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tv   Martin Daubney  GBN  February 29, 2024 3:00pm-6:01pm GMT

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channel a very good afternoon to you. >> it's 3 pm. welcome to the martin daubney show on gb news broadcasting live from the heart of . of westminster. >> the day, we've got >> all across the day, we've got a show coming up and a cracking show coming up and top of the agenda. >> there's reaction to the shock news that a record number of people were given asylum last yeah >> incredibly, the figure was up by a massive . 242% when compared by a massive. 242% when compared to 2022, plus , we issued an to 2022, plus, we issued an eye—watering . 1.4 million work eye—watering. 1.4 million work visas, a 26% increase. >> have we finally totally lost control of our borders? >> then there's the latest on plans to protect mps. as rishi sunak was warns warns we've lost control role and wayne couzens should never have been a police officer.
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>> that's the verdict. the damning verdict of an inquiry into the murder of sarah everard and prince william has made his first public appearance since he mysteriously pulled out of an event on tuesday . event on tuesday. >> and that's all coming up in your next hour . your next hour. >> welcome to the show. as ever , >> welcome to the show. as ever, it's always a huge pleasure to have your company. the figures from the home office today are absolutely astonishing and national embarrassment. you could say . and huge escalation could say. and huge escalation in asylum, a huge escalation in work visas , dependants, family work visas, dependants, family visas, the care sector, the health sector. we've totally lost control . lost control. >> this is not a government in control. >> this is not a country in control of its own destiny . and control of its own destiny. and the labour party today has put figures out about the cost of all of this . they reckon that all of this. they reckon that the actual cost of a hotel bills every single day, £15 million
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for £15 million, every single day, £4.3 billion per year. we voted time and time and time again to take back control of our borders. are they simply not listening to a single thing we say? i want you to tell me what you think today. all the usual ways gbviews@gbnews.com. let's crack on. now it's time for your latest news headlines with sophia wenzler. >> thanks, martin. it's 3:02. i'm sophia wenzler in the gb newsroom . your top story this newsroom. your top story this houh newsroom. your top story this hour. the home secretary has told mps police officers will be automatically suspended if they're charged with certain criminal offences. the comments come after the sarah everard inquiry found wayne couzens should never have been a police officer. he killed the 33 year old in south london in march 2021. her family says she died
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because he was a police officer , because he was a police officer, and she would never have got into a stranger's cah inquiry chairwoman dame angiolini has warned . without a radical warned. without a radical overhaul of policing practices and culture, there's nothing to stop another cousins operating in plain sight. even after cousin's arrest and a review of his vetting clearance , the his vetting clearance, the metropolitan police service told the inquiry. >> in 2022 that they would still have recruited him if provided with the same information . i with the same information. i find this astonishing . with the same information. i find this astonishing. i make a number of recommend actions to improve recruitment and vetting , improve recruitment and vetting, covering everything from in—person interviews and home visits for new recruits to improvements for information sharing around transfer fees. in addition to the shortcomings in vetting and recruitment that the report shows, very clearly how police investigations of indecent exposure were poor . indecent exposure were poor. >> meanwhile , the prime minister >> meanwhile, the prime minister has told police to use their
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powers to protect mps after warning the uk is descending into mob rule. the government has already announced a £31 million package to boost security following safety fears. concerns have been growing over mps being targeted by protesters since the outbreak of the israel—hamas wah schools minister damian hinds says the additional support is needed . additional support is needed. >> it's really important to protect our democracy. that's not just members of parliament, of course, but it includes members of parliament. we have a representative and representative democracy and it's really important that that can about business, can go about its business, that individuals can go about their business. by way, their business. and by the way, their staff members and families without fear. do think it's without fear. so i do think it's right that there is this there is this focus. the police obviously do fantastic work and we're all we're all very grateful to them. and yes, i do welcome that, that, that focus grateful to them. and yes, i do welcthee that, that, that focus grateful to them. and yes, i do welcthe prime that, that focus grateful to them. and yes, i do welcthe prime ministert focus grateful to them. and yes, i do welcthe prime minister has:us that the prime minister has brought our brought to protecting our democracy, process democracy, our democracy process and democratic participation . i and democratic participation. i hotels for asylum seekers are costing the taxpayer £15 million a day, with labour accusing the
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government of blowing its £1 billion budget. >> the treasury figures suggest the home office spent 4.3 billion more than budgeted on asylum accommodation last year. shadow home secretary yvette cooper says it demonstrates the complete chaos in the system , complete chaos in the system, and it comes as the latest figures show illegal migration has fallen. but legal migration is up . the government data also is up. the government data also reveals small boat arrivals in 2023 were down 36% on the previous year. how ever the uk granted asylum to over 62,000 people in 2023, the highest level on record . in other news, level on record. in other news, assist a dying must be addressed with mps warning the government that a plan is needed if laws are passed on jersey or the isle of man. dame esther rantzen is among the voices calling for a fresh debate and a vote in the uk , saying the current uk, saying the current legislation is a mess. she recently revealed she's joined the dignitas clinic in switzerland after being diagnosed with stage four lung cancer.
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diagnosed with stage four lung cancer . the public diagnosed with stage four lung cancer. the public has been giving their view on the matter. >> i think they're going to be a lot of ramifications from this. i they have it legalised i mean, they have it legalised in switzerland, don't they? but it's really going to be something that for a long time, the class will the ruling class will have access how expensive access to, because how expensive it will be, how feasible will it be for the nhs to be able to support it? why >> in theory, i don't see why it shouldn't be legalised because everyone has a right to die in the way they want to. why should they suffer when they're in agony? >> and this could go on. this agony could go on for years . and agony could go on for years. and is it fair to make people suffer for the uk is urging the us to approve more military aid for ukraine. >> the defence secretary made the call while visiting british and ukrainian soldiers at catterick garrison in north yorkshire . asked about the yorkshire. asked about the ongoing impasse over president biden's £47.5 billion military aid package for kyiv , grant aid package for kyiv, grant shapps said congress needs to stick with the uk and stop
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putin's war machine , while the putin's war machine, while the queen has held an audience with the ukraines first lady, olena zelenska . their meeting comes zelenska. their meeting comes just days after the second anniversary of russia's invasion of the country. ukrainian first lady was also welcomed to downing street and has spent time with the prime minister's wife, akshata murthy . after a wife, akshata murthy. after a private meeting , they heard private meeting, they heard a rendition of the ukrainian national anthem performed by a choir made up of ukrainian singers affected by the war and hairy bikers star dave myers has died aged 66, less than two years after revealing his cancer diagnosis. sci king, his motorcycling, cooking partner, revealed the news on social media, saying he passed away peacefully at home with his family. he said he can't put into words how he's feeling at the moment, but everyone who loved dave is devastated . for loved dave is devastated. for the latest story, sign up to gb news alerts by scanning the qr code on your screen or go to gb
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news. common alerts . now it's news. common alerts. now it's back to . martin back to. martin >> thank you for your. let's get going. we've got one heck of a show ahead. and now we start with shocking new figures that show of the migrant show the scale of the migrant crisis . and the granted crisis. and the uk granted asylum to a record number of people in 2023, an astonishing number, the home office confirmed today . that 62,336 confirmed today. that 62,336 people were given refugee status or other protection following an asylum application last year, and that's an increase . get and that's an increase. get ready for this of 242% right now. let's go through them through some of the other alarming figures that also came out this morning . a total of 1.4 out this morning. a total of 1.4 million visas were issued last yeah million visas were issued last year, and that's an increase of 20. and there were more than . 20. and there were more than. 337,000 overseas worker visas .
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337,000 overseas worker visas. and that's up by 26% on the previous 12 months. now, we all know about the number of foreign workers in the health and social care sector. well they got more than 146,000 visas, which was an increase of a massive 91. and the number of dependents coming to the uk also went through the roof. there were more than 279,000 dependent visas issued, which was up by 80% on the previous year. now, of course , previous year. now, of course, the former home secretary, suella braverman , has been suella braverman, has been a very vocal critic of the government's migration policy and she's responded to today's figures by saying this the prime minister must adopt policies. i push for that would have prevented this national disaster . we need a cap on overall numbers . . we need a cap on overall numbers. britain will be unrecognisable if this carries on. it's not what the british people, including me, voted for
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or powerful words there from suella braverman. in response to astonishing figures which i want to go through now, i'm joined by our mehmet, who of course, is the chairman of migration. watch out . welcome to the show. once out. welcome to the show. once again, we hear time and time again, we hear time and time again out. we voted to take back control of our country. these figures seem to me like a final capitulation. this is a country that's almost surrendering. its borders . borders. >> this is immigration out of control , not under control . control, not under control. >> frankly , i'm i'm really >> frankly, i'm i'm really shocked . at 1.4 million long shocked. at 1.4 million long terme visas is the highest ever. and what is more worrying is that there's no sign that there's any prospect of this reducing. >> if you look at the individual areas where the numbers that you've just read out, if you look at them, the fact is we're
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not going to see a fall in student numbers. >> we're not going to see a fall in workers coming here. >> we're not going to see a fall in the numbers of people coming for here family or whatever, which means that we're going to go on and on with this massive absolutely massive net migration figure, which is going to lead to more millions of people being added to our population. >> almost entirely due to immigration in a very short time . we just cannot cope with that. thatis . we just cannot cope with that. that is dangerous . that is dangerous. >> and also out on top of this, to pile misery upon misery. >> the labour party have put figures out today about the true cost of all of this. of course, we've been told it was a mere £7 million a day to house asylum seekers in hotels . turns out seekers in hotels. turns out it's more than double that
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figure £15 million every single day. >> out, £4.3 billion in total. >> out, £4.3 billion in total. >> the entire asylum process last year. this is an extortionate amount of money at a time when many britons are basically struggling to heat their homes and eat food . yeah absolutely. >> although, um, coming from the labour party, it's a bit rich . i labour party, it's a bit rich. i nofice labour party, it's a bit rich. i notice that they haven't really said how they would reduce these numbers . in said how they would reduce these numbers. in fact, said how they would reduce these numbers . in fact, they encourage numbers. in fact, they encourage that the high growth rate of 62,000 and more people who were granted some sort of leave to remain , if not asylum last year , remain, if not asylum last year, the labour party was saying, come on, do this quickly. >> do it more quickly. well, in the end , we ended up in in an the end, we ended up in in an amnesty in all but name , and amnesty in all but name, and that's where i'm worried. >> and that's why i think that however much these figures are
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astonishing thing, they're going to get even worse unless we start debating seriously about how we're going to reduce net migration and the inflow in the way that suella braverman has suggested it have, uh, an overall ceiling, have a, uh, a figure that we can say, right, we'll get these people in no more this year. >> next year , we will arrive at >> next year, we will arrive at a different, uh, ceiling to allow the people that were needed. >> and martin, can i just add, you know, people say net migration . closer to zero. migration. closer to zero. >> that doesn't mean that no one comes in. that means that the number of people who arrive is pretty much equal to the number of people who leave. so you can still have half a million people
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coming here to do the jobs, provide the skills, and join family . and still and still family. and still and still have, uh , net migration. much have, uh, net migration. much much closer to the sort of levels that, uh, will stabilise our population rather than explode it . and of course, we've explode it. and of course, we've also seen this week, david neil, who was sacked as the chief inspector of borders and immigration , saying blowing the immigration, saying blowing the whistle , saying that even a lot whistle, saying that even a lot of these curves in particular are being abused , 25% of them. are being abused, 25% of them. he said , aren't even working in he said, aren't even working in the sector or for a very short penod the sector or for a very short period of time. and when you go into the detail of where the family visas, the dependent visas are going , it's in that visas are going, it's in that sector , um, 73% of all dependent sector, um, 73% of all dependent visas are in the care sector. so every which way you look at it out, it seems there's an opportunity to make britain your permanent home. yeah. no
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absolutely. and i smiled a bit when i saw that the reaction to the abuse that was going on in the abuse that was going on in the care sector visa scheme, uh, when we're effectively handing responsibility for recruiting to the employers and to agents in countries where, frankly, corruption is rife, i, i, i'm a bit shocked that there was the naivety in the home office to think that it wouldn't happen. uh apart from the fact that that it has frankly , they should have it has frankly, they should have known that it was coming all along and they didn't. known that it was coming all along and they didn't . they're along and they didn't. they're not up to the job at the moment. i'm afraid of controlling our borders and keeping us all safe . borders and keeping us all safe. okay, out bakhmut, the chairman of migration watch , thank you of migration watch, thank you for joining us once again with again, very sobering words. now we will of course, have lots more on on today's immigration
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figures throughout the show. and there's lots of coverage on our websites gb news. com you've helped to make it the fastest growing national news website in the you very the country. so thank you very much. now to the latest on the fears over mps safety. and rishi sunak has warned that the uk is descending into mob rule . he was descending into mob rule. he was speaking after the government announced a £31 million security package to protect mps from threats . but one man who's not threats. but one man who's not impressed with the new scheme is justice minister mike freer, who won't stand at the next general election. of course , because of election. of course, because of threats to his own security. he says the extra funding misses the point because it's not actually going to the root cause of the problem. that's exactly what we were saying yesterday on this show with this man , our this show with this man, our political editor, christopher hope. political editor, christopher hope . chris, once again, we're hope. chris, once again, we're talking about mp security. now it's mob rule . according to it's mob rule. according to rishi sunak. it's taking him a long wake we've long while to wake up. we've seen the streets of seen mob rule on the streets of batley. we're seeing mob rule on the streets the grooming the streets of the grooming gang towns. we've seen mob rule all
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over for a long over the country for a long time, now seems they're time, but now it seems they're taking well, the taking it seriously. well, the powers are martin. powers are there are martin. >> it's matter >> they can. it's a matter of enforcing saw enforcing them. you saw for yourself that message about yourself when that message about jews and israel was being projected ben's projected onto the big ben's tower. why wasn't that projected being dealt with? why wasn't someone throwing a blanket over it? removing it? kicking it over, removing it? kicking it over, removing it? it didn't happen. the police allowed happen what's allowed it to happen. what's happened got happened overnight? we've got this protocol here from the this new protocol here from the government defending government called defending democracy policy . protocol. when democracy policy. protocol. when the now agreed to the all forces now agreed to take, um, action in advance of any of any issues breaking out people into people's homes people going into people's homes . summary, saying . in summary, they're saying here that 48 hours before, here that that 48 hours before, um, an event , forces will commit um, an event, forces will commit to engaging with the politician in the mps candidates and in the mps and candidates and ensure that they can deal with any, any, any problems coming up, a protest at the home up, uh, a protest at the home addresses be as addresses will be seen as intimidatory and be enforced intimidatory and can be enforced under section 42 of criminal under section 42 of the criminal justice act. so all justice and police act. so all sorts measures. but as mike sorts of measures. but as mike freer that's is that freer says, that's is that enough ? is that the enough? is that going to the heart where problems heart of where the problems are caused spoke caused by earlier? we spoke to lord , who's an a
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lord walney, who's an he's a former mp , uh, labour mp, former mp, uh, labour mp, who's done this very m atteh >> matter. >> people are not making this up. you can see the level often of um intimate action that is intended on on this. i mean, i've been i've gone into a defence event recently where i had you everyone who ran the gauntlet was being shouted at, screamed at horrific things , screamed at horrific things, said to them, my megaphone in their face, and that is not about changing people's minds. look, the right to protest, the right to debate, the right to get your point across your get your point across to your member of parliament is a foundation our democracy. but foundation of our democracy. but what is happening often at the moment is not that it's about an implied threat of menace and a big physical protest is only one way of many ways in which you can get your point across . but can get your point across. but actually, i think we need to reset the balance and remind people that if they want to change people's minds , as we've change people's minds, as we've we've got an electorate , a
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we've got an electorate, a process of elections to do that. and you can put yourself forward and you can win a majority . and and you can win a majority. and if can't get a majority of if you can't get a majority of people to agree with you, it's not really an acceptable subject to think you can menace people who are there into doing what you want . and that's what we saw you want. and that's what we saw in in the house of commons last week . and that's why a lot of week. and that's why a lot of people are thinking, hang on a minute, this isn't right. we need to reset the balance here. >> and was lord walney >> and that was lord walney speaking to gloria de piero for gb news. but chris begs the simple question they have the bills . have they got the will to bills. have they got the will to enforce it at street level? as i said, as you said, they can already arrest people for wearing balaclavas. they don't . wearing balaclavas. they don't. they can already arrest them for going on war memorials. they don't. when are they actually going well, going to clamp down? well, these are choices made on the ground by policing . by operation, policing. >> and have had tory mps >> and we have had tory mps on this channel haven't this channel before, haven't we, saying earth can't saying why can't earth can't we, the over the the government take over the policing? which ridiculous policing? which is ridiculous because mps decide because the point is mps decide the laws of operationally police
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just and go , they enforce just go and go, they enforce laws and go where the takes laws and go where the law takes them. i think this new protocol agreed with all the agreed by overnight with all the police chiefs in england and wales and reinforced the pm wales and reinforced by the pm essentially reading the reading the act, martin on to the the riot act, martin on to the police and with it . police and get on with it. you've the i'm not you've got the powers. i'm not going any more power to going to give any more power to get on with it and force them and ensure that our democracy isn't, is not, you know, dealt with way influenced. with or in any way influenced. we week with the we saw it last week with the debate gaza and hamas debate in on on gaza and hamas and israel and that can't happen again. >> it's just astonishing, chris, that taken basically the that it's taken basically the mob knocking on their own door before they finally woke up to what many have what i think many of us have been knowing saying for been knowing and saying for many, many years that the situation has been to situation has been allowed to get there the marches. get out of there on the marches. >> it for years and >> you've seen it for years and they are febrile . they are febrile. >> they are. they are out of control . we're seeing council control. we're seeing council meetings stormed left. right. >> should say there are >> i should say there are concerns of course, from amnesty. say we amnesty. they say that we don't want the baby out with want to throw the baby out with the water, that must want to throw the baby out with the a water, that must want to throw the baby out with the a right er, that must want to throw the baby out with the a right to that must want to throw the baby out with the a right to protest. must have a right to protest. it's historically allowed for hundreds this
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hundreds of years in this country. to too country. so not not to go too far, it's certainly far, but it's certainly around the people see the edges. people want to see some action these some action with these demonstrations weeks . demonstrations in future weeks. >> chris obe always >> good stuff. chris obe always a see you again a pleasure to see you again later in show. cheers later in the show. cheers now moving report has revealed moving on. a report has revealed that wayne cousins's history of alleged offending went alleged sexual offending went back nearly 20 years, years before he killed sarah everard . before he killed sarah everard. i'm martin daubney on gb news, britain's news channel .
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welcome back.324 welcome back. 324 you're watching or listening to martin daubney on gb news now. later this hour i'll talk about the migrants dinghy that was picked up by the french coastguard just two miles from france. but was dropped off in british waters, got the video of that. you will not, will not believe your eyes now. wayne couzens should never have been a police officer. and that's the
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conclusion from a damning report into the failings that led to the abduction, rape and murder of sarah everard . it found that of sarah everard. it found that cousins was able to remain in the police because of a series of failures in recruitment, and also vetting processes . also vetting processes. >> tragically , the report >> tragically, the report identifies that cousins was completely unsuitable to serve as a police officer and were still that there were multiple occasions runs where this should could have been recognised , and could have been recognised, and lady alice found significant and repeated problems in recruitment and vetting throughout cousins career, including overlooking his is chaotic financial situation . situation. >> a shadow home secretary yvette cooper said james cleverly his response was too weak to little and too late . weak to little and too late. >> lady angelini says there is
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nothing to stop another wayne couzens operating in plain sight . so although i agree with most of what the home secretary has said, i have to be really blunt about this. his response is too weak. it is too little and it is too late , and the lack of too late, and the lack of urgency is unfathomable to me . urgency is unfathomable to me. well i'm joined now by our homeland security editor, mark white. >> mark, welcome to the show . >> mark, welcome to the show. the report is damning. cousins clearly be a repeat predator and offender going way back until the 1990s. and the report itself concludes mog a lamentable and repeated failure to deal with these allegations and many multiple red flag moments, missed an astonishingly damning report . mark missed an astonishingly damning report. mark we missed an astonishingly damning report . mark we knew that the report. mark we knew that the police service was going to be
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heavily criticised for these failings, with regard to wayne couzens employment as a police officer , but this report by by officer, but this report by by lady elish angiolini really lays bare just the depth of those failings. >> and it goes back in terms of his offending behaviour back to 1995, allegations that he had seriously sexually assaulted a child, barely a teenager. there are other victims, alleged victims . according to lady victims. according to lady angelini , that were not people angelini, that were not people that came forward at the time, but have subsequently been spoken to. and there may, she said, be other victims of wayne couzens still out there. and in terms of that offending behaviour, it continued a right through and including his police service and notably in 2015, he was involved in an incident of indecent exposure while he was indecent exposure while he was in a vehicle in dover in kent. a
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couple reported out to the police. they gave the police, kent police, the vehicle's registration number or description of wayne couzens and indeed that investigation established who the driver of that vehicle was. but it was very according to lady angiolini, a half hearted investigation that was really doomed to failure for that. it wasn't really conduct properly in kent, police acknowledged that was the case, that the officer who was given that case was not an experienced investigator for then moving . on investigator for then moving. on to november of 2020. in the months before sarah everard's abduction , rape and murder, abduction, rape and murder, another incident in which we in cousins was involved in indecent exposure in a rural area of kent. more details passed to kent. more details passed to kent police wasn't really acted on and then two incidents at a mcdonald's in swanley in kent, just a few weeks before sarah
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everard's murdeh again this time it was being investigated by the metropolitan police. but as far as the report is concerned, the metropolitan police are again did not prioritise this, even though it was a complaint against one of their own officers . and of their own officers. and of course, he then went to on abduct, rape and murder sarah everard. we should say as well that as well as the sort of the history of criminal city that wasn't, uh , acted upon, there is wasn't, uh, acted upon, there is this issue, this very serious issue of the vetting of those who joined the police, and he really, uh, was was not properly vetted , it seems, when he went vetted, it seems, when he went to kent police, first of all, as a volunteer police officer, a special constable in 2002, then in 22,008, he wanted to be a full time police officer. kent police failed him. then in terms of the vetting, but he was
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allowed to stay on as a special constable with all the powers. martin, that you enjoy as a special constable , the same special constable, the same powers as a full time police officer . he powers as a full time police officer. he went on to join the civil nuclear constabulary. they they carried out a vetting procedure through a third force, that third force, thames valley police, found significant issues about very serious debt problems that he has. this is a red flag for the police, because if you've got debt problems, it leaves you open potentially. uh, and vulnerable to corruption . and vulnerable to corruption. um, but their recommendation to civil nuclear constabulary that he shouldn't be taken on as a full time police officer was ignored . and they did take him ignored. and they did take him on.and ignored. and they did take him on. and then finally, i think , on. and then finally, i think, in 2018, when he joined the metropolitan police in their vetting procedures , they also, vetting procedures, they also, uh , checked into the police uh, checked into the police databases . they said, i looked databases. they said, i looked at the police national computer and said it found nothing on him, but there was information given about previous incidents
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on that police national computer about him disappearing, going missing, reported missing in 2013 and of course, about that incident in dover in 2015 where it's alleged that he, uh, indecently exposed himself to this couple, uh, when he was in his vehicle there. so things that were just never picked up on of great concern . an and the on of great concern. an and the police now the home secretary, the police service and the various forces involved say they have and are still tightening their procedures to make sure that they can't , uh, you know, that they can't, uh, you know, they will not have a repeat of what happened to, uh, with regards to wayne couzens >> okay. mark white, thank you for that comprehensive update on the damning report. in the case of wayne couzens. and we will also be crossing to mark rowley for the press conference on that later in the show. and also later in the show. and also later in the show. and also later in the show. i'll talk about a very emotive issue , and about a very emotive issue, and dame esther rantzen has made a
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fresh call for a debate and a vote on legalising assisted dying in the uk. but first, it's time to get your latest news headunes time to get your latest news headlines with sophia wenzler. >> thanks, martin. it's 233. i'm sophia wenzler in the gb newsroom , the home secretary has newsroom, the home secretary has told mps police officers will be automatically suspended if they're charged with certain criminal offences. the comments come after the sarah everard inquiry found wayne couzens should never have been a police officer. he killed the 33 year old in south london in march 2021. her family says she died because he was a police officer, and she would never have got into a stranger's car in query, chairwoman dame angiolini was warned without a radical overhaul of the policing practices , there's nothing to practices, there's nothing to stop another cousins operating in plain sight. stop another cousins operating in plain sight . the prime in plain sight. the prime minister has told police to use their powers to protect mps
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after warning the uk is descending into mob rule, the government has already announced a £31 million package to boost security following safety fears. concerns have been growing over mps being targeted by protesters since the outbreak of the israel—hamas . war latest figures israel—hamas. war latest figures show illegal migration has fallen, but legal migration is up.the fallen, but legal migration is up. the government data also reveals small boat arrivals in 2023 were down 36% on the previous year. however, the uk granted asylum . to over 62,000 granted asylum. to over 62,000 people in 2023. the highest level on record . and hairy level on record. and hairy bikers star dave myers has died aged 66, less than two years after revealing his cancer diagnosis. sir backing his motorcycling cooking partner , motorcycling cooking partner, revealed the news on social media, saying he passed away peacefully at home with his family. he said he can't put into words how he's feeling at the moment, but everyone who loved dave is devastated . and
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loved dave is devastated. and for the latest story , sign up to for the latest story, sign up to gb news alerts by scanning the qr code on your screen or go to gb news. com slash alerts . for gb news. com slash alerts. for stunning gold and silver coins . stunning gold and silver coins. >> you'll always value rob haaland gold proudly sponsors the gb news financial report , the gb news financial report, and here's a quick snapshot of today's markets. >> the pound will buy you $1.2675 and ,1.1684. the price of gold is £1,666, and £0.87 per ounce, and the ftse 100 is at 7666 points. >> rosalind gold proudly sponsors the gb news financial report . report. >> thank you sophia. now prince
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william has made his first pubuc william has made his first public appearance since missing a memorial service on tuesday in mr circumstances. i'm martin daubney on gb news, britain's news channel .
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>> in 2024, gb news is britain's election channel, so join me tom harwood for the rochdale by—election results from midnight through to 6 am. we'll discover the twists and turns of the most unpredictable by—election in a long time . we by—election in a long time. we should be celebrating. >> i slept during it, you know, and from 6 am. friday, join michael portillo on gb news breakfast for his take on the results. >> gb news britain's election . channel >> welcome back. it's 338 you're
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watching or listen to martin daubney on gb news now. later this hour i'll be joined by our economics and business editor, liam halligan . he will give his liam halligan. he will give his expert reaction to reports that the chancellor exchequer , the chancellor of the exchequer, jeremy could change or jeremy hunt, could change or even axe non dom status. sounds like a labour party policy . even axe non dom status. sounds like a labour party policy. but before that the prince of wales has made his first public appearance since he pulled out of attending a memorial service due to a personal matter. prince william visited a synagogue in central london, where he met young people and also holocaust survivors as well. i'm joined now by our royal correspondents cameron walker , who's at the cameron walker, who's at the western marble arch synagogue in central london, where it appears to be raining cats and dogs. cameron, a welcome return to the spotlight for the prince . yeah spotlight for the prince. yeah it was certainly a warm welcome here, martin. >> despite the torrential rain here in central london. but of course, it's on the backdrop of it still being a bit of a mystery as to why prince william
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pulled so last minute on pulled out so last minute on tuesday of this thanksgiving service his godfather, king service for his godfather, king constantine of greece . constantine of greece. kensington palace cited personal reasons and they refused to go into any more details. apart from that, now , this, uh, from that, now, this, uh, engagement at the western marble arch synagogue here in london was actually originally planned for holocaust memorial day , and for holocaust memorial day, and it was actually meant to be both the prince and the princess of wales. here in january to visit. but of course, because the princess wales is recovering princess of wales is recovering from abdominal surgery, she could longer be here. and the could no longer be here. and the engagements was rearranged until today. kensington palace insist that the princess of wales is still doing fine. we're not expecting to see her until at least easter. but the prince was still keeping calm and carrying on here for this engagement. now this is part two of, uh, two engagements that he's done over the last couple of weeks to do with the conflicts in the middle east. if you remember , last east. if you remember, last week, attracted a lot of week, he attracted a lot of headunes week, he attracted a lot of headlines the red
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headlines by visiting the red cross headquarters in london, speaking to those who are trying to help with the humanitarian effort in gaza . and he said in effort in gaza. and he said in a very strongly worded statement he wanted the fighting to end as soon as possible and for the hostages to be released. but today it was all about the rise in anti semitism in the uk and perhaps around the world. he met not only a holocaust survivor who told him of her harrowing story during world war two, but also he kind of was in involved in a round table discussion with a lot of young people where he wanted to bring a message of reassurance to them and he said that both catherine and i are extremely concerned about the rise of an anti of anti semitism. uh, and uh, but and we're expecting to see the prince of wales uh tomorrow in wales for saint david's day. so more engagements to come. >> great of cameron walker and a superb of the soft power of superb use of the soft power of royalty to show support for the jewish community at this
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troubling time . excellent. thank troubling time. excellent. thank you, cameron walker and you're doing very well. despite that hammering in a few hammering rain now in a few minutes i'll talk about the migrant dinghy that was picked up french coastguard just up by the french coastguard just two miles from france. but was dropped off in british waters . dropped off in british waters. you won't believe the video, but first, in a gb news series , first, in a gb news series, innovation britain, we're looking at the success of the british manufacturing industry around the country. >> over the years, the engineering and manufacturing environments have often been perceived to have been dirty and polluted. >> but so much has changed in recent years. >> james, why is that? >> james, why is that? >> i think there was generally an acceptance that that was the atmosphere that people were having work in. having to work in. >> there was nothing they could do people come do about it. people would come into just well, into work and just say, well, that's in life. that's that's my lot in life. >> , if you think about >> however, if you think about it, this is this is not really acceptable. and certainly today's >> and certainly in today's environment office, you
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environment, taking office, you wouldn't be expecting to work in an office full of smoke, mist and dust . and dust. >> people would walking out >> people would be walking out and are thinking, and people are thinking, well, hold and people are thinking, well, holwell, shouldn't have to do >> well, i shouldn't have to do the same in a in a manufacturing environment. and people want a cleaner place to work. >> how you managing to >> and how are you managing to do this? >> well, filter mist manufacture a extract a range of products that extract oil , mist, a range of products that extract oil, mist, dust fume at oil, mist, dust and fume at source from industrial settings around world. and we make around the world. and we make them here the midlands . them right here in the midlands. >> your record >> and you've had your record year. yeah >> e have. we've continued >> yes we have. we've continued to our exports to over 60 to grow our exports to over 60 countries . but one of countries worldwide. but one of our biggest growth has our biggest growth areas has actually been uk. one of the actually been the uk. one of the reasons that we sell reasons for that is that we sell a to the machine tool a lot to the machine tool sector. are fitting our sector. who are fitting our equipment machines and equipment to their machines and selling complete turnkey selling a complete turnkey package, which includes clean air customers . air to their customers. meanwhile, the uk government's health and safety executive have focussed more on clean air in the workshop . but most of all the workshop. but most of all people are just wanting. and why wouldn't work in wouldn't you want to work in a cleaner .
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>> welcome back. 347 you're watching or listening to martin daubney on gb news now. 4:00 i'll have the latest on the migrant crisis as astonishing new figures show, a record number of people were given asylum last year and work visas. but before that, jeremy hunt will deliver his spring budget next week. but the chancellor expected to make announcements on scrapping the non—dom tax status and pledging to keep the triple lock in place for millions of pensioners . now millions of pensioners. now joining me now is liam halligan gb news, economics and business editor with on the money . liam editor with on the money. liam always a pleasure and never a chore to have you on the show. liam got to say this non—dom package sounds a bit like they borrowed labour's clothing here,
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doesn't it ? doesn't it? >> indeed. non—dom what does >> indeed. so non—dom what does it mean? it means non—domiciled . it mean? it means non—domiciled. well, it's a foreigner who lives in the uk but doesn't actually live here for tax purposes. it goes all the way back to the colonial era . so our colonial colonial era. so our colonial masters, if you like, here in the uk, they didn't have to get caught up in paying taxation for, for wars and so on. but it's been a kind of wheeze that wealthy foreigners have used in the uk for quite a few years . the uk for quite a few years. and the uk government has accepted because they like having wealthy foreigners here, because of money because they spend lots of money anyway , let's have an on the anyway, let's have an on the money graphic now we can have a look at some the details of look at some of the details of non—dom . foreigners in non—dom status. foreigners in the uk. they get a seven year tax holiday on their overseas income , come in 2022. there were income, come in 2022. there were around 55,000 non—doms living in the uk and studies from the university of warwick, the london school of economics. they've recently stated that
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that if the government scrapped non—dom status, they may be able to raise around £35 billion a year for the treasury that would fund about a tax cut equal to about half of one pence in the pound.so about half of one pence in the pound. so a tax cut of one p in the pound usually costs you around 6 or £7 billion in revenue. so it's quite a chunky amount of money. but the reality is, martin, that if you take away non—dom status, a lot of those wealthy foreigners, they're going elsewhere , they're going to live elsewhere, they'll live dubai, they'll they'll live in dubai, they'll live , they'll live , live in monaco, they'll live, uh, in some other proper tax haven rather than a partial tax haven, which is the uk. they won't spend money here. they won't spend money here. they won't necessarily send their kids to our flashy schools. if you like and frequent our art galleries and indeed invest as much in our country. back in the day , back in the 90s, when day, back in the 90s, when norman lamont was chancellor, the treasury wanted to abolish non—dom status , and he told them non—dom status, and he told them absolutely not. labour is now
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saying that it will water down non—dom status. and so the tories are leaking ahead of the publication of their manifesto ahead of a general election, that they may also want to abolish. non—dom status. a very un tory thing, you might think, but they're keen to steal a march and eat into labour's support. it's an election strategy , kind of, and another strategy, kind of, and another very tory policy is protecting the pension. >> it seems as good news on the triple lock. liam >> well it is good news on the triple lock. if you are in receipt of the basic state pension, if you are a youngster paying pension, if you are a youngster paying taxes , paying a huge paying taxes, paying a huge amounts of money for rent, unable to buy a house, you may have a different point of view. let's have another on the money graphic . it let's have another on the money graphic. it wouldn't be the same, would martin? without same, would it, martin? without the triple lock. is it? the triple lock. what is it? it's a invention. it says it's a tory invention. it says that the state pension goes up each year by the highest of wage growth. inflation or 2.5,
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whichever is , is higher. and whichever is, is higher. and that means that the state pension is set to increase by 8.5% in april. pension is set to increase by 8.5% in april . to 2220 . 1000 to 8.5% in april. to 2220. 1000 to £221.20 a week. that's the equivalent of about 11.5 grand. labour has also signalled that it will keep the triple lock in place and this is very difficult for a lot of younger voters. of course, many gb news viewers will be older voters , some of will be older voters, some of them will be in receipt of the bafic them will be in receipt of the basic state pension. you see, there. the basic state pension will increase by 8.5% in april. and labour has also signalled that it will keep the triple lock. look, why are the tories saying now? why is rishi sunak signalling that he will retain the triple lock? why are labour also saying that they will retain the triple lock, even though it's hugely expensive and even though it will irk quite a lot of younger voters who are
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looking for support to buy houses , who are looking for houses, who are looking for lower taxation , who are not, lower taxation, who are not, that they have to pay off their student loans, feel rightly, student loans, who feel rightly, in my view, that they haven't got such a good deal as my got such a good a deal as my generation indeed our generation or indeed our parents. general martin well, the reason the two main parties out of the gate early, long before their manifestos will be published, long before the general election, which we expect in october and november, is this as older people is simply this as older people vote in bigger numbers than younger people , younger people younger people, younger people move around. they're often not registered to vote where they live, etcetera , etc, etc. so live, etcetera, etc, etc. so this is why the big parties will pretty much always do what the 11 or 12 million uk pensioners want. they are a mighty electoral force. they're called the grey vote , and the only way the grey vote, and the only way that younger people can really try and counter that is by getting out and voting too. >> okay, liam halligan superb stuff as ever with on the money thank you very much. now another
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story that's caught my eye today that i simply could not believe. and it's this posted on and it's this video posted on social which shows social media which shows a french coast guard picking up a dinghy just two miles from france. can see it's france. you can see it's coasting there between boulogne and calais. intercepts a craft two miles off the french coast . two miles off the french coast. after a quick conversation, it starts chugging just after midnight last night towards british waters . you see british british waters. you see british waters represented there by that purple line as you can see, the french craft cruiser towards british waters with those illegals in dinghies on board. they cross into british waters round about 4 am. this morning. they quickly drop off the illegals onto presumably a border force craft or or an ally. and then they meander back to france to repeat all over again that that, ladies and gentlemen, is how it works over and over now, quickly joined by kevin saunders, who's the former chief immigration officer at uk border force . kevin, this will border force. kevin, this will be no news to you, but it's
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basically confirmation taxi services in plain sight . services in plain sight. >> yeah. hello, martin. you're you're spot on as usual. >> yeah. hello, martin. you're you're spot on as usual . all you're spot on as usual. all this. exactly. is that . it's this. exactly. is that. it's a taxi service , but from the taxi service, but from the french point of view, um, they don't regard the law of the sea. which is what this is all about. in the same way as we do the french view is that they will only get involved and rescue these people if they ask for help. they say they are not allowed just to go and get them, pick them up and take them back to france. um, now we don't we don't necessarily agree with that, but that is the french interpretation. so they are basically shadowing the vessel to make sure that it's all right . okay. >> we simply i'm afraid kevin, we have to leave it there. we got to you too late after the previous item. sorry, mate. we'll this another we'll have to do this another time. anyway, i'm martin daubney
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on more after this on gb news loads more after this on gb news loads more after this on those ridiculous, astonishing immigration figures. thank you . immigration figures. thank you. >> a brighter outlook with boxt solar sponsors of weather on . gb solar sponsors of weather on. gb news. hello again. >> alex burkill here with your latest gb news weather forecast. that's more on settled weather to come as we through the end to come as we go through the end of week. heavy rain, of the week. heavy rain, blustery showers snow blustery showers and even snow for some of us at the moment there is an area low pressure there is an area of low pressure to north the uk, bringing to the north of the uk, bringing blustery, weather to blustery, showery weather to many parts. but it's a waving front in the southeast that's brought persisting rain already today continue to do so today and will continue to do so for while before the for a little while before the rain clears away. as we go through evening, some drier through this evening, some drier weather, start weather, then through the start of the night, with of the night, albeit with a scattering showers across scattering of showers across northern some northern parts before some persistent and heavy rain with some hill snow pushes into parts of southwest wales. of the southwest and into wales. elsewhere where we see clearer skies through the night, we are going to see temperatures
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dropping. for some dropping. watch out for some frost, also frost, some icy patches also some fog. first some fog and freezing fog. first thing the most thing tomorrow are the most unsettled weather though. tomorrow parts tomorrow will be across parts of the and wales. the southwest and in wales. heavy some hill snow heavy rain and some hill snow could some travel could cause some travel disruption. some localised flooding. the rain is flooding. otherwise the rain is going to spread across much of england could bring england and wales could bring some wintry ness over higher ground. in particular, the best chance of staying be chance of staying dry will be across of scotland and across parts of scotland and northern chilly across parts of scotland and norttorn chilly across parts of scotland and nortto all chilly across parts of scotland and nortto all of chilly across parts of scotland and nortto all of us. chilly across parts of scotland and nortto all of us. temperatures feel to all of us. temperatures a little bit below average for the as we look the time of year. as we look towards weekend we're towards the weekend and we're going under the going to still be under the influence area of low influence of an area of low pressure going to bring pressure that's going to bring more unsettled weather go more unsettled weather as we go through still, through saturday. still, the chance but chance of more wintry ness. but signs that sunday is going to turn albeit stay rather turn drier, albeit stay rather cloudy then , we see the cloudy before then, we see the return to some more unsettled weather to the working weather to start the working week. temperatures rising a little by by that warm little bit too. by by that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers sponsors of weather on .
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gb news. >> way . >> way. >> way. >> good afternoon . a very good >> good afternoon. a very good afternoon to you. it's 4 pm. welcome to the martin daubney show on gb news broadcasting live from the heart of westminster. all across the uk. on today's show, that's reaction to that shock news that a record number of people were given asylum year. incredibly the asylum last year. incredibly the figures was up by a massive . figures was up by a massive. 242% on 2022, plus there's been a record 1.4 million visas to stay in britain , an astonishing stay in britain, an astonishing 26% increase. and there's also the latest on plans to protect mps, as rishi sunak warns that the uk is descending into mob rule. what took him so long to wake up to that out? and wayne couzens should never have been a police officer. and that's the verdict of a damning inquiry into the murder of sarah everard. that's all coming up in
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your next hour . welcome to the your next hour. welcome to the show. it's always a pleasure to have your company. how many times had you vote to take back control of our borders? every election since 2010, perhaps . election since 2010, perhaps. it's definitely in brexit. and yet today's figures are an utter sham. a country that seems to have surrendered its borders, let alone take back control. 1.4 million visas to remain in the country. booming numbers of care visas, student less dependents, family members, left, right and centre . these figures are centre. these figures are through the roof. i want to know what you think about that. get in touch all the usual ways. gb views at gb news. com we'll sink our teeth into that story. but first, it's for your latest first, it's time for your latest news polly news headlines with polly middlehurst . middlehurst. >> martin. thank you.
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>> martin. thank you. >> good afternoon to you. >> good afternoon to you. >> well, the top story from the newsroom today is that the home secretary mps police secretary has told mps police officers will automatically officers will be automatically suspended if they're charged with certain criminal offences. >> the comments come after the sarah everard inquiry found wayne couzens should never have been a police officer . he killed been a police officer. he killed the 33 year old in south london in in 2021. her family says she died because she would never have got into a stranger's car if he hadn't been a police officer . if he hadn't been a police officer. inquiry chairwoman dame elish angiolini has warned . elish angiolini has warned. >> without a radical overhaul of policing practices and culture, there's nothing to stop. >> another cousin operating in plain sight, even after cousin's arrest and a review of his vetting clearance , the vetting clearance, the metropolitan police service told the inquiry in 2022 that they would still have recruited him if provided with the same information . i find this information. i find this astonish thing . i make a number
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astonish thing. i make a number of recommendations to improve recruitment and vetting , recruitment and vetting, covering everything from in—person interviews and home visits for new recruits to improvements for information sharing around transfers . improvements for information sharing around transfers. in addition to the shortcomings in vetting and recruitment , the vetting and recruitment, the report shows very clearly how police investigations of indecent exposure were poor . indecent exposure were poor. >> well met police commissioner sir mark rowley says the force is trying to learn from its mistakes . mistakes. >> what this report does, it paints a deeply disturbing picture of a starting from an astonishing low base . and that's astonishing low base. and that's what we're moving on from . and what we're moving on from. and we have made progress. but i'm not going to sit here and spout numbers and give a false impression that we're nearly at the finishing line. this is a massive piece of work to do. i think what lady ellis has done really powerfully is lay out this is what the gold standard looks like. this is what you've got to aim at. and we will collectively work on what it
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will for policing to get will take for policing to get there quickly as is there as quickly as is practically possible . practically possible. >> while posting on social media, the home secretary has commented on the case today. >> james cleverly said despite the government's efforts to reform the police force, much more still needs to be done in the years since sarah was murdered, forces have undertaken reforms to identify and to kick out officers as unfit to wear the uniform , um, and to stop the the uniform, um, and to stop the wrong people getting into the forces in the first place. >> we've also made violence against women and girls a national policing priority . now, national policing priority. now, there is still work to be done, and i am committed to working with the police to regain the public's confidence in our forces . forces. >> the home secretary, james cleverly, will the shadow home secretary, yvette cooper, has accused the government of not
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doing enough to vet police. >> wayne couzens should never have been a police officer and the report sets out, continued failings on vetting and on policing response to indecent exposure. but these are national recommendations and the government is just not acting with sufficient urgency . we with sufficient urgency. we called for these reforms on vetting two years ago. they need to swiftly implement them because we've got to take women's safety seriously . women's safety seriously. >> well, in other news, today, sainsbury's, the supermarket , it sainsbury's, the supermarket, it has announced 1500 jobs will be cut as part of a major plan to reduce costs. the supermarket is trying to save around £1 billion a year over the next three years as the chief executive says he's making difficult but necessary decisions as the company moves into the next phase of its strategy. >> jobs at the contact centre in widnes in cheshire, and its in—store bakeries will all be affected . assisted dying must be
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affected. assisted dying must be addressed, with mps warning the government that a plan is needed if laws are passed on jersey or the isle of man day . the isle of man day. >> mr ranson is among the voices calling for a fresh debate and a potential referendum in the uk, saying the current legislation is a mess. she recently revealed she joined the dignity first clinic in switzerland after being diagnosed with stage four lung cancer . being diagnosed with stage four lung cancer. the uk's urging the us to approve more military aid for ukraine. the defence secretary made the call while visiting british and ukrainian soldiers at catterick garrison in north yorkshire, asked about the ongoing impasse over. the ongoing impasse oveh president biden's £47.5 billion military aid package for kyiv, grant shapps said congress needs to stick with the uk and stop putin's wah meanwhile, the queen has held an audience with ukraine's first lady olena zelenska . their meeting comes
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zelenska. their meeting comes just days after the second anniversary of the russian invasion of the country. the ukrainian first lady also spent time with prime minister's wife akshata murthy, where they visited a prosthetics research hub . after a private meeting, hub. after a private meeting, they heard a rendition of the ukrainian national anthem performed by a choir made up of ukrainian singers affected by the war and just lastly, tv chef and hairy bikers star dave myers has died at the age of 66, less than two years after revealing his cancer diagnosis. sir hiking his cancer diagnosis. sir hiking his motorcycling and cooking partner revealed the news on social media today, saying that he'd passed away peacefully at home with his family by his side. he said he can't put into words how he's feeling at the moment, but everyone who loved dave is devastated . for the dave is devastated. for the latest news stories, do sign up for gp news alerts. scan the qr code on the screen right now or go to gb news. com slash alerts .
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go to gb news. com slash alerts. >> thank you pauline. now we start with shocking new figures that show the scale of the migrant crisis. that show the scale of the migrant crisis . ipsis and the uk migrant crisis. ipsis and the uk granted asylum to a record number of people in 2023. the home office confirmed today that 62,336 people were given refugee status or protection for following an asylum application last year, and that's an increase of . an astonishing 242, increase of. an astonishing 242, meant . now increase of. an astonishing 242, meant. now let's go through some of those other alarming figures that came out just this morning from the home office . a total of from the home office. a total of 1.4 million visas were issued last year. that's an increase of 20. and there were more than 337,000 overseas worker visas . 337,000 overseas worker visas. and that's up by 26% on the previous 12 months. now we know
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all about the number of foreign workers in the health and care sector. well, they got more than 146,000 visas, which was an increase massively of 91. and the number of dependents coming to the uk also went through the roof. there were more than 279,000 dependent visas , which 279,000 dependent visas, which was up by an eyewall , towering was up by an eyewall, towering 80% on the previous year. now of course, the former home secretary suella braverman, has been a very vocal critic of the government's migration policy, and she's responded to today's figures by saying this the prime minister must adopt policies i push for that would have prevented this national disaster . we need a cap on overall numbers as britain will be unrecognised if this carries on. it's not what the british people , including me, voted for , and , including me, voted for, and i'm sure many people out there will echo that sentiment . well,
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will echo that sentiment. well, to go through those figures, i'm now joined by immigration lawyer and friend of the show, hardeep singh bango. welcome to the show. we voted to take back control time and time again. yet these figures feel like we've totally lost control. in fact, it almost feels like we've surrendered our borders . well, surrendered our borders. well, compared to the target set by cameron's government, theresa may's government. um, the figures show that targets are not being met and in fact, the biggest startling surprise is in the care and health sector, um, industry, where applications are including dependants are actually up about 349. so that's an astonishing increase . an astonishing increase. however, these people are feeling the jobs, um, in the health and care sector which are needed. but it's the dependence , needed. but it's the dependence, um, which also most well, it's actually more than the actual main applicants coming in now
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that's being changed on march the 11th. so under the care sector visa, you will not be able to bring your dependent over and other stuff we've seen is that, um, towards the end of the year, the actual asylum refusal or the grant rate went down from 80% to about 60. so so and a lot of that was due to albanians, um, being discouraged to come here and albanians being removed. however there does seem to be a little bit of massaging of the figures where, um, they're claiming that the backlog has gone down by 25,000. and in fact, these claims are withdrawn. now, you might remember that there was a weird quote by james cleverly by saying, well , hold on, this quote by james cleverly by saying, well, hold on, this is a part of a backlog and these applications are part of a queue . and everyone going, well, . and everyone was going, well, isn't thing ? a isn't that the same thing? a backlog queue. now what's backlog is a queue. now what's happened applications happened is these applications have withdrawn due to have been withdrawn due to maybe, perhaps the home office not in contact people not being in contact or people not being in contact or people not to be found. and not being able to be found. and a lot of them, the figures show, have system . and have re—entered the system. and so this new queue
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so they've joined this new queue as instead of the backlog as it was instead of the backlog . and conservative . and now the conservative government victory, government will claim victory, as we've got the as in, well, we've got the backlog down. well, no backlog down. well, that's no good. queue is getting good. if the queue is getting bigger. uh , if these figures bigger. so, uh, if these figures are sort of astonishing, they don't really meet the targets that the conservatives have set. and uh, they don't really meet the targets that previous prime ministers and the home secretaries have set. >> then there's the >> yeah. and then there's the nofion >> yeah. and then there's the notion of these visas being abused anyway , we've seen this abused anyway, we've seen this week, david neal, who was sacked as the chief inspector of borders and immigration. >> he said sacked simply for doing his job. he blew the whistle what was happening in whistle on what was happening in the care sector. he reckons 25% of all visas were being abused by work was either coming for a very short period of time into the care sector or not at all. there was an incident of thousands of visas being issued for non—existent health care homes and jobs, and as a consequence, they're also bringing dependants in. and so can we even trust the numbers themselves? can we even trust
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where people are going? it just seems like the entire system has been taken over by lunatics . been taken over by lunatics. >> yeah, there is abuse of the health and care sector visa . health and care sector visa. >> we've seen that herself as well , where, uh, people have set well, where, uh, people have set up care agencies and workers have come over and found out that the care agencies are non—existent or the care homes have just told them, go away. we've done our job, we've brought over. huge brought you over. and huge extortion charged extortion fees have been charged from people come over from these people to come over up upwards of £20,000 to up from upwards of £20,000 to bnng up from upwards of £20,000 to bring their families here. and after paying £20,000, these families don't want to go back. so they're to be so they're going to be assimilated into the system or they're go underground they're going to go underground or radar. so there is or off the radar. so there is big and the home big abuse in that. and the home office criticised office have been criticised rightly and have been. the whistle has been blown. now the home out of james home office is out of james cleverly's to deal with it cleverly's way to deal with it was the whistleblower. was to sack the whistleblower. it wasn't like, okay, we're going take we're going to take control. we're going to take control. we're going to take on board what this person you know, we person said. and, you know, we need down if that's need to clamp down if that's your approach as a home
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secretary, you're not going to grab a hold of this situation. >> you do not sack the people that are looking out for you and are telling look, there's are telling you, look, there's flaws the system. flaws and holes in the system. >> listen to them. >> you actually listen to them. you need more of people you need more of them. people around less. so what's around you, not less. so what's happened know, he happened is, you know, he sacked, that abuse is still sacked, that the abuse is still there . it's still being done. there. it's still being done. there sponsors there were more sponsors licenses issued last year than the year, which might the previous year, which might be a warning sign if they were issued the health care issued in the health and care sector. these visas, which sector. and these visas, which people have come over with families, hopefully the families, um, hopefully the government think that they might decline due to the families and not being allowed to come over now and people will just come over their own . however, once over on their own. however, once these people get indefinite leave remain after five leave to remain after five years, at years, then they'll be at liberty bring families liberty to bring their families over might just over anyway, so they might just be delaying calling their families after five years. families over after five years. but the abuse is definitely there. the whistle is definitely blown . we to to blown. we need to listen to people like, um, david neill rather put them out of rather than, um, put them out of a and add to their a job and add to their government's unemployment figures. well that would be the
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common sense approach. yesterday holac, we had tim lawton in the studio and he was saying there are 15 reports that he knows about. he, of course, is on the home affairs select committee. he cross—examined david neill, 15 reports at the home office simply didn't want to go out there. the huge question is, what was in those reports? why are they trying to bury this information ? what they what information? what they what don't they want us to know? and the bigger question is who's actually control? suella actually in control? suella braverman anne spoke out. she's gone. robert jenrick spoke out. he's . david neil spoke out. he's gone. david neil spoke out. he's gone. david neil spoke out. he's gone. david neil spoke out. he's gone. yeah. the home office, the unelected bureaucrats who we don't even know who they they remain know who they are. they remain in office. who's actually in control . control. >> well, ultimately it's the prime minister and the home secretary. >> um, it's up to them to release these reports . now, we release these reports. now, we can assume if the government don't these reports don't want these reports released, probably released, that they're probably critical government and critical of the government and the government is the way the government is handung the way the government is handling the whole immigration, um, at the moment. we um, system at the moment. we know is broken. the know the system is broken. the home affairs select committee
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itself tells that know itself tells us that we know that successive home secretaries have promised the earth and have delivered nothing on stouffer's. the scheme in fact, the the rwanda scheme in fact, the amount of people from rwanda given went up . given asylum actually went up. that's in its 20s now. i think 21 people were given asylum from rwanda, and this government is claiming it's safe. um, we've seen italy do a deal with its nearest country. um, as for a processing centre, albania and it's done deals. um you know, with that, in order to set up processing centres, this country refused to have a processing centre in france , despite france centre in france, despite france saying, here's a land set it up, we'll help you set the processing centre up. government goes, no, we're going to send them, to them, try and send them to rwanda instead . thousands of rwanda instead. thousands of miles where got no miles away, where we've got no control people. control over these people. a small boat crossings were down, but we don't know whether that's due to the that it's a lot due to the fact that it's a lot of albanians were deterred and it was mainly albanians, um, that went down in the figures . that went down in the figures. um, if you take albanians out of the equation in relation to asylum claims, then asylum claims were only went down by
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about 3. so that wasn't a great sort of shift really . and um, sort of shift really. and um, it's really important to note or to analyse this is the government system working? why is the government trying to have a cover up? why is it getting rid of people who only want to speak the truth and probably help the government? the government, has government, in fact, has employed them to well, hold employed them to say, well, hold on, inspect our borders, us on, inspect our borders, tell us where you're going wrong. and before the person can do it off, you go, son. here's your p45 or we don't want you saying that stuff. we only want you praising us. it's crazy. the moment. us. it's crazy. at the moment. we all know immigration is a top , um, sort of issue for the public. it's definitely in the top polling public are top three polling public are worried about. and this government record over government and their record over the past 14 years is just not good removals have only good enough. removals have only gone up. um still less gone slightly up. um still less than pre—pandemic levels . so and than pre—pandemic levels. so and compared to 20 1011 record, it's just not good enough. yeah. you know what, harjit singh bongo, you know, you always speak common sense and sometimes you
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can only conclude the can only conclude that the lunatics have taken over lunatics really have taken over the asylum system . and the only the asylum system. and the only bit common sense in bit of common sense action in this that they, this report today is that they, the government, conceded the government, finally conceded that small that actually small boat crossings might be down because of the weather, which we told them . but look, thanks them all along. but look, thanks for joining the show. i forjoining us on the show. i guess always a pleasure. guess it's always a pleasure. now i'll have more on now i'll have lots more on today's immigration figures throughout the show. and at 5:00. that's why are so many 5:00. and that's why are so many visas being given to workers in the health and care sector. when i've just outlined those abuses? and also plenty of and there's also plenty of coverage on our website , coverage on our website, gbnews.com. and you've helped to make it the fastest growing national news website in the country. so thank you very much . country. so thank you very much. now to the latest on the fears over mps safety. and rishi sunak has warned that the uk is descending into mob rule. he was speaking after the government announced a £31 million security package to help protect mps from threats . but one man, who's not threats. but one man, who's not impressed with the new scheme is justice minister mike freer, who's not standing. of course,
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at the next general election because of threats to his safety, he says the extra funding misses the point because it's not actually going to get to the root cause of the problem. that's something that we've been saying on this show all along. to go over that now, i'm joined by our political edhoh i'm joined by our political editor, chris hope. chris rishi has finally said we're mob rule is upon us. why chris, did it take the mob storming parliament or being outside parliament for them to finally wake up ? mob them to finally wake up? mob rule has existed in batley , rule has existed in batley, where the grammar teacher school has been hiding. mob where the grammar teacher school has been hiding . mob rule where the grammar teacher school has been hiding. mob rule is where the grammar teacher school hamany1 hiding. mob rule is where the grammar teacher school ha many parts ding . mob rule is where the grammar teacher school ha many parts of|g . mob rule is where the grammar teacher school ha many parts of britain) rule is where the grammar teacher school ha many parts of britain ande is in many parts of britain and when you talk about it, you get called an islamophobe. now finally seems they're waking up because . because. >> because they have to. because the last wednesday night we saw how the protests outside parliament, the feeling of pressure on the labour party about safety and concern for labour forced to speaker as labour mps forced to speaker as he admitted , um, to change the he admitted, um, to change the way, change the rules in parliament, give the labour
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party an opt out, a way to fail on own on the gaza on their own policy on the gaza conflict and that caused conflict and that has caused huge havoc. upset among the tory backbenches. huge havoc. upset among the tory backbenches . he's got 90, 93, backbenches. he's got 90, 93, i think mps now have a vote of no confidence or want to vote. no confidence or want to vote. no confidence in the speaker was put. the pm has done here. he's used which you were used language which you were using last week. martin, on your show, is a growing show, he says there is a growing consensus that mob is consensus that mob rule is replacing rule. £31 replacing democratic rule. £31 million. new protocol . million. there's a new protocol. l agreed last night with police chiefs and the pm defending democracy policing protocol. and this means that in future, the police will be have to be notified of an upcoming event 48 hours advance. and that will hours in advance. and that will allow the to talk to the allow the police to talk to the mp candidate election, mp or candidate at the election, find risks they've got find out any risks they've got protests homes of elected protests at the homes of elected representatives, mps and councillors will be seen as intimidatory under section 42 of the criminal justice and police act. other measures to this is a this obvious £31 million this is obvious £31 million private security for those who need it. um, a hotline for anyone who feels intimidated. mike freers point now appears to
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be. well, that's all that's that's the on outside. but that's the on the outside. but why go back to the root of why not go back to the root of it? not the laws you it? why not apply the laws you already ? and earlier, already have? and earlier, our colleague piero spoke colleague gloria de piero spoke to walney , a former labour to lord walney, a former labour mp who's been doing some work about policing and making our democracy safe. here's what he had to say to her. >> are not making this >> people are not making this up. can see the level often up. you can see the level often of , um, up. you can see the level often of, um, intimidation that is intended on on this. i mean, i've been i've gone into a defence event recently where i had you everyone who ran the gauntlet was being shouted at, screamed at horrific things, said to them, microphone , said to them, microphone, megaphone in their face. and thatis megaphone in their face. and that is not about changing people's minds. look, the right to protest, the right to debate, the right to get your point across member of across to your member of parliament is foundation of across to your member of parldemocracy foundation of across to your member of parldemocracy .foundation of across to your member of parldemocracy . but dation of across to your member of parldemocracy . but what] of across to your member of parldemocracy . but what isf our democracy. but what is happening often at the moment is not that it's about about an implied threat of menace and a big physical protest is only one
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way of many ways in which you can get your point across . can get your point across. actually, i think we need to reset the balance and remind people that if they want to change people's minds, we've we've got an electorate, a process of elections to do that. and you can put yourself forward and you can win a majority. and if you can't get a majority of people to agree with you, it's not really an acceptable subject to think that you can menace people who are there for into doing what you want. and that's what we saw in the house of commons last week, and that's why a lot of people are thinking, hang on a minute, this isn't right . we need to reset isn't right. we need to reset the balance here. that's right. >> and that lord walney is saying is a balance. and of course, amnesty and other groups are saying, on, it's are saying, well, hang on, it's all you don't want all very well. you don't want the concern about the the mob. the concern about the mob deal with the actual mob to deal with the actual legitimate protest. that's legitimate protest. and that's the police have the balance the police will have to in coming weeks. to find in coming weeks. >> they've bill. >> well, they've got the bill. have will? it seems have they got the will? it seems to standing the to me they're standing off the mob soaping chris mob and soft soaping them. chris hope, much .
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hope, thank you very much. always a report always a pleasure. now a report has revealed that wayne cousins's history of alleged sexual offending went back nearly 20 years before he killed sarah everard. i'm martin daubney on gb news britain's news channel .
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>> in 2024, gb news is britain's election channel, so join me tom harwood for the rochdale by—election results from midnight through to 6 am. we'll discover the twists and turns of the most unpredictable by—election in a long time that should be celebrated. >> i slept during it, you know, and from 6 am. friday, join michael portillo on gb news breakfast for his take on the results. >> gb news. britain's election .
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channel >> welcome back. 427 you're watching or listening to martin daubney on gb news now. later this hour i'll have a special report on the migrant crisis in northern ireland. before that , northern ireland. before that, wayne couzens should never have been a police officer. and that's a conclusion from a report into the failings that led to the abduction, rape and murder of sarah everard . it murder of sarah everard. it found that cousins was able to remain in the police because of a series of failures in recruitment and vetting processes, and the metropolitan police's commissioner, sir mark rowley , says the force has made rowley, says the force has made progress in recent years but still has lots of work to do . still has lots of work to do. >> what this report does, it paints a deeply disturbing picture of a starting from an astonishingly low base . and astonishingly low base. and that's what we're moving on from. and we have made progress. but i'm not going to sit here and spout numbers and give a false impression that we're nearly at finishing line. nearly at the finishing line. this a massive work this is a massive piece of work to do . i think what lady elish
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to do. i think what lady elish has done really powerfully is lay this is what the gold lay out this is what the gold standard looks like. this is what you've got to aim at. and we will collectively on we will collectively work on what it will take for policing to get there as quickly as is practically . practically possible. >> well, i'm joined now by peter kirkham, who's a former senior investigating officer with the metropolitan police. always a pleasure you on the metropolitan police. always a pleaslpeteh you on the metropolitan police. always a pleaslpeteh just you on the metropolitan police. always a pleaslpeteh just felt on the metropolitan police. always a pleaslpeteh just felt like :he show, peter. just felt like a copy and paste response there from mark roe, didn't it? it was almost like another lesson need to be learned. we've made mistakes , but this is a serious mistakes, but this is a serious sin . this matter. the report , sin. this matter. the report, peter concluded that this was a very serious sexual assault of a child, barely in her teens. it also came out about an alleged attempt to kidnap at knifepoint in 1995. the report concludes it was a lamentable and repeated failure to deal with these allegations for many years that culminated in sarah everard's tragic murdeh we can't just say
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lessons must be learned, surely this this is far, far more serious than that . the report serious than that. the report paints an incredibly concerning picture of the whole system, from top to bottom . from top to bottom. >> um, we need to be careful about , um, >> um, we need to be careful about, um, recognising that the majority of the incident that's talked about in the report weren't reported to the police at the time, and certainly weren't connected , uh, to him at weren't connected, uh, to him at the time . uh, they are things the time. uh, they are things that have come out subsequent quite a few of the, uh , quite a few of the, uh, complainants, victims in these cases saw his pictures following his arrest for the murder. and came forward at that point. so we haven't got a situation where all of these things were known . all of these things were known. there were things known. uh nowhere near so many , uh, but nowhere near so many, uh, but sufficient to, uh, um, prevent him from being a police officer. had the system worked correctly . had the system worked correctly. there's two reasons why the system , in my view, there are
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system, in my view, there are two reasons why the system, um, uh, didn't work correctly . uh, uh, didn't work correctly. uh, and number one, uh , it's and number one, uh, it's a disjointed system. we've got a situation here involving three different police services. the metropolitan police service, the kent constabulary and the civil nuclear constabulary . uh, and nuclear constabulary. uh, and the passage of information between them is not good. um, they're no different from any other combination of forces . the other combination of forces. the passage of information, immediate puts, uh, a difficult in the way of anything. uh and so shared databases and shared information is better. and also the fragmented nature of the vetting process, 43 different geographical forces and several others. uh on top of that, uh, they don't share a single vetting process. they're a national guide lines. and the idea is that they all do the same thing, the same way. but there's a latitude allowed to each of them to do their own version of it. and so that
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creates a problem . uh, the creates a problem. uh, the second issue is simply one of resources. and at the time of the cuts to the police service , the cuts to the police service, which began in 2012, 2013, uh , which began in 2012, 2013, uh, started to bite. in 2012, 2013, um , the likes of me warned this um, the likes of me warned this will have a serious impact on all manner of things, not just frontline policing , but the back frontline policing, but the back office functions and the main function that is found to be lacking here is the vetting process . um, if less time is process. um, if less time is available to do each vetting of each individual candidate or whatever , or transferee , uh, whatever, or transferee, uh, then less work can be done and it will be done less thoroughly. it's as simple as that. and so we've got two factors here. resource saving and the fragmentation of the police service in the uk. both of which really need to be addressed. this cannot be allowed to continue . continue. >> okay. peter kirkham, former senior investigating officer with met, we have leave
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with the met, we have to leave it input. it there. thanks for your input. as ever. now there's lots more still to come between now and 5:00. i've got good news for 5:00. and i've got good news for pensioners with tories set pensioners. with the tories set to to keep that triple to promise to keep that triple lock their election lock in their election manifesto. hurrah! but first time for your latest news headunes time for your latest news headlines with polly middlehurst i >> -- >> the top stories this hour. the home secretary has told mps police officers will be automatically suspended if they're charged with certain criminal offences. the comments came after the sarah everard inquiry found wayne couzens should never have been a police officer . officer. >> he killed the 33 year old in south london in 2021. her family says she died because she would never have got into a stranger's car and if he hadn't been a police officer . police officer. >> the inquiry chair warned that without radical overhaul of policing practices , there's policing practices, there's nothing to stop. another cousins operating in plain sight . operating in plain sight.
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supermarket giant sainsbury's has announced a round 1500 jobs will be cut as part of a major plan to reduce costs, jobs at sainsbury's contact centre in widnes in cheshire, and its in—store bakeries will all be affected . bosses say they're affected. bosses say they're trying to save around £1 billion a year over the next three years. dame esther rantzen is campaigning for a fresh debate on legal rising assisted dying, saying the current law is a mess . she's recently revealed she joined the dignitas clinic in switzerland after being diagnosed with stage four lung cancer. diagnosed with stage four lung cancer . a report is urging the cancer. a report is urging the government to consider what to do if the law is changed in other parts of the uk after a committee said it's looking increasingly likely that either jersey or the isle of man will legalise assisted dying . and tv legalise assisted dying. and tv chef and hairy bikers star dave myers has died at the age of 66, less than two years after revealing his cancer diagnosis. sci king, his motorcycling and
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cooking partner, revealed the news on social media, saying dave had passed away peacefully at home with his family. he said he was unable to put into words how he's feeling at the moment, but everyone who loved dave is devastated and that's the news. for the latest stories, sign up for gb news alerts. scan the qr code on your screen right now or go gb news. common alerts . go to gb news. common alerts. >> thank you polly. now immigration to northern ireland has doubled in ten years and guess what? it's causing major problems within the community. you don't say, well, i'm martin daubney on gb news. britain's news channel .
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>> earlier on breakfast. >> earlier on breakfast. >> but now it is the 29th of
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february, which means it's a leap year. >> pip, you're going to be getting down on one knee today. absolute not. >> i would only get on one >> i would only get down on one knee. said , ellie, if knee. as i said, ellie, if it was pick my lipstick which was to pick up my lipstick which had the floor. had fallen on the floor. >> to be deterrent. >> it's meant to be a deterrent. we want people we don't really want people paying we don't really want people paying all. we paying these fines at all. we want children in school. want children to be in school. as it's only this is only as i say, it's only this is only for unauthorised absence. as i say, it's only this is only for u don'torised absence. as i say, it's only this is only for u don't think absence. as i say, it's only this is only for u don't think it's ence. as i say, it's only this is only for u don't think it's sunk in. >> i don't think it's sunk in. >> i don't think it's sunk in. >> it hasn't. oh man. >> no it hasn't. oh man. >> no it hasn't. oh man. >> but yeah, it's great. i think it's been going for 35 years now. the fish and chip awards. let's it back to wales. let's take it back to wales. and it's it's it's only the third time it's ever into wales. it's only the third time it's eve it's into wales. it's only the third time it's eve it's amazing.iales. >> it's amazing. >> it's amazing. >> us we proud of. yeah >> so for us we proud of. yeah >> so for us we proud of. yeah >> every morning it's breakfast from 6 am. >> join . from 6 am. >> hope you can join. us. >> hope you can join. us. >> welcome back for 38. you're watching or listening to martin daubney on gb news. now, later this hour i'll talk about a complaint made about that man, lee anderson. after those comments are made on this show about sadiq khan . now, for about sadiq khan. now, for decades , britain has been decades, britain has been deaung decades, britain has been dealing with immigration. but
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for one part of the uk, it is a relative new experience . relative new experience. northern ireland is only now beginning to see migrant communities and they are mainly making working class areas their home and that is causing tensions within the wider community. gb news northern ireland reporter dougie beattie has this report . has this report. >> at the end of april 2023, ireland's immigration was up by 31% and over a decade northern ireland's has doubled , with ireland's has doubled, with south belfast being the most diverse . tracy kelly is a dup diverse. tracy kelly is a dup belfast city councillor who deals with the issues in this area on a daily basis. >> over the last few years it's changed dramatically. um, i've grown up in this community and i've seen a massive change, um, especially regards to our especially with regards to our schools and our houses and, and doctors appointments, etc. the um communities are really struggling with these issues, and i'd say over the last 3 to 4 years, especially since covid, it's got dramatically worse for
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many in these housing estates depend on family support , with depend on family support, with up to four generations living within streets of one another wearing this for social housing in south belfast is now over 2500. >> some immigrants that have already been housed in contracted units is over 1000. we have working class communities like sandy row, like the donegall pass , who are the donegall pass, who are blending in with others who are coming to here work and live and mix, but there is also an issue when there's too many people who can't get housed. >> that seems to be the main issue that i deal with when people in their own community who have been born and reared here, have to move away because there's of housing that there's a lack of housing that causes a wee bit of resentment and unfortunate that sometimes that going to that resentment is going to people who have migrated here. >> given northern ireland's troubled , the conversation troubled past, the conversation around immigration was never on the agenda . but when you're the agenda. but when you're deaung the agenda. but when you're dealing with communities that are still struggling with their own history, identity and
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culture, and even global alliances , is it wise to alliances, is it wise to introduce those that are seeking a new way of life with their own culture and traditions, to working class and post—conflict areas? the shakira makoni represents the african community of northern ireland. >> i would presume mostly 99% of asylum seekers or migrants , um, asylum seekers or migrants, um, and refugees coming to this part of the world would have very little knowledge about the internal, uh , dynamics in internal, uh, dynamics in northern ireland. so you find out it's almost like you're thrown in the deep water to have the cognisance to say here, i need to pick up that. i'm living on a peace line and, um, these guys don't like those guys . and guys don't like those guys. and maybe these guys can tolerate me and those ones won't. you don't have any idea of that. it'll take you up to ten years to get
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a real sense of that. because remember , you're focussed on remember, you're focussed on trying to rebuild your life to avoid further tensions. >> should government be looking at the placement of those refugees and migrants ? dougie refugees and migrants? dougie beattie gb news, south belfast . beattie gb news, south belfast. >> one excellent report that was by dougie beattie. of course, there are special sensitivities in northern ireland. none of this ever gets taken into account, does it? now the state pension will rise by 8.5% in april, and now it looks like the tories are going to say in their manifesto that they will keep that triple lock safe. great news for pensioners . i'm martin news for pensioners. i'm martin daubney on gb news, britain's news channel .
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welcome back for 45 is your time and you're
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watching or listening to martin daubney on gb news. now a 5:00, i'll have the latest on the migrant crisis as new figures show, a record number of people once again being given asylum last year . once again being given asylum last year. now jeremy hunt will deliver his spring budget next week and is expected to pledge to keep the triple lock in place for millions of pensioners . for millions of pensioners. great news for them. and joining me now is liam halligan gb news, economics and business editor with on the money reporter . liam with on the money reporter. liam always a pleasure and never a chore. great news for pensioners at last. tell us more. >> well, what is the triple lock? martin the triple lock is a policy which was developed by the tories with lib dem help. back in the days of the coalition between 2010 and 2015, and what it basically says is that the basic state pension is either it goes up each year by the highest of either wage
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growth , inflation or 2.5% there. growth, inflation or 2.5% there. it is, martin, as you're on the money graphic, it wouldn't be the same without one. and radio listeners can just dream at the moment that they were watching the television so they could see this graphic well our this graphic as well as our wonderful faces. of course, rishi sunak, the prime minister, he says the tories are going to retain the triple lock. he's trying grey voters, he's trying to woo grey voters, he's trying to woo grey voters, he's trying to woo the 11 million to 12 million british pensioners that receive leave. the basic state pension now the state pension will go up by 8.5% in april . to £221 a week. that's april. to £221 a week. that's about 11.5 grand a year, 8.5. that's a pretty hefty increase because that's how high earnings went up during the year to last september , and earnings growth september, and earnings growth was higher than inflation then and higher than 2.5. but labour also have signalled that they will keep the triple lock. so here we are, martin. we're still quite a way from an election , quite a way from an election, but an election is definitely in
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the offing. i'm not talking about tonight's by—election in rochdale. of course i'm talking about a general election . we about a general election. we think that's going to be in october or maybe november. and even now . now, way before that , even now. now, way before that, the tories are saying we're going to keep the triple lock. labour saying we're going to labour are saying we're going to keep those keep the triple lock. those older voters, those pensioner voters are hugely important. but what's it going to mean for young people? young people who are paying back their student young people? young people who are pethat back their student young people? young people who are pethat today'sieir student young people? young people who are pethat today's pensioners loans that today's pensioners didn't have to take on if they went to university? today's youngsters who are struggling to get the housing ladder in get on the housing ladder in a way that today's pensioners didn't when they got on didn't struggle when they got on the housing ladder , and even the the housing ladder, and even the likes you me, martin, likes of you and me, martin, we're are we? we're barely pensioners, are we? is to we is a long way to go. but we had an easier time buying our first properties, didn't we? then lots of our young gb news college here in the newsroom and youngsters up and down the country. so this seems to be fuelling a kind of intergenerational tension that there clearly is across society
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at the moment. there is pensioner poverty of course, the bafic pensioner poverty of course, the basic state pension is very important. i'm not saying it isn't. it is actually quite low by international standards, but everyone gets it. it's called a universal benefit , which everyone gets it. it's called a universal benefit, which means many people are getting the bafic many people are getting the basic state pension, frankly, and using it for their wine fund or their ski holiday fund or whatever it is. that's not to be flippant . whatever it is. that's not to be flippant. it's to whatever it is. that's not to be flippant . it's to say that there flippant. it's to say that there is an issue when everybody is getting a particular payment by the state, regardless of means. but don't worry about that. the tories think it's more important. labour think it's more important to signal to older voters that the basic state pension, which of course they have paid into their whole working lives . you only get it working lives. you only get it if you've got a certain number of years of national insurance contributions and so on, or you only get the full amount they feel they're entitled to that and they feel it should go up by and they feel it should go up by a lot each year. look, inflation was up in double digits as recently as 2022. some people
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will say an 8.5% increase in the bafic will say an 8.5% increase in the basic state pension is not all that, because it's less than inflation has been , but it's inflation has been, but it's still very expensive for the exchequer. and i put it to you, many youngsters will feel while they don't want pensioner poverty in the uk , that this is poverty in the uk, that this is a very generous additional payment to elderly voters, many of whom have had a far better crack of the whip financially than they have . i'm not saying than they have. i'm not saying that all youngsters feel like that, but i know that lots do. and there you have it. so ipso of liam halligan always excellent. >> always on the money. a wine retirement fund, the stuff of dreams. now it feels like i spent most of this past week talking about that man, lee anderson. so be rude not to have a story about him today , a story about him today, wouldn't it? well, the metropolitan police are saying they are assessing a report of hate speech made against anderson after he accused the mayor of london of being cold controlled by islamists. and of course , that was on this very course, that was on this very show on friday at 5:00, scotland
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yard said of reports was received a day after the former tory deputy chairman made those remarks. and to go over them now i'm joined by harry miller, who was accused of sending transphobic tweets . it was transphobic tweets. it was recorded the complaint as a non—crime hate incident, but he eventually won a historic court case that the guidance to police officers breached his freedom of expression rights . so this fella expression rights. so this fella knows what he's talking about. harry always a pleasure. my old son lee said. these comments on a national news broadcaster . he a national news broadcaster. he is an elected mp . he is allowed is an elected mp. he is allowed freedom of speech . how on earth freedom of speech. how on earth can his comments be recorded as a hate crime ? they cannot and a hate crime? they cannot and they must not. this is the reason that i went to the high court and the court of appeal in order to clarify for the police in particular, cannot in particular, that they cannot stop criminalising or de facto criminalising or investigating or harassing people because they express a political point of view. the problem that we have,
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martin, is that the police have got a political bent, a very clear political bent and it is in their interests to seek out hate. and they so they find it evenin hate. and they so they find it even in a slice of toast, particularly if it's right wing toast the police do not like right wingers. the police equate the right wing with hate. yes they. i had the misfortune of being on a hate crime champions training day , where i was training day, where i was subjected to propaganda from hope, not hate . if you remember, hope, not hate. if you remember, martin, both you and i appear in the last hope, not hate report as being far right lunatics. this is the kind of nonsense that the police are sucking up to this is the kind of nonsense that the police are repeating. and what's worse is that they're now training a whole bunch of citizen stasi to go out and hunt down people like you and i and reporters for our so—called far right views . so the police right views. so the police should have filed that report against lee anderson straight away and filed it in the bin.
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the police have no business whatsoever investigating a mp or a member of the public for expressing a perfectly legitimate point of view. now, harry, a lot of people will be concerned because of course , the concerned because of course, the comments were about islam . as he comments were about islam. as he put it. if we are looking at special protection of islam, islamophobia being enshrined, perhaps in law and a future government could these hate crime laws actually harry be a back door to a de facto blasphemy law ? yeah, that's blasphemy law? yeah, that's precisely what's going on. the problem is that we've we've had the equality act, which by and large is not perfect, but it's not too bad. and the equality act gives you protection for your religious belief. act gives you protection for your religious belief . what it your religious belief. what it does not do is protect the religion. so the muslims are protected. islam is not. and we must be free. we must be free to rip islam a new a hole if we so wish. because no religion, no
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religion at all, should be given any form of special protection. none at all. i'm a christian. i don't mind at all if you say nasty things about jesus or you know , you show a cartoon of know, you show a cartoon of jesus , or you say that that jesus, or you say that that america is controlled by right wing christians, i mean that accusation is put around all the time. so i don't see what's different here. you know , when, different here. you know, when, um, when lee anderson said that , um, when lee anderson said that, uh, the capital has been captured by islamists. well, it may be true. it may not be true. it's irrelevant. it's a point of view , and it is a legitimate view, and it is a legitimate point of view. okay. harry miller , strong words as ever. we miller, strong words as ever. we have to leave it there. thank you very harry miller from you very much. harry miller from founder of cop. thanks for founder of fair cop. thanks for joining us on the show. founder of fair cop. thanks for joining us on the show . and, um, joining us on the show. and, um, yeah, um, free speech, but apologies if you're offended by what said. isn't it what you said. there isn't it funny? look, we've got loads. come up in the next hour, including we're looking at those record numbers of asylum and work visas, a huge, huge
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increase, loads of pour over. have we taken back control? what? we lost our minds. i'm martin daubney on gb news, britain's news channel . britain's news channel. >> a brighter outlook with boxt solar sponsors of weather on . gb news. >> hello again. alex burkill here with your latest gb news weather forecast . first, there's weather forecast. first, there's more unsettled weather to come as we go through the end of the week. heavy blustery week. heavy rain, blustery showers even snow for some showers and even snow for some of us at the moment, there is an area of low pressure the area of low pressure to the north of the uk, bringing blustery, north of the uk, bringing blusteparts. but it's a waving many parts. but it's a waving front in the southeast that's brought persistent already brought persistent rain already today, and will continue to do so a little while before the so for a little while before the rain away. as we go rain clears away. as we go through this evening, some drier weather, through start weather, then through the start of night, with of the night, albeit with a scattering showers across scattering of showers across northern parts before some persistent rain with persistent and heavy rain with some hill snow pushes into parts of south—west into wales
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of the south—west and into wales . elsewhere, where we see clearer skies through the night, we temperatures we are going to see temperatures dropping some dropping. watch out for some frost, patches , also frost, some icy patches, also some fog. first some fog and freezing fog. first thing tomorrow. most thing tomorrow. the most unsettled weather though tomorrow be across parts tomorrow will be across parts of the south—west and in wales. heavy and some hill snow heavy rain and some hill snow could travel could cause some travel disruption localised disruption, some localised flooding. the rain is flooding. otherwise the rain is going to spread across much of england and wales could bring some ness over higher england and wales could bring some in ness over higher england and wales could bring some in particular, r higher england and wales could bring some in particular, thejher england and wales could bring some in particular, the best ground. in particular, the best chance of staying dry will be across of scotland and across parts of scotland and northern ireland, but chilly northern ireland, but a chilly feel temperatures feel to all of us. temperatures a average for a little bit below average for the of year. look the time of year. as we look towards the weekend and we're going under the going to still be under the influence area of low influence of an area of low pressure going to bring pressure that's going to bring more unsettled weather go more unsettled weather as we go through still, through saturday. still, the chance but chance of more wintry ness. but signs sunday is going to signs that sunday is going to turn albeit stay rather turn drier, albeit stay rather cloudy before then , we see the cloudy before then, we see the return to some more unsettled weather to start working weather to start the working week . temperatures rising a week. temperatures rising a little too, by by looks like little bit too, by by looks like things are heating up boxt boilers as sponsors of weather
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gb news. >> way . a very good afternoon to >> way. a very good afternoon to all of you lovely people. >> it's 5 pm. welcome to the martin daubney show on gb news broadcasting live from the heart of westminster all across the uk. coming today, let's uk. coming up today, let's reaction to the shock news that a record number of people were given asylum last year. incredibly the figure was up by a massive . 242% on 2022, plus , a massive. 242% on 2022, plus, there's been a record 1.4 million visas to stay in britain, an astonishing 26% increase. this there's also the latest on plans to protect mps . latest on plans to protect mps. rishi sunak warns that the uk is descending into mob rule . what descending into mob rule. what took him so long? also, wayne couzens should never have been a police officer and that's a damning verdict of an inquiry into the murder of sarah everard
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and dame esther rantzen has made and dame esther rantzen has made a fresh call for a parliamentary debate and a vote on legalising assisted dying. and that's all coming up in your next hour. thank you for joining coming up in your next hour. thank you forjoining me on the thank you for joining me on the show. it's always an absolute pleasure to have your company. did you vote to take back control of our borders? you know, like in every election since 2010. and yet today , those since 2010. and yet today, those figures that have come out on immigration and asylum feel like a country that's completely lost control, almost . surrendered 1.4 control, almost. surrendered 1.4 million work visas , astonishing million work visas, astonishing increases in asylum care visas , increases in asylum care visas, student visas, work visas , student visas, work visas, dependants, you name it. they're all through the roof will be tearing into that after this . tearing into that after this. let me know what you think. vaiews@gbnews.com. but first,
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it's vaiews@gbnews.com. but first, wsfime vaiews@gbnews.com. but first, it's time for your latest news headunes it's time for your latest news headlines with polly middlehurst . martin thank you and good evening to you . evening to you. >> well, the top story from the gp newsroom today is that the home has told mps home secretary has told mps police officers be police officers will be automatically suspended if they're charged with certain criminal offences . the comments criminal offences. the comments come after the sarah everard inquiry found wayne couzens should never have been a police officer . he should never have been a police officer. he killed should never have been a police officer . he killed the 33 should never have been a police officer. he killed the 33 year old in south london in 2021. her family says she died because she would never have got into a stranger's car if he hadn't been a police officer, inquiry chair dame elish angiolini has warned that without radical overhaul of policing practices and culture, there's nothing to stop. another cousins operating in plain sight . at met police commissioner sir mark rowley says the force is trying to learn from its mistakes. what this report does, it paints a deeply disturbing
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picture of a starting from an astonishing low base . astonishing low base. >> and that's what we're moving on from . and we have made on from. and we have made progress. but i'm not going to sit here and spout numbers and give a false impression that we're nearly at the finishing line. this is a massive piece of work to do. i think what lady ellis has done really powerfully is lay out this is what the gold standard looks like. this is what you've got to aim at and we will collectively work on what it will take for policing get it will take for policing to get there quickly is there as quickly as is practically possible . practically possible. >> mark rowley , gb news and >> sir mark rowley, gb news and sukh market sainsbury's has announced around 1500 jobs will be cut as part of a major plan to reduce costs. the supermarket's trying to save around £1 billion a year over the next three years. the chief exec saying he's making difficult but necessary decisions the company moves decisions as the company moves into the next phase of its strategy. jobs at the contact centre in widnes, in cheshire and in store bakeries will all be affected . hotels, housing,
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be affected. hotels, housing, asylum seekers are costing the taxpayer 115 million a day, with the labour party accusing the government of blowing its £1 billion budget. treasurer figures suggest the home office spent 4.3 billion, more than budgeted on asylum accommodation last year. the shadow home secretary yvette cooper, says it demonstrated the complete chaos in a system . and it comes as the in a system. and it comes as the latest figures show illegal migration has fallen . but legal migration has fallen. but legal migration has fallen. but legal migration is up. migration has fallen. but legal migration is up . the government migration is up. the government data also reveals small boat arrivals in 2023 were down 36% on the previous year. however, the uk granted asylum to over 62,000 people in 2023. that's the highest level on record . the the highest level on record. the subject of assisted dying must be addressed, with mps warning the government that a plan is now needed if laws are passed on jersey or the isle of man day. mr ransom, the tv personality , mr ransom, the tv personality, is among one of the voices
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calling for a fresh debate and potentially a referendum in the uk , saying the current uk, saying the current legislation is a mess. she recently revealed she joined the dignitas clinic in switzerland, after herself being diagnosed with stage four lung cancer. after herself being diagnosed with stage four lung cancer . the with stage four lung cancer. the prince of wales has condemned a rise in anti—sex elitism during a visit to a jewish synagogue, prince william said it has no place in society as he met young people and students in london. he was told about an increase in anti—semitism since the hamas attacks in october and it was his first public appearance since pulling out of a memorial service on tuesday due to a personal matter . the uk service on tuesday due to a personal matter. the uk is urging the united states to approve more military aid for ukraine. the defence secretary made the call while visiting british and ukrainian soldiers at catterick garrison in north yorkshire . asked about the yorkshire. asked about the ongoing impasse over president biden's £47.5 billion military
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aid package for kyiv, grant shapps said congress needs to stick with the uk and stop putin's wah meanwhile, the queen held an audience with ukraine's first lady olena zelenska . their meeting comes zelenska. their meeting comes just days after the second anniversary of russia's invasion of the country . anniversary of russia's invasion of the country. ukrainian anniversary of russia's invasion of the country . ukrainian first of the country. ukrainian first lady also spent time with prime minister's wife akshata murthy, where they visited a prosthetic research hub. after a private meeting, they heard a rendition. two of the ukrainian national anthem, performed by a choir made up of ukrainian singers affected by the war. now fines for parents taking children out of school without permission will rise across england from september . it's all will rise across england from september. it's all part of new efforts to boost school attendance following the pandemic . the minimum fine will pandemic. the minimum fine will increase from 60 to £80 per parent and if parents fail to pay parent and if parents fail to pay their fine within 21 days, it will double. it comes after nearly 400,000 penalties were issued in 2022 for unauthorised
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school absences, which were higher than pre—covid . higher than pre—covid. >> and finally , tv chef and >> and finally, tv chef and hairy bikers star dave myers has died at the age of 66, less than two years after revealing his cancer diagnosis. >> sir louis king, his motorcycling and cooking partner, revealed the news on social media, saying he'd passed away peacefully at his home with his family . sky king said he his family. sky king said he can't put into words how he's feeling about dave's loss at the moment, everyone who loved moment, but everyone who loved dave devastated . for the very dave is devastated. for the very latest stories. do sign up for gp news alerts by scanning the qr code on your screen , or go to qr code on your screen, or go to gb news. com slash alerts . gb news. com slash alerts. >> thank you polly. now we start with the shocking new figures that show the scale of the migrant crisis and the uk granted asylum to a record number of people in 2023. the home office confirmed today that
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62,336 people were given refugee status or other protection following an asylum application last year, and that's an astonishing increase . of 242. astonishing increase. of 242. and let's go through some of the other alarming figures that came out this morning . a total of 1.4 out this morning. a total of 1.4 million visas were issued last yeah million visas were issued last year, and that's an increase of 20. and that's just the visas to work or study or remain in the country. the 3.4 million actually in total for all reasons. and there were more than 337,000 thousand overseas worker visas. and that's up by 26% on the previous 12 months. now, we all know about the number of foreign workers in the health and care sector, don't we? well, they got more than 146,000 visas, which was an astonishing increase of . 91%
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astonishing increase of. 91% percent. and the number of dependents coming into the uk has also gone through the roof. there were more than 279,000 dependence visas, which is up by a staggering 80% on the previous yeah a staggering 80% on the previous year. now, of course, the former home secretary, suella braverman , has been a very vocal critic of the government's migration policy . and, of course, the policy. and, of course, the former . and she's issued a very formeh and she's issued a very strong word today. and she said this the prime minister must adopt policies. i push for that would have prevented this national disaster. we need a cap on overall numbers . britain will on overall numbers. britain will be unrecognisable if this carries on. it's not what the british people in, including me, voted for. i think many at home will concur with that sentiment . will concur with that sentiment. now i want to focus on the huge rise in visas given to health and care workers in this part of the show , and now i can speak the show, and now i can speak with nhs doctor bashir
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mukherjee. bashir, welcome to the show. a huge number of visas granted to health and care workers, 146,477. that's more than 50% of all visas going out, and an astonishing number of dependents on top of that as well . why do we need so many well. why do we need so many foreign workers? and why can't we simply pay british workers more ? that's the question i'm more? that's the question i'm asking as well . asking as well. >> you know, the reason we're having to rely on foreign workers is because we have got huge number of vacancies in hospitals. >> there are 40,000 nursing vacancies still pending, and you've only got to step into a hospital to see how understaffed they are, how everybody's just rushing, tending to so many patients. you know, we do need these staff, but it would be amazing to have more of our british public included in the workforce . but sadly, 2.8
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workforce. but sadly, 2.8 million people in the in the british public are on long time sickness and 22.6 million people are on benefits . how do we are on benefits. how do we change that narrative ? i would change that narrative? i would like the government to focus on that. like the government to focus on that . on that? yeah that. on that? yeah >> do you know what i absolutely , totally and utterly agree. it just seems completely, almost suicidal tidal that we are reliant on cheap imported foreign labour, sometimes at 20% below the market rate. and yet we are encouraging so many people to sit on benefits . and people to sit on benefits. and then of course, bashir, there's then of course, bashir, there's the topic of the visas being abused. david neil, who was sacked as the chief inspector of borders and immigration , cried borders and immigration, cried wolf last week . he said in his wolf last week. he said in his evidence . 25% of all of those evidence. 25% of all of those visas issued in care homes were being abused. and that's because either people weren't going to work in that sector at all or they were working there for a very short period of time. and
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then they were simply going wokeist. and that included . 1234 wokeist. and that included. 1234 visas to a company that only had four staff and 275 visas to a care home that did not exist . care home that did not exist. but, bashir, i put it to you wherever you look, the lunatic have taken over the asylum system . system. >> you know, i have to disagree with that. >> i come from an immigrant myself , and >> i come from an immigrant myself, and i've seen >> i come from an immigrant myself , and i've seen lots of myself, and i've seen lots of immigrant families. i think the work ethic in immigrant families is much higher than our british public. i worry for our young youth who are looking to for ways not to work , and we have to ways not to work, and we have to incentivise the public and the young people to go into these educational fields and these service industry . so, you know, service industry. so, you know, we need to look at that. we need our focus needs to be on how to fix home, rather than worry about what we're bringing in. essentially >> well, i think we should do both . i mean, i think if we both. i mean, i think if we control the numbers and look at
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the look at the figures out today, labour party today, bashir, the labour party are claiming £113 million a day is being spent on asylum hotels, not the 7 million we were previously told. that's just doubled nowhere. £4.3 doubled out of nowhere. £4.3 billion on the asylum system in the last year alone . that's the last year alone. that's money we should be giving to nurses. that's money we should be giving to care home workers. that's money we should be giving to get these people off the dole and back system . and back into the system. >> think that you're very >> i think that you're very correct there, because ultimately we've got to think about it. if if there are discrepancies within the system, if we cannot control what these people , um, are here for, are people, um, are here for, are they for here legitimate reasons? are they truly needing of asylum? if we don't have a system that can essentially filter this out properly, maybe we're not in the position to give asylum. we have to think about that as well. mhm. >> and bashirjust on the on the >> and bashir just on the on the principle of until very recently it was a 20% markdown that was legally , legally allowed to be
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legally, legally allowed to be paid to foreign workers, 20% below the market rate, which of course suppresses wages for british workers. it suppresses wages for british nurses and care home workers . that's not care home workers. that's not good for the nhs , that's not good for the nhs, that's not good for the nhs, that's not good for the nhs, that's not good for morale. that's not good for britain , that's not good at for britain, that's not good at all at a junior doctor. >> i can definitely agree with this. our fight has been to try to up the wages so that we can keep people in the job and if in that case, some money is going to do it for less and we also have to think about what is that at the cost of, is that at the cost of the quality care they can deliver? does that mean that we're time than to we're spending more time than to train up individuals to be train up these individuals to be able fit into this system, to able to fit into this system, to follow this system, follow the rules in this system, to everything ? so, you to learn everything? so, you know, we're kind of wasting time and money on doing this. essentially, it would be much better if we got people trained in this country , in this system in this country, in this system and into into our health care service directly .
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service directly. >> god, do you know what nhs doctor bashir mukherjee? i wish i could reach through that screen now and shake your hand vigorously. agree vigorously. i agree with everything you're saying. we need more people like you . need more people like you. please, come the show please, please come on the show again fantastic thanks again. fantastic guests. thanks for joining us on genius. forjoining us on genius. brilliant i get lots more on that story on our website. and thanks to you, gb news. com is the fastest growing national news country. news website in the country. it's all the breaking it's got all the breaking news and analysis that and brilliant analysis that you've come to expect from us here at gb news. so thank you very much indeed . now moving on very much indeed. now moving on to the latest on the fears over mp safety . and rishi sunak has mp safety. and rishi sunak has today warned that the uk is descending into mob rule. what took him so long to realise that he was speaking after the government announced a £31 million security package to protect mps from threats . but protect mps from threats. but one man who's not impressed with this new scheme is justice minister mike freer, who of course, is not standing in the next general election because of a threat to his safety. if you
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recall, it was fire bombed and he was threatened with murder. he narrowly avoided being murdered. he believes he says the extra funding misses the point because it's not actually going to the root cause of the problem. we've been saying that for ages on this show with this man here, our political editor chris hope. chris, how come it's taken rishi so long to wake up to the fact that people in batley and span have been saying there's been there . the there's been mob rule there. the grammar school teacher, three years mob rule the years in hiding, mob rule on the streets outside last streets of london outside last week. government week. finally, the government seemed to have woken up because the were knocking their d00h >> well, the impact on last week's debate on gaza, isn't it? martin? week , martin? wednesday last week, when, of course, the speaker allowed have own allowed labour to have their own motion conflict in gaza motion on the conflict in gaza to take the pressure off these labour in there where they labour mps in there where they live in their constituencies ? live in their constituencies? um, the we see £31 million spent on more security guards, a hotline to police and 48 hours nofice hotline to police and 48 hours notice before any kind of protest can take place. if you
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go and protest outside an mp or a candidate's house, that is intimidation . this is the kind intimidation. this is the kind of measures which i think some might say is a good idea. but you heard there from mike freer . you heard there from mike freer. now we know him pretty well from gb been our show gb news been on our our show show before the justice minister, says unless you minister, he says unless you deal with the root cause , you deal with the root cause, you only ring of steel around only have a ring of steel around mps and democracy changes mps and our democracy changes the our democracy is mps and our democracy changes the meant our democracy is mps and our democracy changes the meant to ur democracy is mps and our democracy changes the meant to get emocracy is mps and our democracy changes the meant to get close 'acy is mps and our democracy changes the meant to get close toy is mps and our democracy changes the meant to get close to mps . you meant to get close to mps. we have a one to 1 to 1 relationship with our mp. about 70,000 mp represents represents about 70,000 people. and that that connection might be lost. but earlier my colleague gloria de piero spoke to lord walney , de piero spoke to lord walney, the former labour mp. he's done a review of mp safety and here's what he had to say to her. >> people are not making this up. can see the level often up. you can see the level often of, um, intimidate action that is intended on on this. i mean i've been i've gone into a defence event recently where i had you every one who ran the
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gauntlet was being shouted at, screamed at horrific things, said to them. mike megaphone in their face. and that is not about changing people's minds. look, the right to protest, the right to debate the right get right to debate the right to get your to your member your point across to your member of parliament is a foundation of our but but what is our democracy. but but what is happening often at the moment is not that about an implied not that it's about an implied threat of menace and a big physical protest is only one way of many ways in which you can get your point across. actually, i think we need to reset the balance and remind people that if they want to change people's minds, we've we've got an electorate, a process of elections to do that. and you can put yourself forward and you can put yourself forward and you can win a majority. and if you can't get a majority of people to agree with you, it's not really an acceptable subject to think you can menace people who are there into doing what you want . and that's what we saw in want. and that's what we saw in the house of commons last week ,
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the house of commons last week, and that's why a lot of people are thinking, hang on, a minute, this right. we need to this isn't right. we need to reset the balance here. >> that balance that >> and it's that balance that lord is that balanced. lord walney spoke there walney spoke about there is clear amnesty , of course. the clear amnesty, of course. the campaign is saying that campaign group is saying that talk rule while the talk of mob rule while the exaggerates the issue and risk delegitimizing rightful and peaceful protests as a balance here, we don't want to have our mps surrounded by police. we want to try and re—engage with that relationship. but the concern is the government goes too far the wrong way. but right now, this of mob rule can't now, this idea of mob rule can't continue. and that's what the pm has been saying. >> chris, great surf and a lot of might think, of people out there might think, well, security? how of people out there might think, well, the security? how of people out there might think, well, the mps security? how of people out there might think, well, the mps get ecurity? how of people out there might think, well, the mps get £31rity? how of people out there might think, well, the mps get £31 millionn come the mps get £31 million worth? didn't security worth? i didn't have security when egg shipped when i was getting egg shipped to parliament last week, when i was getting egg shipped to mob iament last week, when i was getting egg shipped to mob were tl last week, when i was getting egg shipped to mob were wearingeek, and the mob were wearing balaclavas and disgusting images on big the were on big ben. the police were there. just want to there. they just didn't want to act. okay. moving on, dame esther has made a fresh esther rantzen has made a fresh call for a debate and a vote on legalising assisted dying in the uk . we've been asking the great uk. we've been asking the great british public for their views on this very emotive topic.
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we'll have that next. i'm martin daubney on gb news, britain's news channel
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in 2024, gb news is britain's election channel. >> so join me tom harwood for the rochdale by—election results from midnight through to 6 am. we'll discover the twists and turns of the most unpredictable by—election in a long time that should be celebrated. >> i slept during it, you know, and from 6 am. friday, join michael portillo on gb news breakfast for his take on the results. >> gb news. britain's election . channel >> welcome back 524 is almost the time and you're watching all the time and you're watching all the centre martin daubney on gb news now later this hour i'll discuss the west end play about slavery, where white people will
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be banned from attending some of the shows . smells like racism to the shows. smells like racism to me now. dame esther rantzen has once again called for a vote on legalising assisted dying . and legalising assisted dying. and this comes as jersey, the isle of man and scotland consider legalising euthanasia for permanent residents, with mps warning that this would lead to a divergence from laws between different parts of the uk . so different parts of the uk. so should euthanasia be legalised in the uk ? well, gb news has in the uk? well, gb news has been asking what you think about this. >> why should they suffer when they're in agony? and this could go on. this agony could go on for years . and is it fair to for years. and is it fair to make people suffer and not only do they suffer, their families are suffering with them. i think they're going to be a lot of ramification from this. >> i mean , they have it >> i mean, they have it legalised switzerland , don't legalised in switzerland, don't they? it's really going to they? but it's really going to be something that for a long time ruling class will have
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time the ruling class will have access to because how access to because of how expensive will be. how expensive it will be. how feasible will it be for the nhs to be able to support it? >> um, not not an easy question to answer. yes, it's not an easy question to say yes and no . so question to say yes and no. so i think we must go into it in depth . but why? in theory, depth. but why? in theory, i don't see why it shouldn't be legalised , because every one has legalised, because every one has a right to die in the way they want to . well joining us now to want to. well joining us now to discuss this is professor kevin yuill, who's the director of humanists against assisted suicide and euthanasia. >> thanks for joining suicide and euthanasia. >> thanks forjoining us on the >> thanks for joining us on the show kevin . so, dame esther show kevin. so, dame esther rantzen herself has terminal stage four cancer. she would like to make that choice with sound mind . um, why would you be sound mind. um, why would you be against that? >> because i think it's a much more complex issue as some of your viewers were talking about then. it's presented , um, by then. it's presented, um, by dame esther rantzen or by those
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who advocate legalised assisted suicide and euthanasia and or euthanasia . so, for instance, euthanasia. so, for instance, evenin euthanasia. so, for instance, even in the terminology, it's very different to actually, uh, pin it down. so for instance , pin it down. so for instance, people, you know, your report talked about euthanasia, but euthanasia is when the doctor gives a lethal injection to the patient, whereas assisted suicide is when the patient takes it him or herself . um, and takes it him or herself. um, and most people in the uk don't understand that . so when we ask understand that. so when we ask about assisted dying , for about assisted dying, for instance, which is a confusing and deceptive firm, then people will answer yes , it sounds will answer yes, it sounds reasonable. but of course, when you look into it, it's not. yeah >> i mean, when you look at the polling on this very, very sensitive topic, it is broadly, actually very largely in favour of this. when the question is 74, this is the poll from last january , support doctor assisted january, support doctor assisted dying of terminally ill patients of sound mind , with two doctors
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of sound mind, with two doctors approving . so with all of those approving. so with all of those safety checks in place and to give people the freedom of choice to not live a life of excruciating pain , why are you excruciating pain, why are you still against it? >> well, because i think if you look to canada and what's happenedin look to canada and what's happened in canada since it's been legalised in 2016, you can see the nightmare that has happened there . happened there. >> people are being euthanized who are not terminally ill. it was expanded, um, in 2020. people were people are being euthanized for, for instance, suffering from poverty . and of suffering from poverty. and of course, that makes sense because if you say this is for unbearable suffering, how can you turn around and say to somebody , you're not suffering? somebody, you're not suffering? so when you when you have this medical treatment, as it's supposed , as, uh, of death for supposed, as, uh, of death for suffering , then many, many suffering, then many, many people are going to demand it and it will expand as it has in canada. >> also , we can look at, at the
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netherlands. >> that's another good example . >> that's another good example. every country where it's been been actually passed , it is it's been actually passed, it is it's expanded . expanded. >> and it is true . when you look >> and it is true. when you look into the terminology , people do into the terminology, people do get more confused. for example , get more confused. for example, a poll showed if the illness is incurable rather than not terminal, then then support it does start to decline. it's only 42% at that point. agree. and i guess that's the point that you're making, isn't it? who decides something is decides if something is insufferable in curable terminal ? and could you find situations where it's being abused , for where it's being abused, for example, by relatives putting pressure on those who are ill to go sooner for, maybe even for financial reasons? perhaps yes. >> yes. i don't think it's common. but where there's a will, there's a relative and it goes the old saying, and i think that's true . and i also think that's true. and i also think the terminology is really problematic in the way that it's being discussed on, shall we say, other news channels on bbc and sky , because they're
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and sky, because they're accepting the idea of dignity, dignity and die say that it's for instance, it's a, uh, assisted dying. is this what they want? but of course , if you they want? but of course, if you if a doctor hands you a gun and you shoot yourself with it , you shoot yourself with it, that's suicide. if a if he hands you a rope and you hang yourself with it, that's suicide . and if with it, that's suicide. and if he hands you deadly drugs and you knowingly take them , that you knowingly take them, that also is suicide. so i think we're being deceptive with this terms assisted dying. >> and i'm really disappointed in as i say, some of the other news channels where it's this terminology is accepted . terminology is accepted. >> okay. it's a fascinating debate. and thank you. so much for your input. professor kevin yuille, who's the director of humanists assisted humanists against assisted suicide and euthanasia. thank you much for that. it's an you very much for that. it's an emotive topic, isn't it? and we are undoubtedly going to live longer longer, more and more longer and longer, more and more of us will be living into a very, very old age , and more and very, very old age, and more and more people will be thinking, do
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i sit around waiting for i want to sit around waiting for the moment, especially when i'm ill? should that be the right? should there be a freedom of choice? or are things choice? or are some things simply important to do that simply too important to do that now? lots more. still to come between now and 6:00, we'll discuss the damning report that's revealed that wayne couzens history of alleged sexual offending went back nearly 20 years before he killed sarah everard, but first, your latest news headlines with polly middlehurst . middlehurst. >> the top stories this hour. the home secretary has told mps, police officers will be automatically suspended if they're charged with certain criminal offences. the comments come after the sarah everard inquiry found wayne couzens should never have been a police officer . he should never have been a police officer. he killed should never have been a police officer . he killed the 33 should never have been a police officer. he killed the 33 year old in south london in 2021. her family says she died because she would never have got into a stranger's car if he hadn't been a police officer . the
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stranger's car if he hadn't been a police officer. the inquiry chair warned that without radical overhaul of policing practices, there's nothing to stop. another cozens, operating in plain sight. stop. another cozens, operating in plain sight . supermarket in plain sight. supermarket giant sainsbury's has announced around 1500 jobs will be cut as part of a major plan to reduce costs . jobs at sainsbury's costs. jobs at sainsbury's contact centre in widnes in cheshire, and its in—store bakeries will all be affected. bosses say they're trying to save around £1 billion a year over the next three years. the latest figures show illegal migration has fallen, but legal migration has fallen, but legal migration is up. the government data also reveals small boat arrivals in the last year were down 36% on the previous record yeah down 36% on the previous record year. however, more than 62,000 people were granted asylum in 2023. that's the highest level on record , and the prince of on record, and the prince of wales has condemned a rise in anti—semitism . during a visit to anti—semitism. during a visit to anti—semitism. during a visit to a jewish synagogue , prince a jewish synagogue, prince william said it has no place in society as he met young people and students in london. he was
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told about an increase in anti—social critic attacks since the israel—hamas war, and it was his first public appearance since pulling out of a memorial service on tuesday due to a personal matter , for that's the personal matter, for that's the news. for the latest stories, do sign up for gb news alerts. scan the qr code on the screen right now or go to gb news. com slash alerts . for a now or go to gb news. com slash alerts. for a valuable now or go to gb news. com slash alerts . for a valuable legacy alerts. for a valuable legacy your family can own gold coins will always shine bright. >> rosalind gold proudly sponsors the gb news financial report . report. >> let's check out the market numbers for you. the pound buying you $1.2627 and ,1.1686. the price of gold is £1,620 and £0.59 an ounce, and the ftse 100 closed today at 7630 points. >> rosalind gold proudly
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sponsors the gb news financial report . report. >> thank you polly. now wayne couzens should never have been a police officer . and that's the police officer. and that's the conclusion from a damning report into the failings that led to the abduction , rape and murder the abduction, rape and murder of sarah everard. it found that cousins was able to remain in the police because of a series of failures in recruitment and vetting processes. well, joining me now to discuss this is hampshire police and crime commissioner donna jones. donna, welcome to the show. the report is eviscerating looking back at cousins offending way back into the 1990s. and it concludes a lamentable and repeated failure to deal with allegations to police before miss avril's murder in south london in march 2021. how how on earth was he
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able to operate for so long? and how on earth can we make sure this never happens again ? this never happens again? >> well, look, today's part two of lady angiolini's report is sadly , uh, really, really sadly, uh, really, really worrying . worrying. >> indeed, yet again, for british policing, as you said , british policing, as you said, how was this monster able to serve in a british police force? >> in fact, in multiple british police forces, how was he not picked up sooner ? picked up sooner? >> how were these failings allowed to happen? >> um, and this is a three part review that lady angelini is doing. um, sadly , the things doing. um, sadly, the things that are contained in the report today are alarming, but not surprising to people who have been following the atrocious behaviours of wayne couzens. this is a man who, as we now have heard , sexually assaulted have heard, sexually assaulted a child in the 1990s who then attempt to kidnap somebody who has raped women. you know, multiple women, um, and then has gone to on rape and murder poor,
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poor sarah everard. and so to all of the other victims of his that are out there today and to sarah's family, yet more pain caused the key thing here for me as a police and crime commissioner and for all police chiefs across the country, is to make sure that these things no longer happen . and i must say, longer happen. and i must say, there has been a big improvement across policing over the last year since part one of the review was published . review was published. >> and how can the vetting process be changed? so that monsters like cousins can never even get into the force in the first place? right >> right. so when, uh, police officers are appointed and police staff members are appointed , um, they go through appointed, um, they go through this initial vetting process, they then get revetted after an, after a set period of years. >> sometimes that can be seven years, ten years, a very long penod years, ten years, a very long period of time. so there's two things that have happened over the last 12 months since part one of lady angelina's review. >> um, every single police officer and police staff member in the country has been
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revetted, and that has led to a few hundred people leaving their positions as police officers and police staff members. >> secondly to that, the vetting will be now will be done much sooneh will be now will be done much sooner, so there won't be such big gaps in between and thirdly, the part around lady angelina's part two review, published this morning that i particularly like is spot checks, so that a police force can choose to review set randomly any police officer or any police staff member at any given time. >> that's really good. but the call i've been asking for and what i would really like to see, is that if somebody who is a serving police staff member or a police officer commits an offence , or even is arrested in offence, or even is arrested in suspicion of , let's say, a pub suspicion of, let's say, a pub fight in a neighbouring police force area. in another part of the country. >> should be flagged to >> that should be flagged to their home force so they can take on as employment take that on as an employment matter and not around the matter and not just around the criminal neighbouring criminal that the neighbouring police force might be investigating. >> has come a long >> so we this has come a long way, but we still have a way to
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go to make sure that no one ever falls the gaps again . falls through the gaps again. >> okay. donna jones excellent insight there. hampshire police and crime commissioner, thanks very much for joining and crime commissioner, thanks very much forjoining on the very much for joining us on the show . now joining me now very much for joining us on the show. now joining me now is michelle dewberry. jubes. welcome to the show. the queen of prime time political debate. what have you got on your menu? hello, by the way. >> am still waiting for >> yeah, i am still waiting for that mug. martin we referenced that, title of me, that, uh, your title of me, didn't the queen of prime didn't we? the queen of prime time. i dropped some non time. and i dropped some non subtle hints where mug? subtle hints where is my mug? that's know . uh, that's what i want to know. uh, anyway, of course, as you would expect, i'm continuing the conversations that i've had you having absolute having about the absolute disgrace that wayne couzens disgrace that is wayne couzens i mean, it just makes your skin crawl . and i wonder, you know, crawl. and i wonder, you know, it's well and good saying, crawl. and i wonder, you know, it's thisnell and good saying, crawl. and i wonder, you know, it's this reformd good saying, crawl. and i wonder, you know, it's this reform thatyd saying, crawl. and i wonder, you know, it's this reform that reformlg, crawl. and i wonder, you know, it's this reform that reform ,i, oh, this reform that reform, this report. but this report, that report. but really , truly are these changes really, truly are these changes actually going to be made? are we going be seeing the we going to be seeing the rhiannon in the police rhiannon jones in the police force out of because make force out of there? because make no mistake, martin, will no mistake, martin, there will be them , uh, kind of be many of them, uh, kind of relaxing feeling that actually i can be a bit of a perv.
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relaxing feeling that actually i can be a bit of a perv . i relaxing feeling that actually i can be a bit of a perv. i can be a bit of a wrong'un, but it's all because got all right, because i've got this badge. protecting badge. um protecting me. well, no, you . they need be no, thank you. they need to be out. need to be weeded out. they need to be weeded out. so have trust and faith so do we have trust and faith that going happen? that that's going to happen? of course. talk course. as well. i want to talk about the pages today about the front pages today about the front pages today about mob rule . uh, according to about mob rule. uh, according to rishi sunak . again, is anything rishi sunak. again, is anything they're going to no they're going to change? no doms. is it time to scrap them? and if the tories do get rid of non—doms martin, where that non—doms martin, where does that leave labour? and also i leave labour? and also tonight i want stuck into one of want to get stuck into one of the most ridiculous things i've heard long and, you heard in a long time. and, you know, doing this job, heard in a long time. and, you knc hear doing this job, heard in a long time. and, you knc hear ridiculousdoing this job, heard in a long time. and, you knc hear ridiculous thingshis job, heard in a long time. and, you knc hear ridiculous things alljob, we hear ridiculous things all the this takes the time. but this one takes the biscuit. that said biscuit. a school. now that said that children can attend school wearing fake eyelashes because apparently telling them they can't wear them is bad their can't wear them is bad for their mental kids, mental health. and these kids, martin, have apparently been taking time off school to go and get eyelashes removed . get these eyelashes removed. where parents? what kind where are the parents? what kind of parent would let their kid have a day off school to go and put and off fake eyelashes? put on and off fake eyelashes? what is the matter with people? well they're losing their minds, but luckily you're here to help
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restore sanity . i'm but luckily you're here to help restore sanity. i'm trying. we've got our work cut out, martin. i'm trying. i've got kelvin mackenzie on the show as well. any punches well. he didn't pull any punches on and tom buick to grace. >> that's dewbs& co six till >> if that's dewbs& co six till seven. this. sounds >> if that's dewbs& co six till seven. as this. sounds >> if that's dewbs& co six till seven. as ever this. sounds >> if that's dewbs& co six till seven. as ever rightis. sounds >> if that's dewbs& co six till seven. as ever right now. unds >> if that's dewbs& co six till seven. as ever right now. moving superb as ever right now. moving on. immigration to northern ireland has doubled in ten years. and would you believe it ? years. and would you believe it? it's causing major problems within the community. i'm martin daubney on gb news britain's news channel .
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welcome back. 542 is your time and you're watching or listening to martin daubney on gb news now. for decades , on gb news now. for decades, britain has been dealing with immigration, but for one part of the uk, it's a relative new experience. northern ireland is only now beginning to see migrant communities, and they are mainly obe taking part in working class areas and making
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it their home. and that's causing tensions within the wider community. gb news northern ireland reporter dougie beattie has this report at the end of april 2023, ireland's immigration was up by 31% and over a decade , northern over a decade, northern ireland's has doubled , with ireland's has doubled, with south belfast being the most diverse . diverse. >> tracy kelly is a dup belfast city councillor who deals with the issues in this area on a daily basis . daily basis. >> over the last few years it's changed dramatically. um, i've grown up in this community and i've seen a massive change, um, especially with regards to our schools and our houses and, and doctor's appointments, etc. um communities are really struggling with these issues . struggling with these issues. and i'd say over the last 3 to 4 years, especially since covid, it's got dramatically worse for many in these housing estates depend on family support , with depend on family support, with up to four generations living within streets of one another, waiting lists for social housing
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in south belfast is now over 2500. >> some immigrants that have already been housed in contracted units is over 1000. we have working class communities like sandy row , like communities like sandy row, like the donegall pass, who are blending in with others who are coming here to work and live and mix. >> but there is also an issue when there's too many people who can't get housed, that seems to be the main issue that i deal with when people in their own community who have been born and reared here have to move away because there's lack of because there's a lack of housing, and that causes a wee bit . and bit of resentment. and unfortunately, that sometimes that resentment is going to people have migrated here. people who have migrated here. >> given northern ireland's troubled past, the conversation around immigration was never on the agenda. but when you're deaung the agenda. but when you're dealing with communities that are still struggling with their own history and identity and culture and even global alliances, is it wise to introduce those that are seeking a new way of life with their own culture and traditions , to
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culture and traditions, to working class and post—conflict areas . working class and post—conflict areas. takira makoni, rappeh it's the african community of northern ireland. i would presume. >> mostly 99% of asylum seekers or migrants , um, and refugees or migrants, um, and refugees are coming to this part of the world would have very little knowledge about the internal, uh , dynamics in northern ireland. so you find out it's almost like you're thrown in the deep water to have the cognisance to say here, i need to pick up that. i'm living on a peace line. and, um, these guys don't like those guys. um, these guys don't like those guys . and maybe these guys can guys. and maybe these guys can tolerate me and those ones won't. you don't have any idea of that. it'll take you up to ten years to get a real sense of that, because remember, you're focussed on trying to rebuild your life to avoid further tensions. >> should government be looking at the placement of those
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refugees and migrants ? dougie refugees and migrants? dougie beattie gb news, south belfast . beattie gb news, south belfast. >> it's an excellent report from dougie beattie that now so many of you have been getting in touch throughout the show and please keep messaging me at gb news gb news news at gbnews.com. i've got loads and loads of emails and a few minutes. i'll read out the best of them and some today i'm martin some crackers. today i'm martin daubney gb news britain's daubney on gb news britain's news channel
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>> 2024 a battleground year. >> 2024 a battleground year. >> the year the nation decides as the parties gear up their campaign for the next general election . election. >> who will be left standing when the british people make one of the biggest decisions of their lives? >> who will rise and who will fall? >> let's find out together for every moment . every moment. >> the highs, the lows, the twists and turns. >> we'll be with you for every step of this journey in 2024 gb news is britain's election .
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channel >> welcome back. it's 550. you're watching. or listen to martin daubney on gb news. now a west end play has come under fire after confirming it will be hosting at least two shows where only black identifying audience members are welcomed . slave members are welcomed. slave play, which is set to starve the game of thrones actor kit harington, is due to have two such shows as well during now to discuss this is comedian and gb news presenter leo kearse. leo banning people from shows based on their skin colour smells a bit racist to me. >> yeah, that's exactly what it is. it's anti—white racism . but is. it's anti—white racism. but you know, being white is a race and this is baked in across all our institutions through diversity , equity and inclusion. diversity, equity and inclusion. so of course, the people doing it don't think they're doing anything bad . anything bad. >> they think that, you know, they're offsetting, uh , bias
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they're offsetting, uh, bias that exists by introducing their own anti—white bias . own anti—white bias. >> and do you think they'd be equally as happy, for example, if we had an all white on the night whites only package? no of course you'd immediately get shut down. >> you'd be charged under the equality act. you'd be arrested for hate crime . uh, so, yeah, for hate crime. uh, so, yeah, this this very much goes one way. but what? >> this what this this does, you know, having a black only night. >> it sort of gives >> uh, it sort of gives legitimacy , uh, and gives legitimacy, uh, and gives credibility to , to racists on credibility to, to racists on the other side. so it encourages it ferments , uh, you know, your it ferments, uh, you know, your traditional , uh, it ferments, uh, you know, your traditional, uh, um, it ferments, uh, you know, your traditional , uh, um, racists who traditional, uh, um, racists who might want to have, uh, whites only night. and the excuse is given for, uh, for this black only audience night. uh, it's ridiculous. they say the black audiences say they don't feel safe . uh, but this black safe. uh, but this black commentator said, uh, you know, black people don't feel safe in, in white crowds in theatres . and in white crowds in theatres. and
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it's like, i don't know, i looked at the crime statistics. i couldn't find a huge number of murders of black theatre goers by audience members is by white audience members is ridiculous. i think the last time somebody was shot in a theatre , uh, was abraham theatre, uh, was abraham lincoln. so you know, we don't need to don't need to batten need to we don't need to batten down and too down the hatches and worry too much this, about theatres much about this, about theatres becoming violent becoming this hub of violent crime isn't just the case that everything is racist . everything is racist. >> i mean, week it was the >> i mean, last week it was the country it's the country side. this week it's the theatre. everything. theatre. yeah everything. >> everything is racist . on >> everything is racist. on a serious note, the ideology that is now through all our institutions, not just public sector. uh, not not just, uh, you know, not just charities and ngos and things like that, but also through through the private sector. it's baked in through the departments, through the hr departments, through diversity, and inclusion diversity, equity and inclusion is this anti—white racism ? it is this anti—white racism? it comes from critical race theory, which , you know, specifically which, you know, specifically says is, uh, you know, whiteness is something to be abolished. this is a deeply dangerous and racist ideology . and i can't racist ideology. and i can't believe that it's got to the
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stage where, you know, we're now we've undergone a sort of chinese cultural revolution and this ideology is now everywhere there. and if you're raising a generation of people who've been who've been brought up to , uh, who've been brought up to, uh, to think that white people are inferior and to white inferior and to hate white people, what you think people, what do you think they're to white they're going to do to white people what's what's people? i mean, what's what's the step ? the next step? >> yeah. excellent stuff. leo kearse bang on the money as ever .thank kearse bang on the money as ever . thank you very much for joining on show. joining us on the show. excellent stuff. now said that excellent stuff. now i said that i out some emails i would read out some emails that you've been sending in today i've this assisted today and i've had this assisted dying email incredibly moving email. i'd like to read out to you. this is from a lady called patricia. she says this, my 94 year old auntie died today at 12:30. blind deaf, bedridden, having her food blended. she had been unconscious and on a syringe drive for ten days. the district nurse was calling daily to the care home she was in to recharge that syringe, and she died peacefully . but she could
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died peacefully. but she could have died peacefully a long time ago . her quality of life and her ago. her quality of life and her brain was the only bit of her body that was working properly . body that was working properly. and it has been zero for over 25 months. patricia every now and then a message to gb news simply takes your breath away . thank takes your breath away. thank you so much. i'm sorry for your loss , but thanks for sharing loss, but thanks for sharing that with us. of course, this is on the topic of dame esther rantzen, who wants the. what's the be able choose the ability to be able to choose to end her own life because she has four an has stage four cancer? an incredible . patricia, incredible email. patricia, thank you so much for sharing that with gb news viewers . now, that with gb news viewers. now, i'll be back tomorrow 3 to 6 pm. we'll be covering all the p.m. we'll be covering all the big stories of the day after. this is dewbs& co six till seven. she'll have the latest on the sarah everard murder inquiry. of course , those sky inquiry. of course, those sky high immigration figures out this morning. this is not a country that's taken back control. it's a country that's totally lost control. i'll be back tomorrow three till six. i'm martin daubney. have a great
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evening. i'll take care . evening. i'll take care. >> a brighter outlook with boxt solar sponsors of weather on . gb news. >> hello again. alex burkill here with your latest gb news weather forecast . there's more weather forecast. there's more unsettled weather to come as we go through the end of the week. heavy rain, blustery showers and even snow. for some of us at the moment an of low moment there is an area of low pressure the north of the uk, pressure to the north of the uk, bringing blustery, showery weather many but it's weather to many parts. but it's a waving front in the southeast that's persistent rain that's brought persistent rain already today and will continue to for a little while to do so for a little while before the rain away. as before the rain clears away. as we through this evening, some we go through this evening, some dner we go through this evening, some drier then through the drier weather then through the start night, with start of the night, albeit with a scattering of showers across northern before northern parts before some persistent rain with persistent and heavy rain with some hill snow pushes into parts of south—west and into wales of the south—west and into wales . elsewhere, where we see
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clearer through the night, clearer skies through the night, we are going see temperatures we are going to see temperatures dropping. some dropping. watch out for some frost, patches , also frost, some icy patches, also some fog. first some fog and freezing fog. first thing most thing tomorrow. the most unsettled weather though tomorrow of tomorrow will be across parts of the south west and in wales. heavy snow heavy rain and some hill snow could some travel could cause some travel disruption. some localised flooding otherwise rain is flooding. otherwise the rain is going across much of going to spread across much of england wales could bring england and wales could bring some wintry ness over higher ground. in particular, best ground. in particular, the best chance dry will be chance of staying dry will be across of scotland and across parts of scotland and northern but chilly northern ireland, but a chilly feel of us. temperatures feel to all of us. temperatures are a little bit below average for time as we look for the time of year as we look towards we're for the time of year as we look towar(to we're for the time of year as we look towar(to still we're for the time of year as we look towar(to still be we're for the time of year as we look towar(to still be under we're for the time of year as we look towar(to still be under the ne're going to still be under the influence an area low influence of an area of low pressure that's going to bring more weather go more unsettled weather as we go through saturday. still, the chance ness. but chance of more wintry ness. but signs that sunday going to signs that sunday is going to turn drier albeit rather turn drier, albeit stay rather cloudy before then, we see the return to some more unsettled weather to start the working week, a week, temperatures rising a little by that warm little bit to by that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers as sponsors of weather on
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released. it is absolutely damning. he should never , ever damning. he should never, ever have been a police officer. multiple failings spanning multiple years and multiple forces. so let me ask you now, do you trust that things will actually be different going forward? also rishi sunak says mob rule is replacing democracy. prime minister, you don't say , prime minister, you don't say, where have you been? all sorts of nights removing non—dom status is a speciality of the labour party. but hang on a second, because today there's a
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rumour that the tories are going to

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