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tv   Patrick Christys Tonight  GB News  February 27, 2024 9:00pm-11:01pm GMT

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gb news 8:09 pm. i'm patrick christys tonight a massive labour scandal i >> -- >> need a system which doesn't allow, um, people to manipulate the rules to be able to get what they want . well, like you did, they want. well, like you did, should keir starmer be forced to resign .7 no one else in the media resign? no one else in the media wants to talk about it. but we will. and yes, is this proof that deputy labour leader angela rayner could be in trouble with the police? >> plus, the notification that i was sacked was in the media before my team or i had had the chance to speak to them, which is just shocking, you know, it's shocking, bonkers. >> britain's broken borders laid bare and we can now reveal that lee met richard lee anderson met with richard tice, of the reform
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tice, the leader of the reform uk party, on sunday lunchtime . uk party, on sunday lunchtime. we have got the inside story of lee anderson's possible defection to reform on my panel tonight is gb news star nana akua. we've got tory mp jonathan gullis and author amy nicole turner . and hey, if you think turner. and hey, if you think our police are useless . it's our police are useless. it's just a it's just a pole door. that mate. anyway, get ready britain. here we go . britain. here we go. the media is trying to cover up a massive labour scandal. i reveal all . next reveal all. next >> patrick, thank you and good evening to you. well, the top story from the gb newsroom tonight is that the suspended
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tory mp lee anderson held tory mp lee anderson has held private talks with the leader of the party leader, the reform uk party leader, richard tice. it's fuelled speculation that the former deputy chair of the tory party is about to defect to the rival party. gb news understand that they met for in person talks in derbyshire on sunday. the meeting happened a day after lee anderson lost the whip for refusing to apologise after saying islamists had control of the london mayor, sadiq khan , the london mayor, sadiq khan, and also today , mp paul scully and also today, mp paul scully has apologised for saying there are no go zones in birmingham and in east london. the former minister made reference to areas with large muslim communities , with large muslim communities, comments which he says he now regrets . mr scully admits he regrets. mr scully admits he could have chosen his words more carefully , and mps are warning carefully, and mps are warning that protests are putting unsustainable pressure on police resources. their calling on the government to give more support. as demonstrations continue over the israel gaza war, a cross—party committee found that
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policing the pope, the protests between october and december last year cost forces more than . last year cost forces more than. £25 million in. the bbc has apologised to the family, caught up in the huw edwards scandal over the way their complaint was handled. it follows, claims the news presenter paid for explicit photographs of a teenager. a review into how non—editorial complaints are handled identified a number of failures and says there's a need for greater consistency when it comes to addressing concerns. the report found the initial complaint about mr edwards was not logged on to the relevant case management system , so could case management system, so could not be seen by senior figures, according to the bbc. the prince of wales has had to pull out of a royal event honour his late godfather because of what's being described as a personal matter. instead, queen camilla led the royal family during a memorial for king constantine of greece. prince william had been due to deliver a reading at the
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service. kensington palace didn't elaborate , but confirmed didn't elaborate, but confirmed the princess of wales, who's recovering from abdominal surgery, is doing well . the king surgery, is doing well. the king also missed the service as he continues treatment for cancer. prince and princess michael of kent, son in law thomas kingston, has died. the king and queen have sent their most heartfelt thoughts and prayers to lady gabriella kingston and mr kingston's family. the 45 year old was found dead at an address in gloucestershire on sunday evening. a statement from the family says tom was an exceptional man who lit up the lives of all who knew him, and gb news understands the prince of wales's absence from today's memorial isn't related to mr kingston's death . that's the kingston's death. that's the latest news for the latest news stories do sign up for gb news alerts, scan the qr code on the screen or go to gb news. common
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alerts . the labour leader screen or go to gb news. common alerts. the labour leader is facing calls to resign and the labour deputy leader could be facing a police investigation. >> you would have thought this might be leading the news agenda, but instead the subserve and blatantly left wing political press are too busy putting their energy into stories like this . conservative stories like this. conservative source points out tonight that rishi sunak has never visited a mosque during his time as prime minister. all of his predecessors johnson, may, cameron , visited mosques in cameron, visited mosques in their time. rishi sunak has held a reception for the muslim community in number 10 and sent wishes during key festivals. but considering he's visited most other major places of worship , other major places of worship, some think it's surprising he hasn't yet visited a mosque, especially given the rise in community tensions. especially given the rise in community tensions . who cares? community tensions. who cares? seriously i mean, after all, keir starmer's last visit to a mosque went really well, didn't it? he was booted out and slammed by the muslim council of wales. top stuff. anyway way
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back to the main point. all this talk of islamophobia has meant sir keir starmer's shameful leaning on the speaker, sir lindsay hoyle, over the gaza ceasefire vote . surely a matter ceasefire vote. surely a matter deserving of an immediate inquiry and very possibly sir keir's resignation has gone quiet. step forward, mr morality .labour quiet. step forward, mr morality . labour mp chris bryant, who let the cat out of the bag on channel 4. >> the way we do our business in parliament is terrible. i mean, we brought ourselves terribly into disrepute. i think, on wednesday. >> but will you put up to that filibuster, or did you take it upon yourself? >> a bit of both, if i'm honest, i think the whole day was grubby. need system grubby. and we need a system which allow people to which doesn't allow people to manipulate the rules to be able to get what they want. yeah. which which which you did, didn't you? >> i mean, it's that labour's chris bryant engaging in dirty tncks chris bryant engaging in dirty tricks so that the labour leader could pressure the speaker into breaking convention to save his skin from a massive shadow front
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and backbench rebellion in a general election year. you mean you mean this? chris bryant, who literally wrote the book called code of conduct? why we need to fix parliament and how to do it? you mean you mean this? chris bryant, refused for bryant, who has refused for years to apologise to nigel farage for baseless claims that he funded russians he was funded by the russians until recently ? well, i, until very recently? well, i, for one, am shocked . shocked for one, am shocked. shocked that unequivocal is an investigation and potential resignation matter for the labour leader, sir keir starmer. sir lindsay hoyle is certainly facing the consequences. it's been revealed tonight. in fact, in the last few minutes that the number of mps backing a no confidence motion in the speaker has now climbed to 86. well, now onto the deputy leader of the labour party, angela rayner's potential sentence . the potential prison sentence. the allegation january allegation is that in january 2006, the right honourable member for ashton under lyne brought her council house in vicarage road , stockport, with vicarage road, stockport, with a £26,000 discount under margaret thatcher's right to buy scheme. she was registered on the electoral roll there from 2005
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to march 2015. in 2010 she married mark rayner, but confusingly they were listed at different addresses for the next five years. she gave her address as vicarage road, yet he gave his address as lundy's lane, a mile away . more mysteriously, mile away. more mysteriously, when she reregistered the births of her two youngest children. that same year she gave her address as lundy's lane, now under electoral rules, voters are expected to register at their permanent home address . their permanent home address. anyone who knowingly provides false information about the address they are registered to vote at could face conviction and a prison sentence. ten points must repay some of the discount they received if they sell within five years. the question then obviously is was angela rayner lying about where she lived to avoid paying this? well then today guido fawkes, the political website published the political website published the birth certificate of one of angela rayner's children. they then quoted the law , quote, any then quoted the law, quote, any false statement with intent to have the same insert in any
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register of births or deaths. he shall be guilty of a misdemeanour and shall be liable on conviction thereof on indictment to penal servitude for a tum not exceeding seven years, or to imprisonment right. so angela rayner obviously denies any wrongdoing, but guido fawkes are adamant, writing either angela rayner lied on the birth certificate or she is lying now . if she told the truth lying now. if she told the truth on the birth certificate, she was liable for capital gains tax . if she did not, she is in breach of section four of the perjury act 1911. she ali. the police should have a little look into this. you've also got the fact that labour mp for. i think it's fleetwood actually an ex shadow cabinet minister. cat smith has now been reported to the standards commissioner for allegedly using her taxpayer funded £11,000 a year stationery budget for campaigning. now look , certainly the first two of those are big stories the labour leader should face an urgent investigation and could possibly be forced to resign as a result.
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and the deputy labour leader could face a police investigation in. this is huge investigation in. this is huge in my view, it should be leading the news agendas. there are massive questions to answer, massive questions to answer, massive . but i know what you all massive. but i know what you all really want to know. when are they going to visit a mosque? yeah, that's right. but let's get the thoughts of my panel now we have got gb news presenter nana akua. got nana akua. we've got conservative mp for stoke on trent, north, jonathan gullace and author and broadcaster amy nicole turner. nana do you think that sir keir starmer should face an investigation ? face an investigation? >> well, i think he absolutely should do we remember what happened with beergate, though? not much. but the snp are calling for the privileges committee to look into this. but of course the privileges committee then have to ask sir lindsay hoyle, he's the speaker, uh, to forward this uh, to push forward with this motion. just you remember motion. so it just you remember what last with the what happened last time with the privileges committee? harriet harman top of that. harman is at the top of that. she's labour call her she's labour skippy. i call her a.k.a because she held a
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a.k.a skippy because she held a kangaroo court. but honestly i. keir starmer has just literally supped keir starmer has just literally slipped under the radar with everything . and you know what's everything. and you know what's happening with mayor khan and lee anderson . they are pushing lee anderson. they are pushing this so much so that i think that the light has not shone on the labour party. >> yeah, i mean, jonathan lee anderson as he's admitted, has handed a little bit of a gift here. the timing was bad, but now we are talking about islamophobia. islamophobe islamophobia. islamophobe islamophobia. can islamophobia. in fact, i can tell well that sadiq khan tell you as well that sadiq khan is currently out of the kebab awards . is currently out of the kebab awards. right. and no is currently out of the kebab awards . right. and no word of is currently out of the kebab awards. right. and no word of a lie. he is talking about islamophobia racism. islamophobia and racism. seriously, you seriously, we'll bring you a clip of that later on. but jonathan, instead of talking about i would argue much about what i would argue is much bigger news, which is the fact that labour should, bigger news, which is the fact th.my labour should, bigger news, which is the fact th.my labbe' should, bigger news, which is the fact th.my labbe facing should, bigger news, which is the fact th.my labbe facing an|ould, in my view, be facing an investigation and possibly a resignation. and the labour deputy might be deputy leader might be investigated by well, investigated by police. well, first let's get to what first of all, let's get to what happened with sir keir starmer. the facts have not been disputed by party. he is that by the labour party. he is that alan chief whip alan campbell, the chief whip for labour party, went in
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for the labour party, went to in the reasons room behind the speaker's 1 to the speaker's chair, 1 to 1 with the speaken speaker's chair, 1 to 1 with the speaker, out looking speaker, and came out looking cross, means that, in our cross, which means that, in our opinion , ultimately he didn't opinion, ultimately he didn't get his way a while later he's gone back in that room with the speaker alone, but this time with sir keir starmer. >> and when they left the room there smiling, sir keir starmer's been accused of telling speaker on way telling the speaker on the way out chamber by doctor out of the chamber by doctor luke saying you as luke evans, saying thank you as he's out of the chamber he's walked out of the chamber and clearly the speaker gave his initial reason was that he wanted the broadest range of view before having been eventually dragged back to the chair suddenly playing chair and suddenly playing the security to cover security card as a way to cover his own tracks. if this was the other way round, if this had been boris johnson, if this was rishi sunak, this would be before privileges committee before the privileges committee in a heartbeat. sir starmer in a heartbeat. sir keir starmer has questions as to has to answer questions as to what said to the speaker, and what he said to the speaker, and whilst himself has said he whilst he himself has said he didn't make any to the didn't make any threats to the speaker about retaining that position post the next election, if government, he if labour were in government, he hasn't whether not hasn't said whether or not anyone within the labour
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anyone else within the labour party, whether that be their chief whip any shadow chief whip or any other shadow minister or whip, those minister or shadow whip, those are need are questions that need answering well as the speaker answering as well as the speaker answering as well as the speaker answering questions as answering those questions as well. know, i've well. and as you know, i've signed early day motion. signed that early day motion. i have the have no confidence in the speaken have no confidence in the speaker. puli khumri. now the second party to come out in total they have no faith total and say they have no faith or confidence in the speaker. he has and once the speaker has to go. and once the speaker is all eyes will be is gone, then all eyes will be on keir starmer. is gone, then all eyes will be on okay. r starmer. is gone, then all eyes will be on okay. all armer. is gone, then all eyes will be on okay. all right. i mean, amy, >> okay. all right. i mean, amy, surely nothing wrong has gone surely if nothing wrong has gone on angela rayner on here, i mean, angela rayner should should welcome a little knock the doors. knock on one of the doors. anyway by greater manchester police maybe as well police and, and maybe as well keir should keir starmer should, should welcome investigation in welcome an investigation in parliament as well. >> keir starmer would >> i think keir starmer would probably welcome an investigation because it's quite confident that nothing nothing wrong has happened here. >> um, it is true that lindsay hoyle willingly went against convention. yes, we know that. but the question is why? why? and the explanation that lindsay hoyle gave. i have great faith in. because if you asked around for character references of
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lindsay hoyle, there's not really anyone that has a bad word to say about his integrity, about his ability to do the job. he's been commended on his ability to do the job throughout his speaker. and when his time as speaker. and when you saw him apologise , which is you saw him apologise, which is something that we get to see the likes anderson do, he likes of lee anderson do, he admitted his mistake and his apology incredibly sincere, apology was incredibly sincere, and could hear the emotion and you could hear the emotion in the difficult, the in his voice, the difficult, the difficulty with this is we all know how the media works and we've proven completely know how the media works and we've with)roven completely know how the media works and we've with)roveexceptiontely know how the media works and we've with)roveexception ofy correct, with the exception of literally doing right literally what we're doing right now on this show, which is that the consequence of lindsay hoyle making that he making the decision that he made on been leant on potentially having been leant on potentially having been leant on keir starmer, that on by sir keir starmer, is that it avoided the it completely avoided the reality, is that there reality, which is that there were supposedly about 100 labour mps, including frontbenchers, that revolt on that were about to revolt on this , including, uh, like this, including, uh, like i said, yeah, frontbench, uh, mps . said, yeah, frontbench, uh, mps. >> that has all gone away now and the focus has been on lindsay hoyle and now again, the focus is his. by the way, focus is on his. by the way, patrick. but hang on minute. patrick. but hang on a minute. >> the result of the vote would have predominantly similar. >> either way, let's be very clear, the speaker
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clear, though, the speaker would have rebellion, but the have been a rebellion, but the vote have gone through vote would have gone through with the consequence for with the same consequence for the very quickly. the people of gaza very quickly. the speaker. sorry, the speaker, let's not forget, i'm sorry let's not forget, has i'm sorry the the the speaker's played the security he's been security card after he's been called obviously been called back and obviously been caught he's done. caught out in what he's done. he's promised a standing he's then promised a standing order 24 debate where he gives the control. literally the snp control. he's literally said the floor of said those words on the floor of the house. and what happened yesterday, he said, actually, i'm give you that. i'm not going to give you that. so already another so he's already made another promise that he can't promise to the snp that he can't deliver on and is ultimately renegade on that. as for angela raynen rayner, patrick, i've written a letter angela rayner which letter to angela rayner which has fawkes has led to the guido fawkes story the questions she story asking the questions she purchased this property at vicarage january purchased this property at vicathousand january purchased this property at vicathousand seven. iuary purchased this property at vicathousand seven. she's two thousand and seven. she's married then mark rayner in september she's september 2010. she's reregistered her children's births at 126 launders lane, which is property owned. at the time of the marriage by mark raynen time of the marriage by mark rayner. however , remained rayner. she's however, remained on the electoral roll of a tory vicarage road. but at the same time her brother is now at 126 london's road, as are the children . so either she's lived children. so either she's lived separately from her children,
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her brother and her husband at vicarage road, all she hasn't and is therefore actually kept herself on the electoral roll at the initial property that she bought. what's the figure ? bought. what's the figure? what's capital gains been what's the capital gains been broken or she's not paid ? the broken or she's not paid? the capital gains tax she should have paid? >> it about £80,000? >> isn't it about £80,000? that's up for debate. >> money's money. >> money's money. >> do you not think this might be the media going through be the media just going through things tooth comb? things with a fine tooth comb? and probably an and that was probably an oversight. i would oversight. if anything, i would say no oversight. >> registering. look at >> she's registering. look at the scandal . the expenses scandal. >> oh, no. »- >> oh, no. >> what was . >> what was. >> what was. >> do you know what's so frustrating about all this? the amount tory have, amount of tory mps that have, for example, zahawi be for example, nadhim zahawi be taking public money to heat his stables? hold on a minute. >> whoa whoa whoa whoa. is. >> whoa whoa whoa whoa. that is. hold that was corrected. hold on. that was corrected. >> he paid that money back in full. >> no more money. >> no more money. >> that was back in 2010. i think we're talking about now. >> and what's going on now is that and angela that keir starmer and angela rayner doing some rayner appear to be doing some things seem things that somehow seem somewhat need to somewhat shady, and they need to be investigated. and i love the fact that you actually talk
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be investigated. and i love the fact trintegrity:tually talk be investigated. and i love the fact trintegrity theny talk be investigated. and i love the fact trintegrity then and k be investigated. and i love the fact trintegrity then and mention about integrity then and mention what she was what about sue gray? she was supposed be full of supposed to be full of integrity. did she turn supposed to be full of inteto ty. did she turn supposed to be full of inteto be? did she turn out to be? >> completely impartial civil servant brilliant at job servant was brilliant at her job and now for the labour party. >> he's now chief of staff, to my you. but people can't. >> people are capable of doing two different things for parliament. >> she's clearly a labour stooge. at the end of the day is have done everything can to have done everything she can to undermine by undermine the labour party by coming citizens coming up with this citizens assembly to assembly nonsense that had to get down is at war with get slapped down is at war with labour's campaign at labour's own campaign guru at the briefing against the moment, in briefing against each other in the media has actually complaint for actually got a complaint for breaching of breaching the rules of engagement by grabbing people's phones and demanding to search through trade through whatsapp without a trade union present. union representative present. sue exactly who sue gray has shown exactly who she is and she deserves everything her way. >> these stories, people >> all these stories, people combing through the likes of angela housing angela rayner's historic housing purchases, it's just because labour got nothing about to get a landslide. >> the questions just come up front. >> let's throw an umbrella over this now and say, do we not think that absolutely think that it's absolutely remarkable that of the remarkable that all of the things spoken things we've spoken about tonight be making tonight appear to be not making the 10:00 news on the vast
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majority of the establishment media no. majority of the establishment me instead no. majority of the establishment me instead instead,». majority of the establishment me instead instead, they are >> instead instead, they are literally talking about whether or not rishi sunak should visit a mosque . well, i think this is a mosque. well, i think this is the thing, isn't it? that's all they care about. i think it's so left leaning. they i listen to, um, a radio station today and literally i just felt you nobody like me would phone up to this radio station ever, because you would be shouted down in a hail of flames that is the problem. and i think they're obsessed with their little westminster bubble and not actually understanding what is happening outside. >> you think people are obsessed with with the house that with the with the house that angela rayner had right by in 2015 when she. this is hilarious . you know it's islamophobia . . you know it's islamophobia. >> the housing minister. >> the housing minister. >> oh my god how many years ago is 2015. >> she's the shadow housing minister. and if she has breached the rules on capital gains, you would love it. >> you'd be rubbing your hands together fingers. >> if she has breached the rules around the electoral commission,
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then got nothing to then if she's got nothing to hide, submit herself a hide, then submit herself to a full investigation. right. full investigation. all right. all right, all right. >> lively! >> well, look. hey, lively! stop! glad >> well, look. hey, lively! stop! having glad >> well, look. hey, lively! stop! having this glad >> well, look. hey, lively! stop! having this conversation. we're having this conversation. look, quickly, case you look, just quickly, in case you thought i was making it up about sadiq being the kebab sadiq khan being at the kebab awards some of the awards earlier and some of the things saying on stage. things you were saying on stage. i believe we have managed to i believe we have now managed to get sadiq khan the get a clip of sadiq khan at the kebab awards responsible. all politicians at a time politicians know that at a time when issues are when emotion issues are understandably running high, we should seek to turn down the temperature and unite, not divide responsible politicians also know that racism and prejudice , no matter what form prejudice, no matter what form it takes , regardless of whether it takes, regardless of whether it's anti—semitism or yes, islamophobia , they should be islamophobia, they should be countered and condemned, not given a free pass or left unchecked for electoral gain . unchecked for electoral gain. it's the kebab awards. just talk about kebabs , right? and do one.
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about kebabs, right? and do one. anyway, got a bit cleaning up to do now. angela rayner said being able to buy my council house back in two thousand and seven was a proud moment for me. i worked hard, saved and bought it was a proud moment for me. i wo the hard, saved and bought it was a proud moment for me. i wo the book. saved and bought it was a proud moment for me. i wo the book. i'm ed and bought it was a proud moment for me. i wo the book. i'm not nd bought it was a proud moment for me. i wo the book. i'm not ashamed, it by the book. i'm not ashamed, but i'm that the tories but i'm angry that the tories that's you, jonathan, since that's you, jonathan, have since put of a secure home put the dream of a secure home out of reach so many others. out of reach for so many others. a labour spokesperson said angela, older child angela, who had an older child from relationship and from a previous relationship and her their her husband maintained their existing before existing residences before moving into their shared marital home. >> when did they move in together? >> yeah, i am also at pains to say sue gray probably denies being a labour stooge. anyway, still to come, the chief inspector of borders and immigration, neal, immigration, david neal, was brutally sacked microsoft brutally sacked on microsoft teams doesn't our focal teams. so why doesn't our focal at home office show a shred of that toughness when it comes to actual illegal migration? but up next in the head to head, local tories are branding rishi sunak a snake. does he urgently need to reinstate lee anderson the to reinstate lee anderson to the tory party? it too late? tory party? is it too late? there's a conservative civil war taking to get ready taking place to get ready for a blue blue battle. it's david blue on blue battle. it's david
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campbell , mr campbell bannerman, mr grassroots, this guy locking horns with amankona. this horns with albie amankona. this is patrick christys tonight. we're only on .
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gb news. it's patrick christys tonight. we're only on gb news. and it is time now for the head to head . time now for the head to head. yeah, well, it's the big one,
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isn't it? really so tory supporters have lashed out at rishi sunak, who they have branded a snake. not my words for suspending lee anderson from the party. well, a guardian exclusive has uncovered that several members of the conservative democratic organisation endorse forcing lee's controversial comments via whatsapp, while sunak was slammed as weak and feeble and again not my words. a nut sack , again not my words. a nut sack, another member told the whatsapp group. it's time for the snake of a pm to go, so it obviously is kicking off in quite rude terms behind the scenes . now, terms behind the scenes. now, the cd0 has also launched a petition to have the red wall mp reinstated with more than 11,000 signatories already , anderson signatories already, anderson had the whip suspended after refusing to apologise for comments he made about london mayor sadiq khan. and in an exclusive interview on this very show last night, it didn't sound like he was going to budge. >> you saw the statement that i produced on saturday, which i was willing to go with. >> it's shown a little bit of
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contrition in there. um, although i didn't directly apologise khan, which apologise to mayor khan, which i'm to . not why i've i'm not going to. not why i've got a breath in my body because the comments weren't the comments i made weren't racist at all. >> but pressure continues to grow on the former deputy chair of the tory party, james cleverly, the latest big hitter to call for an apology. i think lee should apologise. >> what he said wasn't accurate. it wasn't fair. um, but but the chief whip and the prime minister have made the party position absolutely clear on this . this. >> so tonight i am asking, should the prime minister reinstate lee anderson? let me know your thoughts. email gb views at gb news. com tweet me at gb news while you're there , at gb news while you're there, go and vote in our poll. the results will come very shortly, but first, going head to head on this, our political commentator, albie news albie amankona and gb news presenter let's not do albie amankona and gb news pres down. let's not do albie amankona and gb news pres down. and let's not do albie amankona and gb news pres down. and former; not do him down. and former conservative mep david campbell bannerman shapps, thank you very, david i'll very, very much. david i'll start with you. should rishi sunak come grovelling back to lee him whip lee anderson, give him the whip back.
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>> i think it would make a lot of sense given the whip back. patrick. i mean, um, you know, i think it's a really foolish decision to remove the whip. we've taken the heat off, uh, starmer, who was on the ropes after the problem of after all the problem of pressure rising. allegedly, the speaker , uh, and all the trouble speaker, uh, and all the trouble that's come out of that. and now we have this race row, and it's not about race. i don't think lee lee anderson is anti—muslim anyway , or racist. um, and anyway, or racist. um, and i think it's very foolish and it's , it's really let starmer off the hook and he may even leave the hook and he may even leave the party now. and that would be a disaster for the conservative party >> okay. now, albie , is there >> okay. now, albie, is there not some truth to what david's saying there? you know, rishi sunak caving in, losing the red wall, all of that. >> no, there's no truth in it whatsoever. >> look , what lee did was wrong. >> look, what lee did was wrong. >> look, what lee did was wrong. >> and as a child, i was always taught. >> when you make mistakes, you apologise . apologise. >> guys. now i understand, lee accepts that he made a mistake. >> he's described his language
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as clumsy. >> it's not something he wishes he would have done. >> it's probably not something he again. he would do again. >> so he's admitted fault. so he should apologise. there also, should apologise. there is also, of course, perception that of course, the perception that what has said is anti—muslim what lee has said is anti—muslim . this whole has . um, and this whole row has taken away from the very serious issue of islamist extremism in this country. and i think that's absolutely unforgivable, because last week we had a situation in parliament where islamist extremists pressured the speaker into changing the rules to what looked like favour favoured laboun looked like favour favoured labour. and now we're having a discussion about a race row within the conservative party, all because an mp said something which was wrong. so no, i do not think the whip should be restored unless lee anderson apologises. there is apologises. where there is contrition, there should be forgiveness. >> but if there's no contrition , >> but if there's no contrition, there should be no forgiveness. >> look , obviously, alby, >> well, look, obviously, alby, and be fair, a lot of people and to be fair, a lot of people out there do think that what lee anderson said was wrong. >> be honest with >> i'll be honest with you, david. the vast majority david. i think the vast majority of was of people think he was absolutely bang the money
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absolutely bang on the money with of what said. with a lot of what he said. certainly the sentiment of it, and shouldn't and therefore he shouldn't apologise. and actually, as rishi wrong, well, rishi sunak is wrong, well, i think he should apologise for saying think he should apologise for say um, mayor hung out with >> um, mayor khan hung out with his islamist mates. i think that went a bit far. but, you know , went a bit far. but, you know, i'd love to know from alby . how i'd love to know from alby. how do you define islam ? a phobia, do you define islam? a phobia, because a labour party can't define it there on radio four this morning. anneliese dodds chair of the party. she couldn't define it. the government ignored is actually trying to avoiding actually mentioning azam a phobia . it's not azam a phobia. it's not a helpful tum. i think kemi badenoch is right when she says we should use anti muslim hatred, which we are united in saying is totally unacceptable. david, respectfully , i didn't david, respectfully, i didn't use the word islamophobia . use the word islamophobia. >> you did. >> you did. >> i agree with kemi badenoch definition of anti—muslim sentiment, and i think i think thatis sentiment, and i think i think that is right. >> and there are many muslims within the conservative party who i've spoken to from the
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conservative muslim forum who say what he has said is anti muslim, and i think we should listen to them when jewish people told me that from the river to the sea, palestine will be free was a racist and anti—semitic slur, i believed them. >> why is it that we're not believing muslim members of the conservative party when they say what lee anderson said was anti—muslim ? anti—muslim? >> okay, david? well that's because you're just allowing a group of people to basically, um, you know, you know, create a definition that is wrong. >> i have a real worry about the definition of this. um, and also the label racists, you know , uh, the label racists, you know, uh, you know, islam is not a race. it's a religion. and that is confusing too. so that's just stick to what kemi badenoch said . anti—muslim hatred , we all . anti—muslim hatred, we all agree, is totally unacceptable . agree, is totally unacceptable. i don't think he showed anti—muslim hatred. david, if, if the mayor of london was jewish and someone said that
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he's controlled by the jewish establishment, what do you think should happen to that person? >> if they were an mp, would you think that mp should i just counter that slightly out? >> could i just before i, >> could i just just before i, like david said, could i just counter that slightly? you know, like david said, could i just cotheer that slightly? you know, like david said, could i just cothe mayor slightly? you know, like david said, could i just cothe mayor ofghtly? you know, like david said, could i just cothe mayor of london ou know, like david said, could i just cothe mayor of london had now, like david said, could i just cothe mayor of london had was if the mayor of london had was who jewish, had appeared on who was jewish, had appeared on a nine times with a platform nine times with somebody who was an out and out, you know, radical jewish person or whatever it was and, you know, wanted, wanted to do all sorts of mad stuff in the middle east, right then, you know, would it not be reasonable, albie, to pose that question? we're not just saying it's not. he's just piping out he's not just piping out something that's completely baseless the baseless here, is he? in the sense in the sense that sense that in the sense that sadiq khan has, as has been widely reported, shared a platform amount platform an uncomfortable amount of with some incredibly of times with some incredibly fruity albie patrick fruity characters? albie patrick what lee said was that sadiq khan was controlled by islamists and he'd given away london to his mates . his mates. >> that is very different from a
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platform that he shared with some pretty bad people . i think some pretty bad people. i think it was in the early 2000, one of the people we can condemn that . the people we can condemn that. >> yeah, one of the people who supposedly was a mastermind behind seven seven and yeah, patrick patrick, what lee said the other day, you agreed was wrong. >> it is wrong to say the mayor of london is mates with and controlled by islam, and as i mentioned before, i was taught as a child, when you make mistakes, you apologise all right. >> look, david, if lee anderson, as it is being strongly rumoured this evening and later on in the show, we've got a bit of an inside track on this, but it's strongly rumoured this evening to be on the cusp of joining the reform rishi sunak to be on the cusp of joining the refohave rishi sunak to be on the cusp of joining the refo have to rishi sunak to be on the cusp of joining the refo have to swallowishi sunak to be on the cusp of joining the refohave to swallow his sunak to be on the cusp of joining the refo have to swallow his words. just have to swallow his words and say to him, lee, come back because going to decimate because you're going to decimate the well, i, i think it's >> well, i, i think it's a disaster for the conservative party lee. it's an accident that shouldn't have happened. and i'm afraid the spotlight is on rishi sunak , uh, for causing this row sunak, uh, for causing this row and diverting attention. right
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away from, uh, keir starmer and his terrible record on this. so, no, i think it's a disaster. and by the way, you know, mayor khan actually was talked about white families and not representative of london and that, you know, there's too many white men on transport for london. so let's let's actually look at what mayor khan's record is as well, because it's not perfect. thank you . you. >> all right. right. just just just for the sake of absolute clarity, then i'll be you all say, even if even if means say, even if even if it means that lee anderson defects to reform. um, and even if the grassroots of the conservative party, your view, wrongly. party, in your view, wrongly. fair enough. grassroots, fair enough. but the grassroots, the conservative party, the overwhelming which overwhelming majority of which think right for what he think he was right for what he said, still think that he said, you still think that he should whip removed should have the whip removed and that's you're that's that as far as you're concerned, lp well, the grassroots, the conservative party know do not all party that i know do not all think lee anderson was right. >> i would question where you're getting from, that getting your opinion from, that you the speaker of you somehow are the speaker of the grassroots of the conservative the grassroots of the con i ervative the grassroots of the coniervati\i'm quite i, i was at >> i think i'm quite i, i was at a tory party event in
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westminster the westminster before i came to the studio tonight. >> and i can tell you, >> patrick and i can tell you, not there thinks that not everyone there thinks that lee was right in what lee anderson was right in what he said. i think what lee anderson said he anderson said was wrong. he should apologise he should apologise and then he should apologise and then he should back into the should be let back into the party. but he's going to party. but if he's not going to apologise, he's not coming in. >> and david finally, finally, for absolute for your point, absolute clarity. you just think they should let him back should just let him back in. >> yes, think he should >> yes, i think he should apologise for the remark about islamist don't think islamist mates. i don't think that acceptable . but that's that was acceptable. but that's all he has to do . and let's move all he has to do. and let's move on from this and put the focus back onto labour. well we agree david. >> well, yeah. >> well, yeah. >> i mean what is fascinating and this is the point we can't avoid, is that lee anderson is not going to do that right. so we'll have wait and see what we'll have to wait and see what happens. but but of you happens. but but both of you thank much. good stuff. thank you very much. good stuff. so do you agree with as so look who do you agree with as tory supporters at tory supporters lash out at rishi sunak should the prime minister lee anderson? minister reinstate lee anderson? tony lee tony on access. yes. lee anderson kept the conservative party silly party right by keeping silly wokeness the party. wokeness out of the party. lesley no, the tories are lesley says no, the tories are finished. should move finished. lee should move to reform. says yes, reform. ria says possibly yes, but ever have a voice
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but he won't ever have a voice again he back . so it's again if he goes back. so it's better he's independent or maybe join verdict is in join reform. your verdict is in 86% of you agree that the prime minister should should reinstate lee anderson for 14% of you say that he should not. right. coming up , that he should not. right. coming up, it's suella braverman right that the tory islamophobia row has descended into hysteria. muslim . solicitor yunus lunat muslim. solicitor yunus lunat will take on the former home secretary about all of that. and the sacked chief inspector of borders and immigration has been calling out the clown in the home office today. what he says is extremely worrying. i will play is extremely worrying. i will play that to you next. some quite astonishing revelations from that chap. actually, this is patrick christys tonight. you don't to miss a second.
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okay. all right. this is patrick christys tonight, and we are only on gbp news now. the sacked chief inspector of borders and immigration, david neal, was grilled by mps today , and he grilled by mps today, and he used the opportunity to lash out at the government. i have a little luck. >> i've been sacked for doing my job. >> you were actually dismissed by teams . by teams. >> did you just say yes? >> did you just say yes? >> i was, yes and worse than that, the notification that i was sacked was in the media before my team or i had had the chance to speak to them, which is just shocking, you know, it's
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shocking. leadership >> well, neil was fired after details from confidential details from a confidential report about potential security threats appeared in the media. but asked about the leaks today, he launched his blistering defence legislation. >> doesn't require us to comment to the daily mail, but it does. you did, though, didn't you? it does. it does. it does require to us i think there is a to us expose. i think there is a higher calling here that it does require expose know, require us to expose you know, what's if there's what's going on. and if there's something going on that, that i think a risk to think is, you know, a risk to the, you know, risks the the, you know, risks to the country, i think there's a, country, then i think there's a, there is a to expose it. there is a duty to expose it. well i'm joined now by doctor mike jones , who is the executive mike jones, who is the executive director of the think tank migration campaigns migration watch, which campaigns for lower immigration. >> now look , when it comes to >> now look, when it comes to immigration, mike, do you think the home office is fit for purpose at all? are they doing quite a bad job? >> uh, yes they are. i mean, you got to remember, mr neil is a patriot. >> you know, he's trained at sandhurst, he served with nato. >> he was responsible for the inspection of various uk
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detention facilities. as yet, he broke his silence because there were numerous reports around 15 that were kicked into the long grass . they weren't published. grass. they weren't published. they gathered dust at whitehall and, you know, allegedly, these reports have exposed systemic failures within the home office and essentially, mr neil was sacked because because he did his job and did sacked because because he did hisjob and did it sacked because because he did his job and did it very well. >> so do you think there is a chance that he was sacked essentially for being too good at his job and wanting to talk about the truth? basically yeah. >> i mean, he was sacked because he lost the confidence of the home secretary and i mean, mr neil's issue was, you know, first with, with uh, certain general aviation flights that weren't properly checked and scrutinised from high risk countries . countries. >> and he also had an issue with the social care visa, which essentially acted as a trojan horse for um , economic migration horse for um, economic migration into other sectors of the
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economy. so so, yeah, i think he's done his job very well. and unfortunately he's paying the consequences. >> it does raise the question, doesn't it, really, which is that do your job very that if you do do your job very well behind scenes in the well behind the scenes in the home and you get too home office and you get too close to, frankly, exposing the reality which is that, i mean, it sounds and looks a lot like a complete circus, then you end up getting booted out whilst everybody else manages to just plod along . just responding plod along. just responding to mr comments today, mr neil's comments today, labour's immigration labour's shadow immigration minister said minister stephen kinnock said this. chief inspector's this. the chief inspector's evidence makes clear what the british public already knew , british public already knew, that have that the conservatives have undermined border security undermined our border security and failing to show any and are failing to show any proper leadership to sort it out rather than confront uncomfortable truths . the uncomfortable truths. the government them . government is hiding them. sitting on 15 unpublished reports which are likely to expose failings in their handung expose failings in their handling of uk borders, those must be published immediately. the conservatives lost the conservatives have lost control borders, have no control of our borders, have no plan fix them, he says. only plan to fix them, he says. only labour can deliver the change that need. well, all right, that we need. well, all right, fine. i mean, it remains to
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fine. but i mean, it remains to be doesn't the home be seen. doesn't say the home office also said, look, be seen. doesn't say the home offictake also said, look, be seen. doesn't say the home offictake border said, look, be seen. doesn't say the home offictake border securityyk, be seen. doesn't say the home offictake border security very they take border security very seriously expect. seriously as you would expect. but cleverly came out and but james cleverly came out and said something today as well, which is about this idea that we now need to do more to promote the wellbeing of other countries in order to cut back on illegal immigration. so essentially, he said, this . said, this. >> well, the point i was making is that the proper management of immigration is not just a national issue, it's an international issue. and that also we work together to try and prevent the drivers of mass migration things like conflict, things like climate change. um, and we boost the economic prosperity of those countries that are currently, uh, exporting people across the world. i think this is a massive question now, right? >> which is that does the british taxpayer have a responsibility to pump what will inevitably be tens of billions of pounds into the poorer, worse
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countries in order to stop people leaving those countries to come here illegally? do you think? >> well, i was actually quite disappointed with mr cleverly's speech. you know, i'd read snippets that were leaked to the tabloid and broadsheet press, and i was expecting something quite substantial . but quite substantial. but ultimately it was an exercise in evasion of responsibility . you evasion of responsibility. you know, mr cleverly said that , you know, mr cleverly said that, you know, mr cleverly said that, you know, if we level up developing economies, then that will reduce the pull factor in terms of illegal migration. you know, we liberalise markets s, um, have a more strategic aid policy. but the problem is this has been tried in the past and it's failed now . international aid failed now. international aid does make a difference at the margins, but it's not going to revolutionise developing economies. the problem with developing countries, particularly in africa , is their particularly in africa, is their dependence on primary commodity exports. you know , that exports. you know, that underlies issues with deaths and their marginalisation from
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overseas markets. but that's going to require massive internal reform. um, you know, a few strokes of the whitehall pan and increasing international aid is not going to make a substantial difference to the pull factor. um if you want to stop illegal migration from developing countries, you need to look at domestic laws. yeah. >> whether to control your own borders, precisely whether that's the human rights act or membership of the echr. that's the human rights act or membership of the echr . yeah. membership of the echr. yeah. and where does this money go? and where does this money go? and also where are we getting this money from? you know, people are still seeing their energy people energy bills sky high. people are struggling to make are still struggling to make ends meet. at the moment. i think it's incredibly hard to justify british public after justify the british public after trying can't trying everything. we can't even get rwanda off the get flights to rwanda off the ground. but if you give us another billion we send another £10 billion and we send it somewhere for, know, it to somewhere for, you know, in third or whatever, in the third world or whatever, then it'll stop people then maybe it'll stop people coming. will but coming. it won't, will it? but look, thank you very much. great to you the show. much to have you on the show. much appreciated. course. right appreciated. of course. right now, scully appreciated. of course. right now, be scully
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appreciated. of course. right now, be backtracking scully appreciated. of course. right now, be backtracking on lly appreciated. of course. right now, be backtracking on his might be backtracking on his claims birmingham claims about birmingham and tower being go zones, tower hamlets being no go zones, but i will be revealing which area the no go zone area is the real no go zone right here this show. but right here on this show. but next braverman claims next suella braverman claims that, hysteria over the that, quote, hysteria over the tory islamophobia row is distracting from threat distracting from the real threat of islamist extremism . um, is of islamist extremism. um, is she right now? i will be joined by prominent muslim lawyer yunus lunat, who acted as a spokesman for the parent who hounded out the school teacher in batley. that famous batley grammar school this patrick school incident. this is patrick christys tonight. will see you christys tonight. i will see you in a sec.
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well, it's patrick christys tonight. we're only on gb news now. look, coming up. should keir starmer face an investigation for allegedly coerced sir lindsay hoyle ? but coerced sir lindsay hoyle? but first, former home secretary suella braverman has claimed the problem facing britain and the tories this week is not islamophobia . so she said we
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islamophobia. so she said we need to urgently focus now on the big problem how to tackle islamist extremism in the uk. the hysteria in response to those calling out the crisis is one of the reasons why we're not making progress. now, if you're wondering what exactly she's referring to, well , watch this referring to, well, watch this is it. >> islamophobic minister was it islamophobic ? islamophobic? >> and nick, it was wrong. was what lee anderson said islamophobic? >> oh, minister. >> oh, minister. >> yes or no? was it islamophobic ? islamophobic? >> are you allergic to the words islamophobic, islamophobia is rooted in racism . rooted in racism. >> it's islamophobia when it comes to islamophobia . and yeah, comes to islamophobia. and yeah, i mean, there's a heck of a lot of mention of it, isn't there? >> and not not a huge amount of mention of actual islamism, which has been a huge problem. and if we all take it right back to the initial point where all of this kicked off, arguably to the initial point where all of tof; kicked off, arguably to the initial point where all of tof this
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much for joining yunus lunat. so thank you very much forjoining us. great to much for joining us. great to have you the show. so first have you on the show. so first and foremost is suella braverman right? think that the right? do you think that the tory row has tory islamophobia row has descended hysteria? descended into hysteria? >> patrick, how are you ? >> navalny patrick, how are you? >> navalny patrick, how are you? >> i'm good. thank you. sorry i don't know if there's a bit of a delay. is it hysteria? >> sorry. just say that again is a delay. i can't hear you properly. >> is it hysteria? >> is it hysteria? >> what is the tory islamophobia row? >> um . >> um. >> um. >> is it serious? being caused by the tories? um there seems to be hysteria in the media. it's caused by the tories. right >> so do you agree, then, that the people are being overly hysterical about islamophobia and then ignoring islamism ? and then ignoring islamism? >> well, not really , no, i don't >> well, not really, no, i don't agree, i don't disagree, i don't really have a view on that. >> if that's how the tories want to behave, it's a matter for them, right? >> do you understand what you're on to talk about, though, don't you? why booked you, you? which is why we booked you, which is to respond to suella braverman comments. so do you think islamophobia
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think that islamophobia sometimes maybe as sometimes is used? maybe as a shield to deflect from, um, islamism? >> can you give me some examples ? >> 7- >> yeah. >> yeah. >> so essentially what they're saying is that at the moment our speaker revealed that mps were under terrorist threats , and under terrorist threats, and those were threats were from people , uh, towards mps from the people, uh, towards mps from the uh, islamist section of society. and then what's happened is that subsequently, we have now seen, uh, the comments entirely about islamophobia and not about that . islamophobia and not about that. islamophobia and not about that. i think also maybe make maybe make a point as well of something that i think you have personal, uh, personal involvement with, which was the batley incident, batley grammar school incident, for there for example, which is that there was an incident there which was deemed islam phobic, where deemed to be islam phobic, where a a picture of a teacher showed a picture of the prophet muhammad to some children happened children and then what happened was of people essentially was a load of people essentially erupted outside school erupted outside the school gates and had to and that individual has had to remain in police . remain in, uh, in police. >> i find it baffling . patrick, >> i find it baffling. patrick, every time i come on your show and once a week at least, your
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program has to mention about the grammar school incident. what i think batley is more for think batley is more famous for is mair . why don't we is thomas mair. why don't we talk about thomas mair? what he's famous for. that's that's the root cause of a lot of this. you keep mentioning. i'm not here to talk about the batley grammar school incident. you're bringing that up. uh i don't we are about it. are here to talk about it. >> sorry, eunice , i am. >> sorry, eunice, i am. >> sorry, eunice, i am. >> my role is my role in that was bringing that to an end. >> right? okay um, i am slightly confused as to why you've agreed to come on. because we are obviously here to talk about islamism islamophobia. if islamism and islamophobia. if you're the you're not going to answer the questions then there's questions at all, then there's no why. no reason why. >> what here about is what's >> what i'm here about is what's the democracy? is the threat to democracy? what is there to democracy? there a threat to democracy? that's what i've told. is that's what i've been told. is there there what's happening there is there what's happening in this instance? is there a threat to democracy now? i think you misrepresented what the you just misrepresented what the speaker of speaker said in the house of lords. did say lords. the speaker did not say that there was threats of islamism. there was threats of terrorism. speaker did say terrorism. the speaker did say there he there may have been threats. he did did say, you can did say he did say, you can i don't want that to be another
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terrorist attack. >> obviously , the major >> and then obviously, the major threat at the moment, as has been evidenced by prevent etc. is coming from the islamist side of things. so that's what i'm saying to you. so i'm just asking you to respond to suella bravermans comments, which have made headlines today, bravermans comments, which have made is headlines today, bravermans comments, which have made is do headlines today, bravermans comments, which have made is do yoweadlines today, bravermans comments, which have made is do you think1es today, bravermans comments, which have made is do you think at today, bravermans comments, which have made is do you think at times. which is do you think at times islamophobia is used as a defence mechanism to not discuss the issue of islamism ? the issue of islamism? >> what the patrick, what what mi5 >> what the patrick, what what m15 will tell you is the major threat to society today is from far right. >> no, that's a lie. >> no, that's a lie. >> and if i mention if i mention rogan stewart , christopher rogan stewart, christopher ringrose, marco brit school, will they mean anything to you? >> yeah. okay. >> yeah. okay. >> look, that means anything to you. >> i'm i'm. i'm going to stop you there, younis, because that's actually factually inaccurate. you know, you're inequality's i'm sure inequality's lawyer. i'm sure that like to deal with that you like to deal with facts. what's inaccurate, which is what's factually facts. what's inaccurate, which is the what's factually facts. what's inaccurate, which is the day, what's factually facts. what's inaccurate, which is the day, on what's factually facts. what's inaccurate, which is the day, on the it's factually facts. what's inaccurate, which is the day, on the day actually facts. what's inaccurate, which is the day, on the day you ally facts. what's inaccurate, which is the day, on the day you had on the day, on the day you had on the day, on the day you had on the day review, you got into the scheme, which the prevent scheme, which reveals the overwhelming reveals that the overwhelming threat is threat to this country is islamist extremism. that is a threat dominates m15. it's
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threat that dominates m15. it's a threat that dominates the prevent scheme. now far right might the fastest growing might be the fastest growing threat, but islamist extremism as know, is a major threat. >> where's the evidence? where's the evidence? where's the evidence that the threats to mps have been made by muslims or islamists? where's the threat? >> where's amos was stabbed to death . yes. mike fryer has death. yes. mike fryer has decided that he can't stand it any longer. uh, so. so that is that. and i obviously also talk to a huge number of mps as well, who confirmed that to me. so that's i'll respond to that point. >> i'll respond to that point, patrick. i'll respond to that point. mike freer had an arson attack on his offices on new year's eve. yes, it's not just the arson attack, though, is it? no, no, no, i'll come on to that. and the people that have been the arson been charged with the arson attack are called paul sherwood. and zahra kasuri. yeah. >> didn't bring the >> see, i didn't bring up the arson did yeah yeah. arson attack, did i? yeah yeah. >> and the. and the person that made the threat to his office telephoned three times and said ,
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telephoned three times and said, i'm coming after you. >> so you have to you there >> so you have to stop you there because you know , i'm stopping because you know, i'm stopping there because an active case, it's completely pointless. you've been an absolute disgrace, frankly, coming on. you're not wanting to talk about. why you've about. i don't know why you've wasted . vital wasted everybody's time. vital issue of the day, eunice . thank issue of the day, eunice. thank you much. now, coming up you very much. now, coming up after anderson's secret after lee anderson's top secret meeting with richard tice reform party is he going to defect to the philip davies joins the tories? philip davies joins me inside track . and yes i >> -- >> that 5mm >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers , sponsors of boxt boilers, sponsors of weather on . gb news. weather on. gb news. >> hello. good evening . welcome >> hello. good evening. welcome to your latest gb news weather update with me. annie from the met office will be a foggy start for some of us tomorrow, but it should stay dry across eastern areas, through this evening areas, but through this evening we'll see a weather front push into the southeast. so that's when there's the greatest risk of a chance of rain across southeastern behind it, southeastern areas. behind it, though, much though, it will turn much clearer. so some cloud and rain
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through this evening across the southeast. elsewhere southeast. but elsewhere should be but be a fairly dry evening. but some fog start to develop some fog will start to develop quite quickly through night, quite quickly through the night, so be a bit of a murky so it will be a bit of a murky start for many areas, particularly across central southern but also up southern england, but also up through pennines across through the pennines and across eastern scotland, eastern areas of scotland, as well . so feel quite cold well. so it will feel quite cold tomorrow morning. again. well. so it will feel quite cold tom itrow morning. again. well. so it will feel quite cold tom it won'torning. again. well. so it will feel quite cold tom it won't be ng. again. well. so it will feel quite cold tom it won't be quite again. well. so it will feel quite cold tom it won't be quite as again. well. so it will feel quite cold tom it won't be quite as frosty. but it won't be quite as frosty as was this morning, and as it was this morning, and there be some early there will be some early sunshine where we don't see any fog through tomorrow, particularly the far east particularly across the far east coast many southeastern coast and many southeastern areas should stay dry through much the day, elsewhere much of the day, but elsewhere it turn much wetter the it will turn much wetter as the day goes on, particularly across parts of south—west of parts of the south—west of england where we'll england and wales, where we'll see some quite persistent rain at times, but across at times, but also across northern ireland, much of scotland and northern england. but it will feel milder across the uk. the back of that rain will push into the southeast on thursday , so quite a wet day to thursday, so quite a wet day to come in the southeast on thursday. it thursday. elsewhere, though, it will mix of sunny spells will be a mix of sunny spells and showers at once . that rain and showers at once. that rain does clear through and that's the as we head through the the story as we head through the rest week. a showery
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rest of the week. a showery picture through friday and saturday well, after saturday as well, and after a milder through wednesday milder spell through wednesday and turn and thursday, it looks to turn colder friday. colder from friday. >> looks
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gb news. well. it's 10 pm. on patrick christys tonight i'm trying to make is if you look at, um, parts of tower hamlets for example, where people are there are no go areas . are no 90 areas. >> are no go areas. >> well, there are no go zones . >> well, there are no go zones. and i'll tell you where they are and will you be a candidate for the tory party in the next election? >> well, that's not up to me. that's out of my hands at the moment, chopper. but i will be standing at the next election. >> will the lee anderson scandal finish off? well we can finish sunak off? well we can now that lee anderson met now reveal that lee anderson met with tice, the leader with richard tice, the leader of the uk party, on sunday the reform uk party, on sunday lunchtime . our reform about to lunchtime. our reform about to cash in. plus millom three heroes live in squalor . cash in. plus millom three heroes live in squalor. illegal immigrants are basking in
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luxury. i've got all of tomorrow's front pages tonight with gb news star nana akua tory mp jonathan gullace and author amy nicole turner. oh, and joe biden's sanity appears to be melting away. >> can you give us a sense of when you think that ceasefire will start? >> sir ? get ready britain. here >> sir? get ready britain. here we go. no go zones do exist . that's . next. >> patrick. thank you . well, the >> patrick. thank you. well, the top story from the gb newsroom tonight is that the suspended tory mp, lee anderson, has been holding private talks with the leader of the reform uk party, richard tice. it's fuelled speculation that the former deputy chair of the tory party could be about to defect to the
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rival party. gb news understands they met in person for talks in derbyshire on sunday. the meeting happened a day after lee anderson lost the whip for refusing to apologise after saying islamists had control of the london mayor, sadiq khan. and tonight at an awards ceremony in london, the london mayor reiterated his position about mr anderson's comments. >> responsible politicians also know that racism and prejudice , know that racism and prejudice, no matter what form it takes, regardless of whether it's anti—semitism or, yes, islamophobia should be countered and condemned, not given a free pass or left unchallenged for electoral gain . electoral gain. >> sadiq khan speaking earlier on this evening. well, in other news today, the bbc has had to apologise to the family caught up in the huw edwards scandal over the way their complaint was handled . it follows, claims the handled. it follows, claims the news presenter paid for explicit
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photographs of a teenager. a review into how non—editorial complaints are handled. i identified a number of failures and says there's a greater need now for consistency when it comes to addressing concerns, the report found. the initial complaint about mr edwards was not logged on to the relevant case management system, according to the bbc, so could not be seen by senior figures . not be seen by senior figures. now an 18th century pub that was destroyed in a suspected arson attack in the west midlands, must be rebuilt brick by brick by order of the local council. britain's wonkiest pub, the crooked house, was quickly demolished just two days after the fire last august. now an enforcement notice has been issued against its owners for the unlawful demolition of the local favourite pub , and south local favourite pub, and south staffordshire council is ordering that it be rebuilt in its original state within three years. meanwhile a police investigation into the fire that burnt it down continues . anyone
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burnt it down continues. anyone with any information is still urged to come forward . royal urged to come forward. royal news and the prince of wales pulled out of a royal event to honour his late godfather because of what's being described as a personal matter . described as a personal matter. instead, queen camilla led the royal family during a memorial for king constantine of greece . for king constantine of greece. prince william had been due to deliver a reading at the service . kensington palace didn't elaborate , but confirmed the elaborate, but confirmed the princess of wales , who's princess of wales, who's recovering from abdominal surgery , is doing well. the king surgery, is doing well. the king also missed the service as he continues his treatment for cancer. continues his treatment for cancer . two continues his treatment for cancer. two d—day continues his treatment for cancer . two d—day veterans have cancer. two d—day veterans have described had the honour of having their names added to a memorial wall in portsmouth. british military veterans stanford and john roberts were presented with their plaques today , a total of 13 names of today, a total of 13 names of normandy veterans will be added to the wall as portsmouth becomes the uk's official host to mark 80 years since the d—day landings . later on this year.
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landings. later on this year. but the related stories sign up to gb news alerts scan the qr code on the screen right now or go to gb news. com slash alerts . go to gb news. com slash alerts. >> welcome along. now no go zones. do exist. tory mp paul scully got in a load of trouble for saying this. >> do you see what i'm trying to? the point i'm trying to make is if you look at, um, parts of tower hamlets, for example, where where people are, there are no go areas, parts of birmingham, sparkhill were birmingham, sparkhill that were there are no go areas, mainly because and mainly because of doctrine and mainly because of doctrine and mainly because um, sort of because of people, um, sort of using their abusing in many ways, their religion . ways, their religion. >> well then there was a load of backlash and he did what all men of principle and honour do, backtracked and apologised. i used that time and i've used i spoken a lot about the need to use , uh, sensible language. use, uh, sensible language. >> i clearly didn't use the right language there. uh, and
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why is that? because actually, it's a distraction from the direct opposite. what i was trying to say, which is basically there are areas around every city in the country, frankly, are people frankly, that are which people are going to, are worried about going to, whether based around whether it's often based around gangs or a handful of idiots, frankly, that are threatening or intimidating or whatever. like that. >> well, compare that, by the way, lee anderson. no way, to lee anderson. no apologies. there there . but apologies. there are there. but he's right. there are are no go zones. there are giant mobile, no go zones of hate and anti—semitism . there are no go anti—semitism. there are no go zones wherever the pro—palestine mob turns up. latest figures show the taxpayer has forked out £25 million on these horrible marches through london. that has taken up 26,121 metropolitan police officers, shifts so far, and seen a giant surge in hate crimes . anti—semitic hate crimes crimes. anti—semitic hate crimes went up . 1,350% in october, and went up. 1,350% in october, and they're up to five times higher between october and december
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than they were in 2022, a spokesperson for the campaign against anti—semitism said the jewish community is in fear and our city centres remain no go zones during the protests. we need action urgently. well it isn't just the jewish community though , it's the ceasefire. though, it's the ceasefire. simps like chris bryant, fresh from admitting that he essentially bent the rules to help push through the labour ceasefire amendment, help push through the labour ceasefire amendment , getting ceasefire amendment, getting hounded as he tried to get a bit of dinner. shame on you, chris bryant. >> shame on you, chris bryant. shame on you, chris. your name? richard tice. nice nice fire burn . burn. >> well, we've also got people turning up at tory dinner events in stoke with the police. remarkably waving them in. here we go. let's have a little a little look at this. in you come, lads. oh, yeah. yeah. no, no issues there. we can see. and then of course they proceeded to, you know, hound people. just normal, ordinary blokes having a
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pint in a curry. >> well no backbone and you guys are child killers and genocidal guys. all of you. yes. i know this doctrine you very well, guys have no backbone. you are child murderers and you are obsessive compulsive freaks controlling your body . you all controlling your body. you all are part of a genocide. come on. you are all a part of me. i can point out you. is it illegal? take it like a man. the shame on you in the video you show . you in the video you show. >> i mean, that's a no go zone. there isn't it? they've created a no go zone. tower bridge was literally a no go zone. you couldn't go anywhere because they blocked it. i mean, there are literally hundreds of examples of this stuff . and all examples of this stuff. and all of this takes police time away from community policing , which from community policing, which means we'll see loads more
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scenes like this . there we are. scenes like this. there we are. if you look closely. oh, that's just some men fighting with machetes in broad daylight . i machetes in broad daylight. i don't know about you or what you would call a no go zone, but that's certainly not a zone. i would like to go in. okay. now now, these mobile no go zones that we have springing up wherever the pro—palestine bngade wherever the pro—palestine brigade are, are not going to go away. even if we get a ceasefire. now, here's why . the ceasefire. now, here's why. the muslim vote .co.uk , which is an muslim vote .co.uk, which is an organisation that appeared after the october 7 attacks and is predominantly focussed on a ceasefire, tweeted this earlier. it said islamophobia is real and it is welcome that for once, labour and mainstream media are holding the tories to account. but let's be real, labour itself has an islamophobia problem and this whole issue is being used as a political bludgeon to hit the tories with it's cynical . so the tories with it's cynical. so they are now calling on the labour party to implement the findings of the labour muslims report. well let's have a little
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look into this report. all right. so this report wheels out a load of stats about islamophobia in the labour party, how bad it is over1 in 4 muslim members have directly experienced islamophobia in the labour party . these findings labour party. these findings apparently came from a grand total of just 422 people. and off the back of those 422 people, they want the labour party to implement the following comprehensive islamophobia training in conjunction with the muslim council of britain, all policies to undergo an impact assessment when it comes to muslim members. a handbook to educate labour members on islamophobia . to adopt islamophobia. to adopt a definition of islamophobia to. but as it clearly says , adopting but as it clearly says, adopting a definition of it isn't enough . a definition of it isn't enough. they then need to go further and construct a code of conduct relating to islam phobia in conjunction with uk guessed it, the muslim council of britain . the muslim council of britain. so what do we end up with? no peace, no justice? is it until there's a ceasefire and all the commendations from a survey, the
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size of which you could fit into maidenhead united's football stadium ten times over until all of adopted? look we do of that's adopted? look we do have no go zones in britain , and have no go zones in britain, and they are wherever a mob decides that to be. and that they want them to be. and if you don't believe they exist, then maybe you should ask a member of the jewish community if feel safe walking if they feel safe walking around. in central around. certainly in central london a saturday. and if you london on a saturday. and if you think that doesn't really matter here, then maybe you're an anti—semite . but let's get the anti—semite. but let's get the thoughts of my panel now i've got gb news presenter nana akua. i've got conservative mp for stoke it's the stoke on trent north. it's the wonderful jonathan gullace i wonderful jonathan gullace and i have and broadcaster have got author and broadcaster amy nicholl turner nana. i will go to you first on this, uh, when we talk about no go zones , when we talk about no go zones, do you think that we do have them ? is it is it wherever this them? is it is it wherever this mob says they are, do you think? >> well, first of all, patrick, great monologue. i happened to listen to that disastrous interview on lbc this afternoon listen to that disastrous interpaulon lbc this afternoon listen to that disastrous inter paul scully, this afternoon listen to that disastrous inter paul scully, and afternoon listen to that disastrous interpaul scully, and heernoon listen to that disastrous interpaul scully, and he started with paul scully, and he started off talking about how he was wrong. it was his own personal
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experience and then at one point, then when it came back from the break, he said, oh, this is why i wish i hadn't sort of called now and talked of called you now and talked about it's like, wish you about it. it's like, i wish you hadn't. he talked about fact hadn't. he talked about the fact that aren't no go that they aren't any no go zones, and he could only do it from his personal from his own personal experience. what experience. well, that's what counts, isn't it? your personal experience is what counts. so if you experienced places you have experienced places where because where you cannot go to because of for whatever of whatever, for whatever that situation that's no go situation is, and that's a no go zone and i was absolutely disgusted he disgusted by the fact that he was so quick to capitulate and then even acknowledge then not even acknowledge that there zones in there are no go zones in particular for jewish people there are no go zones in particular forjewish people on particular for jewish people on the every single the weekends. every single saturday, pro—palestinian the weekends. every single saturdaand pro—palestinian the weekends. every single saturda and to3ro—palestinian the weekends. every single saturda and to be-palestinian the weekends. every single saturdaand to be frank, tinian protest and to be frank, i wouldn't do that either. and as a there of no a woman, there are plenty of no go zones. go zones. >> go zones. >> i think conflated to >> i think what he conflated to jonathan was he? jonathan be fair, was he? firstly, he named a couple of examples. and, you know, we had firstly, he named a couple of e)discussion nd, you know, we had firstly, he named a couple of e)discussion in you know, we had firstly, he named a couple of e)discussion in this know, we had firstly, he named a couple of e)discussion in this office we had a discussion in this office earlier today. i was like, oh, well, don't why don't i go well, why don't why don't i go to some these places? and to some of these places? and then thought, they're then we thought, well, they're literally zones. if i literally not no go zones. if i can up with camera and can turn up with a camera and talk people. right. so that's talk to people. right. so that's that, but
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that, that was wrong. but i think there are occasions where a go zone can be created, a no go zone can be created, like the kind of situation i think we a bit in stoke think we saw a bit in stoke where you've got a load of blokes there down the pub essentially, and before you know it called killers. >> e“ e we we re e we were hosting a >> yeah, well we were hosting a fundraiser our police crime fundraiser for our police crime commissioner who was actually in the time. we the building at that time. we suddenly that these suddenly see that there's these protests taking place. um, obviously hate mob obviously there was a hate mob spewing hatred and trying to intimidate the great intimidate and harass the great concern about the officer in question allowed the people question who allowed the people into because the into the building because the organiser this or one organiser of this event, or one of organisers of this of the organisers of this event had as unfil of the organisers of this event had as until 2015, had been as up until 2015, a member of the now proscribed terrorist ut—tahrir terrorist group hizb ut—tahrir may , we don't may well be still, we don't know, but was certainly active in 2009 to 2015 on social media. literally articles literally sharing articles themselves. literally themselves. so that's literally people's lives at danger , to be people's lives at danger, to be perfectly and then to go perfectly frank. and then to go and scream at members . one of and scream at members. one of those members in that video had his 11 year old daughter there. his year old daughter has his 11 year old daughter has been called child murderer. been called a child murderer. she's genocide point she's pro genocide to the point where scared and upset where she's so scared and upset that she's now fearful of going into type such
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into any type of such event again, to have again, and then to have the police tell that it's our police tell us that it's our event must shut down. that event that must shut down. that mps like aaron bell, who is due to attend, should not now go because the mob got what because the hate mob got what they absolutely they wanted is absolutely disgusting and that is therefore a zone. because even a no go zone. because even though were in a private though we were in a private venue function room venue in a private function room that booked when advance, that we'd booked when advance, it was us who had to capitulate to mob when the to the mob when the mob themselves were private themselves were on private property easily property and could have easily been arrested for been used, arrested for disrupting peace or for disrupting the peace or for causing and causing intimidation and harassment. weak harassment. and it is weak policing that's allowed that to happen. amy your view, presumably think? presumably you don't think? >> zones exist at all, is >> no. go zones exist at all, is that right? >> because all anyone can >> well, because all anyone can ever few anecdotes. ever give is a few anecdotes. and i think what jonathan's described is really concerning. and is that is extremism. and that is a that is extremism. and that is a that is extremism. and need to be and those people need to be dean and those people need to be dealt with accordingly. but that doesn't a go doesn't make that pub a no go zone. ridiculous thing zone. that's a ridiculous thing to period of time. to suggest. period of time. i think for that period of time maybe it's not, you know maybe like it's not, you know what no means and it what the no go zone means and it means you can't go to that area for fear of, of extremism. you not being welcomed there. do you
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think that i don't think the same for jews on saturday. >> all right. >> all right. >> no, because there's so many jews on those protests. i think what you need there have been people holding jews people holding up jews for palestine sign signs are every single week, week in week out. can i just say one thing that you're all not mentioning is that people feel really, really helpless in in the wake of gaza. they see it on their social media. they see these horrendous. i saw a video today of four babies in an incubator that have no oxygen, let alone their parents are dead. there are 19,000 orphaned children in gaza. people are seeing this unfold in their social media and they don't feel heard by the political class . and of course, political class. and of course, that's going to overspill into these protests. when do protests happen? when people don't feel heard by politicians? >> i think, amy, we can one thing we can say is we've heard more than enough. and now wasting £25 million of taxpayers money dragging say that's a money and dragging say that's a waste trent. but waste from stoke on trent. but first of all, let me be clear. if a jewish, you've been
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if you're a jewish, you've been on been on tfl, we've on and you've been on tfl, we've got tube drivers who have been chanting river to the chanting from the river to the sea. that's not anti—semitic. it's misrepresentation.we've sea. that's not anti—semitic. it's we've'epresentation. we've sea. that's not anti—semitic. it's we've'eprebustation. we've sea. that's not anti—semitic. it's we've'eprebustation. \.whoe got we've got bus drivers who have pick up jewish have refused to pick up jewish students. things students. these are all things that michael ellis mp has put on the house. as the floor of the house. as a matter of fact, and has not been disputed. they also got disputed. they we've also got people projecting from the river to sea. palestine feel, to the sea. palestine will feel, although they can't spell palestine. should tell palestine. so that should tell you about others being you something about others being projected along the elizabeth tower. again, the police standing nothing standing by and doing nothing about there proves about that. there, there proves the that if you are jewish the point that if you are jewish in country, capital in this country, your capital city too unsafe for you to city is too unsafe for you to go. what you continue doing , go. what you continue doing, your star of david, you're taking your, uh, yom kippur hat off as well in order to hydride anti anti—semitism, £25 million. >> now , the point where we draw >> now, the point where we draw the line on these marches because, you know, is costing because, you know, it is costing the millions of the taxpayers millions of millions pounds, it also millions of pounds, it is also taking from community millions of pounds, it is also taking as from community millions of pounds, it is also taking as well.i community policing as well. >> too much. i mean, if it >> it's too much. i mean, if it were me and these if they want to with these marches, to carry on with these marches, then say i would want it
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then i'd say i would want it would be a ticketed event. they come i'd everybody's come in, i'd stamp everybody's hand. a fiver. hand. they pay a fiver. otherwise i would otherwise you go, i would be making money out of these marches. i wouldn't allow it to carry like this. or a carry on like this. or a wristband or, you know, these stunts go into club stunts when you go into a club or bar. i'd make sure or bar. and i'd make sure everybody one those. if everybody had one of those. if they're these they're coming to do these events. i bet you they events. and i bet you once they start paying it themselves, start paying for it themselves, these would stop. people these marches would stop. people wouldn't fiver. wouldn't want to pay a fiver. anybody 16 or over. i've worked this i sat down and written this out. i sat down and written how i'd it or over. you how i'd do it 16 or over. you pay pay £5. >> that's not a bad idea because everybody would still go and then the money to then we could give the money to then we could give the money to the palestinian solidarity. palestinians. give them palestinians. you give them all the money. >> was paul scully >> the police was paul scully wrong to just immediately row back? this back? i mean, this is this is the opposite of what lee the polar opposite of what lee anderson is doing. one of the reasons why lee anderson has got so support, he's so much support, because he's stuck to his guns. paul scully comes out and says, now look, i don't want to i know if he don't want to i don't know if he is you. maybe i don't want to dig him out unnecessarily, but like, just kind of like, this is just the kind of cack handed weakness that people hate politics. look, hate about politics. well, look, the birmingham mail themselves had article about no
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had written an article about no go zones in birmingham, so. >> he couldn't >> but he tells you he couldn't provide evidence. and provide the evidence. and patrick, your monologue was pretty patrick's pretty important. st patrick's monologue provided all the evidence. personally, evidence. so look, personally, the no issue the evidence i've got no issue with saying are no with saying that there are no go zones certain parts our zones in certain parts of our country. yes, they may be temporary. they may be temporary. yes they may be because of a certain incident over certain of time in over a certain period of time in that that that restaurant in stoke that was um, but was an example. um, but ultimately the idea that they don't exist at all is for the birds. >> he should have prepared himself and if that himself better and found if that was the case, he would line is just is one just landing now, which is one of reasons stalling of the reasons i was stalling for time. of the reasons i was stalling for sore. of the reasons i was stalling for so in an interview with the >> so in an interview with the times, james cleverly has said, this is this has just dropped. you your now now end you made your point. now now end the protest. so the home the gaza protest. so the home secretary apparently that secretary apparently argues that pro palestinian demonstrators are not saying anything new. well, more well, we will give you a more in—depth this story in—depth version of this story when our newspaper review when we do our newspaper review very, because when we do our newspaper review very, have because when we do our newspaper review very, have the because when we do our newspaper review very, have the full)ecause when we do our newspaper review very, have the full details on we'll have the full details on that. but that could be fascinating, because you fascinating, okay. because you know, all right. suella braverman have more braverman might have used more inflammatory language, calling them i inflammatory language, calling them! can gather here, the nub what i can gather here, the nub of it is exactly the same. okay
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so what's going to happen now is james cleverly going to james cleverly what, going to ban the protest? is he can he anyway coming up i'll bring you anyway coming up i'll bring you a look tomorrow's a very first look at tomorrow's newspaper pages. and next newspaper front pages. and next it's emerged lee anderson newspaper front pages. and next it's irichardi lee anderson newspaper front pages. and next it's irichard tice lee anderson newspaper front pages. and next it's irichard tice had anderson newspaper front pages. and next it's irichard tice had a.nderson newspaper front pages. and next it's irichard tice had a secret n and richard tice had a secret meeting on sunday. bizarrely, a houday meeting on sunday. bizarrely, a holiddefect to reform do the lead defect to reform uk. do the tories even want to keep him? i've got conservative mp philip davies in the davies joining me live in the studio to give his honest view of the wall rottweiler. this of the red wall rottweiler. this is christys tonight. is patrick christys tonight. we're gb stay we're only on gb news. stay tuned.
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all right . now, very shortly i all right. now, very shortly i will be bringing you all of tomorrow's newspaper front pages. but before that, it's a massive story still dominating the headlines. rishi sunak appears to be willing to lose lee anderson . lee anderson. >> well, i've been very clear that what he said was wrong. it was unacceptable and that's why we suspended the whip . and it's we suspended the whip. and it's important that everybody but particularly elected politicians , are careful with their words and do not inflame tensions. >> well, in our exclusive interview last night with lee, he wasn't too happy with his treatment from rishi sunak and the tories. >> i think the party could have given me a little bit more backing, um, if i'm honest and will he be a candidate for the tory party in the next election? well, that's not up to me. that's out of my hands at the moment, but i be moment, chopper. but i will be standing at next election today. >> gb news revealed this exclusive information where >> gb news revealed this excluzloyaltiesmation where >> gb news revealed this excluzloyalties mayyn where >> gb news revealed this excluzloyalties may lie where >> gb news revealed this
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excluzloyalties may lie in where >> gb news revealed this excluzloyalties may lie in there lee's loyalties may lie in the future. in a reveal that lee anderson met with richard tice, the leader of the reform uk party, on sunday lunchtime, he was spotted there for um at a houdayinn was spotted there for um at a holiday inn junction 28 of the m1. >> um, we don't know what they discussed, but the timing is very, very , very telling. very, very, very telling. i think 24 hours after he lost the whip. >> right. so i mean, i suppose the big question really is whether or not rishi sunak should try to keep lee anderson , should try to keep lee anderson, should try to keep lee anderson, should he come grovelling to him and accept him joining me and accept him back? joining me to is tory mp to discuss this is tory mp philip and former philip davies and former conservative mep from 2004 to 2019 sajjad karim , both of 2019 is sajjad karim, both of them joining me, thank you very much, sajjad. i'll start with you okay. so look, lee you if that's okay. so look, lee anderson could defect to the reform should have lost reform party should he have lost the whip the first the tory whip in the first place. are your thoughts? that's >> well, i think the matter was dean >> well, i think the matter was dealt with by the whips office in an appropriate manner. >> they clearly, first of all, viewed what lee anderson had actually stated . and then,
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actually stated. and then, having viewed it, took the steps that were necessary in the circumstance . so i certainly see circumstance. so i certainly see the case for that having happened. the case for that having happened . uh, what i'm sorry happened. uh, what i'm sorry aboutis happened. uh, what i'm sorry about is , uh, the fact that lee about is, uh, the fact that lee anderson has chosen to dig his heels in at this particular point , i heels in at this particular point, i would much rather he actually took a progressive attitude and actually examined his actions in the way they are objective , be looked at, and objective, be looked at, and then possibly reviewed the position at that stage . position at that stage. >> okay, philip, your view on this? i mean, it does. look, there's quite a good chance, i think, that you're going to lose the anderson to reform. well i don't think that follows. >> i mean, i don't think lee anderson should have lost the whip. >> i think it was an overreaction. >> i think lee said. basically, l, >> i think lee said. basically, i, uh, expressed myself clumsily, um, and i think that we have accepted that and we should have accepted that and moved on. we should. we moved on. and we should. we probably be discussing moved on. and we should. we prfourly be discussing moved on. and we should. we prfour days be discussing moved on. and we should. we prfour days ore discussing moved on. and we should. we prfour days or whatever ng it four days later or whatever it four days later or whatever it might be, if that had been the um, just because the case. um, but just because richard has met with lee richard tice has met with lee anderson we anderson, i don't think we should take as read.
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should take it as read. therefore, that lee anderson is definitely be definitely going to be a defecting mean , defecting to reform. i mean, i've met richard tice quite a few times. he's been round to my house. been round to his, house. i've been round to his, uh, mean to say that uh, it doesn't mean to say that i'm to be, uh, join the i'm going to be, uh, join the reform party. um, so i don't i don't think we should put two two and together come up two and together and come up with i think we should. with 23. i think we should. >> philip, i agree with >> look, philip, i agree with a lot you say, but he met lot of what you say, but he met him, at a holiday inn him, apparently at a holiday inn at service station at a motorway service station not he lost the whip. not long after he lost the whip. i mean, come on, that doesn't mean he doesn't follow, therefore, that he's going to he's defect. therefore, that he's going to he'iwhat defect. therefore, that he's going to he'iwhat we defect. therefore, that he's going to he'iwhat we should. therefore, that he's going to he'iwhat we should be doing is >> what we should be doing is lee's written an lee's actually written an article the daily express article for the daily express tomorrow, online tomorrow, which is up online already, read. it already, which i've read. it seems to be a perfectly, uh, i've had a quick scan of it. from read, it seems to be from what i read, it seems to be perfectly i hope from what i read, it seems to be perf
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you know, lee would you know, i think lee would accept conservative accept that the conservative party good to him. um, party has been good to him. um, up until this weekend, perhaps. and, can and, and i hopefully we can restore relationship we restore the relationship that we had before then. >> all right. >> all right. >> so go to respond >> so i'll go to you to respond to and also just look, to that and also just ask. look, politically speaking, with from within party within the conservative party if lee about to defect, lee anderson is about to defect, if he then potentially takes a lot of the red wall with him or a lot of the grassroots of the tory does he really have tory party does he really have to apologise in order to come back, clarify ? back, or can he just clarify? >> well, really don't see that >> well, i really don't see that scenario unfolding that you've just described that , uh, lee just described that, uh, lee anderson has that sort of influence that he can take all of the red wall with him, or certainly that size of the electorate . i, uh, grew up in a electorate. i, uh, grew up in a northern working class , uh, northern working class, uh, community, uh, in lancashire. so i know these communities very well indeed. and the way that they have been depicted as somehow being represented by this sort of political viewpoint across the board, all of them , i
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across the board, all of them, i find, actually extremely objectionable . uh, you know, objectionable. uh, you know, these working class communities are very proud communities. they are very proud communities. they are very proud communities. they are very open minded communities . they are very tolerant communities . this has been my communities. this has been my experience of growing up in that community as a member of that community. so i just don't recognise these depictions at all now. so far as lee anderson is concerned, i think one of the things that the party ought to do is to offer lee an opportunity, an opportunity to actually come and see the other side of the argument . and side of the argument. and actually there is a variety of ways in which a progressive agenda can be presented to lee anderson . and if he is given anderson. and if he is given that opportunity , he and he that opportunity, he and he still refuses to take it. well, that's his choice . but i would that's his choice. but i would much rather he took that choice. and then he and the party could move forward because . because move forward because. because ultimately we have a big electorate right across the country that will actually be
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supportive of lee's position. and lee's views . and lee's views. >> okay, philip, i mean , is it >> okay, philip, i mean, is it then a problem if lee goes, it's just one man, it's one man who's got a few supporters and it doesn't really matter. no i didn't say that. >> no, i know i didn't say that. >> no, i know i didn't say that. >> no, i know i didn't say that. >> no, i know i'm asking the question to philip. >> well, of course, of course it would matter if lee left. he's a is a very valued colleague and he's he's not going to apologise . of course he's not going to apologise. i mean, everywhere he goes, he, he has garlands around his being treated his neck and he's being treated like he's like a national hero. he's loving every minute of it. so he's certainly not to. why he's certainly not going to. why would when he's would he apologise when he's being treated like that? that's not to happen. but we not going to happen. but we need to way. and i think the to find a way. and i think the article written the article he's written for the express a a perfectly good express is a is a perfectly good way actually say, well, look way to actually say, well, look here, he's clarified what the point trying to make in point he was trying to make in the first place. it's a perfectly reasonable point, sarge. with it. sarge. might not agree with it. we all have to agree with we don't all have to agree with him a member of the
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him to be a member of the conservative party, but the point that lee expressed point of view that lee expressed in express article tomorrow in the express article tomorrow seems to be perfectly seems to be a perfectly legitimate whether legitimate view to hold. whether you're conservative you're in the conservative party or so i that on or not. and so i hope that on that we can all move that basis, we can all move forward, line under it, forward, draw a line under it, and move on together. all parts of and actually of the same party, and actually doing what we should be doing, which highlighting which is highlighting what a disaster the disaster keir starmer and the labour party would be for this country. because if we're not, we're be in danger we're going to be in danger of sleepwalking into a complete nightmare argue about nightmare while we argue about argue about whether argue the toss about whether lee anderson this anderson should use this particular or not. yeah, particular word or not. yeah, look, article live. look, this article went live. >> since i've literally been sat in studio, so i am just in the studio, so i am just getting sight of this now getting first sight of this now as gather, the as far as i can gather, the headline, well, is headline, well, it is the headuneis headline, well, it is the headline is lee anderson warns rishi sunak speaks for tory voters blasts i'm not voters and he blasts i'm not a racist. i mean, he he's racist. um, i mean, he he's sticking his guns, sticking to his guns, right? he's he's not going to move. he's not he's not going to move. sajid is he so i mean, he's going to have to be rishi sunak who comes cap in hand to him. otherwise there's nothing. well the this that as we the reality is this that as we move into the general election cycle, i do not see a position
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emerging whereby if the leader of the conservative party and if it still happens to be rishi sunak at that time, uh, if that particular leader takes the view that actually we are going to fight this election not on policies , but on these sort, policies, but on these sort, these sort of culture wars, agendas, then i'm afraid there's going to be very little appetite in the country at large for that sort of campaign. >> what we need to see is a conservative party once again hungry for government, taking the case to the country. and a very vigorous campaign from the opposition , because that is what opposition, because that is what will be truly healthy for our democracy . and we do need to do democracy. and we do need to do a huge amount of repair work based upon the damage that has been done over these past few years. i think, patrick, that lee has moved quite a bit in this article tomorrow. >> it might say he's not backing down and all the rest of it, but actually he doesn't repeat the thing islamist extremists thing about islamist extremists being khan's mates , which
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being sadiq khan's mates, which was the bit that caused all the uproar in the first place, he he doesn't that. it's doesn't repeat that. and it's quite striking. doesn't quite striking. he doesn't repeat that. i think lee repeat that. so i think lee behind all of the sort of headlines, has actually moved to, to deal with the issues that that people were concerned about in the first place. and like i say, i on the back of that. say, i was on the back of that. i hopefully we can draw a line under this matter and move on. with lee back as a valued member of conservative in parliament. >> right. look, both of you, >> all right. look, both of you, thank you very much. really great stuff. we could obviously talk night, talk about this all night, but we time. we haven't got the time. unfortunately. was, uh, unfortunately. that was, uh, philip sajjad karim. philip davies and sajjad karim. thank thank you, thank you. thank you, thank you, thank you. now while illegal migrants thank you, thank you, thank you. novyup�*nile illegal migrants thank you, thank you, thank you. novyup in; illegal migrants thank you, thank you, thank you. novyup in hotels,l migrants thank you, thank you, thank you. novyup in hotels,l migwon't put up in hotels, you won't believe the squalor that members of forces are being of our armed forces are being forced in. the very forced to live in. plus the very first look at tomorrow's newspaper front pages landing in thick come thick and fast. when i come back. it's all of back. well, it's all of tomorrow's .
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news. okay. welcome back. it is time now for all of tomorrow's news tonight with all the front pages. let's do it. so start with the metro. £16 for a pack of six. huge tax rise as hunt launched his budget. war on smoking and vaping. all right, patrick, i know this . all i've patrick, i know this. all i've got left. the daily telegraph uk blocks macron's bid to send troops to ukraine this is a rift emerging now at the top of nato, as france suggests that the west could directly enter the conflict empty handed, £30 million for extra security amid the gaza threat. and jake rowling there leading the backlash over a trans cat killer. send standing trial as a woman, let's go to the guardian tories putting party before sexual assault claims as alleged victim. woman says no action was taken after claim of being attacked by an mp . um, we go to attacked by an mp. um, we go to the eye now . labour yet to the eye now. labour yet to convince 40% of target voters new poll finds election danger
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lurks for labour. they say , and lurks for labour. they say, and many stoke fears of sorry a may stoke fears of soft leading national polls are interesting, really. the eye appeared to be going off at the idea that they've yet to convince quotes working to man in stevenage woman, which are the, you know, the kind of the kind of people that apparently need to win that they apparently need to win an election. daily mail an election. the daily mail indefensible despite growing global threats and warning from military top brass , chancellor military top brass, chancellor rejects calls to boost forces funding in budget jeremy hunt face fury last night after it emerged he had no plans to increase defence spending . they increase defence spending. they also do go off in a day of royal tragedy and drama. sudden death of lady gabriella's husband rocks the royal family and then william mysteriously his william mysteriously misses his godfather's . the sun godfather's memorial. the sun hugh row bbc say sorry teens family locked down. it's the bbc yesterday apologising to the parents at the centre of the huw edwards scandal. right, okay, so
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those are all of, well, most of tomorrow's front pages for you. i am yet again joined by my press pack. i've got gb news presenter nana akua. i've got conservative mp for on conservative mp for stoke on trent north, jonathan gullies, an author and broadcaster, amy nicholl turner. so it's one nicholl turner. um, so it's one of the inside stories this well, this country continues to plough £8 million a day into putting migrants up in hotels. the quality of housing that our military are left with puts us to shame. so an army family that was forced to leave their military home shared images on social media last night of the crumbling accommodation after a wall in the bedroom caved in. this apparently follows three years of complaints to try and get the issue sorted. meanwhile, those who come over here illegally got a bit of luxury , illegally got a bit of luxury, don't they ? sinner sabina nessa don't they? sinner sabina nessa logan mwangi the tories draghi . logan mwangi the tories draghi. esta si na sukh .
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esta si na sukh. >> now , now. >> now, now. >> now, now. >> gross double standards. >> gross double standards. >> absolutely. this reminds me of when i was young. my friends would come over and my mother, i don't know who the hell she turned into, would get out the penguins. lovely chocolate penguins. these lovely chocolate wrapped biscuits. normally we get she'd be get cream crackers and she'd be like, hello everybody! and she'd be my friends . and be so nice to my friends. and then as soon as they've gone, she'd wrap everything back and she'd wrap everything back and she'd all cream she'd give us all cream crackers. this is exactly what it's exactly happening it's exactly what's happening here, i was like, who here, isn't it? i was like, who the woman? you the hell is this woman? you know? is what's know? but this is what's happening we are greeting happening here. we are greeting everybody these wonderful everybody with these wonderful as we treat everybody as if we treat everybody else like don't. and i like that. but we don't. and i mean, it's disgraceful. >> on minute. gone video >> hang on a minute. gone video does what we're does not represent what we're giving migrants here. giving migrants who come here. >> literally a video from >> that's literally a video from a hotel. >> is i think they would >> that is i think they would premiere they're not. let's premiere in they're not. let's look at the bibby stockholm. you've four people a you've got four people to a bibby stockholm indefinitely. there why? hang on a minute, hang a minute. it have, hang on a minute. did it have, um, legionnaires disease in there when it was used? temporary only by workers at this point, they don't even know
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when they're going to leave. why would you want to? stewing indefinitely travelodge indefinitely in a travelodge with men? it's not with four other men? it's not the equivalent of getting a lovely you see that picture on >> did you see that picture on the down and we're the roof coming down and we're paying the roof coming down and we're paying 8 million. >> that that is the >> i hate that that that is the army offered. we have army barracks offered. we have we have treated our our military personnel appallingly. that's why be in the why no one wants to be in the army. that's why everyone keeps talking concern, reaction. talking about concern, reaction. we massive recruitment we have massive recruitment and retention that we have massive recruitment and reten not that we have massive recruitment and reten not let that we have massive recruitment and reten not let me that we have massive recruitment and reten not let me finish the does not mean let me finish the point. no it does not mean that you put that you mistreat migrants. you put that you mistreat migokay? now, jonathan, >> okay? right now, jonathan, i have put to you. i have to have to put it to you. i have to put it to you. >> amy's exhausted me with that. >> amy's exhausted me with that. >> actually. >> actually. >> what like. >> what i get like. >> what i get like. >> all right, people on >> all right, people back on track i to put it to track now, i have to put it to you that it is under your government that we are seeing veterans or serving military personnel, veterans personnel, not even veterans living . living in squalor. >> look, not comfortable >> look, i'm not comfortable with i'm seeing. i've spent with what i'm seeing. i've spent a with our armed a lot of time with our armed forces and across, up and down the country, visiting different barracks time with barracks and spending time with those women those brave men and women to hear about in the hear about their time in the forces and what needs to happen.
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and it's absolutely clear to me there needs to be a huge capital investment, both into the accommodation the accommodation but also into the barracks in general terms of barracks in general in terms of shelters accommodation and shelters and accommodation and ultimate . lee, i don't know if ultimate. lee, i don't know if the chancellor has ruled out. we won't literally until won't literally won't know until the i'm happy to join the day, but i'm happy to join with colleagues across the with colleagues from across the house sure that there is house to make sure that there is a long terme funding program for capital as capital investment, because as amy does rightly it does amy does rightly say, it does impact recruitment and retention. morale. impact recruitment and retenti the morale. impact recruitment and retentithe last morale. impact recruitment and retentithe last thing morale. impact recruitment and retentithe last thing we rale. impact recruitment and retentithe last thing we need. that's the last thing we need. these put their these are heroes who put their lives danger order to lives in danger in order to endure, can enjoy the endure, so we can enjoy the freedoms that we have. my grandfather served in 42 commando. other grandfather commando. my other grandfather served r.a.f. both served served in the raf. both served dunng served in the raf. both served during suez crisis. my great during the suez crisis. my great great uncle still alive great uncle is still alive today. d—day veteran today. he was a d—day veteran who legionnaire today. he was a d—day veteran who gullies. legionnaire today. he was a d—day veteran who gullies. very)nnaire today. he was a d—day veteran who gullies. very proude today. he was a d—day veteran who gullies. very proud to alan gullies. i'm very proud to be from a family with military background. incredibly background. he'd be incredibly sound. also be disgusted sound. he'd also be disgusted with the quality of accommodation. is not accommodation. apparently is not is squalor, according to amy. basically when it comes to migrants who illegally migrants who have illegally entered our country, you have to accept that video we accept that that video that we showed there the music and showed there with the music and the guy in the travelodge is
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probably used by people probably being used by people smugglers attract attract smugglers to attract, to attract people, that journey. people, to make that journey. >> make that >> and when they make that journey, are greeted journey, they are not greeted with that. >> make one in bibby >> we make one in the bibby stockholm maybe that'll stockholm and then maybe that'll determean, mean, there are to >> i mean, i mean, there are to be fair, i mean, well, i mean, you can see the hotels these people are i mean, they do people are in. i mean, they do exist, these hotels do exist and they are happy. >> rarely relaxed, >> they rarely he's relaxed, cosy. been there in cosy. he's always been there in definitely mental health cosy. he's always been there in deappalling. mental health cosy. he's always been there in deappalling. theyental health cosy. he's always been there in deappalling. they arel health suffering. >> oh, god. amy. come on. >> oh, god. oh amy. come on. >> jonathan, as someone that suffered with mental health, i would have thought you at would have thought you would at least would have thought you would at leas one of these hotels. into one of these hotels. >> is there not suffering mental health? they're actually living >> is there not suffering mental health? quality actually living >> is there not suffering mental health? quality accommodation, in good quality accommodation, getting meals a day, getting three meals a day, getting three meals a day, getting well, as getting some money as well, as well obviously being, uh, well as obviously being, uh, having the to having security on the door to make they're make sure they're well protected. all we've got protected. all while we've got people streets who are people in our streets who are falling into despair. in fact, one of hotels used in stoke one of the hotels used in stoke one of the hotels used in stoke on was where were on trent was where we were putting women who were fleeing domestic violence, we've domestic violence, and we've had to allow to remove all those to allow these migrants to have these illegal migrants to have these illegal migrants to have the that what the place instead. that is what i abhorrent. the place instead. that is what i and)horrent. the place instead. that is what i and yet rent. the place instead. that is what i and yet here are, just to >> and yet here we are, just to round off nicely as if we
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round us off nicely as if we planned it. the front of the daily mail indefensible. despite growing global threats, warning from military top brass. and as we've seen, there are we've just seen, there are nearly swore that awful, awful military accommodation. apparently jeremy hunt is facing fury after it emerged he has no plans to increase defence spending in next week's budget. there you go. now, a ministry of defence spokesperson said we are committed to welfare of committed to the welfare of service personnel and their families and the defence secretary has made improving the standard of military accommodation personal accommodation a personal priority. are priority. this is why we are investing in additional £400 million over the two years million over the next two years to improve military housing that is more than 3000 is available, and more than 3000 homes will have had improvements , including mould , including damp and mould treatments, by the end of the month. so that's response. month. so that's their response. now our lovable now look, coming up, our lovable lefty turner met up lefty amy nicole turner met up with some gb news viewers this weekend. yeah. anyway, uh , how weekend. yeah. anyway, uh, how do you think that one. oh, hopefully. good she's still here. that's the main thing. good good. i hope it's good. otherwise it's terrible. um, anyway, as crown anyway, find out as i'm crown tonight's greatest britain on
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union, jackass. but next, labour plans with this year's plans to train with this year's young male influencers to combat figures like andrew tate . are figures like andrew tate. are they breeding the next generation of woke lefties? tonight's panel gets stuck into that. don't miss it.
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all right okay, so now labour plans to tackle misogyny by training young male influencers in our schools to combat figures such as andrew tate. apparently so. tate has found fame, particularly among young people, through his controversial online videos amongst other things, about women and labour's shadow education secretary bridget phillipson wants older schoolboys to coach younger pupils into recognising and calling out misogyny. phillipson said it's really powerful if men all step in and make clear that kind of sexist and misogynistic
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behaviour is not acceptable and that they don't tolerate it ehhen that they don't tolerate it either. all right, okay, well look, now , now, is this not look, now, now, is this not a potential slippery slope? almost kind of taking andrew's say out of it here, which is government mandate influencers is a bit weird i don't know. >> look , if you look at the way >> look, if you look at the way things work at the moment. right. so they'll either buy ads and you hear government advertising on radio stations and wherever their tv adverts, they spend a lot of money on that. think they're using that. i think they're just using the natural platform to the next natural platform to advertise, but i worry that they could hijack the narrative because, as we've seen , um, you because, as we've seen, um, you know, the narrative, whatever they want to push across, they'll hijack it using influential people . and i'm influential people. and i'm concerned that young people might not see through that . so might not see through that. so let me give you an example. so for example, when it comes to the trans conversation, they might hijack the narrative to make it sound normal make it sound perfectly normal to call, you know, for a man to be a woman and a woman to be a
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man. and i'm concerned that, yes, i understand it's the next natural platform, don't natural platform, but i don't there's only certain type of there's only a certain type of influence would get nod influence that would get the nod from a labour from a, especially a labour government. it depends what government. but it depends what the is. it depends the conversation is. it depends what get across. >> my concern with this is, first all, who decides what, first of all, who decides what, who gets to an influencer, who gets to be an influencer, who gets to be an influencer, who essentially what is who decides essentially what is correct and wrong messaging? and thirdly, the debate for too long around masculinity has been this idea that it's purely toxic and i think that's really damaging and really unfair, because i think that the overwhelming majority of men, young and majority of men, both young and old, respect women want to obviously do the right things. and ultimately look for positive male role models without having to have some influence. who's funded and funded by the government. and i think that until actually think that until we actually have conversation have a serious conversation about the responsibility of parents and particularly fathers to demonstrate to their children , i've got a daughter and i've got a son, i always think with my son how i treat his mother is how he's going to grow up, about how he's going to grow up, about how he's going to grow up, about how he should respect and treat women. and i think that's my
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fault, my responsibility to treat utmost treat her with the utmost respect, do things respect, to do the things that i should be doing in order for him to know that's how to know that if that's how i treat mother, that's how treat your mother, that's how i expect you to treat any other woman. >> a lot of it comes from actually, i think i think that is what lot of you think that. is what a lot of you think that. >> but when you have >> but then when you have a teenage son, external factors can play a massive part. and at the we live in a society the moment we live in a society where teenage boys are more likely to know who andrew doyle tate sunak. has tate is than rishi sunak. he has a massive his whole a massive influence in his whole game, is targeting male insecurity. >> was that not all ever thus? i mean, might not mean, people all right might not be necessarily. you be andrew tate necessarily. you know, in social media, but i think 13 year boys are think 13 year old boys are always inclined to know, if always more inclined to know, if you back, who eric you take it far back, who eric cantona right. right. you take it far back, who eric canand right. right. you take it far back, who eric canand was right. right. you take it far back, who eric canand was ericiht. right. you take it far back, who eric canand was eric cantona:. you take it far back, who eric canand was eric cantona saying >> and was eric cantona saying that your whole worth is based on possessions on your material possessions and your aggression towards women and letting your and letting you letting your women you're owned. to women know that you're owned. to be you what i mean? women know that you're owned. to be values what i mean? women know that you're owned. to be values that what i mean? women know that you're owned. to be values that he hat i mean? women know that you're owned. to be values that he is|t i mean? women know that you're owned. to be values that he is pushing|? the values that he is pushing are so dangerous, and i think this to be clamped down this needs to be clamped down on. it's not uncommon for on. and it's not uncommon for governments to use sports stars
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on. and it's not uncommon for go use ments to use sports stars on. and it's not uncommon for go use men stars use sports stars on. and it's not uncommon for go use men stars toe sports stars on. and it's not uncommon for go use men stars to to, orts stars on. and it's not uncommon for go use men stars to to, relaytars to use pop stars to to, relay that messaging. and don't to use pop stars to to, relay that rit�*ssaging. and don't to use pop stars to to, relay that rit would g. and don't to use pop stars to to, relay that rit would be ind don't to use pop stars to to, relay that rit would be like don't to use pop stars to to, relay that rit would be like getting think it would be like getting eric cantona to counteract this message. >> you know, i mean, i would be i'll with if it i'll be honest with you, if it was years ago in favour of was 13 years ago in favour of the king doing absolutely whatever heck likes. but the king doing absolutely whatmoving heck likes. but the king doing absolutely whatmoving on, ck likes. but the king doing absolutely whatmoving on, joe likes. but the king doing absolutely whatmoving on, joe biden;. but the king doing absolutely whatmoving on, joe biden hasit now moving on, joe biden has made a statement on a ceasefire in here speaking in gaza. here he is speaking a load of waffle. oh, god. can you give us a sense of where you think that ceasefire will start, sir? well i hope by the beginning mean beginning of the weekend, i mean the the week end, at the end of the week end, at least my, my, my national security adviser tells me that we're close. >> we're close. it's done >> we're close. it's not done yet. hope is next yet. and my hope is by next monday, we'll have a ceasefire >> looking. patrick monday, we'll have a ceasefire >> right.)oking. patrick monday, we'll have a ceasefire >> right. so.ng. patrick monday, we'll have a ceasefire >> right. so. right.:rick >> right. so. right. >> right. so. right. >> since then? >> right. since then? since then, he since then , then, he's. he now. since then, israel's prime minister benjamin netanyahu be netanyahu is said to be surprised. i'm not surprised at the us president's comments as negotiations are still close negotiations are still not close . can also just point out that . can i also just point out that there was a statement for all this talk, him saying a ceasefire is close. it can also just point out hamas issued a statement, actual hamas saying it's too premature to talk about statement, actual hamas saying it ceasefire “nature to talk about
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statement, actual hamas saying it ceasefire . ature to talk about statement, actual hamas saying it ceasefire . so re to talk about statement, actual hamas saying it ceasefire . so foro talk about statement, actual hamas saying it ceasefire . so for allilk about statement, actual hamas saying it ceasefire . so for all this bout a ceasefire. so for all this rubbish that we've got going on in this country at moment, in this country at the moment, actual don't really want actual hamas don't really want a ceasefire why is ceasefire and know that why is the leader of the free world talking about global policy and ice pie? ice cream pie? >> god, he reminds me >> oh, god, he reminds me of a child eating an ice cream. if i'm totally honest with you, he's behaving like a six year old standing bakhmut. he's that'll get clipped. >> be careful. >> be careful. >> he is not. he's not with it. we all know he's not with it. it's like the emperor has no clothes. we can all see that he's naked. we know that he's not really pulling the strings. he know what he's he doesn't know what he's talking about. he doesn't know what an what he's doing. he's having an ice there's war. ice cream. there's a war. there's all this going on there's all this stuff going on around his ears. >> patrick. he seems to have this weird obsession with going to ice cream parlours as photo ops. mean, he reminds me of my ops. i mean, he reminds me of my grandmother who was a care grandmother who was in a care home, the years of home, uh, in the final years of her life, getting ice cream. so you know, only playing into you know, he's only playing into the picture that donald trump is going him, which going to portray of him, which is who's mentally is this is a man who's mentally gone, physically gone, gone, who's physically gone, and is to be president of
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is not fit to be president of the united states of america anyway. >> i mean, i mean, i mean, some people would say, hey, he's i think people are now just looking that looking to find anything that they push out as they can clip up and push out as he volunteered. >> but hang on a minute, because we as are now entering, we as the uk are now entering, we're recession. the us is we're in recession. the us is flourishing. you saying so? flourishing. are you saying so? he doing something he must be doing something right. perfectly with it. i >> i'm perfectly with it. i mean, i'm not but i'm just mean, i'm not him, but i'm just saying, all right. >> on paper. >> on paper. >> quickly forgot who hamas were. come on mate, wonderful. >> come on mate, wonderful. >> come on mate, wonderful. >> panel. have just >> wonderful panel. we have just about to do today's about got time to do today's greatest britain and union jackass all right. we are going greatest britain and union jackass to. right. we are going greatest britain and union jackass to bejht. we are going greatest britain and union jackass to be rapid'e are going greatest britain and union jackass to be rapid with going greatest britain and union jackass to be rapid with this. g to have to be rapid with this. so, nano, your greatest britain? >> my greatest britain is the, uh, military wives for forcing the defence to the ministry of defence to u—turn the housing. u—turn over the housing. they were prioritising with u—turn over the housing. they wernumbersing with u—turn over the housing. they wernumbersing ratherith u—turn over the housing. they wernumbersing ratherthan the number of kids rather than the number of kids rather than the of the officer. but the the rank of the officer. but the wives stood and said, nah, we wives stood up and said, nah, we ain't having it. >> yeah. good. okay. john lydon the victims of the rising scandal, came before the scandal, they came before the business committee, business trade select committee, three today, including three of them today, including mr alan bates and were incredibly sharing incredibly brave in sharing their very harrowing stories, including who had including one individual who had to the country for 15 years
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to flee the country for 15 years before returning here then before returning here and then was falsely accused of having paid off 100 grand mortgage that didn't exist. didn't even exist. >> their bravery in >> so for their bravery in standing up for everyone else to make that justice will make sure that justice will hopefully done , hopefully one day be fully done, i think they deserve the shout. >> right, amy. they >> all right, go on amy. they just want their money though, don't they? >> not your nomination anyway. my my nomination is, uh, simon lee, who gb news var, and his who is a gb news var, and his wife, trang, i met them wife, trang, because i met them in manchester over the weekend, and up to me and they and they came up to me and they said, oh, we watch you on gb news. and i was like, oh my god. oh, like, what are you going to throw me? and they were like, throw at me? and they were like, we your contributions. we love your contributions. we love love love rebecca and we love benjamin they like benjamin to right. so they like to the broad. so to hit the broad. so >> i no, no, thank you very much . i don't mean that. please keep watching . . i don't mean that. please keep watching. um. uh, . i don't mean that. please keep watching . um. uh, today's grace watching. um. uh, today's grace is britain and the army wives. okay. sorry. what were their names again ? names again? >> uh, simon and trang. >> uh, simon and trang. >> simon and trang, thank you very much for watching your support does mean the world. and so. yes. thank you, thank you, thank very quickly. thank you. right. very quickly. who's why?
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who's a union jack? why? >> got to the >> union jack has got to be the guardian for calling the cat killer. murderer a woman who turns is a trans. so turns out, is a trans. so ultimately he is a man. >> quickly . >> okay, quickly. >> okay, quickly. >> a cat in a blender? sorry >> uh, the actual post office executives. the ceo executives. it turns out the ceo is actually also under investigation, as well as the former has told former chairman, and has told the committee under oath that he hadnt the committee under oath that he hadn't resigning. hadn't thought about resigning. but allegedly, there's now an 80 page says he did page document that says he did consider resigning, which means he in contempt of he will be found in contempt of parliament. that's true, parliament. if that's true, good grief. >> all right. very quickly, gerry moynihan for the tax rises that decimate our that will just decimate our pubuc public services. >> cuts. that >> even tax cuts. sorry that would rubbish. rubbish, would be rubbish. rubbish, right. would be rubbish. rubbish, rigitoday's union jack is the >> today's union jack is the guardian. come on. there we go. nana has won twice. so well done. nana right. okay, look. thank you very much. everybody who's been watching. you, thank you very much. everybody who's you,i watching. you, thank you very much. everybody who's you, thank|ing. you, thank you very much. everybody who's you, thank you. you, thank you very much. everybody who's you, thank you. i'll you, thank you very much. everybody who's you, thank you. i'll see ou, thank you, thank you. i'll see you tomorrow at nine. why . you tomorrow at nine. why. >> a brighter outlook with boxt solar sponsor of weather on . gb
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news. >> hello. good evening. welcome to your latest gb news weather update with me. annie from the met office will be a foggy start for some of us tomorrow, but it should stay dry across eastern areas. but through the evening we'll see a weather front push into southeast . so that's into the southeast. so that's when there's the greatest risk of rain across of a chance of rain across southeastern areas. behind it, though, it will turn much clearer. and rain clearer. so some cloud and rain through evening across the through this evening across the southeast, it southeast, but elsewhere it should dry evening. should be a fairly dry evening. but some fog will start to develop quite quickly through the night, so it will be a bit of a murky start for many areas, particularly across central southern also southern england, but also up through across through the pennines and across eastern areas of scotland, as well . so feel quite cold well. so it will feel quite cold tomorrow morning. once again. but it won't be as frosty but it won't be quite as frosty as was this morning. and as it was this morning. and there will early there will be some early sunshine where don't see any sunshine where we don't see any fog tomorrow, fog through tomorrow, particularly far east particularly across the far east coast southeastern coast, and many southeastern areas stay dry through areas should stay dry through much of the day , but elsewhere much of the day, but elsewhere it will turn wetter as the it will turn much wetter as the day goes on, particularly across parts of the south—west of england where we'll
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england and wales, where we'll see persistent rain see some quite persistent rain at times, but also across northern of northern ireland, much of scotland northern england. scotland and northern england. but it feel milder across but it will feel milder across the the back of that rain the uk. the back of that rain will push into the southeast on thursday, so quite a wet day to come in the southeast on thursday. elsewhere, though, it will be a mix of sunny spells and once. rain and showers at once. that rain does clear through and that's the as we head through the the story as we head through the rest of the week, a showery picture through friday and saturday and after saturday as well, and after a milder through wednesday milder spell through wednesday and thursday, it looks turn and thursday, it looks to turn colder from friday. >> that feeling inside from colder from friday. >> thboiler feeling inside from colder from friday. >> thboiler oilers,ng inside from colder from friday. >> thboiler oilers, sponsors from colder from friday. >> thboiler oilers, sponsors of m boxt boiler oilers, sponsors of weather on
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gb news. >> it's 11:00. you're with gb >> it's11:00. you're with gb news and the top story tonight suspended tory mp lee anderson has held private talks with the leader of the reform uk party, richard tice. it's fuelled speculation that the former deputy chair is about to defect to the rival party, gb news understands that they met in person for talks in derbyshire on sunday. the meeting happened a day after lee anderson lost the whip for refusing to apologise after saying islamist had control of london mayor sadiq khan. well, tonight at an awards ceremony in london, sadiq khan reiterated his position about lee anderson's comments . about lee anderson's comments. >> this responsible politician also know that racism and prejudice , no matter what form
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prejudice, no matter what form it

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