> mean, think you're >> i mean, i think you're completely missing the point. >> the is james >> the point is that james cleverly, is trying to cleverly, as ever, is trying to shift blame for the fact shift the blame for the fact that government refused that the government has refused and to or not and has been unable to or not unable to, but has refused to process the only process asylum claims. the only reason accommodation for reason we need accommodation for asylum country asylum seekers in this country is the government is because the government doesn't asylum claims is because the government d scotland should >> i'm sorry, scotland should take share. >> i'm sorry, scotland should takithey share. >> i'm sorry, scotland should takithey sitake their fair >> they should take their fair share. the that share. but the point that they have either they've have made is either they've taken many ukrainians taken twice as many ukrainians as else per head, as anyone else per head, but also there should also that there should be funding to enable funding put in place to enable them to take asylum seekers. the government them to take asylum seekers. the govern people out of hotels. to get people out of hotels. what hasn't done and the snp what it hasn't done and the snp made is clear their made clear is clear in their quote, the home office hasn't
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quote, is the home office hasn't given enough to local given enough funding to local authorities scotland authorities in scotland or anywhere be anywhere else for them to be able everywhere else to able to take everywhere else to absorb west of england has >> the north west of england has got 14,500 of people got 14,500 of these people living they've living in the community. they've had office to find, had the home office to find, presumably the home office has directed more funding towards the for this, and the north west for this, and they to scotland is they have to scotland this is not funding. they have to scotland this is not this funding. they have to scotland this is not this isfunding. they have to scotland this is not this is aboutg. they have to scotland this is not this is about actually it's >> this is about actually it's about funding. house about funding. you can't house people for free. >> take refugees. are >> take legal refugees. they are not take a legal not happy to take a legal migrants who cross the channel. and is clear. and that is clear. >> i mean, it's by my >> i mean, it's not by my decision my choice decision or my choice necessarily defend snp, necessarily to defend the snp, but occasion on, he said but on this occasion on, he said very clearly, willing to very clearly, we're willing to take people. you just need to pay take people. you just need to pay but just to pay for it. but just to come back boat, they did ask back to the boat, they did ask people boat for the year. people on the boat for the year. ukrainians you're they ukrainians you're right. they then was unfit then decided it was it was unfit for purpose and so moved for that purpose and so moved the ukrainians off. they've the ukrainians off. so they've decided not for the decided it's not fit for the ukrainians. they put ukrainians. why would they put anybody they could make it >> because they could make it fit we've to make it. >> it was it was fit for purpose ehhen >> previously, because, i mean, it was a cruise ship. >> so people used to pay money to go boat, they? to go on the boat, didn't they? >> on going on a cruise >> living on going on a cruise liner very different from
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liner is very different from living on. >> i'll come back you, >> i'll come back to you, beunda >> i'll come back to you, belinda the snp belinda humza yousaf of the snp saying, oh, look, we this saying, oh, look, we are this lovely party. we'll throw our arms absolute lovely party. we'll throw our armsof absolute lovely party. we'll throw our armsof rubbish. absolute load of rubbish. >> course it is. i think the >> of course it is. i think the myth moral superiority myth of snp moral superiority over asylum and immigration has been completely busted, but i think is a reach of cleverly think it is a reach of cleverly to talk about dispersing these men who asylum seekers. men who are not asylum seekers. they are men coming from a safe country . we need to make that country. we need to make that clear it wrong our clear and it is wrong of our government deflect from government to keep deflect from the real issue. they shouldn't be in our country anyway , and be in our country anyway, and it's english borders that our government have made so porous, so welcoming and accommodating to of thousands of unvetted to tens of thousands of unvetted undocumented men from the safety of france. that is where the attention should lie. if i was up in scotland, i'd be very, very happy. actually that we weren't accommodate weren't having to accommodate these hotels these unvetted men in our hotels . and the truth is, scottish people, english people, welsh people, english people, welsh people , we don't want them. the people, we don't want them. the majority don't want them. and humza probably knows that and knows he's going to get bit of knows he's going to get a bit of stick if starts accommodating. >> more than scotland >> wales does more than scotland does. terms per
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does. you know, in terms of per capita, takes more and capita, wales takes more and that's a population that's already got a population of and they of 3.6 million and they take more per. england more than scotland per. england is one the most highly is one of the most highly densely countries in densely populated countries in the , second only the whole of europe, second only to netherlands, bar, malta to the netherlands, bar, malta and vatican city . and the vatican city. >> we are up, we know we're >> we are full up, we know we're full up because we don't even have the have have hotels. where's the illegal immigration act? that was supposed to send them back? that hasn't yet that that hasn't come in yet that we're talking rwanda, we're talking about rwanda, which take which we're told will only take 500 500 could be 500 people, 500 people could be sent scotland tomorrow, sent in to scotland tomorrow, and just take up and it would just take up the current space. current bed space. >> just do martha's >> they just do the old martha's vineyard just drop vineyard trick mic and just drop them yousaf his them outside. humza yousaf his house go, there you house and go, look, there you go. of cash. go go. there's a bit of cash. go on. i mean, actually it on. i mean, actually make it make acknowledge fact make him acknowledge the fact that want to come back that i do just want to come back on belinda said, which on something belinda said, which is genuine is that they're not genuine asylum seekers. >> vast >> they're not. the vast majority them they're not. >> it's because we have a low bar that's very clearly a government that is not in favour of people deemed of these people being deemed asylum yet home office, >> and yet the home office, under under this under even under this government, assesses that the vast them, about vast majority of them, about 4/5 of are genuine. that is of them are genuine. that is because case law. because of weak bad case law. >> it's not true that these people fearing death
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persecution. >> there's been >> mind you, there's been against coming to against these people coming to the they not most at risk >> they are not the most at risk of excitement that they are of the excitement that they are genuine asylum seekers. they're hardly a soft touch. >> them are not refugees . >> 70% of them are not refugees. >> 70% of them are not refugees. >> you know, they're economic, not imperil . not imperil. >> it's exactly the opposite. >> it's exactly the opposite. >> the exact opposite of >> that is the exact opposite of what is true. 78% of them are deemed to genuine under deemed to be genuine even under this government. >> the government's figures are 70. >> about of them that 70. of them that are >> about 20% of them that are not genuine. government not genuine. but the government seems. accept that if >> don't you accept that if there's literally no bar to? >> what makes you eligible for an asylum seeker, then everyone >> what makes you eligible for aran ylum seeker, then everyone >> what makes you eligible for aran asylum eker, then everyone >> what makes you eligible for aran asylum .ker, then everyone is an asylum. >> these is it very clearly clear sets. >> it doesn't make it. no, there isn't. >> we clear sort of case law coming from albania. yeah. there's bar is there. so there's a bar is there. okay. so the as we famously know, people are coming albania. are not coming from albania. well did. that well we know they did. but that was stop a quick just a was put a stop a quick just a quick yes or no. >> humza and the >> should humza yousaf and the snp all of their virtue snp given all of their virtue signalling, be taking boat signalling, be taking more boat asylum , seeking 150? asylum, seeking 150? >> should they ? >> yes. should they? >> yes. should they? >> they should, but it should be funded the office. funded by the home office. >> absolutely. >> okay, absolutely. >> okay, absolutely. >> focus on
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>> but we should focus on stopping coming here in the stopping them coming here in the first place. >> okay. the kind of >> all right. okay. the kind of lively i've got on lively start i've got on a monday. the scottish government spokesperson said the home office responsible for office is responsible for provision of asylum accommodation, hotels accommodation, including hotels procured initial procured as contingency initial asylum accommodation. scotland has consistently played its part in supporting asylum dispersal since introduced over two since it was introduced over two decades ago. we are committed to supporting people to integrate into communities to into our communities and to providing the safety and security they need as they begin to rebuild lives , right, to rebuild their lives, right, okay. now time is okay. good stuff. now time is running out on your chance to win £18,000 in cash in our latest great giveaway latest great british giveaway lines close on friday. make sure you get your entry in and here is how you can win. >> it's the final week to see how you could be the winner of the great british giveaway. >> there's an incredible £18,000 in cash to won. be totally tax free cash that you can do whatever you like with that works out to be an extra £1,500 to play with each month for a whole year. >> you could put it towards monthly treats, save it for a
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our health service helping to eradicate biological women ? eradicate biological women? social commentator amy ansell goes head to head with women's rights campaigner kelly j. keane and sparks will definitely fly. this is patrick christys tonight. we're only on gb news.
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sunday mornings from 930 on gb news. who's . well come back, news. who's. well come back, we're going straight in now with our head to head .
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our head to head. >> yes . okay, so it's been >> yes. okay, so it's been a story. of course, that has absolutely gripped the nation today and it's about milk. absolutely gripped the nation today and it's about milk . okay, today and it's about milk. okay, which is a weird thing to say, but it's true. so it is about whether or not trans women and their milk is as good as , as their milk is as good as, as male milk. well, milk from a trans woman who was born male is as good for babies. apparently current drugs can be used to induce lactation and enable trans women to feed babies . but trans women to feed babies. but after complaints about the practice, the medical director of university hospitals sussex nhs foundation trust, which is a mouthful, doctor rachel james, has hit back rising medications are sometimes used to induce lactation , often like the lactation, often like the natural hormones which develop when the baby is newly born. the evidence which is available demonstrates that the milk is comparable to that produced following the birth of a baby . following the birth of a baby. all right, well, it'll come as no surprise that no surprise then, that this particular was the particular nhs trust was the first use woke terms like
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first to use woke terms like chestfeeding and birthing parent. so no mention of a woman there at all. and of course it's a member of stonewall's controversy diversity champions programme . so tonight i am programme. so tonight i am asking is the nhs trying to eradicate women? let me know your email your thoughts. email me gbviews@gbnews.uk or tweet me at gb news. while you're there, make sure you take in our make sure you take part in our poll. the results will come shortly, before we into shortly, but before we get into our head, i'm joined our head to head, i'm joined first by an actual trained medical practitioner. it's doctor mukherjee. thank doctor bashar mukherjee. thank you very much joining us. do you very much forjoining us. do you very much forjoining us. do you it is okay to say you think that it is okay to say that, medically speaking and scientifically speaking, milk from a trans woman is the same thing , or as from a trans woman is the same thing, or as for a baby as thing, or as good for a baby as that a natural woman . that from a natural woman. >> i think you said it right there. >> patrick is it as good? >> patrick is it as good? >> what do we consider good? thatis >> what do we consider good? that is the question . and my that is the question. and my biggest concern is for the safety of the child in medical profession. we have obviously medical ethics . and in that non medical ethics. and in that non maleficence do no harm . um,
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maleficence do no harm. um, takes more precedence over beneficence . now if this if this beneficence. now if this if this secretion are being measured by the vitamins and minerals , the vitamins and minerals, perhaps there is benefit in the nutritious component . but we nutritious component. but we cannot take away the fact that we still don't have enough data as to if this is safe for the baby and that is the biggest concern that i have . concern that i have. >> is this even safe for the baby. and also as a clinician, i would have safeguarding concerns for a baby who is vulnerable and voiceless. they have no choice in the matter as to whether they want to be exposed to this drug or not. and we take all this into consideration even when prescribing normal, simple things like painkillers and antibiotics for women who are breastfeeding, there are so many sacrifices and compromises that are made by mothers around the
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world and for the benefit of their baby. and i and i worry that these same considerations have not been taken in in this article. >> yes, i refuse to believe that somebody who is pumped full of medicine and hormones and all of those kind of things in order to be able to lactate. how on earth can that be good as the way that nature intended it? do you think is irresponsible for the nhs trust? a hospital trust , to be trust? a hospital trust, to be saying that it is as good? >> think it's a responsibility >> i think it's a responsibility of all of us as a british public, to be raising these concerns because even the company that, you know , like company that, you know, like domperidone is one of the medical options that's used to induce lactation , even for this induce lactation, even for this drug. it's actually it's it states in their documentation that this is probably not safe in breastfeeding because small amounts have been found in breast milk. and all studies regarding around the topic of drugs that are safe and unsafe
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in breastfeeding, there's a lot of discrepancies in these studies anyway, so it's a very , studies anyway, so it's a very, very grey area of medicine, and we all should be looking out for the well—being of the of the children. >> there's no i'm sorry, but there's no place for virtue signalling when it comes to a newborn baby's health. is that is doctor bashar mukherji. thank you absolute you very much. absolute pleasure. care. that's pleasure. take care. that's the science madness. science behind this madness. that's now science behind this madness. twant now science behind this madness. twant to now science behind this madness. twant to ask, now science behind this madness. twant to ask, is now science behind this madness. twant to ask, is the now science behind this madness. twant to ask, is the nhs now i want to ask, is the nhs actually to eradicate actually trying to eradicate women ? do you think doing battle women? do you think doing battle on is woman's rights on this is woman's rights activist keane and activist is kelly j. keane and the social commentator amy ansell. both you, thank you ansell. both of you, thank you very , kelly. to you very much, kelly. i'll go to you first. do you think this is another example being another example of women being eradicated from society ? i think eradicated from society? i think it's so much worse, actually , it's so much worse, actually, because what we have is , is men because what we have is, is men who want to get a kick out of putting their fake breasts and nipple in a baby's mouth to be sucked and so what we're really talking about is the nhs promoting paedophilia . promoting paedophilia. >> and yes, i think it is. i
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think it's gravely concerning . i think it's gravely concerning. i think it's gravely concerning. i think it's gravely concerning. i think it's repulsive . think it's repulsive. >> uh, i think i, i have no idea where we've got this idea that we have to enable these men to exercise lack asian fetish, which is what it is with newborn babies. it's disgust thing. >> amy. it's disgusting. and it's a fetish . no not at all. it's a fetish. no not at all. >> i'm sorry you feel that way. and you think that , um, i don't and you think that, um, i don't feel. i mean , listen, i could feel. i mean, listen, i could not breastfeed my newborn son. it just didn't happen. i couldn't express enough milk. so i had to turn to formula . now, i had to turn to formula. now, formula, as we know, is commercially produced. there's synthetic nutrients, preservatives, corn syrup . i preservatives, corn syrup. i mean, i did the best i could in my situation to give my son my baby the best care and the best nutrition i could as a new mother. of course, safety comes
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first, but did that eradicate me as a woman ? absolutely not. as a woman? absolutely not. >> okay, do you want to come out? >> the philip practices on the television. was that like a career goal? i mean, it it's just preposterous. how on earth can you defend a grown man putting his nipple in a baby's mouth ? mouth? >> amy, first of all, when the embryo is when there's gestation for the first 6 to 7 weeks. >> guess what? it's female . so >> guess what? it's female. so men and women have nipples. >> false. >> false. >> untrue . nonsense. >> untrue. nonsense. >> untrue. nonsense. >> a baby on one at a time because he's cutting out. >> kelly, go. and then i'll go to amy. go on. >> kelly chen, a an embryo has a biological sex. so let's stop this silly nonsense and let's spread . spread. >> right? okay, look, amy, amy, i'll just. i'll say, you know, okay? it's one thing saying that
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you'd give your baby formula. and obviously a lot of women have to do that for whatever reason, know? fair enough. reason, you know? fair enough. would your baby would you have given your baby milk woman slash milk from a trans woman slash man ? man? >> well, listen, i trust what i read by the nhs trust . and as read by the nhs trust. and as you quoted in the beginning of the segment, drug induced milk from transgender women who were born male is as good for babies as a mother's breast milk. why should i not believe that i am not a medical professional ? i am not a medical professional? i am not a medical professional? i am not a medical professional? i am not a doctor or a clinician, but i believe what the nhs trust says because i believe they do the research that i don't . the research that i don't. >> okay, it's the same nhs trust , kelly, that introduced chest feeders and birthing people or birthing humans or whatever they did to basically eradicate the word woman from the old process of giving birth. so i mean, we are dealing with that lot . are dealing with that lot. >> we are dealing with look, we're dealing with a very pernicious, insidious cult that manages to get a very well respected woman to come on the television and say that embryos
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are female for the first six weeks, and that she i mean, i, i don't know why you won't answer the question, amy. i have suspicions why you won't answer the about what? how you the question about what? how you saw yourself with your career defending a paedophilic practice that a man getting sexually aroused by putting his nipple in aroused by putting his nipple in a baby's mouth . a baby's mouth. >> i'm not defending that. it's youn >> i'm not defending that. it's your. that's your impression of what that looks like. what that is. that's not how i see it. if a trans woman wants to breastfeed their child and it's safe to do so , they have every safe to do so, they have every right to do that . it. right to do that. it. >> come on. come on. >> that's ridiculous. okay i will just say, look, i will, will. >> look, one thing that i will say is that whilst obviously everybody is perfectly entitled to their views, or do you want to their views, or do you want to make it absolutely clear that , not trying to , you know, i'm not trying to say single person , you know, i'm not trying to say is single person , you know, i'm not trying to say is doing single person , you know, i'm not trying to say is doing this gle person , you know, i'm not trying to say is doing this isa person , you know, i'm not trying to say is doing this is inerson , you know, i'm not trying to say is doing this is in some that is doing this is in some way a paedophile, and also as well, obviously, we were playing clips that there well, obviously, we were playing clip action that there well, obviously, we were playing clipaction of that there well, obviously, we were playing clipaction of trans hat there well, obviously, we were playing clipaction of trans people 'e
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well, obviously, we were playing clipaction of trans people using the action of trans people using lactation, etc. and obviously there's no indication that those particular individuals involved there have indeed got any kind of sexual proclivities in that direction at all. so i want to make that abundantly clear. um, but will give i will give one but i will give i will give one more answer each on this, kelly, and just say, look, when it comes to actually nhs trusts, etc, almost tripping over etc, now almost tripping over themselves to remove the themselves to try to remove the word woman from things . i mean, word woman from things. i mean, i'm concerned as to the direction of travel with that really. kelly >> um, look, i mean, i, ijust have to make it really clear and then i will answer your question . paedophilic acts are done by paedophiles like you can't you can't have one without the other. you can't do something thatis other. you can't do something that is paedophilic without you being a paedophile and you can't apologise for something that is apologise for something that is a paedophilic act without being a paedophilic act without being a paedophile apologist. uh, when it comes to the nhs, they have been totally captured. uh they are. it's. i suspect there's too many people in roles that depend
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on, um, being subservient to this ideology . uh, and i think this ideology. uh, and i think it's incredibly harmful. right across the nhs, i went to my local gp the other day, and the woman behind the counter had a he him pronoun badge on his everywhere. it's insidious and it's poison. >> okay, look , final word to >> okay, look, final word to you, amy, and let's just keep it on the old, uh, actual action, i suppose, of what we're what we're dealing with here. you personally don't see anything wrong with this at all? >> and i don't see it as >> no, and i don't see it as a paedophilic act like she said. i see it as a trans woman having that lovely bonding experience of breastfeeding their child safely. >> okay. all right. look, both of you, thank you very, very much. and no doubt we're chatting to you again when some more madness takes in the more madness takes place in the nhs point very, very nhs at some point very, very soon. thank you very much. soon. so thank you very much. a spokesperson the university spokesperson for the university hospital foundation hospital sussex nhs foundation trust we stand by the facts trust said we stand by the facts of the letter and the cited evidence supporting them, which
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is short and sweet, but they do say as far as say that, you know, as far as they're , scientific they're concerned, scientific evidence indeed as evidence is that is indeed as safe as i suppose you would say natural female breast milk. so look, who do you agree with? is the health service trying to eradicate women? ralph on x says, what the hell is trans women's milk? this nonsense has to stop. johnny on x says this is misogyny , pure and simple. is misogyny, pure and simple. your verdict is now in. 78% of you agree that the nhs is trying to eradicate women. 22% of you say they they are not coming up . say they they are not coming up. so apparently around . 150 tory so apparently around. 150 tory mps mike quit before the next election . should rishi sunak election. should rishi sunak just put the country out of their misery and call a general election now? can i also just say absolutely pathetic ? say that's absolutely pathetic? seriously, is seriously, it really is absolutely pathetic. if you're going you know, be abhorred going to, you know, be abhorred what you think is sinking what you think is a sinking ship, down with it. ship, at least go down with it. where you? minerals our where are you? minerals and our labour's mps really up to labour's new mps really up to the job. fleet street legend kelvin mackenzie tackles of kelvin mackenzie tackles all of that. britain's crime
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that. plus britain's knife crime epidemic. next, jobless epidemic. but next, jobless migrants and foreign workers are costing the british taxpayer an eye—watering sum that runs into not just the billions but the tens of billions. it blows the lid off. the idea that mass migration is a good thing for britain. reform uk leader richard tice has his say on that. plus, labour's plans for citizens assemblies . can we citizens assemblies. can we guess what type of people might be on those? it's
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isabel monday to thursdays from. six till 930.
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>> all right. still to come . >> all right. still to come. kelvin mackenzie on the shocking calibre of labour mps being elected. but first it's time for reform uk leader richard tice. now it's emerged that one in every four foreign care workers , every four foreign care workers, up to 25,000, by the way, are working illegally in the uk. that's according to the chief inspector of borders and immigration. unbelievably, the home office has issued 275 visas to a care home that did not exist . and 1234 to a company exist. and 1234 to a company that claimed it only had four staff. when granted its license to operate . this follows reports to operate. this follows reports that more than 700 foreign nurses in britain are treating patients, despite being under investigation for not actually being qualified . the alleged being qualified. the alleged fraudsters use proxies to take the necessary registration tests in nigeria, so richard, with the social care and nursing sector is being played. does britain's
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broken immigration system actually need a complete overhaul? i mean, are people dying as a result this? now? dying as a result of this? now? >> knows? >> who knows? >> who knows? >> what we do know >> patrick. but what we do know is that this is just yet more utter, woeful incompetence from the home office, from various authorities and indeed, the nhs. with regard to nurses that that are not qualified. it turns out wherever you look, there is just so much incompetence . you so much incompetence. you actually have to describe it as gross. gross negligence. it's appalling . and we're we're not appalling. and we're we're not only are we suffering, we're paying only are we suffering, we're paying the bills for this. and all our quality of life is deteriorating. and yet no one in in the establishment or in parliament seems to care at all about this stuff. and as for these, this a fake care home? how could anybody be so useless? not to just check? maybe does the care home exist? i mean, how does this happen ? it's just mind does this happen? it's just mind boggung. does this happen? it's just mind boggling . people at home will be boggling. people at home will be just frankly , throwing something
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just frankly, throwing something at the television. yeah i mean, the care home secretary is one thing. >> the fact that we also have potentially 700 nurses who've never done a nursing qualification working in the nhs, they could be treating you now, but they're completely unrelated . unrelated. >> and the only common factor is utter incompetence and negligence . that's the point. negligence. that's the point. and it's us that's paying the bill. and it's infuriating . bill. and it's infuriating. >> i'll read what the home office have said about this. so they've now announced new restrictions, they say, on social visas social care visas and a spokesperson this care spokesperson has said this care workers make a vital contribution society . but contribution to society. but immigration is not the long terme to social care terme answer to our social care needs. why measures due needs. that is why measures due to laid in parliament will to be laid in parliament will cut numbers of visas cut the rising numbers of visas granted care workers granted to overseas care workers and address significant concerns about levels of about high levels of non—compliance, worker exploitation and the abuse within the sector of overseas workers. but it's difficult, though richard, isn't it, because it's easy for you to sit there and say, well, look, this is complete and utter and competence. i suppose at the moment, have these moment, if we didn't have these people, then battery staff. people, then we battery staff. >> it's not difficult at all.
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it's actually blindingly simple. it's actually blindingly simple. it 80s. it worked it worked in the 80s. it worked in using british people , in the 90s using british people, british workers who didn't want to it. to do it. >> richard. to do it. >> no,|ard. to do it. >> no, it's about pay because what's if you import what's happened is if you import cheap , low skilled or cheap, low skilled or unqualified overseas labour, you depress british wages. so big business makes off handsomely. and it's the decent british worker that gets utterly shafted. >> all right, well, here's another absolute shocker for you . so a new report has found that economically inactive legal migrants and foreign students have cost the taxpayer . £36 have cost the taxpayer. £36 billion since 2020. in figures that cast doubt over claims that mass migration is actually crucial to boosting britain's ailing economy. and if you take students out of that, it is around £24 billion since 2020. for economically inactive legal migrants. i mean, richard shaw , migrants. i mean, richard shaw, only now, after everything , only now, after everything, after talk about pressures on housing, pressures on our
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infrastructure, surely now the economic argument has gone as well, isn't it? >> but again, we've been lied to for decade after decade by the established by the labour party, by the conservative party. they've always said that immigration is good for our economy. no it's not. these figures prove it. if you have cheap, low skilled immigration, even for people who are depressing british wages or not working . at all, then actually working. at all, then actually it's a huge burden on us, on our pubuc it's a huge burden on us, on our public services. we all pay the price, the public services get worse, housing rents go up and the quality of life in our beloved country deteriorates . beloved country deteriorates. and it's got to stop. what about gdp , though, richard? gdp, though, richard? >> you can't put price on >> and you can't put a price on cultural but cultural enrichment. hey, but what gdp last year, patrick? >> it went down. the prime minister says the economy is recovering . he's plan. no, recovering. he's got a plan. no, it's not the we're in recession. and when you take an account of gdp per head , we've actually gdp per head, we've actually been going down for seven quarters in a the worst quarters in a row. the worst since record began in the mid 50s. since record began in the mid 505. it since record began in the mid 50s. it destroys the whole of
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this mass immigration nightmare. >> what do we do practically here? so if we've got let's take the foreign students out of it. all right. look, that's you know, is what that but know, that is what that is. but if billion, if you've got the £24 billion, this 2020 going to economically inactive people. so that we've legally let it, what do we do with them now. i mean some of those could have been here for years. i mean what we can't just deport them can deport them all can we? >> no, that's what we're >> no, that's not what we're saying. what we're saying is actually to actually people have got to become economically active. people who can people are not working who can work, should work, shouldn't be able the able to claim benefits. it's the people live in the people who come to live in the uk. a fee for using our uk. there's a fee for using our services . it's not a freebie. services. it's not a freebie. the reason so many people are coming here is because we stupidly a freebie. stupidly make it a freebie. >> okay , now look, there's one >> okay, now look, there's one more we just >> okay, now look, there's one more got we just >> okay, now look, there's one more got time we just >> okay, now look, there's one more got time for. we just >> okay, now look, there's one more got time for. sue just >> okay, now look, there's one more got time for. sue gray has about got time for. sue gray has revealed the labour party's plans introduce citizens plans to introduce citizens assemblies to the uk, in which members of the public are asked to on issues such to decide on issues such as assisted divorce , assisted dying, divorce, labuschagne and where new houses should be built. she was interviewed new biography interviewed for a new biography of starmer through his
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of keir starmer through his chief of staff has said this. this is one way that we can help resolve questions by resolve these questions by involving communities at an resolve these questions by invol\ stage. mmunities at an resolve these questions by invobstage. whitehall at an resolve these questions by invol\ stage. whitehall will|n resolve these questions by invol\ stage. whitehall will not early stage. whitehall will not like because they have no like this because they have no control. citizens assemblies have largely been deemed successful countries such as successful in countries such as ireland. apparently they typically of 99 randomly typically made up of 99 randomly selected members of the public and one appointed moderator , and and one appointed moderator, and their conclusions result in recommendations to parliament or even referendums , which i'm keen even referendums, which i'm keen to get your view on. this you know, i think, you know, broadly in favour of pr, you like to referendum in your time, you know, i do. >> referendum and >> i like referendum and actually, know, actually, you know, i like pushing down close as pushing power down as close as possible to the people and listening to the people. so i think is used. it's think sensible is used. it's absolutely fine. and you can listen to people as long as it's not an excuse for kicking the can down the road because you haven't got any guts, any conviction, any principle , any conviction, any principle, any views of your own. that's the difference. we can't be swamped with with sort of everlong a
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very expensive process for pi'ocesses. >> processes. >> so conceivably, what's interesting here is that we now have labour's everyone's crying out for labour policy. we appear to have, um, sukh who's crying out for labour policy to find out for labour policy to find out what it is. >> oh, see what you mean. >> oh, i see what you mean. >> oh, i see what you mean. >> then we've sue >> but but then we've got sue graves, staff, who now graves, chief of staff, who now appears announcing what appears to be announcing what policy is which keir can policy is which keir starmer can suitably distance himself from if it. and if he doesn't like it. and then also can well, if also now we can say, well, if he's in power, can hide he's in power, he can hide behind assembly, behind a people's assembly, presumably, and say, well, we're just we're going to just going to we're going to have to. wouldn't have to. i wouldn't want to pre—empt from this pre—empt the verdict from this 99 group of randomly selected people. so we'll have to wait and is. is that and see what that is. is that something you would be something that you would be concerned there? concerned about there? >> well, think just proves >> well, i think it just proves that got he's he's got no that he's got he's he's got no guts and conviction of own. guts and conviction of his own. he's flop he's just captain flip flop captain it's absurd. captain hindsight. it's absurd. we leadership, we need real leadership, real conviction. suppose , you conviction. look, i suppose, you know, we are looking at know, maybe we are looking at this scenario, this in the worst case scenario, which is fair enough. >> but, you know, >> in a sense. but, you know, perhaps this would work. well i mean, i'm in of mean, i'm broadly in favour of the more being the idea of more people being directly involved in decision making. takes civil making. if it takes civil servants whitehall of it servants in whitehall out of it and act on it. and i do
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and people act on it. and i do actually think the labour party might want to be little bit might want to be a little bit careful for, careful what they wish for, because if they did get because i think if they did get the real views of real people when comes things when it comes to things like rwanda, then they rwanda, for example, then they might or migration. >> they might be rather surprised, but we'll have to wait see. surprised, but we'll have to wai richard, 3. surprised, but we'll have to wai richard, thank very much. >> richard, thank you very much. richard course, richard tice, who is of course, the of reform uk now the leader of reform uk now coming up, keir starmer edging the leader of reform uk now comingto p, keir starmer edging the leader of reform uk now comingto callingstarmer edging closer to calling for an immediate ceasefire gaza. immediate ceasefire in gaza. have extremists now have political extremists now not labour running not the labour leader running scared. more at ten. not the labour leader running scarnext more at ten. not the labour leader running scarnext with more at ten. not the labour leader running scarnext with up�*nore at ten. not the labour leader running scarnext with up to re at ten. not the labour leader running scarnext with up to 150t ten. not the labour leader running scarnext with up to 150 tory. not the labour leader running scarnext with up to 150 tory mps but next with up to 150 tory mps potentially resigning before the next election, should he just call a general election now? rishi sunak can put an end to all of this nonsense and our labour's new mps really up to the i've kelvin the job. i've got kelvin mackenzie, he's live in the studio. you don't want miss
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tick all right. it's patrick christys tonight and we are only on gb news. still to come. is keir starmer about to get back into bed with far left corbynites? it
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certainly looks that way. but first it's time for fleet street kingpin kelvin mackenzie, now senior tory sources have admitted that more than 100 tory mps could resign before the next election. some people are predicting that it could be as many as 150 jumping ship in a record breaking desertion of the party, and i would also extend to that country. now, this includes 58 conservative mps who believe it or not, have already announced that they will not stand at the next election. so 58 have already said they're not running. last week's crushing defeats elections defeats in local by elections put on a course for put the country on a course for a labour government the a labour government at the ballot of those ballot box. one of those planning reportedly planning to quit reportedly told his going his friends i'm not going because i think to because i think i'm going to lose . i'm because i think i'm going to lose. i'm going because i think i'm going to lose . i'm going because lose. i'm going because i'm worried i might win as they feared the prospect of being left in a party of, quote, nutters. kelvin with tory mps potentially jumping ship should sunak call an election and put us out of our misery or not? >> if i'm sunak, i'm hanging on to the right to the end . i don't to the right to the end. i don't need the money, but i seriously
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believe i've got more. more chance in november than i have in may. but the main point, the reason these guys are all going is they're all rushing to get jobs because who on earth is going to hire a failed conservative politician? the reason that the country is rejecting them is because of the atrocious manner in which they run our nation. now, for the best part of a decade, it's a real shocker. and you're going to invite some useless creep like that on your board , or put like that on your board, or put them in charge of your museum , them in charge of your museum, or do something. why would you do that? and what they're all scared about. and the reason they're going now is because there two jobs for there may only be two jobs for them . and they want to them. and they and they want to get there. nice and quickly because that come because they're scared that come november, there might be there might be 300 of them. >> we've seen useless tories do well for themselves before . rory well for themselves before. rory stewart on the rise . stewart is on the rise. >> rory, you're quite right. but at he's just talking at least he's just talking rubbish alongside somebody else who talk him who talks the talk of him becoming honcho. becoming some head honcho. >> one of oxford
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>> i think he's one of oxford university's colleges or something. i mean, talk about falling upwards. >> true. is true. >> yes, it is true. it is true. but and of course, the same could be said of george osborne. absolutely that seven jobs. >> george. yeah, yeah, 27 jobs. >> george. yeah, yeah, 27 jobs. >> he's known , >> george, as he's now known, um, who's doing his best to um, who's now doing his best to sell the daily telegraph. uh to the arabs. he now represents, uh, redbird . and so we know uh, redbird. and so we know where he's there. he's there to make money and good luck to him. but no , nobody in their right but no, nobody in their right mind is going to hire any mp , mind is going to hire any mp, especially somebody who's been the conservative. >> let's just have a look at the actual cowardice of this, though, okay? is it right that these mps, the percentage as many as 150 of them, should just jump many as 150 of them, should just jump ship before the next election ? do they not have election? do they not have a moral duty? yeah to at least stand there handing over a defeat to somebody else, essentially, they're weakening the with it as well. the the party with it as well. the country. it's remarkable . country. it's remarkable. >> yeah, yeah. well, actually one comes in here fairly
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one of them comes in here fairly regularly, he? kwasi regularly, doesn't he? kwasi kwarteng. he's told the kwarteng. he said he's told the people spelthorne , um, that people of spelthorne, um, that he's, he's , he's offski. right. he's, he's, he's offski. right. and so these are these are a shocking v—sign to, to their people when everything is going well. oh yes . people when everything is going well. oh yes. i'm going to be chancellor. i'm going to be this, i'm going to be that. hello. what's going on? oh, you don't like me. well, in that case, off. it is case, i'm off. no, it is completely wrong. they should not be allowed to say goodbye . not be allowed to say goodbye. they should sit there and fight for it. yeah. >> i mean, the country needs to be fought for at the moment. we have problems left, right and centre they be centre and they appear to be deciding to but um, deciding to leave. but um, talking of there , calibre talking of mps, there, calibre of the labour mps who won last week's by elections has been called into question. so wellingborough's new 28 year old mp , jen kitchen has limited mp, jen kitchen has limited experience. it's mostly in charity work. here's some of her victory speech . victory speech. >> i am honoured that local people have placed their trust in me and the labour party under
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keir starmer , but i also know keir starmer, but i also know from the thousands of conversations i have had during this campaign how desperately people yeah, yeah, nigel farage wasn't impressed. >> i don't want to be rude, but you know, good luck to jen kitchen. >> she's now the labour mp. i mean, that wasn't a speech that was reading off a sheet of paper . um, and it kind of sums up, i think , how do candidates like think, how do candidates like this cut the mustard, calvin. >> yeah, she she is hopeless, right . right. >> so she comes out of queen mary university at twickenham, which, honestly be very lucky to be a technical college . right. be a technical college. right. and then what does she do for the next seven years? she goes into the charity business. right. and during that the last bit she is in charge of philanthropy in the charity business. so not only is it not her money, she's giving away as part of her career, giving away money now, that will make her a fantastic labour mp, giving away
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. in other people's mean. she's had the bottle. >> calvin to stand for election and win. you know. yeah, not her fault she's won is it. and you know we've got mp. we've just done a piece there. 150 tory mps quitting. at least there's someone wants to in someone who wants to be in parliament. someone who wants to be in par she ent. someone who wants to be in parsheent. want someone who wants to be in parshe ent. want be >> she does want to be in parliament. and when , when parliament. and when, when finally, the good people of wellingborough wake what wellingborough wake up to what they've got , they will throw her they've got, they will throw her back by elections are back out again. by elections are very, harsh places. the very, very harsh places. the second time you stand up so , uh, second time you stand up so, uh, all i'm saying is, is that the best that labour could do and is that's what's happening to politics. are we actually are. can you only get into this game if you've been into the charity business? >> well, so let's say 150 tory mps quit. we've got no idea who's going to stand as a tory mp in those 150 seats there. obviously, by definition going to be the second best choice. i would say at least. and then, you know , if who's labour you know, if who's labour standing against them as well . standing against them as well. and look thank you very, and we look we thank you very, very . as i've said before, very much. as i've said before, i the loser here is
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i think the big loser here is all british public, aren't i think the big loser here is all but3ritish public, aren't i think the big loser here is all but um,h public, aren't i think the big loser here is all but um, kelvinic, aren't i think the big loser here is all but um, kelvin mackenzie, we. but um, kelvin mackenzie, they're now coming this is they're now coming up. this is a big story. why eritrean big story. why are eritrean migrants on the streets migrants clashing on the streets all europe and in the uk? all over europe and in the uk? and how worried should we be? former bbc africa editor martin plaut explains why we should indeed be very, very concerned. but next, as keir starmer moves closer to calling for an immediate ceasefire in gaza after weeks of pressure, i'm asking is he on the run from extremis and is he about to get into bed with jeremy corbyn? plus, disgraced hospital meals that you wouldn't even feed your . dog? .dog? >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers sponsors of weather on gb news . on gb news. >> hello, very good evening to you, i'm alex burkill. here's your latest gb news weather update. there will be a spell of wet and windy weather for many of us tomorrow, but before that we do have relatively quiet we do have a relatively quiet night . that's because we night ahead. that's because we have to the south have high pressure to the south
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of which is keeping our of us, which is keeping our weather largely that weather largely settled. that being , a weak front is being said, a weak front is pushing its way eastwards across scotland evening, bringing pushing its way eastwards across scotléthick evening, bringing pushing its way eastwards across scotléthick cloud ning, bringing pushing its way eastwards across scotléthick cloud and bringing pushing its way eastwards across scotléthick cloud and some ing some thick cloud and some outbreaks rain for a time. outbreaks of rain for a time. then through much the night. then through much of the night. for us is going to be for many of us it is going to be largely perhaps largely dry. perhaps some thickening the west thickening cloud in the west will bring few outbreaks of will bring a few outbreaks of drizzly here, and watch drizzly rain here, and watch out for and fog patches. for some mist and fog patches. two it may be a touch fresher than some recent nights, particularly the east, where particularly in the east, where we get some clearer skies. we may get some clearer skies. temperatures to temperatures perhaps dropping to low but staying low single figures but staying above . however, as we above freezing. however, as we go through tuesday , a wet go through tuesday, a wet morning across parts of scotland and northern ireland as a band of rain pushes its way in, that is then going slip further is then going to slip further south and eastwards into england and the and wales as we head into the afternoon, the afternoon, though, across the south—east it's to south—east here it's likely to stay least during the stay dry, at least during the daytime mild highs of daytime and mild again. highs of around 14 or 15 celsius. some showers pushing in behind that front on tuesday, but it's front later on tuesday, but it's on wednesday where we get the heaviest rain likely to be pretty persistent and could cause some localised problems,
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especially in the south west where we do have a warning as some disruption some some travel disruption and some localised flooding quite localised flooding is quite likely rain does clear likely that rain does clear through as we go into thursday. but to but more unsettled weather to come go through the of come as we go through the end of the and into the weekend. the week and into the weekend. with dropping close with temperatures dropping close to for the time of year , to normal for the time of year, looks things are heating up looks like things are heating up boxt boiler as sponsors of weather on gb news .
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it's 10 pm. pm! it's 10 pm. i'm patrick christys tonight right ? right? >> extremists have keir starmer on the run and he's about to get back into bed with jeremy corbyn . and. >> others . >> others. >> others. >> eritreans are getting violent right across europe and i will reveal why that is a problem for us here in britain . plus, us here in britain. plus, hospital dinners. you wouldn't even feed your dog also. >> yeah, he's , uh, he's on his >> yeah, he's, uh, he's on his phone. he's all right. >> health and safety gone mad. what's the point of our emergency services there? i've got all of tomorrow's newspaper front pages for you tonight with daily express columnist carole malone , journalist mike buckley malone, journalist mike buckley and brexit party mep belinda and ex brexit party mep belinda de lucio . and they've got a de lucio. and they've got a religious habit of winning this
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lot . karate britain here we go lot. karate britain here we go. sir keir starmer is about to cave in to extremists. i'll explain how . next. explain how. next. >> the top story tonight from the gp newsroom. a man who piloted a people smuggling boat across the english channel has been found guilty of manslaughter. here's the rescue . manslaughter. here's the rescue. taking place in december 2022. if you're watching on tv, you can see the dinghy has collapsed in on itself. that ended up killing four people who were on board and ibrahim abbas, who's a senegalese migrant, was in charge of that vessel, navigating using only mobile phone technology , which the phone technology, which the judge said led directly to the
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deaths. one of the passengers told kent police it was common knowledge among those on the boat that once they entered british waters , they would be british waters, they would be rescued . the business secretary rescued. the business secretary took aim at the former post office chairman today, accusing him of making up claims that he was told to delay compensation payments yesterday , mr staunton payments yesterday, mr staunton suggested he'd been made a scapegoat for the post office scandal, and that the government had deliberately delayed compensation payouts. hundreds of post office staff are still waiting for compensation action, despite the government announcing that those who've had convictions quashed are eligible. speaking in the commons, kemi badenoch said mr staunton's claims were a blatant attempt to seek revenge following dismissal himself . following dismissal himself. >> mr staunton claimed that when he was first appointed as chair of the post office , he was told of the post office, he was told by a senior civil servant to stall on paying compensation. there is no evidence whatsoever that this is true. in fact, on becoming post office chair, mr
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staunton received a letter from the bays permanent secretary, sarah mumby, on the 9th of december, 2022. it welcomed him to his role making it's crystal clear that successfully reaching settlement with victims of the post office scandal should be one of his highest priorities . one of his highest priorities. >> kemi badenoch now new government guidance been issued today for teachers in england on restricting the use of smartphones in schools, as concerns grow over the impact of social media on young people, headteachers can now choose to include a ban on phones with provisions for searches of school bags if necessary . school bags if necessary. headteachers say the guidelines aren't needed because robust rules already exist . the rules already exist. the government says, though, that recent data showed 29% of secondary school pupils report mobile phones being used during class. the education secretary, gillian keegan, says the government's ensuring clarity and consistency exists across all schools . all schools. >> what we're trying to do is change the social norm, change the norm in our schools that
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that phones are not acceptable in our schools and some other countries have already done this. >> quite a countries >> quite a few countries have already done this, just already done this, and we just want that it's want to make sure that it's consistent make it clear, consistent and we make it clear, and head teachers and we empower head teachers to do this. and we think that mostly, um, this is something that would welcome. mostly, um, this is something tha now would welcome. mostly, um, this is something tha now , would welcome. mostly, um, this is something tha now , lord )uld welcome. mostly, um, this is something tha now , lord cameron ome. mostly, um, this is something tha now , lord cameron has. mostly, um, this is something tha now , lord cameron has been >> now, lord cameron has been visiting some key battle sites in the falkland islands, in the south atlantic today as part of his visit to show islanders there that they are a valued part of the british family at goose green, where 18 british army personnel died in 1982. >> lord cameron visited the museum and thanked locals for keeping their memory alive. he also laid a wreath at san carlos, nicknamed bomb alley due to the aerial attacks faced by british warships in 1982. as they protected the land against invading argentinians. it's the first visit by a foreign secretary there for almost 30 years, and comes amid renewed argentine calls for negotiations on the island's future. for the
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latest stories, do sign up for gb news alerts by scanning the qr code on your screen , or go to qr code on your screen, or go to gb news. com slash alerts . gb news. com slash alerts. >> extremists and radicals have got sir keir starmer on the run, and he's about to get back into bed with jeremy corbyn. starmer whipped his mps to vote against a ceasefire a few months ago and a ceasefire a few months ago and a third rebelled. he lost eight shadow cabinet ministers, now labour mps are getting hounded everywhere they go , like shadow everywhere they go, like shadow chancellor rachel reeves getting a verbal battering in the street again . again. >> why did you not vote for a ceasefire? rachel where are you going ? going? >> complicity in genocide . >> complicity in genocide. >> complicity in genocide. >> rachel , israel's got a right >> rachel, israel's got a right to defend, but palestine hasn't. rachel why, rachel? why a palestine less a people where are you going? >> rachel ? >> rachel? >> rachel? >> mr starmer is having to deal with a raft of alternative
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campaign posters popping up as well. i stand with genocide tel aviv . keith is the latest that aviv. keith is the latest that i've seen there. it's happening on a daily basis now. labour made a big thing about appealing to the muslim vote. now they've lost the muslim vote and they've realised that they've made a mistake. in fact , they have mistake. in fact, they have literally lost the muslim vote. the website has popped up. muslim .co.uk they say they're backing candidates in every single constituency where the mp abstain or voted against a ceasefire. the pressure now is massive . and now keir starmer massive. and now keir starmer has been backed into a corner by the snp because mps will be bringing forward a motion to the house of commons to back an immediate ceasefire. >> our history will judge all of us by our words and by our actions, so will starmer tell labour mps to vote for the snp motion? >> well, labour in scotland have gone for it. scotland's labour leader anas sarwar has come out in favour, so he's broken ranks
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now. i asked jonathan reynolds, who is labour's shadow secretary of for state business and trade, if he would vote for the snp ceasefire motion. >> the position the labour party has is that we want the fighting to stop. we want a cessation of violence, we want a serious, sustainable ceasefire. that means and we want means both sides and we want a peace process out of that. and i think that is right. think think that is right. i think people saying that you ignore the still the fact that hostages are still being that you somehow being held, or that you somehow only one side in only think there's one side in this. both sides be this. we want both sides to be part of that ceasefire, we part of that ceasefire, and we want sustainable two want a proper, sustainable two state peace process. >> labour didn't answer the question, wes streeting , who question, and wes streeting, who is of the mps who could lose is one of the mps who could lose his a pro—palestinian his seat to a pro—palestinian independent? well, he couldn't give straight either. give a straight answer either. >> what their final word we >> see what their final word we have, that we have the final word . word. >> it's been confirmed by the snp, tabled . but this house snp, tabled. but this house calls for immediate ceasefire calls for an immediate ceasefire in you back that ? we will. >> we will put our we will put our own position out and we will there be will there be a labour motion where we want to get to?
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>> i'm not going to pre—empt, motion where we want to get to? >> decisions)ing to pre—empt, motion where we want to get to? >> decisions thatto pre—empt, motion where we want to get to? >> decisions that are re—empt, motion where we want to get to? >> decisions that are being pt, uh, decisions that are being taken by colleagues with only two days away, we might be doing well . then you won't two days away, we might be doing well. then you won't mind waiting, you ? waiting, will you? >> haven't got an answer. >> they haven't got an answer. they an answer. and they haven't got an answer. and then comes says then starmer comes out and says this and to the fighting, not just now, not for just this and to the fighting, not just now, not forjust a pause, but permanently a ceasefire that lasts. >> conference . that is what must >> conference. that is what must happen now . the fighting must happen now. the fighting must stop now. well that's not going to wash, is it? >> will he vote for a ceasefire on wednesday or not? and the latest development is that hard left? jeremy corbyn backing group momentum , have said group momentum, have said they're going to start a lobbying blitz, encouraging people to call on labour mps to back the snp's amendment, demanding an immediate ceasefire. so if keir starmer caves into the old ceasefire calls, who's he on the same side as mps just to wake up, wake up and think about what is happening in gaza .
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happening in gaza. >> think what the international court of justice said, and think that there are now demonstrations today . in 45 demonstrations today. in 45 countries around the world. this is a global movement for palestine. is britain going to be left behind in that global movement ? movement? >> he'd also be caving in to pressure from people like this woman spotted on the so—called peaceful, pro—palestine protest at the weekend. long live the intifada intifada . of course, intifada intifada. of course, being a kind of violent insurrection there. and of course , these people as well, course, these people as well, who hounded a man stating the simple fact that hamas are a terrorist group . terrorist group. ignonng terrorist group. ignoring . you must not be. keir ignoring. you must not be. keir starmer is facing his worst nightmare when the snp hold a
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vote on a ceasefire . labour are vote on a ceasefire. labour are getting battered on social media. labour mps are getting hounded out of town wherever they go. he has lost the muslim vote and that is not coming back. no matter what he does. why? because everyone knows where he really stands on this issue . he's been relatively issue. he's been relatively pro—israel and that's all it takes. pro—israel and that's all it takes . so if he caves pro—israel and that's all it takes. so if he caves in pro—israel and that's all it takes . so if he caves in now, takes. so if he caves in now, it's because he's been outfoxed politically . he's caving in to politically. he's caving in to a minority of political extremists and he's trying to appease jeremy corbyn. it's worth noting, then, isn't it, that this guy might soon have the keys to downing street? let's get the thoughts of my panel. i have got daily express columnist carole malone. it's also journalist and commentator mike buckley and the former brexit party mep belinda de lucy. carole is sir keir starmer caving in to extremists? and he's about to get back into bed with corbyn. >> yeah of course. is this the typical of slippery stalemate? it's political expediency above principle. it was only four
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months ago, he that months ago, he said that a ceasefire was totally the wrong thing do. said it would thing to do. he said it would embolden hamas. it would stop. it would stop israel dismantling hamas. he said it was completely the wrong move. and he said he would never cave in to demands from who were saying he from people who were saying he would. change his would. he had to change his mind. done four mind. what has he done four months because he knows months later? because he knows the coming, because he the elections coming, because he knows election and rochdale knows the election and rochdale is coming. he's caved in because he knows the muslim vote. he depends. the labour depends on the muslim vote. and corbyn is whipping up muslims. there was an interesting with a muslim youth organisation . the boss youth organisation. the boss of that, guy called mohammed that, a guy called mohammed shafiq, today that rochdale shafiq, said today that rochdale was was a was a the by—election was was a was a the by—election was a referendum on gaza. it shouldn't be that it should be for the needs of the people of rochdale and you know what's farcical to me? that you know that starmer's leadership and possibly the election results depends on a war that's being fought in a different country. it has nothing to do with us. why does corbyn think stopping
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the war is our job, and that someone like netanyahu is going to listen to what keir starmer says and say, okay, we'll stop this now. >> all right, keir starmer's let this rumble on quite a while obviously. >> i mean i mean just to come back what you said, if keir back on what you said, if keir starmer changed his views starmer hadn't changed his views in be in four months, i would be worried, to be honest you, in four months, i would be worrwould be honest you, in four months, i would be worrwould be reallyt you, in four months, i would be worrwould be really odd you, in four months, i would be worrwould be really odd in'ou, in four months, i would be worrwould be really odd in the that would be really odd in the context of why would it be odd? let's let's think about the let's let's just think about the concept. have let's let's just think about the conce now have let's let's just think about the conce now in have let's let's just think about the conce now in gaza, have let's let's just think about the conce now in gaza, majority died. now in gaza, the majority of the women and children, i think would, think would think it would, i think it would be we know that for be very odd. do we know that for a fact or are we? >> yes we do. are we believing hamas? >> it's well, it's the agreed figure are lots of figure and there are lots of international observers there. i think be be think there would be be something with you something quite wrong with you if he didn't want that to stop. something quite wrong with you iimean,in't want that to stop. something quite wrong with you iimean,in't vwould at to stop. something quite wrong with you iimean,in't vwould he :o stop. something quite wrong with you iimean,in't vwould he wantp. i mean, why would he want the fighting continue, and why fighting to continue, and why would and children would he want women and children and men, admittedly, to keep dying? earth any dying? why on earth would any living i living human being one that i cannot talk living human being one that i cannokeir talk living human being one that i canno keir starmer talk living human being one that i canno keir starmer being talk living human being one that i canno keir starmer being inlk living human being one that i cannokeir starmer being in bed about keir starmer being in bed with extremists. you haven't actually any actually pointed to any extremists or giving extremists in bed with or giving into. honest, he's into. if i'm quite honest, he's talking into. if i'm quite honest, he's taliing into. if i'm quite honest, he's talii mean, we really want to >> i mean, we really want to play >> i mean, we really want to play obviously did play that game. he obviously did offer hizb
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offer legal advice to hizb ut—tahrir, are of ut—tahrir, which are now, of course, he was doing his job of director public prosecutions. director of public prosecutions. >> lawyer. mean, he >> he was a lawyer. i mean, he of he has do job, of course he has to do his job, you know, haven't you know, but you haven't actually poisoned. if you look at people, just let me at people, if you just let me finish, people finish, you look at people calling the us calling for a ceasefire. the us government just government today has just submitted the un submitted a resolution to the un saying we now want the fighting to the french government, to stop the french government, the government, the german government, the spanish government. rishi sunak himself himself. does he? >> rishi sunak himself. does he? on comes around. on wednesday? it comes around. he's a straight choice he's got a straight choice between granting victory to the snp. for their snp. right by voting for their ceasefire amendment. or what? what losing? losing it. more than a third of his mps. >> who cares about the snp motion? snp are simply motion? the snp are simply troublemaking and they're trying to labour a difficult to put labour in a difficult spot. that obvious. spot. i mean, that is obvious. he's been out for the snp, he's been outfoxed by the snp, are just with this. been outfoxed by the snp, are just keir with this. been outfoxed by the snp, are just keir starmer's with this. been outfoxed by the snp, are just keir starmer's with this but keir starmer's position is very, you gave very, very clear. you gave a speech the other day. yes he did. he the other day did. he gave the other day saying he wants the violence to end vote end now. he doesn't need to vote for resolution in to for a snp resolution in to parliament say that. >> months he said >> and four months ago he said he he cares what he said he didn't. he cares what he said four months ago. >> situation has changed
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>> the situation has changed irrevocably in the last four months. >> you mentioned that you mentioned ago, mentioned the four months ago, 28,000 died . 28,000 people hadn't died. >> i'm not >> stop shouting. i'm not shouting just making >> stop shouting. i'm not sivery1g just making >> stop shouting. i'm not sivery clear just making >> stop shouting. i'm not sivery clear point. just making a very clear point. >> trying to talk you're >> i'm trying to talk and you're trying out my point and trying to drown out my point and my why you go my point is, why don't you go ahead? what has he said about the people were the 1200 people that were slaughtered he slaughtered in israel? has he said much about them? you're talking who've said much about them? you're talkir killed. who've said much about them? you're talkir killed. me who've said much about them? you're talkir killed. me talked/ho've said much about them? you're talkir killed. me talked about that. >> a huge was the attack. and he's clear that let he's made clear that let me people interview and then i will come both of you. come back to both of you. >> uh, belinda mean, >> uh, belinda i mean, from where if keir starmer where i can see if keir starmer caves now and decides to vote caves in now and decides to vote for a ceasefire , is it not for a ceasefire, is it not giving in to mob rule on the streets , do you think? streets, do you think? >> yeah. uh, he reminds me of that churchill quote . an that churchill quote. an appeaser is one who feeds the crocodile in the hope it eats him last. and there is a lot of truth to this. and the tory party are also responsible for appeasement and buckling down to islamist mobs. appeasement and buckling down to islamist mobs . and the hard left islamist mobs. and the hard left give islamist mobs sanctuary. i've been the victim of islamist bullying . on quite a few
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bullying. on quite a few occasions. i had to have the police involved one time. it is frightening being harassed, being followed, being cornered by very raging males. um, and i've seen what's been happening to mps, whether it's by the hard left or islamist mobs. and i wonder whether keir is frightened if he doesn't come out with this dance. what's going to happen to his candidates at the next election as they go door knocking ? are as they go door knocking? are they going to be faced with the threat of violence and intimidation his intimidation and maybe it's his way keep them safe. way of trying to keep them safe. >> way buckling . >> but what a way of buckling. we submitting to we shouldn't be submitting to this. be defending and this. we should be defending and standing up. >> political expediency, >> this is political expediency, isn't because knows what isn't it? because he knows what the elections come. he knows there pro palestinian there are pro palestinian candidates put seats to candidates being put in seats to challenge labour. so this is to save his job and to save his party. >> there's no point in the genie back in the bottle. there are people. people have made their minds about that. although i can understand i just understand why. mike, can i just ask so he's not. he's said ask you so he's not. he's said he the fighting. he wants an end to the fighting. this war must stop now. he's spoken a bit about ceasefire. spoken a bit about a ceasefire. he it clear. i
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he has not made it clear. i mean, neither could wes streeting jonathan reynolds. streeting or jonathan reynolds. i whether they i mean, whether or not they are actually for actually going to vote for a ceasefire wednesday. mean, actually going to vote for a ceas do e wednesday. mean, actually going to vote for a ceas do you wednesday. mean, actually going to vote for a ceas do you predictsday. mean, actually going to vote for a ceas do you predict this. mean, actually going to vote for a ceas do you predict this will ean, how do you predict this will play how do you predict this will play wednesday? what? play out on wednesday? what? what do you think will happen? >> actually don't >> i actually don't know. i mean, i what streeting mean, i think what wes streeting said they haven't seen said is that they haven't seen the final wording yet the the final wording yet from the snp. to see snp. so they're waiting to see that. will make a that. then they will make a decision on how going decision on how they're going to vote just vote for it. but as i've just said, think doesn't matter said, i think it doesn't matter because keir very clear the because keir was very clear the other to an end other day he wants to see an end to the fighting, as does, by the way, rishi rishi sunak. to the fighting, as does, by the wayyeah,i rishi sunak. to the fighting, as does, by the wayyeah,i risthere1ak. this >> yeah, but there was this permanent mike. permanent ceasefire, mike. there was broke it. and the was one hamas broke it. and the idea going to ask an idea you're going to ask an islamist terror group to put their down. their weapons down. >> their >> jordan, when in their manifesto, want manifesto, they want to annihilate never going to get a >> you were never going to get a ceasefire. you've got ceasefire. but but you've got you trust hamas in that. you seem to trust hamas in that. >> i don't think any i don't trust hamas, i don't trust >> i don't think any i don't trusisraeli as, i don't trust >> i don't think any i don't trusisraeli government�*t trust >> i don't think any i don't trusisraeli government either. the israeli government either. do actually think want do you actually think they want to incredible wrongdoing to see an incredible wrongdoing on both sides? >> you believe hamas wants >> do you believe hamas wants i don't know, i believe that they don't know, i believe that they do to do want to see. >> makes you think hamas >> what makes you think hamas wants the ceasefire, but everybody wants naive. everybody wants to be naive. >> putting >> they're literally putting women there's
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women and children that there's ever putting women. >> they're putting women. >> they're putting women. >> fairly recently, >> everyone. fairly recently, they kept it. they kept to it. >> really? kept >> oh. oh, really? they kept it. so they the 1200 so why did they kill the 1200 people rape and behead? yes, exactly. >> i'm going to just do another little poll here now. little straw poll here now. so wednesday around. we wednesday comes around. as we understand have got understand it, the snp have got and i have of it, and from what i have seen of it, it's pretty an immediate it's pretty clear an immediate ceasefire is what the snp are saying, that they that they want. be want. so there's going to be some kind of vote on this on wednesday. understand it. wednesday. as we understand it. okay. keir tell his okay. does keir starmer tell his labour vote for or labour mps to vote for or against do think he against that? do you think he won't do it? >> what . >> what. >> what. >> he'll just abstain. >> he'll just abstain. >> i think he, i he won't >> i think he, i think he won't make the instruction is make it. the instruction is clear saying. you clear as you're saying. you think once think he'll he tried it once before. was ignored by 56 mps before. he was ignored by 56 mps and ministers. and eight shadow ministers. >> on, put a tenner on it. >> go on, put a tenner on it. which do you think he's which way do you think he's going go? going to go? >> i don't know he's going >> i don't know what he's going to what i do know to do, but. but what i do know is that he's very, very clear that wants an to that he wants to see an end to the because he said the violence because he said that literally 2 or 3 days ago and that wants to see and that he wants to see a sustainable, solution. and that he wants to see a sus belinda, solution. and that he wants to see a susbelinda, you solution. and that he wants to see a sus belinda, you thinkrtion. >> belinda, do you think he'd whip vote against whip his mps to vote against this motion? or do you think this motion? or how do you think i agree? >> yeah, agree with carol >> yeah, i agree with carol on this. think
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this. actually. i think especially the especially after the mp candidate conspiracy candidate with his conspiracy theory came and candidate with his conspiracy the delay came and candidate with his conspiracy the delay over came and candidate with his conspiracy the delay over that,came and candidate with his conspiracy the delay over that, i|me and candidate with his conspiracy the delay over that, i think and candidate with his conspiracy the delay over that, i think donnd his delay over that, i think do you think might we might be you think we might we might be in free vote territory, for in free vote territory, free for them in free vote territory, free for the well, we'll to and >> well, we'll have to wait and see. to wait. none of see. we'll have to wait. none of us have got a crystal ball, of course. a couple of days course. and a couple of days is a time politics. look, a long time in politics. look, thank very much that. thank you very much for that. it's start to the hour it's a good start to the hour now, last week. it is the now, in the last week. it is the last week enter our great last week to enter our great british and it's your british giveaway. and it's your last to grab a chance to last week to grab a chance to win tax free cash. win £18,000 in tax free cash. here's you need here's all the details you need to in the final to get your entry in the final week see how could be the week to see how you could be the winner £18,000 in tax free cash. >> that's like having an extra £1,500 month for next £1,500 each month for the next year. £1,500 each month for the next year . listen £1,500 each month for the next year. listen to £1,500 each month for the next year . listen to the £1,500 each month for the next year. listen to the moment we told phil, from west yorkshire he'd won our last great british giveaway. phil, i've got giveaway. hello phil, i've got some really good news for you. >> you're the winner of the great british giveaway. >> you're joking. that's brilliant news. but hurry as lines close 5:00 pm on friday lines close at 5:00 pm on friday for another chance to win £18,000 in tax free cash . text £18,000 in tax free cash. text gb win to 84 9002. text cost £2
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plus one standard network rate message or post your name and number to gb zero two. po box 8690 derby de19, double two, uk only entrants must be 18 or oven only entrants must be 18 or over. lines close at 5 pm. on friday. full terms and privacy nofice friday. full terms and privacy notice at gbnews.com. forward slash win . good luck . slash win. good luck. >> coming up my panel react to the big headlines in tomorrow's newspaper front page , including newspaper front page, including a potential return to royal dufies a potential return to royal duties for prince harry and next violent riots among eritreans across europe . so have we across europe. so have we imported sectarian violence to the west? and should we be worried about scenes like this happening on the streets of britain? former bbc africa editor martin plaut will reveal exactly what we're dealing with here. he's live in the studio in just a tick. trust me, you will want to listen to what this man has to say. patrick christys tonight and we are only on
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>> and the camilla tominey show sunday mornings from 930 on gb news news . news news. >> this is patrick christys. tonight we're on gb news tomorrow's newspaper front pages are on the way. but first, i'm absolutely fascinated by this story. okay, so the dutch city of the hague was rocked last night by violent riots between rival eritrean mobs torching cars, attacking the police. now the violence was between two enemy groups who appeared to support and oppose the eritrean government. now, it's not the
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first time that this has happened. first time that this has happened . okay, at least 26 happened. okay, at least 26 police officers were injured and over 200 people were arrested when clashes broke out and an eritrean culture festival in the german city of stuttgart and the israeli prime minister, benjamin netanyahu, announced a plan to remove all migrants from the east country after east african country after dozens people were dozens of people were left injured rival groups injured when rival groups clashed in tel aviv. couple clashed in tel aviv. a couple of months the uk, eight months ago. and in the uk, eight people were arrested in december after confrontation turned after a confrontation turned violent again involving, we believe, anyway, two different eritrean groups. so given that nearly 3000 eritreans have arrived on small boats last yean arrived on small boats last year, should we now be worried about importing foreign politics? and frankly , foreign politics? and frankly, foreign violent issues onto our shores? i'm very gratefully joined now by the former bbc africa editor and research fellow at king's college, university. it is martin plaut martin. how worried should we be here in britain about eritrean violence, do you think? well i think we should be
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worried because these conflicts have been going on now for at least the last 2 to 3 years, and they're growing in intensity. >> the one in in tel aviv that you mentioned was really bad and, and led there was even a gunshot by one of the government supporters inside the eritrean community against their opponents. and there were a lot of people were injured , frankly, of people were injured, frankly, a lot of them by the israeli police. but a lot of them were injured in the stones that were thrown . and there's real thrown. and there's real bitterness in the community about the issue and about the strategy . strategy. >> so why is it that that eritreans are , like, so angry eritreans are, like, so angry with each other? what's going on there? and, and in terms of the geography about where they live in britain, is part of the problem that we've imported both sides the foreign conflict, sides of the foreign conflict, as it were. >> well, it's a complicated story because in a sense, we only bring in refugees, people who are fleeing from the regime.
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there are a regime is the most repressive in africa . i mean, repressive in africa. i mean, there was an interesting exchange in parliament today where, uh, patrick grady , the where, uh, patrick grady, the snp mp, asked the minister of state, andrew mitchell, what what they were going to do because they are such bad human rights in, in, in eritrea. he called it the north korea of, of the, of the horn of africa and andrew mitchell reprise, i think the gentleman pulls his punches. it's worse than he said . that is it's worse than he said. that is how bad the situation is in eritrea. what in a sense has happenedis eritrea. what in a sense has happened is they came to power in 93 independent country after 30 years of fighting for their independence against ethiopia , independence against ethiopia, they broke with ethiopia, a separate independent country. >> but it's become such a repressive dictatorship . repressive dictatorship. >> they've never had elections . >> they've never had elections. they have no free press. they have no independent judiciary. and the president rules by decree. everybody is forced to go into national service , which
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go into national service, which is really just conscription. and . they can be in there for up to 20 years. >> wow. and he sent them into one war after another. >> you remember the war in ethiopia? uh, that ended about a year ago. >> nobody knows many died. >> nobody knows how many died. >> nobody knows how many died. >> possibly as 100,000. >> possibly as many as 100,000. so everyone from so essentially everyone from that really can probably claim asylum. >> exactly over here. but the issue that is that we end issue with that is that we end up with both sides of that living here. do we? well the problem is that they they tend to come over. >> eritreans tend to come over here and they they risk everything to come here. >> they go through the sahara. many them there, others many of them die there, others of them die boats on the of them die in boats on the mediterranean . they then cross mediterranean. they then cross europe and then they think that that going be that britain is going to be a safe haven. try and get safe haven. they try and get across the channel and you see the bodies in the water, but when they get here, they then , when they get here, they then, uh, it takes them a long time to get used to living in britain. it's not an easy place to live in. >> they think it's going to be easy, but actually it's quite
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tough. >> uh, but then they are faced with pressure from the government. if you want to get, for example, your birth certificate or your grandmother for example, your birth certi'anda or your grandmother for example, your birth certi'and she your grandmother for example, your birth certi'and she leaves'andmother for example, your birth certi'and she leaves you nother for example, your birth certi'and she leaves you ayther for example, your birth certi'and she leaves you a house, dies and she leaves you a house, you want to , uh, sell that house you want to, uh, sell that house or get a birth certificate from the government, you go to the embassy, the embassy says you must paid your 2% tax. um, must have paid your 2% tax. um, not just for this year from the year you arrived. can be thousands and thousands of pounds. >> okay, so why are we seeing violence in the streets around europe and how do we see that going forward here then because of what i've been saying about the tax that extracted from the community and the young people who come here say, i didn't come flee from my home, cross the sahara and do this only to be taxed and forced by the government , then they use all government, then they use all sorts of means. >> they use even physical violence in in european countries to force the exiles to support them and to hold these rallies where they have young
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kids dressed in military fatigues , marching up and down, fatigues, marching up and down, you know , shouting for the you know, shouting for the regime and the young people who are opposed that say , we're not are opposed that say, we're not going to put it any more. we're going to put it any more. we're going to put it any more. we're going to break these events. going to break up these events. and where and that is where the confrontation happens. >> do you think this >> and how bad do you think this could know, on could get then in, you know, on the streets of britain? >> look, i don't want to you can't don't want can't predict and i don't want to overemphasise can't predict and i don't want to (butzmphasise can't predict and i don't want to (butznthinkise can't predict and i don't want to (butznthink people will be hurt. >> and there's even a possibility people being possibility of people being killed. really killed. gosh it's really getting serious. people are throwing, you lumps concrete at you know, lumps of concrete at each other. now you only have to make mistake and somebody is dead. >> and i think that is really worrying situation . worrying situation. >> there's really a lot >> and there's not really a lot we do about as long as we can do about it as long as people here, suppose. people are here, i suppose. is there really? people are here, i suppose. is there rea|we can't send them back >> well, we can't send them back because the situation is so bad. >> they here the problem >> they are here and the problem is government is that the government was presented back in presented with evidence back in 2011 about what this extraction of tax by the eritrean government through the console. >> they did nothing about it two years ago. >> so the house of lords said we must have a serious look at
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this. >> and we've got to have a robust policy. >> nothing is being done. >> nothing is being done. >> and one government after another has ducked the issue of really taking on the eritrean. >> and it's going to it's going to keep escalating, i suppose, isn't it. look, can i just say thank you very much. it's a pleasure. um, well, pleasure. and um, well, unfortunately, the unfortunately, because of the subject do suspect subject matter. but i do suspect that be talking again at that we'll be talking again at some thank you. some point soon. so thank you. an to have you some point soon. so thank you. an the to have you some point soon. so thank you. an the show. to have you some point soon. so thank you. an the show. is, to have you some point soon. so thank you. an the show. is, of have you some point soon. so thank you. an the show. is, of course,yu on the show. that is, of course, martin who's former martin plaut there, who's former bbc editor and research bbc africa editor and research fellow college, fellow at king's college, university. hs2 now up next, the nhs is serving food that you wouldn't give to your dog as our national health service becomes a disgrace . and is a national disgrace. and who is to blame? don't to blame? but don't forget sending your pictures of disgusting meals or nice disgusting nhs meals or nice ones to be fair, gb's ones as well. to be fair, gb's views plus my views at gb news.com. plus my press pack returns so very shortly just couple shortly in just a couple of moments have all of moments you will have all of tomorrow's front pages tomorrow's newspaper front pages and i'll show you what happened when michael buble loved bombed prince harry. it's not great.
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>> so you're listening to news.
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radio. >> it's time to bring you tomorrow's news tonight. now in the liveliest paper of you, you'll get anywhere on telly. here are the front pages. so we take it away with the metro. beautiful souls. very sad story. this tragedy of dead siblings. so three young children believed to have been murdered in their home were beautiful souls. a friend said . unfortunately, they friend said. unfortunately, they were a baby, uh, aged three years old and another one aged seven years old as well. really a really sad story that we're going with the eye now. uh, labour set to pledge triple lock on uk state pensions. sir keir starmer and shadow chancellor rachel reeves will commit to continuing existing state pension safeguards. so it looks as though that is , you know, an as though that is, you know, an interesting pledge really from the labour party. labour set to pledge triple uh, daily pledge triple lock. uh, daily express pm. i know it's been tough, but our plan will boost britain. he's really emphasising the plan, isn't he? i've got a plan. uh, rishi sunak has vowed
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to renew britain's sense of pride after tough times . he pride after tough times. he promised daily express readers who met him at number 10 that his plans for the economy will boost britain. well there we go. let's go to daily telegraph let's go to the daily telegraph us block to block israeli us block moves to block israeli offensive. biden tries to stop the invasion of rafah. also so men and women's brains work differently. scientists prove . differently. scientists prove. it says this is the daily telegraph don't start shouting at your tv screens. um, apparently the brains of men and women operate differently. scientists have shown for the first in a breakthrough first time in a breakthrough that sex matter in that proves sex does matter in how people think. okay let's go to the national. refugees are welcome here. cleverly's claim that scotland does not take its fair share of asylum seekers, fails to look at the full picture, expert says, with respect to the national, the expert also then went on to say that if you do actually take the definition of asylum seeker, then scotland behind. then scotland is lagging behind. but the story but there we go. but the story at the top the national at the top of the national is what talking about now. what we're talking about now. health sorry after
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health board says sorry after picture hospital picture of disgusting hospital food viral. well, i'm food goes viral. well, i'm joined by my press pack. i've got daily express columnist carole malone, journalist and commentator buckley and commentator mike buckley and former belinda former brexit party mep belinda de is bad enough de luci. so it is bad enough having relative in hospital. having a relative in hospital. of would of course it is. but how would you if you knew they were you feel if you knew they were given this for lunch ? this is given this for lunch? this is what an elderly man was given at queen elizabeth nhs hospital in glasgow. . this isn't glasgow. but wait. this isn't the only dodgy dinner on offer in the nhs. i mean, look at that. so i'm sorry, but let's keep that on the screen for a sec. so top left to me looks like dead mice in hummus. and then got, well , i mean, then you've got, well, i mean, i've on then you've got, well, i mean, pve on top then you've got, well, i mean, i've on top . i've thrown that up on the top. right. and then at the bottom that's the other end. that's come out the other end. and so of both of and then so, so, so of both of them to honest with you, them that to be honest with you, is of a heavy night, is the stages of a heavy night, isn't it? um, it's not exactly putting the health the putting the health into the national mean, national health service. i mean, carol, what's going on here? has it become a national embarrassment? i'm just saying, i'm old >> i'm just saying, i'm old enough remember the enough to remember when the national made its food on national health made its food on the premises. national health made its food on the premises . all of these are the premises. all of these are farmed out to outside companies
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who it in in terrible old who bring it in in terrible old trays. i mean, that first one you there, i can't you showed there, i can't identify what that food on identify what that food is on that there's two. there's that plate. there's two. there's two. i can identify the potato, but then there's something else looked and looked like a potato and something that like something else that looks like ricotta, a meat. the whole point about you're never more vulnerable when you're in vulnerable than when you're in hospital. you're sick and you need your nutrients. then more than there's nothing. than ever, there's nothing. there's nutrients in any of there's no nutrients in any of that stuff. >> you've just showed you're going this 14 going to tell me this is 14 years of tory cuts, aren't you? i is. i mean, it is. >> i mean, let's be i >> i mean, let's be honest. i mean, to say, i mean, mean, i have to say, i mean, just we went live, carol just before we went live, carol was literally a was literally there like a minute ago. just saying. oh, well, 15 years ago, mum well, 15 years ago, my mum was getting under getting great feeling under a labour government. that's why. why the decently why well, the nhs was decently funded. if you want decent food, it's going to cost money. this is for it . is pay for it. >> this is absolute tosh. this literally telling. >> we just he told me. >> we just say what he told me. >> we just say what he told me. >> is private companies >> this is private companies that making so that are making money. so they're paid a certain amount by they're paid a certain amount by the really matter if the it doesn't really matter if it's all right for it's called all right for a decent meal. >> wherever it comes from. this government is when i belinda,
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when i saw that picture, patrick of the spam and potatoes, i thought it was gubbins from thought it was the gubbins from an operation . an actual operation. >> i it was literally >> i thought it was literally something that had been schlepped so schlepped out. it was so disgusting actuallythink disgusting. i actually think carol's got a point. the nhs is allowed to waste many allowed to waste so many millions of money. millions of pounds of money. it's never had so much money than so it's not than it has now. so it's not about the problem is it's about cuts. the problem is it's wasted all the time, mismanaged all the time. could be all the time. so it could be spent on food, but instead it's outsourced. a rubbish should be ashamed of. >> so they can't make an excuse for that. they should sack the company that has providing that and company will provide. i mean, you wouldn't, be >> i mean, you wouldn't, to be honest with you. you wouldn't. well, i literally would honest with you. you wouldn't. well it i literally would honest with you. you wouldn't. well it to i literally would honest with you. you wouldn't. well it to dog,3rally would honest with you. you wouldn't. well it to dog, buty would honest with you. you wouldn't. well it to dog, but i would honest with you. you wouldn't. well it to dog, but i mean, feed it to the dog, but i mean, it's phrase, isn't it? you it's the phrase, isn't it? you wouldn't it your dog, wouldn't give it to your dog, you wouldn't love your dog very much it that. much if you gave it that. >> tell you. yeah, yeah. >> i can tell you. yeah, yeah. it's no for dog either. it's no good for the dog either. >> disgusting. >> it's disgusting. >> it's disgusting. >> joke. if we're >> this isn't a joke. if we're feeding food feeding patients poor food in hospital, going to stay hospital, they're going to stay sick longer. they're going hospital, they're going to stay sick in nger. they're going hospital, they're going to stay sick in hospitaley're going hospital, they're going to stay sick in hospital bedsgoing hospital, they're going to stay sick in hospital beds for|g to stay in hospital beds for longer. there's fewer longer. that means there's fewer beds available for anybody else. this. these this. this matters with these people's matters people's health. it matters for
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all emailed in. >> thank you very much, lisa. i haven't seen this by the haven't seen this yet, by the way. goodness knows way. so goodness only knows what's screens. what's about to hit our screens. but writes. patrick, this but she writes. hi patrick, this is chips and mushy is the fish chips and mushy peas. served the queen peas. i was served at the queen elizabeth in gateshead. elizabeth hospital in gateshead. needless didn't eat needless to say, i didn't eat it. can we get see? see that ' 7 m. again? >> the mushy wthe mushy >> it's the mushy peas that i'm missing now. >> for me the peas. >> for me it's the mushy peas. they you bounce they look like you could bounce them wall. not good. i'll them off a wall. not good. i'll be honest with you. the be honest with you. the the breaded doesn't look breaded fish doesn't look all the look all the chips. the chips look all right. i the peas, right. i think the mushy peas, it's he's got like he's got a bit a crust on it. um. yeah. bit of a crust on it. um. yeah. but i mean, belinda is, i mean, just generally the in just generally the food in hospitals mean, know hospitals for me. i mean, i know it's a national joke, it's a bit of a national joke, but there's a heck of a lot of things online there. i mean, it's not really fair it's not it's not really fair on it's not it's not really fair on it's fair. it's not fair. >> it is going to keep >> and it is going to keep people sicker for longer. and just you a very, very just to give you a very, very quick example, friend of mine quick example, a friend of mine worked nhs for seven worked in the nhs for seven years and they cleaned the wards right, nice and right, make them all nice and clean. were not allowed to clean. they were not allowed to use stepladders to clean the top of lights of health and of lights because of health and safety. it rentokil, outsourced it to rentokil, a mice rat very, you mice and rat company, very, you know, expensive compared mice and rat company, very, you kn(to expensive compared
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mice and rat company, very, you kn(to use expensive compared mice and rat company, very, you kn(to use the (pensive compared mice and rat company, very, you kn(to use the stepsve compared mice and rat company, very, you kn(to use the steps to compared mice and rat company, very, you kn(to use the steps to wasteired to, to use the steps to waste taxpayers money rather than putting giving of the putting their own giving of the money they the money that money that they the money that is wasted that could be put to money that they the money that is wa�*foodthat could be put to money that they the money that is wa�*food is|t could be put to money that they the money that is wa�*food is astronomical.t to money that they the money that is wa�*food is astronomical. it's good food is astronomical. it's actually with actually nothing to do with cuts, mismanagement. actually nothing to do with cut�*yeah. mismanagement. actually nothing to do with cut�*yeah. all;management. actually nothing to do with cut�*yeah. all right.gement. actually nothing to do with cut�*yeah. all right. um,3nt. actually nothing to do with cut�*yeah. all right. um, well, >> yeah. all right. um, well, now , now, hand our now, now, big hand to our firemen and women who put their lives on the line every single day for members of the british public. all our public. well done to all of our exceptional emergency service workers, , course, when workers, except, of course, when there's four feet of flood water. so that's right. a man trapped in a sinking car. there we go. uh was left on his own because firefighters are only allowed to go in water. waist high, apparently. thankfully, a braver couple took the plunge and fished the driver out. that's how you do it. i just find that quite staggering, really. that we've got, you know , a fire fighters there standing looking at the sea. i don't know if we could just bring that back up.can if we could just bring that back up. can we. so i'll just bring it back up. so it's ridiculous that we've so you better that we've got. so you better flood i mean, can i also flood water. i mean, can i also just say i think it's absolutely
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ludicrous this hasn't got ludicrous and this hasn't got enough which enough attention, which is why a learner has up in a learner driver has ended up in a lake of floodwater. i mean, lake full of floodwater. i mean, i would seriously question if lake full of floodwater. i mean, i w> i think bodes does >> i think it bodes well. does it? can you imagine it? i mean, can you imagine being surrounded by being there, surrounded by floodwater and panicking and you've firefighter you've got a firefighter there going, right, worry. going, all right, don't worry. a member will be member of the public will be here look, coming member of the public will be herecoming look, coming member of the public will be herecoming up, look, coming member of the public will be herecoming up, loccrowning; up, coming up, the crowning moment where moment of the show where i decide tonight, as great as britain and jackass and britain and union. jackass and get buble. get ready for michael buble. mickey his mate, mickey bubble to his mate, serenade i said it serenade prince harry. i said it on history's page. >> may have cost him each . >> may have cost him each. >> may have cost him each. >> we come, harry. oh, me. >> well, i'm seriously. come on. just harry really want to return to royal duties. we debate if
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the king should take him back . the king should take him back. all of that. and yes, more of tomorrow's front pages for you in second. i'll see you in just a second. i'll see you in just a second. i'll see you in a second.
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all right. it's time to return to the liveliest pay per view on telly. now, more front pages for you. let's do it. all right. the guardian . stand with me. yulia guardian. stand with me. yulia navalnaya vows to continue her husband's fight. navalnaya vows to continue her husband's fight . um, ex post husband's fight. um, ex post office chair out for revenge, says kemi badenoch . let's go to says kemi badenoch. let's go to the daily mail. hundreds of high risk flights land in uk unchecked. so high risk aircraft are landing in britain without security checks and a major new immigration scandal, the mail can reveal . the borders watchdog can reveal. the borders watchdog warned of dangerous failings as a prominent london airport , a prominent london airport, which potentially allowed thousands passengers to evade thousands of passengers to evade passport controls. there go . passport controls. there we go. yeah, well, the times same story about navalny's wife widow, unfortunately. now, um, okay.
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all right. so i'm joined again by my press pack, daily express columnist carole malone, journalist commentator mike buckley, brexit party buckley, and former brexit party mep so so while mep belinda de luci. so so while the king is open to rebuilding ties his estranged son, ties with his estranged son, insider sources have stressed that the duke of sussex, prince harry, will not be welcomed back as working royal any time as a working royal any time soon. and let's be honest, opening the local community centre isn't exactly harry's idea of a good time. just last night, he hosting lavish night, he was hosting a lavish gala vancouver gala dinner in vancouver alongside markle and alongside wife meghan markle and to wrap up their week promoting the 2025 winter invictus games. the sussexes just wanted their privacy and hate to be the centre of attention. so here's mickey bubble michael buble singing on stage about how amazing they both are . one man i amazing they both are. one man i like changing plan . like changing plan. >> it does all he can. >> he's a visionary. >> it does all he can. >> he's a visionary . a sage on
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>> he's a visionary. a sage on history's page , they give cost history's page, they give cost him each . we come. harry i've just. >> a sage on history's page. >> a sage on history's page. >> i think i threw up in my mouth there a little bit. um look, it's, um. it's the sort of sycophantic , hero worshipping sycophantic, hero worshipping stuff that harry and meghan must absolutely love. i love michael buble . um, and it's still. absolutely love. i love michael buble . um, and it's still . well, buble. um, and it's still. well, sadly, i'm like, that was just. the thing is, that's the last thing this this couple needs is this kind of messiah complex that michael buble has just given them already. >> i mean, look, you know , it's >> i mean, look, you know, it's one thing being, you know , one thing being, you know, sympathetic towards harry. meghan all of this stuff, but thatis meghan all of this stuff, but that is token. >> he's a sage, isn't it? >> i mean, i think, let's be honest, the invictus games is a good thing. yes. i mean, it's a very good thing, you know, lots of been of people who've been in conflict are conflict situations and are disabled . they get disabled as a result. they get the and do
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the chance to compete and to do something together. and it's genuinely a good thing. and indeed, start it. indeed, harry did did start it. so that's something so i think that's something to celebrate. i think celebrate. however i think this kind singing from kind of, you know, singing from michael not very michael buble is not very british, i think think british, is it? i think i think as makes us feel as british people makes us feel slightly well slightly awkward as well as the wider context of awful he's wider context of how awful he's been rest of the been towards the rest of the royal family. he hasn't apologised, if i apologised, and certainly if i were they'd like, were charles they'd be like, well, your were charles they'd be like, well, role your were charles they'd be like, well, role until your were charles they'd be like, well, role until you've/our royal role back until you've actually said sorry. yeah. >> which is not happening. yes. so but i it's so yeah. yes. but i think it's interesting, isn't it? so yeah. yes. but i think it's inteallting, isn't it? so yeah. yes. but i think it's inteallting, isrumours he >> all these rumours that he might to be taking might be going to be taking a bit work up now, the thing, bit of work up now, the thing, it's come his it's tosh. they've come from his camp because the palace officials said no officials have said under no way under no circumstances are you going to come back and do this. you know, it strikes that you know, it strikes me that harry enormity harry now realises the enormity of what he's done and what he's lost . and i think trying to lost. and i think he's trying to get because he's get back because what he's asking what he asking for now is what he refused do before. remember refused to do before. remember he the queen for part he asked the queen for a part time role. said absolutely time role. she said absolutely no. what's to happen? no. what's going to happen? that's he's asking for. now that's what he's asking for. now he a foot he wants to little put a foot back in the water. >> you're right. actually, mike, back in the water. >> yormakingt. actually, mike, back in the water. >> yormakingt. a(point', mike, back in the water. >> yormakingt. a(point about, back in the water. >> y> y< it being|t. a(point about, back in the water. >> y< it being soa(point about, back in the water. >> y< it being so unfamiliar)ut, that. it being so unfamiliar as brits actually,
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brits because actually, if it had british mate singing had been a british mate singing it, the whole song would have been him. you been ribbing him. oh, yeah. you know, and that know, making fun and that self—deprecation, which is absolutely there. but the absolutely absent there. but the fact sitting fact that they're sitting tittering just shows tittering loving it just shows what, what sycophants they are. >> want that it is all i >> they want that it is all i mean, i need also at mean, i need it, but also at this point , the invictus games this point, the invictus games is a good it is amazing. >> it's one of the it's one of the good things that harry and it's clear they love each other. >> they were very sweet to each other. harry and meghan, will >> they were very sweet to each othe themy and meghan, will >> they were very sweet to each othe them that. meghan, will >> they were very sweet to each othe them that. i'm ghan, will >> they were very sweet to each othe them that. i'm not1, will >> they were very sweet to each othe them that. i'm not buying. give them that. i'm not buying. no. think that was quite no. oh, i think that was quite sweet came on the sweet how they came out on the slopes valentine's day, slopes on saint valentine's day, on a time they were promoting the website. the new website. >> think you're getting >> i do think you're getting a big send off big kind of semi—royal send off of at what point do you think >> at what point do you think you'd have have a word and you'd have to have a word and 90, you'd have to have a word and go, you just go, look, can you actually just stop seriously go, look, can you actually just stop syou usly go, look, can you actually just stop syou would think so, >> well, you would think so, wouldn't yeah, for wouldn't you? yeah, i think for us quite us it's just genuinely quite uncomfortable. we uncomfortable. but anyway, we never again. on never have to watch it again. on the no. the bright side, no. >> apart from now, no, no. okay. now we're over to the now look, we're over to the world now, because, now look, we're over to the worldyou'll now, because, now look, we're over to the worldyou'll heard )ecause, now look, we're over to the worldyou'll heard of ause, now look, we're over to the worldyou'll heard of the a, look, you'll have heard of the premier of premier league. you've heard of la now it's time for la liga, but now it's time for the bundesliga. yes it's time.
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it's have it's the team that have a religious winning . they religious habit of winning. they are the best team , bar none, are the best team, bar none, aren't they? yeah, i've got loads of these. it's great. no. where is that? >> where is that? >> where is that? >> somewhere in italy . >> somewhere in italy. >> somewhere in italy. >> said that. we >> we thought. we said that. we guessed italy. yeah, exactly. >> yeah. no. fantastic >> um, yeah. no. fantastic i mean, you look at that and you think, jesus don't you? mean, you look at that and you thinthenus don't you? mean, you look at that and you thinthen obviously, don't you? mean, you look at that and you thinthen obviously, don'tknow, but then obviously, you know, they're uh, they're just but then obviously, you know, theygetting uh, they're just but then obviously, you know, theygetting there hey're just but then obviously, you know, theygetting there anyway,ist but then obviously, you know, theygetting there anyway, uh, not getting there anyway, uh, mick emailed this mick has emailed him with this picture of his, uh, dodgy hospital . he writes. hi, hospital food. he writes. hi, patrick. uh oh. what is that ? patrick. uh oh. what is that? yeah. what's it supposed while i was in hospital? this is one of the meals they gave me. what a joke. so it's just a jacket potato? it's been punched, so it's just battered. i've been dropped the floor and trodden dropped on the floor and trodden on. oh, there you go. get on. oh, god. there you go. get better of way. he's better. a lot of the way. he's gone. joke. regards mick. gone. what a joke. regards mick. well, kind regards well, there you go. kind regards to to mick. okay. oh, rita to you. to mick. okay. oh, rita from ireland emailed in with this of her measly this picture of her measly hospital she, uh. yeah hospital dinner as she, uh. yeah i mean, that potato does look a little bit like something someone's amputated, doesn't it? actually. oh, great.
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>> it's of. it's a homage >> it's kind of. it's a homage to sausage and mash, an homage . to sausage and mash, an homage. >> it's a minimalistic. yeah, minimalistic one. >> definitely. amputated fingers i >> -- >> gravy. >> gravy. >> i hope it's the fingers right . okay, it's time . it's time . okay, so it's time. it's time now to reveal today's greatest pritt stick idiot jackass . any pritt stick idiot jackass. any moment now. there we go . good moment now. there we go. good stuff, guys. all right. uh, carol is your greatest britain. >> please. mine is the woke idiots at the leeds playhouse who have placed trigger who have placed a trigger warning production of warning on their production of my warning on their production of my case it's my fair lady, in case it's depictions going great as britain first. >> great britain. it's all right. we've had a sneak peek of union jack has got back in my greatest britain. >> i've completely. i'm very, very sorry . very sorry. >> is this james sps? >> is this james sps? >> it'sjames >> is this james sps? >> it's james sps elianne bloody from miami. he exposes lot of from miami. he exposes a lot of nonsense about gender ideology. he story last week he broke the story last week about lewis in—house about john lewis in—house magazine on, identity was magazine on, uh, identity was was giving parents advice how to chest bind their children , their chest bind their children, their trans children. now, this is after the john hopkins university produced a report that says chest binding and
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adults can create spinal deformities , creates rib deformities, creates rib fractures, create cuts, um, skin conditions and headaches. and still they're advising parents to do this. john lewis should sell furniture and washing machines and shut up an overly pnced machines and shut up an overly priced kitchens . priced kitchens. >> anyway. come on euros . >> anyway. come on euros. >> anyway. come on euros. >> so although it's not a brit, mine's honorary, um, greatest britain which is yearly in the yeah britain which is yearly in the year. um, because of her incredible courage and just the way that she's dealt with, you know, just the awful circumstances been know, just the awful cir(the;tances been know, just the awful cir(the awful; been know, just the awful cir(the awful killing been know, just the awful cir(the awful killing of been know, just the awful cir(the awful killing of hereen in, the awful killing of her husband the grace and wisdom husband and the grace and wisdom and that she showed and just bravery that she showed today. i think you wonder absolutely incredible. >> wonder if wishes. >> i do wonder if she wishes. well, must wish he'd well, she must wish that he'd not know, can not gone back. you know, i can imagine . yeah. yeah, imagine that's, uh. yeah. yeah, i imagine that was an incredibly difficult conversation at the time. probably single difficult conversation at the timesince, probably single difficult conversation at the timesince, actually. single difficult conversation at the timesince, actually. but, single difficult conversation at the timesince, actually. but, um,;le day since, actually. but, um, belinda, greatest britain? >> my greatest brit is prince william putting on brave william for putting on a brave face baftas . he's an face at the baftas. he's an incredible, um , soft power gift incredible, um, soft power gift that this country has. and though his wife has been ill, his father has cancer and is constant drama that prince harry's stories are bringing the
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family the time. he just family all the time. he just keeps through he keeps on working through and he was everyone and was charming everyone and delighting he is delighting everyone. and he is the, representative delighting everyone. and he is th
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bear? >> all right, go on. my union jack has time. >> i'm just thinking maybe we can all agree that theatre doesn't need a trigger warning. yes, would be. yes, definitely. that would be. that a rarity, wouldn't that would be a rarity, wouldn't it? that my jackass , the it? i said that my jackass, the home office. this is genuinely awful, right? so there was some, you know, people moving to the uk, talking an english language test like over a decade ago. and they were like false they were given like false results, basically , they were results, basically, they were told they hadn't passed told that they hadn't passed when they clearly had passed. right. it's been a decade on. there's apology . there's been no apology. people's been ruined people's lives have been ruined because them. home because we deport them. the home office lied and office said, you've lied and treated they hadn't lied treated when they hadn't lied and treated. people have and treated. these people have not get jobs. not been able to get jobs. >> there's enough people that they uh, to split. they could, uh, decide to split. >> awful. the >> absolutely awful. and the home office is still not apologising ing. okay. >> right, interesting stuff. >> all right, interesting stuff. go belinda mines. >> all right, interesting stuff. go estarmernines. >> all right, interesting stuff. go estarmer . nes. >> all right, interesting stuff. go estarmer . um, nobody >> keir starmer. um, nobody really what he actually really knows what he actually thinks gaza—israel thinks about the gaza—israel conflict or anything. it feels like he's just blowing in the wind, which makes me feel very unsafe in the unsafe for foreign policy in the future. and. and who is putting pressure on him to do what? and his latest flip flopping. i just
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think keir has to get it. >> well, the winner is sir keir starmer. there we go, jackass. mike, i promise you keep mike, i promise you, if you keep coming will coming back, eventually you will win one of these. >> yeah i to nominate >> yeah, i like to nominate someone talked to that day or someone i talked to that day or a jackass. a union jackass. >> a union jackass. » n >> it will happen one day. can i just much? my just say thank you very much? my wonderful panel. i really, really nights. really enjoy the monday nights. we and we get stuck right into it. and that's the it should that's exactly the way it should be kick start your week. be to kick start your week. headliners are up for next a more look at of more detailed look at all of tomorrow's way more detailed look at all of tom(only's way more detailed look at all of tom(only they way more detailed look at all of tom(only they can, way more detailed look at all of tom(only they can, are way more detailed look at all of tom(only they can, are we vay more detailed look at all of tom(only they can, are we about that only they can, are we about tomorrow nine? i'll have tomorrow at nine? i'll have a couple of gems lined up for you, so i'll see you then . so i'll see you then. >> a brighter outlook with boxt solar for sponsors of weather on . gb news. >> hello. very good evening to you. i'm alex burkill. here's your latest gb news weather update. there will spell of update. there will be a spell of wet windy weather for many wet and windy weather for many of tomorrow. that, of us tomorrow. but before that, we relatively quiet we do have a relatively quiet night ahead. because we night ahead. that's because we have high pressure to the south of is keeping our
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of us, which is keeping our weather largely settled. that being weak front is being said, a weak front is pushing its way eastwards across scotland evening, bringing scotland this evening, bringing some cloud and some some thick cloud and some outbreaks for time , outbreaks of rain. for a time, then through much the night then through much of the night for it is going to be for many of us it is going to be largely dry, perhaps some thickening west thickening cloud in the west will few outbreaks of will bring a few outbreaks of drizzly here, and watch out drizzly rain here, and watch out for mist and fog patches. for some mist and fog patches. two a touch fresher two it may be a touch fresher than some recent nights, particularly east, where particularly in the east, where we may get some clearer skies. temperatures we may get some clearer skies. tem single res we may get some clearer skies. tem single figures but staying low single figures but staying above however as we go above freezing. however as we go through tuesday, a wet morning across parts of scotland and northern ireland as a band of rain pushes its way in, that is then going to further then going to slip further south and and and eastwards into england and wales . head into the wales. as we head into the afternoon, though across the southeast here it's likely to stay the stay dry at least during the daytime and mild again. highs of around 40 or 15 celsius. some showers pushing in behind that front later on tuesday, but it's on wednesday where we get the heaviest rain likely to be pretty persistent and could cause some localised problems, especially in the southwest where we do have a warning as
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some travel disruption and some localised quite localised flooding is quite normal for,“ localised flooding is quite normal for the time of year, to normal for the time of year, that feeling inside from that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers sponsors of weather on gb news .
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>> you with gb news and the top story this hour, the row between the business secretary and the former poa chairman has deepened . tonight henry staunton has accused kemi badenoch of making an astonishing series of claims after today. she told mps he'd sped, made up anecdotes following his dismissal . miss following his dismissal. miss badenoch took aim at mr staunton today in the commons , accusing today in the commons, accusing him of making up claims that he was told to delay government compensation payments for post office staff . and yesterday mr office staff. and yesterday mr staunton said the government had deliberately delayed compensation payments and tonight he says he's standing by those comments. miss badenoch had earlier said mr staunton's claims were a blatant attempt to seek revenge following his own dismissal . dismissal. >> mr staunton claims that when he was first appointed as chair of the post office , he was told of the post office, he was told by a senior civil servant to stall on paying compensation . stall on paying compensation. there is no evidence what so ever that this is true in fact,

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