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tv   Britains Newsroom  GBN  March 4, 2024 9:30am-12:01pm GMT

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three we'll stand in there for three score. labour seats and either defeat them ourselves or cause their defeat . their defeat. >> so workers party of britain leader george galloway is going to be sworn in as an mp at the house of commons today, after winning last week's by—election in rochdale. political correspondent evie olivia utley has more . has more. >> yes , britain's newest mp, >> yes, britain's newest mp, george galloway, will be introduced to the commons today, but not by conservative mp david davis. find out more with me very soon. very 500“. >> very soon. >> ministers are set to change the government's definition of extremist ism, which was set out ten years ago. it's part of a crackdown on people and groups who are apparently undermining britain's institutions and values . values. >> and the chancellor is drafting plans for up to £9 billion worth of tax rises and spending reductions in an effort to balance the books in this week's budget, former home secretary priti patel spoke to breakfast earlier . breakfast earlier. >> where are the ideas about
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economic growth? you know more housing, more infrastructure investment and development and the government needs to be agile about that . about that. >> and she's exhausted. queen camilla so she's taking a break for the first time since stepping in to lead the royal family after prince charles. after king charles, of course. uh, diagnosis with cancer. you won't how few royal won't believe how few royal engagements. however, she's carried year and carried out this year and unsolved burglaries are on the rise, damning new figures show the police have failed to solve a single house burglary in nearly half of all neighbourhoods in england and wales in the past three years. do you remember the metropolitan police commissioner, sir mark rowley, said every single burglary will be investigated . burglary will be investigated. every single one. well, there we are . in the last three years, are. in the last three years, half of them know no burglary. sold. it's appalling because
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they say it's not important. it is. if you burgled , it's horrible. >> horrible. if you've been a victim of a house burglary. what was your experience with the police? what reason did they give you as to why they may not catch the person who just let themselves into your house and help to their stuff? help themselves to their stuff? vaiews@gbnews.com the email vaiews@gbnews.com is the email address this morning. that and a lot lot more. first though, the very latest news headlines with tatiana . tatiana sanchez. >> beth, thank you very much and good morning. your top stories from the gb newsroom. £360 million worth of funding for uk manufacturing is set to be announced ahead of wednesday's budget. £200 million will be invested in zero carbon aircraft technology with pharmaceutical and car companies also set to benefit . the chancellor says benefit. the chancellor says it's aimed at helping the uk become a world leader in manufacturing to boost the economy. although jeremy hunt has tried to play down
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expectations of tax cuts for the budget . budget. >> we have over 500,000 civil servants now, even to shave a degree off that would cut public expenditure by at least £1 billion and that would be great. back again in 2010, 2016, when we had under, i think, around 400,000 civil servants, and that saved a significant amount, amount of money, the spending, the costs alone. i think , came the costs alone. i think, came down to something like £11 billion. this is where we have to be again to be an agile government that's fit in the sense of financially sound , sense of financially sound, sound money, conservative principles , but actually making principles, but actually making sure the public keep more of their their money. >> that was the former home secretary priti patel, speaking on breakfast this morning. george galloway is due to be sworn in as the new rochdale mp in the house of commons later today. the workers party of britain leader won last week's by—election when the focus of his campaign was the ongoing war in gaza, warning sir keir starmer that his party would pay a price for enabling and
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a high price for enabling and covering what he called the catastrophe. galloway was the labour mp for 16 years until his suspension from the party in 2003. after remarks made at the start of the iraq war. nikki haley has defeated donald trump in the republican primary in washington dc . this is her first washington dc. this is her first victory of the former president in this year's campaign to become the republican presidential candidate. she lost in her home state of south carolina , but she's now the carolina, but she's now the first woman to win a republican primary in us history. the only remaining challenger to donald trump in the race, she won almost 63% of that vote. however mr trump has a significant lead over miss haley, and he's likely to face joe biden in the election in november. and pupils from low income backgrounds in england are still behind in their maths grades. compared with before the covid pandemic. a new think tank report has revealed . maths performance revealed. maths performance dropping back to 2017 levels for
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pupils in years 3 to 9. the research shows the disadvantaged gap has widened from around seven months to almost nine. that amounts to an average loss of over four months of learning in secondary schools, and a loss of two months in primary schools . for the latest stories, you can sign up to gb news alerts by scanning the qr code on your screen or you can go to gb news .com/ alerts. now it's back to andrew and . bev andrew and. bev >> good morning. welcome to britain's newsroom. >> we're going to be talking about the big moment today. >> we're going to be talking about the big moment today . the about the big moment today. the workers party of britain leader george galloway will be sworn in in the house of commons. he won the last seats by—election in rochdale mile . rochdale by a country mile. >> we've got 59 parliamentary candidates ready to go and we'll stand in. therefore three score lead seats and either defeat them ourselves or cause their
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defeat . by three score. defeat. by three score. >> labour seats . you mean 60 >> labour seats. you mean 60 seats, right? what a strange way to speak. well, he describes starmer and prime minister rishi sunak as two cheeks of the same backside , saying that he hopes backside, saying that he hopes they well and truly they would get well and truly spanked. i was telly on spanked. i was on telly on friday, andrew, when this broke you weren't. i've been dying to know what make of it. know what you make of it. >> i absolutely expected >> well, i absolutely expected him win. it's a huge kick in him to win. it's a huge kick in the face for labour in particular, because that is a labour seat. rochdale, they it's their own fault because they chose candidate who muttered chose a candidate who muttered and spluttered all those anti—semitic tropes . but anti—semitic tropes. but galloway is a fantastic campaigner, a brilliant public speaker , and he is going to speaker, and he is going to throw a massive spanner in the works for labour and he's going to cause huge problems in parliament. we've already seen it because i spoke to david davis the weekend often on davis at the weekend often on this programme, he was going to introduce galloway because you have two mps have to introduce a new mp, he said. i disagree with him, but i fundamentally support his right to hold his views.
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however, he pulled out because his deputy, chris williamson, a former labour mp, made such appalling remarks about israel and refused to condemn hamas terrorist attack on israel that he's withdrawn. so already he's in controversy. >> surprised that david davis has withdrawn from that because david davis, above all other mps to me, appears to be an advocate of free speech, certainly is. so so this demonstrates george galloway is a massive thorn in the side, isn't he, of mps of every particular. >> yeah , labour in particular, >> yeah, labour in particular, because that's who he's aiming . because that's who he's aiming. >> he's gunning for because he's going to he's going to put candidates up where there's a large muslim vote. there was a large muslim vote. there was a large muslim vote. there was a large muslim rochdale . large muslim vote in rochdale. and that's how he won . he this and that's how he won. he this wasn't about rochdale. this was about gaza. when do we last have about gaza. when do we last have a by—election campaign, which is all about a place 2000 miles away, when he stood and said, away, when he stood up and said, this for gaza, i couldn't this is for gaza, i couldn't kind of i just couldn't really believe my ears and eyes. >> i grew up just around the
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corner from rochdale. i spent a lot of my teen years in rochdale , and the idea that would , and the idea that that would happen an area which has happen in an area which has hideous social economic challenges places, challenges in some places, some of the most deprived parts of greater manchester there in greater manchester there are in rochdale , education is rochdale, education is struggling there. and the idea that a very organised, actually very organised, very angry muslim community got together. they grouped and they engineered this success. but it is democracy in action. what can you say? well, joining us now is political correspondent olivia utley. good morning olivia. so george galloway, not even saturday's bomb on those seats yet in the house and yet already causing ructions. what's going to happen ? to happen? >> well, george galloway is going to meet the speaker, lindsay hoyle, before he gets sworn in to the house of commons. and that'll be a very interesting meeting indeed. lindsay hoyle has told mps to be kinder and nicer to each other. he is deeply concerned about mps
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safety and george galloway is essentially the embodiment of the division which speaker hoyle has been so keen to try and end in the house of commons. so that'll be a fascinating meeting. and then we have the actual swearing in of george galloway, as you mentioned there, david davis was going to introduce him sort of free introduce him on a sort of free speech basis. he's now refused because of galloway's views on gaza. so he will now be introduced by peter bottomley, who is the father of the house and his old comrade jeremy corbyn. so that's a start . off corbyn. so that's a start. off with a bang, if you like . now, with a bang, if you like. now, the future of george galloway and the people around him is what's really interesting to people at the moment. george galloway, we heard in that clip there is going to be standing 59 different candidates for the workers party of great britain. and he says he's planning to defeat labour in these 60 seats. well, will that be possible? of course. as you mentioned there, you know, we have george
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galloway. election has proved that there is a constituency of people in the uk that who tend to be of the muslim faith , who to be of the muslim faith, who are prepared to vote in an mp for reasons which aren't anything to do with what's going on in britain, because george galloway was campaigning as the mp for gaza. and of course, there are other constituency as well as rochdale, which have huge muslim populations. but whether george galloway's party stands any chance of repeating the success anywhere else remains to be seen . as you said, remains to be seen. as you said, that andrew george galloway is a fantastic campaigner . we, like fantastic campaigner. we, like him or loathe him , he's him or loathe him, he's a charismatic person , banality and charismatic person, banality and of course the rochdale by—election was very, very unusual. labour's campaign imploded entirely. so i don't think it's possible to sort of extrapolate this result into the general election. but it's certainly something that mps will be keeping an eye on. >> okay, fascinating , isn't it? >> okay, fascinating, isn't it? sarah vine i've known george galloway for years and i'm sure
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your cars must have crossed. he's quite formidable, actually. >> he is. very charming. he >> he is. he's very charming. he really does have the gift of the gab. he's amazing. he's a brilliant, brilliant speaker. >> match him , >> there are few to match him, actually, when he's in full flow, really is. i mean, do flow, he really is. i mean, do you remember he. you remember when he. >> clever? he's really clever. >> when he called before >> when he was called before those american congressmen and he the tables he absolutely turned the tables on about, um, sanctions on them about, um, sanctions busting. he was. and they were dumbfounded his performance. dumbfounded by his performance. he's to really turn he's going to really turn parliament upside down, isn't he ? >> 7- >> yes. i 7_ >> yes. i mean, ? >> yes. i mean, he's and he is the sort of he's the labour party's reform problem. you know, he's he's the other side of that coin in the tories have got reform and the labour party now have george galloway. i'd say he's quite a formidable say that he's quite a formidable opponent actually. yes he is just charming. he really is charming. >> that's what he is. it's >> that's what he is. and it's interesting because olivia talked meeting the talked about him meeting the speaken speaker. the speaker has appealed to be nice appealed for mps to be nice to each other, on friday, each other, he said on friday, i hate the prime minister. i mean, that's his voice even got in the i hate minister. i hate the prime minister. i know he's and we pretty much hate keir too.
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hate pretty keir starmer, too. >> mean, the thing is about >> i mean, the thing is about that, galloway, that he's an that, galloway, is that he's an opportunist he knows what opportunist and he knows what plays to his constituency. and you playing card you know, he's playing his card very well. >> so this history. is >> so this is history. this is the first since winston the first mp since winston churchill entering the churchill to be entering the commons in a fourth constituency. see. yeah. because he's he's he's been around the block quite a few times. >> but i think i do think >> but i do think i do think it's interesting that, you know, he effectively mp for he is effectively the mp for gaza. is. yeah i think it's gaza. he is. yeah i think it's interesting that something that's earlier that's as you said earlier andrew, that's something that's happening has had happening so far away has had such a such a direct consequence on in british, on british politics. >> is it also does he represent a little bit even though he is standing on this side, the idea of calling for an unequivocal ceasefire in gaza? is there also something about him being anti—establishment which appeals to people who may not necessarily feel very strongly? >> i mean, a lot of people frame the sort of frame the israel palestine thing as a david and goliath war. yeah. um, of course it's much more complicated than that. let's not forget that
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that. but let's not forget that galloway, you know, has openly supported know , supported hezbollah. you know, he's he's he's got a quite he's he's he's he's got a quite a if you, if you actually look at what he said in the past, he's, he's, he's been a great supporter of russia. he's he's definitely i wouldn't say he's on the side of the angels generally because he prays saddam hussein. generally because he prays sac hen hussein. generally because he prays sac he alwayszin. generally because he prays sac he always he was >> he always he was misrepresented we him misrepresented. but we saw him say saddam hussein , his say to saddam hussein, to his face, salute your interfax face, i salute your interfax ability your courage. ability and your courage. >> so i mean, people >> exactly. so i mean, people just need to be aware that however charming he is, and he is definitely charming, there, there a dark there is a quite a dark underbelly there. >> think triggereda underbelly there. >> think triggered a speech >> i think he triggered a speech from prime minister, from the prime minister, which some thought, general some people thought, oh, general election, podium was election, because the podium was put the government put outside with the government crest on it. people thought general i didn't think general election. i didn't think for a general election, no, i didn't, i completely mad. um, but i thought but he delivered what i thought was his better speeches. was one of his better speeches. >> to say, i thought it >> i have to say, i thought it was a really, really good speech.i was a really, really good speech. i read it, i read it quite a few times. yeah. and he's not world's. mean, he's not the world's. i mean, rishi the world's rishi sunak is not the world's greatest orator, i'm afraid. but that was a very sound and i thought very measured, but very
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firm know, was it firm speech, you know, it was it was the first real sign of kind of a vision and a leadership that i've seen in him, you know, and i think that's what people are crying out for. i think people have a general sense of, oh, everything disaster oh, everything is disaster at the there's such lot the moment. there's such a lot of everyone's shouting of malaise. everyone's shouting at arguing . there's at each other, arguing. there's all of awful things all sorts of awful things happening, you know, whether it's ukraine or janjaweed or, you know , gaza. and i think what you know, gaza. and i think what you know, gaza. and i think what you when, when the world feels so unstable, what you want is somebody who can come out and sort of crystallise a vision and say, these are the parameters, these are our boundaries. this is we stand for. these are is what we stand for. these are our that's what i our values. and that's what i felt. really did. and i think felt. he really did. and i think if he does more of that than it's what people want. but why would he why would he choose the day of galloway's election to come give speech? come out and give that speech? because think what i think because i think what i think that he felt and i think a lot of people feel that it is alarming that a situation so far from home that is not, you know , from home that is not, you know, our, our, our situation has, has
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affected british politics in such a way . and i think he also such a way. and i think he also looks at galloway's record and says, this is a man who has supported, you know , dictators supported, you know, dictators and not very nice people in the past . and here he is being past. and here he is being ushered in on, uh, on what is essentially a really tribal vote. you know, it's not like you know, like we were saying, like your political correspondent was saying this wasn't a this wasn't a by—election about local issues, about schools, about health care or it simply a or anything. it was simply a binary , you know, and yet he binary, you know, and yet he then packaged the far right. >> he said, with islamic extremists , it's all extremists. extremists, it's all extremists. but why ? why when he came, why but why? why when he came, why did he package people from all different levels of political? it felt a little bit mealy mouthed that to me. >> well , because he doesn't >> well, because he doesn't i mean, he has to. he has to be very careful not to sort of fuel these accusations against the tory party being tory party of it being islamophobic. so of course, if you're a speech you're writing a speech like that, have
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that, you have to have a counterbalance. so you have to remind that it's not remind people that it's not just extremism . extremism doesn't extremism. extremism doesn't just exist on the left. and it's not just religious based. it can also be, as you say, far right. it can be different type of it can be a different type of thing. i think that just thing. so i think that was just him. know, making sure that thing. so i think that was just hinwasn't> mm mm. right. we're going to take a quick break sarah. >> don't anywhere. i want to >> don't go anywhere. i want to hear views well on these hear your views as well on these huge of unsolved huge amounts of unsolved burglaries england. be burglaries in england. we'll be talking just a
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gb news steal. welcome back. it is 949. we're going to be talking a little about about the fact that it's national obesity day, which sounds like a celebration, but it isn't actually a celebration. >> it'sjust it isn't actually a celebration. >> it's just another stupid gimmick. >> but first of all, with us still the studio is daily still in the studio is daily mail obesity day. >> that's my day by stupid gimmick . well, don't know do
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gimmick. well, i don't know do we have national thin day we don't have national thin day every obesity day. >> let's face it, in my house, every day is national. we're not allowed to call people fat anymore. allowed to call people fat anymori think you are allowed >> no, i think you are allowed to call people fat. call yes, ho. 110. >> no. >> you'll em ma gm— h be shamed for >> you'll probably be shamed for it's probably a hate crime to call somebody fat, so. >> well, you get accused of >> well, you will get accused of fat yeah, the thing. >> yeah, that's the thing. you're allowed. are you're not allowed. what are you supposed back? shame. supposed to bring back? shame. i want to start a campaign. >> what is national obesity day? >> what is national obesity day? >> is is it for obese people >> is it is it for obese people to celebrate being obese? is that is? that what it is? >> we're supposed to highlight the there much the fact there is so much obesity in the and do obesity in the country and do something about it. okay. but i think these things are gimmicks like it's sponsored greggs. think these things are gimmicks likeprobably,sored greggs. think these things are gimmicks likeprobably,um,i greggs. think these things are gimmicks likeprobably, um, can greggs. think these things are gimmicks like probably, um, can we ggs. think these things are gimmicks likeprobably, um, can we talk >> probably, um, can we talk about burglary? >> horrendous >> sarah vine this is horrendous statistic, it, about the statistic, isn't it, about the number of burglaries? i think in the there are the last three years. there are some have had zero some areas that have had zero burglary is solved england burglary is solved in england and wales. >> i just think they're >> i just don't think they're a priority days. are they? priority these days. are they? >> supposed be. do >> they're supposed to be. do you remember the you remember mark? the commissioner every burglary you remember mark? the com be .sioner every burglary you remember mark? the com be investigated./ery burglary will be investigated. >> also a problem. >> car theft is also a problem. i don't know whether that's classified as burglary.
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>> well, i these things >> well, i think these things really to people. really matter to people. >> do, although the >> no. they do, although the police don't. police have decided they don't. >> i mean, because >> yeah, well, i mean, because they're worrying about they're so busy worrying about sort know, crime sort of, you know, knife crime and other things, they don't have resources or hate have enough resources or hate crime, actually. >> n crime, actually. >> computer screen. i know it's a longer a property is no longer something is considered a something that is considered a sort know, i don't know, sort of, you know, i don't know, there's a sort of weird, isn't there? strange if you've got nice it's sort your nice stuff, it's sort of your fault if someone wants steal fault if someone wants to steal it. i that sense, it. correct. i get that sense, which is strangely left which is a strangely left leaning political atmosphere which is a strangely left leanwe're»litical atmosphere which is a strangely left lean we're»litical under.3here that we're living under. >> absolutely. in under >> absolutely. yeah in under the conservatives think this conservatives um, i think this will of those will be actually one of those issues that people will on issues that people will vote on in election because in the election because everybody's around everybody's looking around for where vote . and if where to put their vote. and if you've got a personal story, yeah, that is emotional . you are yeah, that is emotional. you are likely to vote for an alternative party because your burglary wasn't sold. yeah. >> no . completely agree. i mean, >> no. completely agree. i mean, it's just not it's not it's just not a priority is it? that's the people have hassle the police people have to hassle the police to at least give them a burglary number, because then they can claim on their insurance. >> burgled, 15 >> when i was burgled, about 15 years my front
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years ago, they took my front door down with a sledgehammer. did they? yeah. i'd. and did they? yeah. and i'd. and they terrible it they made a terrible mess and it took is years ago. took took this is 15 years ago. took two days to get the police to do anything about it. >> wow. with a sledge hammer. sledge weren't in the house. >> you weren't in the house. presumably mercifully, because it might have it me. it might have taken it to me. >> was big, strong. >> my daughter. my daughter's at university in manchester, and her student get burgled her student cohort get burgled all it's terrible. all the time. it's terrible. i mean, constantly sort mean, constantly i did a sort of. at university of of. i was at university of manchester, same thing with some reason, i think. i think reason, i think. well, i think because you know, students have laptops think laptops and stuff and i think they're magnet for people they're just a magnet for people wanting stuff and wanting to nick stuff and nothing done. and it's nothing ever gets done. and it's almost though there's a sense almost as though there's a sense that for having that it's your fault for having your in your house. your laptop in your house. >> i got burgled one night, which was me and my mum and the children in the house, and it was men two women, and was three men and two women, and they came into the house and i came down in the morning and the back was and i back door was open and i thought, oh, that's strange, back door's open. didn't really question it, and then walked into is . into where all my laundry is. and there was a space my and there was a space that my ex—husband to use as a gym.
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and there was a space that my ex—iitsband to use as a gym. and there was a space that my ex—iit was d to use as a gym. and there was a space that my ex—iit was all to use as a gym. and there was a space that my ex—iit was all just:o use as a gym. and there was a space that my ex—iit was all just completelygym. and it was all just completely trashed and, and they were trashed and, um, and they were in for an hour and in the for house an hour and a half when you didn't hear cctv, caught them and we didn't hear them. nobody was arrested. them. nobody was ever arrested. >> yeah, it's a horrible >> yeah, but it's a horrible thought, it, that somebody >> yeah, but it's a horrible lhollnil, it, that somebody >> yeah, but it's a horrible th0lin your it, that somebody >> yeah, but it's a horrible th0lin your house 1at somebody >> yeah, but it's a horrible th0lin your house while �*nebody >> yeah, but it's a horrible th0lin your house while you )dy >> yeah, but it's a horrible th0lin your house while you were asleep? >> it was vulnerable that. >> it was vulnerable to that. >> it was vulnerable to that. >> you know what it also made >> do you know what it also made me feel? i thought, how lucky am i five people were in i that five people were in my house an and a half? my house for an hour and a half? my house for an hour and a half? my house is not enormous. i've made it sound like it's a country pile. it's not. and didn't. pile. it's not. and i didn't. and were all fine and and luckily we were all fine and not harmed. >> just to not harmed. » just >> let's just talk to you very briefly about the prime minister's speech, where he talked about security for mps. sarah, married talked about security for mps. sa michael married talked about security for mps. sa michael gove? married to michael gove? >> i mean, it people >> yeah. i mean, it is people come into your home was a serious people coming. serious problem. people coming. well man who killed david well the man who killed david amess before he killed david amess was before he killed david amess. to kill amess. he was trying to kill michael. didn't succeed. michael. he didn't succeed. thank he was tracked thank god, but he was tracked outside our house on repeated occasions. you occasions. and the police, you know, were actually know, were were actually quite sort it sort of sort of. they took it very seriously. have to say very seriously. i have to say they, they were there but, but, but the problem is it only takes one nutter as it were, one sort of nutter as it were, to, to, to put someone in
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dangen to, to, to put someone in danger. and we've now got a situation i think, think, you situation i think, i think, you know, of hysterical know, the sort of hysterical hysteria social media and the hysteria on social media and the proliferation of crazy conspiracy often put conspiracy theories often put about by quite responsible people. you know, you'd think, you know , wow. and people you know, wow. and people believe stuff that is not true . believe stuff that is not true. and, and they get understandably get very wound up about it. and you know, as i said, it only takes one person who's, who's not quite completely stable to, you know, we need to we need to move on. >> unfortunately, we've got to read this out at home office spokesperson said since 2010, our are safer. our communities are safer. crimes burglary, crimes including burglary, robbery are down 48. more robbery, theft are down 48. more police officers in england and wales ever before. stay wales than ever before. stay with us. >> don't go anywhere. a lot more. sorry . more. sorry. >> a brighter outlook with boxt solar sponsors of weather on . gb news. >> hello there, i'm greg dewhurst and welcome to your latest gb news weather. we've
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got some frost around this morning, some dense fog patches, two leading to some tricky travelling conditions and then all eyes on the west as the next weather system moves in. this morning though, plenty of sunshine the uk away from sunshine across the uk away from the south—west to the the south—west cold start to the day. this weather front is slowly pushing north and eastwards through the day. coming into parts of southwest england, wales and then northern ireland afternoon in ireland for the afternoon in some of the rain could be heavy at times. the wind's picking up here but elsewhere here too, but elsewhere staying dry. sunny spells so dry. plenty of sunny spells so the sunshine turning hazy across eastern england by the afternoon and temperatures well double figures for the vast majority. feeling a little warmer than the weekend . and into this evening weekend. and into this evening time, this band of rain continues to push north and eastwards country, eastwards across the country, though weaken , it though it starts to weaken, it slows across eastern parts slows down across eastern parts of , eastern scotland of england, eastern scotland here a grey night with here giving a grey night with outbreaks of light rain and drizzle. further west. some clear spells but blustery showers quickly following on behind temperatures staying above freezing for everyone , above freezing for everyone, with generally cloud around
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with generally more cloud around so a start across eastern so a grey start across eastern areas on tuesday morning. brighter further west, but blustery quickly moving blustery showers quickly moving their way eastwards , but the their way eastwards, but the east should start to brighten up as we move through the morning into the afternoon. as that weather system moves out, the into the afternoon. as that weataar system moves out, the into the afternoon. as that weata few'stem moves out, the into the afternoon. as that weata few showers»ves out, the into the afternoon. as that weata few showers starting the into the afternoon. as that weata few showers starting to e way a few showers starting to bubble up as the temperatures rise and again for most of us, getting into double figures by the afternoon. see you again sooi'i. 500“. >> soon. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers sponsor of weather on .
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gb news way. >> good morning. it's 10 am. on monday, the 4th of march. 4th of march. how's that happened? this is britain's newsroom on gbh news with bev turner and andrew pierce. >> well, he's in the commons today. >> nine parliamentary candidates ready to go, and we'll stand in
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there for three score. labour seats and either defeat them ourselves or cause their defeat . ourselves or cause their defeat. it ominous workers party of britain leader george galloway is going to be sworn in as an mp in the commons today after winning that by—election in rochdale so convincingly . rochdale so convincingly. >> you heard of a neat? >> have you heard of a neat? well, it is anybody aged between 16 and 24 who are not in education, employment or training. some some might say they are work shy . is it more they are work shy. is it more complicated than that? well, labour are going to set out their proposals to support young people back into work this morning during this show , and morning during this show, and obesity is now a greater threat to global health than hunger. >> nearly two thirds of the adults in england are overweight or obese, and today is national obesity day . obesity day. >> and do teachers deserve a pay rise? well, one headteachers union are calling for a double digit pay rise for all teachers in england.
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let us know your thoughts on all of our talking points. this morning. email us gb views at gb news. com and national obesity day whose responsibility is it ? day whose responsibility is it? do you know what the older i get, the more i think the food manufacturing company is not going to help us. the fast food companies aren't going to help us. government is not going us. the government is not going to we've to to help us. we've just got to take personal responsibility. >> have. >> of course we have. >> of course we have. >> what the point of >> but what is the point of national obesity day? what is the of things? the point of these things? >> well, we're talking about it, aren't we? >> suppose that's kind of the >> i suppose that's kind of the point of it. uh first, though, here's your news headlines with tatiana good morning. tatiana sanchez. good morning. >> your top stories from the gp newsroom. dame priti patel has claimed that people need their money back ahead of wednesday's budget. the chancellor has been under growing pressure from the other tory mps to lower taxes,
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which are currently at a historic high. a former home secretary told gb news the conservative party have been downplaying the budget because it's part of the process. charles taylor jeremy hunt has just announced £360 million worth of funding for uk manufacturing ahead of the budget, he says it's aimed at helping the uk become a world leader in manufacturing to boost the economy. well dame priti patel said we cannot keep borrowing and that economic growth is the priority we have over 500,000 civil servants now, even to shave a degree off that would cut public expenditure by at least £1 billion and that would be great. >> back again in 2010, 2016, when we had under, i think , when we had under, i think, around 400,000 civil servants, and that saved a significant amount, amount of money, the spending, the costs alone , i spending, the costs alone, i think, came down to something like £11 billion. this is where we have to be again, to be an agile government that's fit in the sense of financially sound , the sense of financially sound, sound money, conservative
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principles , but actually making principles, but actually making sure the public keep more of their their money. >> the government's rwanda bill returns to the house of lords today , with a number of votes today, with a number of votes expected to be cast at nearly 50. amendments have been put forward to peers, among them the government's assessment that rwanda is a safe country to send asylum seekers to. it comes almost two years after ministers first announced the plan to send some migrants to the east african nation. the government has promised that first flights will happen in the spring. george galloway is due to be sworn in as the new rochdale mp in the house of commons later today. the workers party of britain leader won last week's by—election by over 5500 votes. the focus of his campaign was the ongoing war in gaza . the the ongoing war in gaza. the warnings, the keir starmer that his party would pay a high price for enabling and covering what he called the catastrophe. galloway was the labour mp for 16 years until his suspension from the party in 2003. after remarks made at the start of the
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iraq war . remarks made at the start of the iraq war. nikki haley has defeated donald trump in the republican primary in washington, dc, her first victory over the former president in this year's campaign to become the republican presidential candidate . she lost in her home candidate. she lost in her home state of south carolina. but she's now the first woman to win a republican primary in us history . the only remaining history. the only remaining challenger to donald trump in the race, she won 62.9% of that vote. however mr trump has a significant lead over mrs. haley, and he's likely to face joe biden in the november election . education leaders are election. education leaders are calling for a double digit pay rise for all teachers across england . it's after the england. it's after the government said school salaries should return to a more reasonable level, while the national association of head teachers union said england currently has the highest number of unfilled teaching posts in over a decade , it says a raise over a decade, it says a raise of at least 10% in all salaries will counter the recruiting and retention crisis . pupils from
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retention crisis. pupils from low income backgrounds in england are still behind in their maths grades, compared with before the covid pandemic, a new think tank report has revealed. performance levels dropping back to 2017 levels for pupils in years 3 to 9. the research shows the disadvantaged gap has widened from around seven months to almost nine in that amounts to an average loss of over four months of learning in secondary schools and a loss of two months in primary schools. maths teacher bobby seagull says the government needs to do more, while the government has done in lockdown is they introduced the tutoring fund and spent a lot of money on this and it was meant to help close the gap and to be honest, that's an important scheme and i think they're planning on ending that gap. that closing tutoring gap. >> disadvantaged that closing tutoring gap. >> suffering disadvantaged that closing tutoring gap. >> suffering more ivantaged that closing tutoring gap. >> suffering more ,antaged that closing tutoring gap. >> suffering more , and ged that closing tutoring gap. >> suffering more , and ifd that closing tutoring gap. >> suffering more , and if we are suffering more, and if we want to make sure students have the numeracy skills so the basic numeracy skills so they again, applying they can access, again, applying for jobs and understanding the basics of a payslip, they need those skills and i think the report today is all about saying
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actually those disadvantaged pupils even further pupils are falling even further behind and cadbury's chocolate is turning 200 today and it's celebrating by recreating its first shop using more than 600 bars of dairy milk chocolate . bars of dairy milk chocolate. >> cadbury's has recreated their first ever store out of chocolate to celebrate the company's anniversary . the company's anniversary. the edible masterpiece recreates the first shop john cadbury opened at 93 bull street in birmingham . at 93 bull street in birmingham. at 85cm tall, weighing 300kg, the magnificent chocolate shop took the talented chocolate ears five days to make . for the five days to make. for the latest stories, you can sign up to gb news alerts by scanning the qr code on your screen. or you can go to gb news common alerts. now it's back to andrew and . bev. and. bev. >> at the time, it is now 1007.
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you're with britain's newsroom gb news andrew pearson bev turner. >> so the workers party of britain leader george galloway has arrived in parliament as this expected be this afternoon is expected to be sworn in at the house of commons after last week's after winning last week's by—election in rochdale. >> just remind ourselves >> let's just remind ourselves a bit his victory speech here. bit of his victory speech here. >> starmer's problems just got 100 times serious than they 100 times more serious than they were before here today . this is were before here today. this is going to spark a movement, a landslide, a shifting of the tectonic plates in scores of parliamentary constituencies , parliamentary constituencies, beginning here in the north—west >> well, he describes starmer and the prime minister, rishi sunak , charming. he said, two sunak, charming. he said, two cheeks of the same backside, saying they've both been well and truly spanked. well, joining us in studio is former labour adviser scarlett mccgwire humiliation starmer. humiliation for keir starmer. >> labour wasn't even standing in the election. >> well, whose fault is that? well late labour screwed up, right.
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>> they, they they certainly they chose the wrong candidate and had to and had to get rid of him. to say this is the him. but to say this is the tectonic plates shifting is completely mad. so labour didn't have a candidate, so he didn't beat anybody. the conservative candidate went on holiday during the election . that's how the election. that's how seriously you lot took it. and then where were the lib dems? i mean, seriously, the lib dems could have had it that this rochdale is a blip. it's incredible. and let's not pretend that lots of muslims , pretend that lots of muslims, those who believe in you making that mistake though of complacency. >> there because maybe he's on to something . maybe this is to something. maybe this is going to happen all over the country. look, wes streeting, he's one of your most talented labour frontbenchers. he's got a muslim candidate standing against north. against him in ilford north. he's of 5000, 27% he's got a majority of 5000, 27% of the constituency is muslim . of the constituency is muslim. they're very unhappy. labour has taken that vote for granted. >> now there are people who there certainly are muslims who feel like that, but actually they don't support george galloway. i mean , that's the
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galloway. i mean, that's the difference, right ? it they did difference, right? it they did in rochdale because there was very little choice. right. what. but the let's not pretend that the workers party of great britain supports muslims. i mean the workers party of great britain and george galloway have been all over the political shop. right. and i mean, the people we should feel sorry for are the people of rochdale , are the people of rochdale, because george galloway certainly has no interest in, in supporting them as we've seen in the other in the other constituencies that he got, he got thrown out of each one immediately as soon as there was an election, because he doesn't do anything for it. i mean , i do anything for it. i mean, i think, george, i think frankly, the media is making too much of george galloway. he is he is a self—publicising narcissist. >> but they didn't vote for the british workers party of britain or whatever it's called . they or whatever it's called. they voted for a an unequivocal ceasefire in gaza. and there are enough people in this country
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who feel sufficiently angry about that, that they will place their votes purely on that one issue.i their votes purely on that one issue. i think it's also worth reminding ourselves that the second place in labour, sorry, in rochdale, was was not labour or conservative. it was an independent candidate , david independent candidate, david scully, a local businessman scully, he's a local businessman who stood, mean, what this who stood, i mean, what this vote says, and i do think both parties actually labour and conservatives, are risking complacency is to understand how dissatisfied the general public are with this idea of the uni party, that there's no distinction to use george galloway's phrase, two cheeks of the same backside . the same backside. >> can we make it clear there was no labour candidate in rochdale, so labour didn't. laboun rochdale, so labour didn't. labour. labour lost rochdale by choosing the wrong candidate, completely screwing up there. >> there was, as a rally . well, >> there was, as a rally. well, the whole point, isn't it, that there was a labour candidate . he there was a labour candidate. he was. he accused benjamin netanyahu stepping his netanyahu of stepping down his security the idf, and security forces in the idf, and therefore that led to the invasion. >> there wasn't he so, so >> but so there wasn't he so, so he was disowned by labour. so let's pretend was let's not pretend that there was a candidate. and yes , i
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a labour candidate. and yes, i think we have to take dissatisfaction in the country very, very seriously. i don't think it's just among muslims, frankly, i think there is dissatisfaction that's right with the two main with the with the two main parties is because of what they're feeling is what have we got to what have we got to offer. yeah. and in times like that, i mean, let's talk about paul tully. i mean then an independent, an independence. have have won before because they actually talk about what, what is happening on the ground and that's what's important is , and that's what's important is, is, is the thing about george galloway is he will only talk about gaza. >> he, he did tick the boxes though, didn't he? he did talk about the threat to the local maternity unit, the local, the end. >> he didn't really i mean, i think he got 40% of the vote. >> that is a pretty extraordinary 40. >> he got 12,000 votes, 5% of the votes cast , but the vote was 40. >> people came out and voted and he got 40% of the 40. >> let's, let's i mean, what worries me about the upcoming
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election is the number of people who aren't going to vote. and i think, i mean, in the general election and that is what really, really worries me. and that's and that's what well, it's not actually it's not apathy. it's i, there's nobody to vote for. and why why has your man start to when you consider the tories been in power for 14 years, why hasn't he through? he cut through? >> that's what you're >> because that's what you're saying. if there are, if you're saying. if there are, if you're saying people are dissatisfied with parties, it's with both main parties, it's down the leader make down to the leader to make people if we're people feel, well, if we're talking about blair in 97, after 13 years, 18 years, people will long for him . there was a long for him. there was a passion for blair out there . passion for blair out there. >> for you know, >> well, not for you know, i mean, i mean, you were you were you mean, i mean, you were you were you were mean, i mean, you were you were you were you mean, i mean, you were you were you were you were mean, i mean, you were you were you were you were there dissing him the accusing him you were you were there dissing hirlying the accusing him you were you were there dissing hirlying right accusing him you were you were there dissing hirlying right to. accusing him you were you were there dissing hirlying right to. but using him you were you were there dissing hirlying right to. but butig him you were you were there dissing hirlying right to. but but no, m of lying right to. but but no, i mean, i mean, actually , why mean, i mean, actually, why hasn't he done it? he's 20% aheadin hasn't he done it? he's 20% ahead in the polls. i mean, what more can you do, right? he has got people who want to vote for him. he has got a lot of people who i mean, as i said over and over again, labour didn't stand
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in rochdale. so we really, really can't do it. and they would only have won if they stood on the ticket of an unequivocal ceasefire in gaza . unequivocal ceasefire in gaza. no, we don't know that labour has overturning mass has been overturning mass massive conservative majority in by elections. right. we have no idea what would have happened had , you know, we had the right had, you know, we had the right guy in gaza in in rochdale, i think. right. who didn't? i think. right. who didn't? i think galloway would still have won. >> well you do well, yes. >> well you do well, yes. >> but you don't know. you don't. you have no idea because. because they've been and you know where where was the tory? why did he go on holiday? >> toys were never going to win in rochdale. >> rac. >> rac. >> don't you don't go on holiday. >> but you offer it. >> but but you offer it. >> but but you offer it. >> you do try and offer an alternative. i mean, that's what we're so terrible. was that neither the tories neither labour nor the tories offered an alternative to george galloway. >> there is this great disenchant with the main political parties. i think on both sides people feel disembody and disenchanted. they feel disconnected. they don't know who to vote for . that's why
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who to vote for. that's why reform is stepping into the vacuum you argue, and vacuum. you could argue, and i look reform . look at reform. >> i mean, maybe, maybe you don't put up somebody who's been thrown out of the labour party for sixteen a 17 year old. quite right. i mean, you know, one doesn't was one does absolutely see that that's who the candidate does. and one does wonder whether reform will just have as, as as we talk. >> we've got ben habib in the studio in this former labour mps all on the ballot paper i know has there ever been a situation like that before, two of which were thrown the party, were thrown out of the party, and the third has been suspended while he he's i mean, while he while he's i mean, of course should thrown out course he should be thrown out shouldn't what said. shouldn't he, for what he said. >> well, they've got to you have to have a fair process, andrew. you don't just have andrew saying should. saying he should. >> wasn't just vile anti >> it wasn't just vile anti conspiracy it was conspiracy theories. it was horrible anti—semitism. >> can we ask you about labour's plans. we're going to hear them this morning scarlet this morning announced scarlet dunng this morning announced scarlet during the show about what to do about neets, is about these neets, which is people are not in people who are not in employment, education or
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training. a record number of 16 to 24 year olds, just sat at home basically flicking through their phones well. their phones as well. >> 861,000 doubly depressed. i mean, it is a really, really depressing statistic. i mean, i really do believe that work is good for the soul, right? and i mean , and it's very easy, you mean, and it's very easy, you know, when all of us are just are doing this for work. but actually, i mean, i've seen it over and over again and with my children is how i mean, i mean, my daughter worked in pubs , but my daughter worked in pubs, but trying to find other jobs because actually she didn't want to sit at home. so i think that that, uh, i think it's really important that we take these young people who must be pretty disillusioned, who did badly at school. so for them, the education system has failed them , and that we actually try and look at what what at what what is their potential , how they can is their potential, how they can retrain in, in things. i think it's really , really important
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it's really, really important because actually they they don't want to be living on benefits. and it's a lockdown hangover . and it's a lockdown hangover. >> this is that generation who didn't get to sit their gcses , didn't get to sit their gcses, maybe didn't get to sit their a—levels . some of them went to a—levels. some of them went to university and spent two years at university, sat at zoom in their parents house doing everything they have done everything they should have done for i my next door >> i mean, my next door neighbour was one of them. horrible miserable situation for this generation. >> i'm glad that i'm glad that somebody is talking about how to help them. >> yeah, i mean, and it is it is about saying, you know, actually that there is a second we do believe in second chances and okay, you screwed up your gcses. i mean, most of these people are not actually have been to university. most of these are kids who blew their gcses for one reason or another, who couldn't do english. you couldn't do english. you couldn't do english. you couldn't do maths and actually we have to give them a second chance because. because because they they need that . but we need they they need that. but we need them. i mean, we, we britain
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should not be a country where you have young people sitting at home just waiting nearly million. >> it's a terrible figure, isn't it? it's a terrible figure. >> it's a really, really terrible figure. and i'm really pleased that liz kendall is the labouri pleased that liz kendall is the labour i am person is actually doing something about doing, and it's not about what is she going to do. >> so what's she going to do? >> so what's she going to do? >> so what's she going to do? >> so she's going to she's she's going to try and get a decent careers service in schools because that's one of the things that happened don't get that happened is you don't get a careers service. right. so where do the go? it's fine. if do the kids go? it's fine. if you've got parents who are saying , i know somebody who saying, oh, i know somebody who can but actually, can do this, but actually, if you haven't got i mean, you can that's it is it no mental health. partly there's mental health. partly there's mental health problems. so mental health problems. so mental health hubs in schools which are which do happen. and i know because i'm on the board of a of a young people, uh, mental health thing in haringey called open door. we have council , we open door. we have council, we have counsellors in schools that actually deal with the problems before they leave school . right.
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before they leave school. right. so that you find out because there are kids and partly because of covid. i mean, you're right, the lockdown who are just not going to school anymore, well, they're never going to get anything. >> yeah. and also, you know what they do need. i hope she mentions this, but she won't. i'm they need to work out i'm sure they need to work out how off their tech how to get off their tech addiction. there's a whole generation of young people who addiction. there's a whole gen addictedf young people who addiction. there's a whole genaddicted ,young people who addiction. there's a whole genaddicted , and g people who addiction. there's a whole genaddicted , and i people who addiction. there's a whole genaddicted , and i don't.e who addiction. there's a whole genaddicted , and i don't useho are addicted, and i don't use that word lightly to the phone, to phones, and to the to their phones, and to the dopamine the constant dopamine hits. the constant dopamine hits. the constant dopamine tiktok dopamine hits of tiktok and everything lose everything else, and they lose hours and suddenly look up, hours and suddenly they look up, and then they've lost three hours won't hours of their day. there won't be a parent or a grandparent watching this who does not isn't nodding vigorously. watching this who does not isn't nocokay.'igorously. watching this who does not isn't nocokay. and)usly. watching this who does not isn't nocokay. and)u know people in >> okay. and i know people in really for whom i really good jobs for whom i mean, holiday with a mean, i went on holiday with a guy who really mean, he's guy who is really i mean, he's quite well known. >> he's very, very intellectual. he not spend a meal he could not spend a meal without either his phone or without either on his phone or on his nintendo. what? yeah it is absolutely rife. >> how old was he? >> how old was he? >> 30. >> 30. >> it's honestly, it's a pandemic of tech addiction. >> it's not. it's not just kids
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who who are at home right . who who are at home right. >> should be banned at meal time. yeah >> banned at meal time. phones yeah. >> well, my son did tell me off for not there is a there is a problem i did then the next family that came i said no phones. scarlet >> right. good to see you as always. now don't forget you can join nigel farage and michelle dewberry for budget special in dewberry for a budget special in white i am going to be white haven. i am going to be there as all. uh, what day there as well. all. uh, what day is it today? pierce, it's is it today? andrew pierce, it's monday. i'm the studio monday. i'm. i'm in the studio tomorrow. there on tomorrow. i will be there on wednesday. be here in the wednesday. you'll be here in the studio. to be in the >> i'm going to be in the westminster studio. >> you're in westminster >> oh, you're in the westminster studio. brilliant um, so we've got fantastic coverage this week of uh the qr of the budget. uh scan the qr code on screen now, and you code on the screen now, and you could michelle and or nigel could join michelle and or nigel to be part of the show in whitehaven on wednesday. uh, get your questions to them . uh, via your questions to them. uh, via that code . right. still to come? that code. right. still to come? um queen camilla, she's exhausted . apparently. it must exhausted. apparently. it must be she needs a rest. she's taken centre stage since the king's
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cancer diagnosis. she's now going to be taking a break. do you think she's, um, overworked? act. >> and we'll tell you after the break how many engagements she's carried out since january the 1st. you may be surprised. yeah. >> this is britain's newsroom on gb so don't go anywhere
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1023 this is britain's newsroom on gb news with me, bev turner and andrew pierce. >> we're joined by former labour adviser, matthew laza writer adviser, matthew laza and writer and columnist emma in the and columnist emma woolf in the studio. you first and columnist emma woolf in the sthatthew, you first and columnist emma woolf in the sthatthew, good you first and columnist emma woolf in the sthatthew, good morning.;t and columnist emma woolf in the sthatthew, good morning. we've of matthew, good morning. we've got you about the got to ask you about the humiliation labour in humiliation for labour in rochdale. go well did it? rochdale. didn't go well did it? >> no, it didn't go well. i mean, you know, to it mean, you know, to put it mildly. i mean, i, you know, like a of labour people, i'm like a lot of labour people, i'm very we let the very upset that we let the people of rochdale down. rochdale deserves a lot better than on thursday. it than it got on thursday. it deserves better the deserves a lot better than the mp on thursday by
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mp who won on thursday by a message of divisiveness. um, but he and all i can say is he did win and all i can say is one big and he. well he won big because he won 37% the vote. because he won 37% of the vote. he because it was a he won big because it was a complete mess. two the complete mess. two things. the tories got 31% of the vote in rochdale uh, you rochdale in 2019. um uh, you know, we wouldn't be know, ordinarily we wouldn't be expecting to win, but you expecting them to win, but you would have thought that, you know, the absence a labour know, in the absence of a labour candidate galloway, there candidate or mr galloway, there that voters would, that moderate voters would, would, would rally around them and didn't. and they didn't. >> galloway. >> the tories wanted galloway. i think too. think they did too. >> so they didn't do anything. the guy went there. the candidate in the candidate went on holiday in the middle of the campaign. um, uh uh, look, we need the big uh, but look, we need the big incumbent. thing on labour incumbent. the thing on labour is incumbent labour to is it's incumbent on labour to get candidate in rochdale is it's incumbent on labour to ge beat candidate in rochdale is it's incumbent on labour to ge beat him:andidate in rochdale is it's incumbent on labour to ge beat him nextdate in rochdale is it's incumbent on labour to ge beat him next time,�*| rochdale is it's incumbent on labour to ge beat him next time, and:hdale to beat him next time, and i think he will be beaten. uh, but it stand in rochdale. i it was just stand in rochdale. i well, i'm sceptical. he well, i'm very sceptical. he won't the by—election won't know on the by—election special on thursday. special on this on on thursday. um i said that you know i think he might well flee to bethnal green. old where won green. his old where he won before want to live in. >> want a >> he doesn't want to spend a lot of week in russia and lot of his week in russia and also in an ordinary camp. >> absolutely. and in an
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ordinary because ordinary campaign, because rochdale muslim rochdale has a large muslim community, not community, but it's not a majority community. majority muslim community. i don't that ordinary majority muslim community. i doordinary that ordinary majority muslim community. i do ordinary circumstances, ary in ordinary circumstances, muslim standing muslim already standing in bethnal he stood, muslim already standing in bethisl he stood, muslim already standing in bethis the. he stood, that is the. >> but shamima begins lawyer oh yes. >> well i mean there was more but all i'd say is but all i'm the all i'd say is the fantastic mr tully who's my hero. uh, he's the hero. yes. uh, he's the independent. the guy who came second. the local, uh, second. he runs the local, uh, sort football club. he does, sort of football club. he does, you football club you know, the kids football club and and he didn't even and stuff. and he didn't even know that you were allowed a free post. if you're a candidate, the royal mail deliverer. so i reckon another week and he might have given mr galloway. you imagine that? galloway. can you imagine that? mr westminster? mr tully comes to westminster? what a great film that would make believe, emma, that make you believe, emma, that this election was on gaza. >> i am 200 miles away. i am 2000 over 2000 miles away. >> i am terribly sad that uk politics the politics i care about the israel—gaza let me israel—gaza conflict. let me just make that clear. of course i my heart breaks of i do. my heart breaks for all of that humanitarian suffering, but i'm uk politics i'm really sad that uk politics has hijacked by galloway has been hijacked by galloway standing this is standing up and saying this is for and you know what's for gaza. and you know what's more watching that more interesting? watching that statement on statement from rishi sunak on friday was really friday afternoon, i was really
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moved . i thought, finally he's moved. i thought, finally he's saying something, he's going to do you know do something. and, you know what? by saturday i realised a it's just words, it's no action. nothing's going to happen. but it's just words, it's no action. n the muslims >> i'm not saying the muslims because no there. because there's no centre there. they we in britain they do. but we are in britain and is over 2000 miles and gaza is over 2000 miles away, and we to focus on away, and we need to focus on this country well. this country as well. >> doesn't it show you, >> but doesn't it show you, though, what's going to happen at next election? an at the next election? an organised frightening. organised it's frightening. galvanised, population. >> are very organised bev. >> they are very organised bev. they extremely well they are extremely well organised. they are good at mobilising . imams incredibly mobilising. imams are incredibly good mobilising their vote. good at mobilising their vote. it's frightening. >> goes out in the >> the message goes out in the mosque. absolutely. >> the message goes out in the mosque postalutely. went very >> and postal votes went up very substantially from to substantially from 15,000 to
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23,000. absolutely. i think 23,000. yeah absolutely. i think labour has an issue in small labour has an issue in the small number of where there's number of seats where there's a muslim majority community. i think it's a very serious it's sort of overwhelming issue. well anneliese up anneliese talk about putting up 60 >> yeah. >> yeah. >> and i think look and all >> and i think and look and all galloway benefit is that is galloway will benefit is that is the but a poll has just the tories. but a poll has just broken couple of broken in the last couple of minutes, is the worst, minutes, which is the worst, which is for the standard ipsos mori has labour on mori poll, which has labour on 47 steady. but the tories 47 pretty steady. but the tories have slipped 27 to 20. they have slipped from 27 to 20. they are for the are the worst poll for the tories since jim callaghan was prime minister in 1978. >> is that in london? >> is that in london? >> no, no, that's national a national poll. national poll down to 20. literally just breaking before. breaking this before. >> have off the >> but i have to ask off the back of that news, is it time to change the leader or for which party? >> now? w now? is em— party? >> now? is it time to >> what now? is it time to change? no, people are change? no, but people are talking may election. we talking about a may election. we can't. can't. who? can't. he can't. who? >> suella braverman. >> suella braverman. >> there a piece in the >> there was a piece in the papers yesterday saying she's the only person that might be able die. the only person that might be ablthing die. the only person that might be ablthing is die. the only person that might be ablthing is changing. the only person that might be ablthing is changing a leader, >> thing is changing a leader, having that leadership election just to march just causes. we went to march already. need to get they already. they need to get they need to get steady. the ship and
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they wait until they could work out, wait until january year if they waited january next year if they waited until january next year. >> braverman again >> got sunak out braverman again will in will be so divisive in other ways. >> cannot imagine that. well, >> i cannot imagine that. well, you know what? nothing is going to polls for the to shift the polls for the conservatives right now. >> people have their mind up. >> yeah, but i think that the i think the prospects of a may election are receding this morning downing sees morning as downing street sees a poll on 20. yeah um, and interestingly, it's not it's reform. of stayed reform. um, have sort of stayed steady eight in this steady on eight in this particular poll. so it's not like it's, it's a few percent has to labour. and isn't it has gone to labour. and isn't it interesting this interesting how little this wednesday matters? interesting how little this weibecause matters? interesting how little this weibecause all matters? interesting how little this weibecause all know matters? interesting how little this weibecause all know that ters? >> because we all know that they're scrabbling they're they're scrabbling here. they're scrabbling here, you know, looking the backs of looking behind the backs of sofas, trying give you one sofas, trying to give you one p their it off. you in their take it off. you in another way. one is going to another way. no one is going to change their mind right now. >> they'll cut national insurance my view because >> they'll cut national insura cheaperiy view because >> they'll cut national insura cheaper to liew because >> they'll cut national insura cheaper to cut because >> they'll cut national insura cheaper to cut national that's cheaper to cut national insurance. headline insurance. and it's a headline tax because you to give it tax because you have to give it to pensioners. but people to pensioners. but but people will people will at will be a lot of people will at the same dragged into a the same time be dragged into a higher tax. >> of they will. >> of course they will. >> of course they will. >> they've frozen the threshold. >> they've frozen the threshold. >> talk >> should we talk about dishonest. we about
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dishonest. should we talk about diversity inclusion in florida? >> we should talk about queen camilla taking time because camilla taking time off because she's tired. she's very tired. >> about >> well, let's talk about camilla she's performed camilla because she's performed this year. >> 46 good try. >> 46 good try. >> 13 since, um, since charles announced announced cancer announced announced his cancer diagnosis last month. but i think already, think it's in the 40s already, isn't it? >> but we know the answer. >> but we know the answer. >> i think it's 13 altogether. >> i think it's 13 altogether. >> okay. >> okay. >> yeah. 13 altogether. >> yeah. 13 altogether. >> do we are we getting out >> now do we are we getting out the violin? the world's smallest violin? >> to i know i do go back >> emma to i know i do go back and forth is it hard work indian spar. span >> e- 9 isn't is e— >> no it isn't is it. no. >> i know, i know, but she's in her 70s. it's quite wearing dunng her 70s. it's quite wearing during those kind of public jannik sinner 70s. >> done 86 engagements. >> i know, i know, i'm just saying think camilla's been saying i think camilla's been through think through quite a lot. i think emotionally i'm not i'm not saying she's, you know, out there stacking shelves. there saying she's, you know, out theipeopleing shelves. there saying she's, you know, out theipeople in| shelves. there saying she's, you know, out theipeople in| shel'70s there saying she's, you know, out theipeople in| shel'70s stille are people in their 70s still working, still, know, working, still, you know, working, still, you know, working whatever. working as carers. whatever. i think. it's quite think. i think it's quite emotionally wearing what she's been through, becoming queen. there stuff. there in all the family stuff. her being diagnosed as her husband being diagnosed as really ill. i'm really possibly quite ill. i'm heanng really possibly quite ill. i'm hearing that he's actually ill. >> and wouldn't you want to >> and then wouldn't you want to stick your while stick around your husband while
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he's going through cancer treatment?she definitely leaving >> and is she definitely leaving charles home? >> and is she definitely leaving chaapparentlyle? >> and is she definitely leaving chaapparently she's going to >> apparently she's going to india to a spa. >> that's what surprised me. i thought when first that >> that's what surprised me. i thotwas when first that >> that's what surprised me. i thotwas taking first that >> that's what surprised me. i thotwas taking fibit that >> that's what surprised me. i thotwas taking fibit of that >> that's what surprised me. i thotwas taking fi bit of time|at she was taking a bit of time off, that she would be spending time with charles one of the time with charles at one of the beautiful, country beautiful, beautiful country houses. pick. houses. they take your pick. um, you east or west, but you want to go east or west, but actually go to an indian spa? seems bit weird. i'm a massive seems a bit weird. i'm a massive camilla fan, actually, i've been there quite a few but, there quite a few times, but, um, of course. um, we don't know. of course. how how rundown. she's feeling. maybe she's got, if not health problems. she's she problems. you know, she's she may in a great way, but may be not in a great way, but they're dropping like flies. may be not in a great way, but the what �*opping like flies. may be not in a great way, but the what baffles like flies. may be not in a great way, but the what baffles me, flies. may be not in a great way, but the what baffles me, though, >> what baffles me, though, emma, the working emma, she was the last working woman, is. that's not woman, which she is. that's not the bit, tiring bit the tiring bit, the tiring bit is going and running around is going home and running around with the hoover putting the with the hoover and putting the dishwasher and putting the dishwasher on and putting the laundry know laundry on and i know she doesn't do anything. doesn't have to do anything. >> to a red >> you're going to be a red republican me and my nan, republican like me and my nan, red jessie soon. >> you know who that? >> you know who taught me that? we in a palace we should turn back in a palace into council houses? funnily into council houses? i funnily enough, renewed enough, i've got a renewed appreciation enough, i've got a renewed appreci.just mainly family, just mainly because i don't president tony blair don't want president tony blair in country. in the country. >> but i think think they do. >> but i think i think they do. they the of
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they really run the risk of having pr disaster, having a bit of a pr disaster, i know, and i do agree with you, i do tired, i do agree with you because hard work when do tired, i do agree with you becthave hard work when do tired, i do agree with you becthave so hard work when do tired, i do agree with you becthave so muchard work when do tired, i do agree with you becthave so much help. rk when you have so much help. >> everything is absolutely top notch. even the treatment. i mean wish king mean an absolutely i wish king charles the best, he's charles all the best, but he's going get know, my father going to get you know, my father went we've went through cancer. we've all seen go through seen our relatives go through cancen seen our relatives go through cancer, the cancer, getting the bus to the hospital, chemo, hospital, having their chemo, coming feeling coming back on the bus, feeling rotten, they didn't rotten, having no, they didn't go a waiting go on a waiting list. >> saying he should, but >> i'm not saying he should, but i think people the royal family needs aware when needs to be aware that when you've waiting lists, you've got nhs waiting lists, over including over 7.5 million, including things treatment over 7.5 million, including thingyou treatment over 7.5 million, including thingyou have treatment over 7.5 million, including thingyou have to treatment over 7.5 million, including thingyou have to traware1t over 7.5 million, including thingyou have to traware of, that you have to be aware of, how plays with the public, how it plays with the public, how it plays with the public, how the messaging well, how the messaging plays. well, talking to talking of waiting, we've got to go sanchez, who is go to tatiana sanchez, who is waiting patiently waiting very patiently for us. >> headlines with >> here's the headlines with tatiana. >> bev, thank you very much . >> bev, thank you very much. your top stories from the gb newsroom . the chancellor is newsroom. the chancellor is under growing pressure to lower taxes with the former home secretary, priti patel, taxes with the former home secretary, priti patel , saying secretary, priti patel, saying voters need their money back . voters need their money back. income tax has reached an historic high and whilst promising some cuts, jeremy hunt has been trying to temper
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expectations ahead of wednesday's budget. today, he's announced £360 million worth of funding for uk manufacturing to help boost the economy . dame help boost the economy. dame priti told gb news the government can't keep on borrowing and it needs to be more cautious when it comes to spending. we have over 500,000 civil servants now even to shave a degree off. >> that would cut public expenditure by at least £1 billion and that would be great. back again in 2010, 2016, when we had under , i think, around we had under, i think, around 400,000 civil servants, and that saved a significant amount, amount of money, the spending, the costs alone. i think , came the costs alone. i think, came down to something like £11 billion. this is where we have to be again, to be an agile government that's fit in the sense of financially sound, sound money, conservative principles , but actually making principles, but actually making sure the public keep more of their their money. >> george galloway is due to be sworn in as the new rochdale mp later today. this is what he had to say en route to the commons.
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>> well, i'll tell you what's up. he didn't say the bill. i always loved the building, the people in it, not quite so much . people in it, not quite so much. >> the workers party of britain leader won last week's by—election by over 5500 votes. the focus of his campaign was the ongoing war in gaza, warning sir keir starmer that his party would pay a high price for enabung would pay a high price for enabling and covering what he called the catastrophe . galloway called the catastrophe. galloway was the labour mp for 16 years until his suspension from the party in 2003. after remarks he made at the start of the iraq war . nikki made at the start of the iraq war. nikki haley has defeated donald trump in the republican primary in washington dc . this primary in washington dc. this is her first victory over the former president in this year's campaign to become the republican presidential candidate. she lost in her home state of south carolina , but state of south carolina, but she's now the first woman to win a republican primary in us history . the only remaining history. the only remaining challenger to donald trump in the race, she won almost 63% of the race, she won almost 63% of the vote and pupils from low
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income backgrounds in england are still behind in their maths grades . compared with before the grades. compared with before the covid pandemic , a new think tank covid pandemic, a new think tank report has revealed. performance levels dropping back to 2017 levels dropping back to 2017 levels for pupils in years 3 to 9. the research shows. the disadvantaged gap has widened from around seven months to almost nine. for the latest stories , you can sign up to gb stories, you can sign up to gb news alerts by scanning the qr code on your screen or you can code on youi’ screen or you can 90 code on your screen or you can go to gb news. comment alerts . go to gb news. comment alerts. >> for stunning gold and silver coins, you'll always value rosalind gold proudly sponsors the gb news financial report . the gb news financial report. >> here's a quick snapshot of today's markets. the pound will buy you $1.2676 and ,1.1683. the price of gold is . £1,644.36 per
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price of gold is. £1,644.36 per ounce, and the ftse 100 is 7656 points. >> rosalind gold proudly sponsors the gb news financial report . report. >> we're going to be hearing any moment from the shadow work and pensions secretary , liz kendall. pensions secretary, liz kendall. we're going to hear labour's plans the out of plans to get the youth out of bed and back to work. but first in a new gb news series, innovation britain, we're looking at the success of british around the british manufacturing around the country . today. >> we're in the heart of shropshire at ezedi technology . shropshire at ezedi technology. i'm actually with the ceo of the company , chris guido. chris, i company, chris guido. chris, i know you've got a lot of successful uk manufacturing news coming out of this building. >> absolutely . we are continuing >> absolutely. we are continuing to we've got big to invest. we've got big investment year. investment plans this year. we've got 100 tonne, 200 tonne progression and a thousand progression press and a thousand tonne progression press coming onune tonne progression press coming online this year. looking online this year. we're looking
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at , so we're getting at reshoring, so we're getting more more enquiries and it's more and more enquiries and it's good news. >> yeah. so let's talk about that because you do a lot that because i know you do a lot of exporting as well don't you. maybe not directly but maybe not directly export but your on to your parts get bolted on to aeroplanes militaryvehicles aeroplanes to military vehicles to, to automotive vehicles and obviously get exported all around the world. absolutely >> and we also export directly to america germany. so we to america and germany. so we are seeing more and more enquiries coming now for uk manufacturers and certainly uk manufacturers and certainly uk manufacturers making for the uk market. but also exporting. so it's great for news the uk economy. >> yeah. when you look at uk manufacturing it's highly respected around world. so respected around the world. so why export? respected around the world. so wthbsolutely. export? respected around the world. so wthbsolutely. uk export? respected around the world. so wthbsolutely. uk manufactured >> absolutely. uk manufactured product is quality product by quality companies and we should be exporting around the world. we should be looked to for supplying that quality product. okay >> and skills gap. i know you've got some quite, quite exciting ways of, you know, bridging that skill gap here at st. >> absolutely. so we don't just train also got train our own. we've also got a training here where training centre here where we training centre here where we train companies. so train for other companies. so we're very much looking at
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bringing apprenticeships . bringing on apprenticeships. we're training our we're looking at training our own. so upskilling and then bringing on apprenticeships to fill lower down. but fill the gaps lower down. but there's exciting times here. most our have been with most of our staff have been with us long i've here us a long time. i've been here for nearly and we're for nearly 29 years and we're looking to the future for uk manufacturing .
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>> good morning. this is britain's newsroom on gb news with andrew and bev announcing their plan to support young people back to work and training. >> so we're going to hear now from the shadow work and pensions secretary, liz kendall, from the shadow work and peianins secretary, liz kendall, as an mp. >> and before became an mp, >> and before i became an mp, and i really look forward to working this subject working with you on this subject in the months and years ahead . in the months and years ahead. now, this week , the tories now, this week, the tories seventh chancellor gives his second budget. the last before the general election . the general election. speculation swirled about what
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jeremy hunt will say and whether it will appease his divided, chaotic . party but whatever mr chaotic. party but whatever mr hunt announced liz, it won't make up for 14 years of economic failure under this conservative government they claim the economy has turned a corner, but they've driven it into a dead end . rishi's recession with gdp end. rishi's recession with gdp per capita down in every quarter of the last year , our economy of the last year, our economy smaller now than when the prime minister first entered downing street . but the biggest hit to street. but the biggest hit to living standards on record and the highest tax burden for 70 years. more for food banks than police stations and our public services on their knees . people services on their knees. people in this country don't need statistics to tell them the dire state we are in, or that they're
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paying state we are in, or that they're paying more, but getting less and as rachel reeves, labour's shadow chancellor, has said , we shadow chancellor, has said, we know what's led us here to austerity , choking off austerity, choking off investment , brexit without investment, brexit without a plan , a disastrous mini—budget plan, a disastrous mini—budget that sent interest rates soaring and mortgages rocketing with ordinary people paying the price for an ideological gamble which swathes of tory mps still believe in. but there's another reason why the tories have failed on the economy. and that's because they have failed on work . the official on work. the official unemployment rate is low , but unemployment rate is low, but this isn't because there's a record high in the number of people actually in work . indeed, people actually in work. indeed, britain is the only country in the g7 whose employment rate has not returned to pre—pandemic levels . the reality is
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levels. the reality is increasing numbers of people are leaving the labour market and no longer even looking for work . longer even looking for work. this parliament has seen the highest increase in economic inactivity for 40 years, and the number of people out of work because of long terme sickness is at an all time. because of long terme sickness is at an all time . high. 2.8 is at an all time. high. 2.8 million people are not in work because of poor health. the over 50s mostly women struggle with bad hips, knees and joints , bad hips, knees and joints, often caring for elderly parents at the same time , young people at the same time, young people with mental health problems , with mental health problems, many lacking basic qualifications , ones with all qualifications, ones with all these problems far worse in northern towns and cities places the tories promised to level up, but which have once again borne the brunt of their economic failure . in places like so .
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failure. in places like so. >> that's the shadow work and pensions secretary , liz kendall, pensions secretary, liz kendall, who completely lost the room , in who completely lost the room, in my view, by immediately launching into attack on the launching into an attack on the tories. she's still banging on about tories. 2 or 3 minutes about the tories. 2 or 3 minutes into her speech and what we wanted to hear from her was what she and a labour government wanted to hear from her was what sheto nd a labour government wanted to hear from her was what sheto get| labour government wanted to hear from her was what sheto get| labibetween nment wanted to hear from her was what sheto get| labibetween 16|ent wanted to hear from her was what sheto get| labibetween 16 and 24 do to get kids between 16 and 24 into into education. into work or into education. they're called neets, not in employment, not in training, not in none. employment, not in training, not in disappointing. liz kendall >> so disappointing. liz kendall i mother with teenager . i am that mother with teenager. you need to talk to me and tell me what you're going to do. don't start and give us, what, three, four minutes? well how have we got to this place? because the conservatives are da da if you think da da da. because if you think you're to win the next you're going to win the next election, own act like you election, own it. act like you already and stop slagging already have and stop slagging off the tories. >> heard from matthew >> we just heard from matthew laza, a former labour laza, who's a former labour adviser. polls given adviser. the latest polls given the labour a 27 point lead. so why do they do this? they should be grown up. they're in opposition . they're months away opposition. they're months away from being the next government . from being the next government. so start talking about what you're going to do in government, not more political
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point . it just turns point scoring. it just turns people off. pathetic >> if you think you're going to win the next election, own it. act like have . tell us act like you have. tell us exactly you're going do. exactly what you're going to do. don't criticising don't stand there criticising the conservative government. you don't need to that . people don't need to do that. people are up their own are already making up their own minds. us what the minds. tell us what the alternative is, right? well, she minds. tell us what the altern'haveis, right? well, she minds. tell us what the altern'have lostght? well, she minds. tell us what the altern'have lost the well, she minds. tell us what the altern'have lost the room, she minds. tell us what the altern'have lost the room, but might have lost the room, but have the tories lost the countryside recently, rishi sunak national sunak addressed the national farmers he farmers union conference and he told have your back while told them i have your back while sharing stories of how he once milked a cow . sharing stories of how he once milked a cow. but now farmers are saying that that hasn't made up for the years unpopular up for the years of unpopular post—brexit trade and post—brexit trade deals and a bungled transition from eu farming payments . farming payments. >> so joining us now is windsor and maidenhead farmer and landowner rayner. colin landowner colin rayner. colin morning have the tories morning to you have the tories traditionally are seen as the custodians of the countryside. they get the rural vote. have they lost it this time? um i think they just made them the, the members of the countryside very, very unhappy me and i'm a true long life conservative
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voter and we are now looking over the border in wales and see what the labour party have done to the welsh farmers and countryside. >> actually called them right wing fascists. i believe one of them did, but my view is that them did, but my view is that the concern voters have upset the concern voters have upset the countryside have upset the farmers. they need to do some hard work to win back their votes. but my fear is that the conservative members, farmers in the countryside will vote just won't vote. so there's a lot of work to do. what have they? >> uh, colin, explain why. why they've lost. you've lost faith in them. what have they done to the countryside, in your view? was was mistaken . was was mistaken. >> well, they've just made error after error. they've upset us all about the, um, how they've deau all about the, um, how they've dealt with brexit, the trade deals, the mountain, mountain paperwork that we get each year. they give us more legislation.
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they give us more legislation. they just make it very, very hard for to us farm and to work. we've got this net zero. we are criticised every day for polluting the countryside and being horrible. after the farmers never built heathrow airport or london, but we are blamed for all the pollution, all the time, and we're just fed up with being. we've been attacked by this government and every political party we're now being told we must go wild flowers instead of food. it just frightens me. colin, where do you think? >> where do you think politicians think the food is going to come from, when all the farmers have closed down? because inevitably where because that is inevitably where this end. and we've just this will end. and we've just seen of the campaign. seen some clips of the campaign. no farmers, no food. a politician's not thinking with their imagination . their imagination. >> the biggest problem this is happening throughout europe every farm, farming country in europe are on protesting. they all going down this net zero, accusing us of polluting the
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countryside. want us to grow wild flowers and look after the countryside. we've been looking after the countryside since 1551. we've not destroyed the environment. we've have just been good at doing what we're doing and it upsets us. >> it upsets all of us. i'm sorry. we've got very little time with you this morning, colin, but good to talk to you. um, stay with us on gb news. i do wonder where the food is going from. maybe. well, going to come from. maybe. well, it's maybe it's national obesity day. maybe that's we're it's national obesity day. maybe that's to we're it's national obesity day. maybe that's to be we're it's national obesity day. maybe that's to be starved. we're going to be starved.
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>> so let's be getting in touch about queen camilla because she's taking a week off. she's going to a spa in india. uh, because she's exhausted. of course she's under a strain because of the cancer treatment of her husband. sharon says you cannot judge how a woman of 76 feels when you're only 45. well, she thought you. >> not me. i'm a bit older. we
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wish both of us were 45. >> it's not the hour or so when you're shaking hands. that matters. it's the preparation, the travel, the early starts, late put that late finishes. put all that together. some and together. make some effort and empathy. you're empathy. at 76, even if you're healthy, it's tiring. you don't have of someone 30 have the energy of someone 30 years younger or the same recovery i'm only late 60s recovery time. i'm only late 60s and miles, need and can walk for miles, but need at day to recover at least one full day to recover before i can get up and do it all a lot of you agreeing with >> a lot of you agreeing with sharon, you're very cross with me saying that camilla me for saying that camilla should on me for saying that camilla shouthe on me for saying that camilla shouthe job. on me for saying that camilla shouthe job. while on me for saying that camilla shouthe job. while so on me for saying that camilla shouthe job. while so many with the job. while so many other of work, as other royals are out of work, as it were tony says, was it were. tony says, when i was at i had to attend many at work, i had to attend many dinners and social occasions, believe it hard work. believe me, it was hard work. the choice. give it the queen has no choice. give it a you'd change a go, bev. you'd soon change your tune. i'm not saying it's easy.i your tune. i'm not saying it's easy. i can't think of anything worse having to get put worse than having to get up. put your up on every day. put a your make up on every day. put a frock have to do that frock on. oh, i have to do that anyway. you do. and then talk to bonng anyway. you do. and then talk to boring that you don't boring people that you don't really or want boring people that you don't retmeet. or want boring people that you don't retmeet. i or want boring people that you don't retmeet. i have or want boring people that you don't retmeet. i have to or want boring people that you don't retmeet. i have to do or want boring people that you don't retmeet. i have to do that want boring people that you don't retmeet. i have to do that as nt to meet. i have to do that as well day. no, i'm joking. well every day. no, i'm joking. um, but what? my point um, but but but what? my point is right the thing is this. right the thing that ties out in life, as i said,
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ties you out in life, as i said, it's not just the work, is it? it's all other stuff that it's all the other stuff that women as well. women predominantly do as well. the , the dishwasher, the hoovering, the dishwasher, the doing the laundry. she's not doing any of doesn't have to plan >> she doesn't have to plan the plan. weekly bill. plan. the weekly food bill. >> doesn't have to get on >> she doesn't have to get on the she tube and wait for the bus. >> i mean, i'm sorry, ijust i just can't feel that sorry. >> clive says, give camilla a break. >> regardless the help break. >> regétravelling the help break. >> regétravelling alone help she has travelling alone is tiring. you get older, she tiring. as you get older, she may well have arthritic problems, which it more problems, which makes it more difficult. have other difficult. or she may have other age problems which age related problems which hinder so critical. >> f- critical. >> know what? critical. >> also, know what? critical. >> also, i know what? critical. >> also, i thinkv what? critical. >> also, i think ifrvhat? critical. >> also, i think if hat? critical. >> also, i think if i was 76, um, you know, the idea of getting a plane to india, i'd getting on a plane to india, i'd find in itself is find the travelling in itself is quite , mind. quite tiring, mind. >> it'll going first class >> it'll be going first class and flying and she doesn't like flying at all. the palace have all. but the palace have revealed this just in the last day the king is going to go day that the king is going to go to australia later this year, which to me that which suggests to me then that they expecting confident they are expecting a confident outcome of his cancer treatment and queen camilla will go with him. >> and talking about burglaries as well, linda has said my house got burgled last year while as well, linda has said my house got asleepi last year while as well, linda has said my house got asleep in|st year while as well, linda has said my house got asleep in bed. ar while was asleep in bed. >> i got a crime number. i also got stolen and didn't
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got my car stolen and didn't get a for days. the a crime number for days. the police failed to tell me they'd found the car. they put it in the pound rather me, the pound rather than tell me, and from the and i received a letter from the pound later. that sort pound four days later. that sort of lack of communication, i think when you dealing with think when you are dealing with the incredibly the police, is incredibly frustrating. yeah say, frustrating. and yeah, as i say, lots you saying give camilla lots of you saying give camilla a yeah, she needs a break. yeah, she needs a houday. a break. yeah, she needs a holwell, exactly what >> well, that's exactly what she's break. she's having a break. >> kind out there, >> you're very kind out there, aren't right. keep >> you're very kind out there, aren'emails right. keep >> you're very kind out there, aren'emails coming.ht. keep vaiews@gbnews.com. >> and of course, we're talking to reforms uk's benabib later. >> wonder what he will say about reforms woeful performance in the rochdale by—election. i think it was woeful. this is britain's nursery gb news. a brighter outlook with boxt solar sponsors of weather on . gb news. sponsors of weather on. gb news. >> hello there and greg dewhurst and welcome to your latest gb news weather. >> we've got some frost around this morning, some dense fog patches to leading to some tncky patches to leading to some tricky travelling conditions and then all eyes on the west as the
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next weather system moves in. this though, plenty this morning though, plenty of sunshine uk away from sunshine across the uk away from the south—west. cold start to the south—west. cold start to the day. this weather front is slowly pushing north and eastwards through the and eastwards through the day and coming into parts of southwest england , wales then northern england, wales and then northern ireland for the afternoon. some of rain could be heavy at of the rain could be heavy at times, the winds picking up here too, elsewhere staying dry. too, but elsewhere staying dry. plenty though , plenty of sunny spells though, the hazy across the sunshine turning hazy across eastern england by the afternoon and temperatures well double figures for the vast majority. feeling a little warmer than the weekend into this evening time. this band of rain continues to push north and eastwards across the country, though it starts to weaken , slows across weaken, slows down across eastern england , eastern parts of england, eastern parts of england, eastern scotland here giving a grey night with outbreaks of light rain and drizzle further west . some clear spells but west. some clear spells but blustery showers quickly following temperature following on behind temperature numbers staying above freezing for everyone , with generally for everyone, with generally more cloud around, so a great start eastern areas on start across eastern areas on tuesday morning. brighter start across eastern areas on tuesdajwest'ning. brighter start across eastern areas on tuesdajwest but]. brighter start across eastern areas on tuesdajwest but blusteryer further west but blustery showers quickly moving their way eastwards , but the east should
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eastwards, but the east should start to brighten up as we move through the morning into the afternoon. as that weather system the way a few system moves out the way a few showers to bubble up as showers starting to bubble up as the temperatures rise and again for most of us, getting into double figures by the afternoon. see you again soon on that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers sponsors of weather on .
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gb news morning, 11 am. on monday, the 4th of march. >> this is britain's newsroom on gb news with andrew pierce and bev turner. >> very good morning to you. so workers party of leader britain leader george galloway will be sworn at the house sworn in as an mp at the house of commons after winning of commons today after winning last week's by—election in rochdale. >> heard of a neat. >> and have you heard of a neat. well, people between well, it's people aged between 16 to not in education, 16 to 24 are not in education, employment training. labour 16 to 24 are not in education, emfbeenent training. labour 16 to 24 are not in education, emfbeen settingraining. labour 16 to 24 are not in education, emfbeen settingrainitheirabour has been setting out their proposals young has been setting out their proposeback young has been setting out their proposeback into young has been setting out their proposeback into workoung has been setting out their
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proposeback into work this people back into work this morning . morning. >> and do teachers deserve a pay rise? well, one headteachers union are calling for a double digit pay rise for all teachers in england . in england. >> unsolved burglaries on the rise damning new figures show the police have failed to solve a single burglary in nearly half of all neighbourhoods in england, the past three england, wales in the past three years. scandalous and its national butchers week. >> we're being encouraged to use local butchers as our first port of call for meat purchases. but dunng of call for meat purchases. but during the cost of living crisis , can you afford to buy in that way? and we've got ben habib from reform waiting to talk to you in just a moment. after the news, a lot . talk to just a moment. after the news, a lot. talk to him about, i say i like going to the butchers. oh, i love a butchers. i went to one, in fact, on saturday, a little farm shop, butcher and, uh, it was a little bit more uh, and it was a little bit more expensive, it was british,
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expensive, but it was british, it local produce. and i just it was local produce. and i just thought, i don't thought, you know what? i don't need 35 sausages in the bag that i might get the supermarket need 35 sausages in the bag that i i'm ht get the supermarket need 35 sausages in the bag that i i'm ht gigoing the supermarket need 35 sausages in the bag that i i'm ht gigoing to 1e supermarket need 35 sausages in the bag that i i'm ht gigoing to getupermarket need 35 sausages in the bag that i i'm ht gigoing to get eightiarket . i'm just going to get eight quality sausages support quality sausages and i support my too. my greengrocer, too. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> should um. don't >> we should always, um. don't forget, going to tell you forget, we're going to tell you about budget week. about this. it's budget week. of course, nigel course, you can join nigel farage michelle dewberry course, you can join nigel fibudget michelle dewberry course, you can join nigel fibudget specialzlle dewberry course, you can join nigel fibudget special in; dewberry course, you can join nigel fibudget special in whitehaven. a budget special in whitehaven. that's on wednesday night. michelle will be on six till seven. farage is on seven till eight. i will be there in whitehaven during the day on wednesday as well. if you want to apply go to gbnews.com or you can scan the code on the screen . can scan the code on the screen. now then. um first of all though, here is your news with tatiana sanchez . tatiana sanchez. >> beth, thank you very much and good morning. your top stories from the gb newsroom. the chancellor is under growing pressure to lower tax his with the former home secretary priti patel saying voters need their money back. income tax has reached an historic high while
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promising some cuts. jeremy hunt has been trying to temper expectations ahead of wednesday's budget . today, he's wednesday's budget. today, he's announced £360 million worth of funding for manufacturing to help boost the economy . dame help boost the economy. dame pretty told gb news the government can't keep borrowing and it needs to be more cautious when it comes to spending . when it comes to spending. >> we have over 500,000 civil servants now even to shave a degree off, that would cut pubuc degree off, that would cut public expenditure by at least £1 billion and that would be great. back again in 2010, 2016, we had under, i think, around 400,000 civil servants, and that saved a significant amount, amount of money. the spending, the costs alone , i think, came the costs alone, i think, came to down something like £11 billion. this is where we have to be again, to be an agile government that's fit in the sense of financially sound, sound money, conservative principles. but actually making sure the public keep more of their their money. >> george galloway is due to be sworn in as the new rochdale mp,
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later arriving at the commons , later arriving at the commons, he was asked how he feels about his comeback. >> well, i'll tell you what's happening inside the bill. i always loved the building, the people in it not quite so much . people in it not quite so much. >> the workers party of britain leader won last week's by—election by more than 5500 votes. the focus of his campaign was the ongoing war in gaza. warnings to keir starmer that labour would pay a high price for enabling what he says is a catastrophe . mr galloway was a catastrophe. mr galloway was a labour mp for 16 years. he was suspended from the party in 2003 over remarks he made at the start of the iraq war. the rwanda bill returns to the house of lords this afternoon as the legislation enters its final stages in parliament, nearly 50 amendments have been put forward , with a number of votes expected today and on wednesday. among them, the government's assessment that rwanda is a safe country for asylum seekers . as country for asylum seekers. as it comes almost two years after
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ministers first announced the plan to send some migrants to the east african country, the government has promised that the first flights will happen in the spring. nora forster. meanwhile, gb news understands around 150 migrants have been intercepted crossing the english channel in three small boats today . that's three small boats today. that's after 327 made the crossing yesterday. the same day that a seven year old girl died after a boat capsized. she'd been travelling with her pregnant mother , her father and three mother, her father and three siblings when the boat got into difficulty in the early hours of yesterday morning . nikki haley yesterday morning. nikki haley has defeated donald trump in the republican primary in washington, dc. this is her first victory over the former president in this year's campaign to become the republican presidential candidate. she lost in her home state of carolina, but she's now the first woman to win a republican primary in us history . the only remaining challenger to donald trump in the race, she won almost 63% of that vote. however mr trump has a
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significant lead over mrs. haley and is likely to face joe biden in the november election . in in the november election. in education leaders are calling for a double digit pay rise for all teachers across england. it's after the government said school salaries should return to a more reasonable level. the national association of head teachers union said england currently has the highest number of unfilled teaching posts in over a decade. it says a raise of at least 10% will counter the recruitment and retention crisis piece . pupils from low income piece. pupils from low income backgrounds in england are still behind in their maths grades, compared with before the covid pandemic , a new think tank pandemic, a new think tank report has revealed. performance levels dropping back to 2017 levels dropping back to 2017 levels for pupils in years 3 to 9. the research shows. the disadvantaged gap has widened from around seven months to almost nine. that amounts to an average loss of over four months of learning in secondary schools , and a loss of two months in primary maths. teacher bobby seagull says the government
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needs to do more while the government done in lockdown government has done in lockdown is introduced the tutoring is they introduced the tutoring fund, spent a lot of money on this and it was meant to help close the gap. >> and be honest, that's an >> and to be honest, that's an important scheme and i think they're planning on ending that closing tutoring gap. the most disadvantaged pupils are suffering more, and if we want to make sure students the to make sure students have the bafic to make sure students have the basic numeracy skills so they can access, again, applying for jobs understanding the jobs and understanding the basics of a payslip, they need those skills . i the those skills. and i think the report today all about saying report today is all about saying actually those disadvantaged pupils falling further pupils are falling even further behind . behind. >> for all the latest stories, you can sign up to gb news alerts by scanning the qr code on your screen. or you can go to gb news .com/ alerts . now it's gb news .com/ alerts. now it's back to andrew and . bev back to andrew and. bev >> what's the time? 11:07. with britain's newsroom gb news andrew pierce and bev turner. >> well, coming up, one of the country's biggest girls football leagues faces being shut down by
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the because they refused to the fa because they refused to allow play in their matches. >> you couldn't make this stuff up, could you? no, no , no, but up, could you? no, no, no, but first george galloway, he will be sworn in today as an the new mp for rochdale . mp for rochdale. >> the controversy already around that because he was going to be um david davis was one of the senior tory mps, was going to introduce him. he's pulled out because of his deputy's views on gaza terrorism . views on gaza and terrorism. >> um, so the seats, of course, where you've reform uk simon danczuk finished rock bottom. this with just 6.3% this was rochdale with just 6.3% of the vote. we're joined in the studio now by ben habib. can we just first of all ask about this decision david davis not to decision by david davis not to swear in? i'm surprised by swear him in? i'm surprised by david davis . you as much david davis. you know, as much as like george as you may not like george galloway of the things galloway and some of the things he stands for, he was democratically elected with a thumping. just have to they do get grip. get a grip. >> they have to swallow it and they have to accept him into the house of commons. and the criticism, extent they've criticism, to the extent they've got ought be got criticisms, ought to be aimed themselves, that aimed at themselves, that they've allowed country aimed at themselves, that thejtoa allowed country aimed at themselves, that thejto aallowed country aimed at themselves, that thejto a stage d country
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aimed at themselves, that thejto a stage where:ountry aimed at themselves, that thejto a stage where youtry aimed at themselves, that thejto a stage where you could get to a stage where you could get to a stage where you could get someone like galloway getting a thumping majority . getting a thumping majority. it's the conservatives. i don't want to do any tory bashing, but it's the concern lives who've beenin it's the concern lives who've been in office, who've delivered rochdale to the point that rochdale to the point that rochdale is at and they must bear responsibility for galloway being elected . you know, rishi being elected. you know, rishi sunak's speech the other day , a sunak's speech the other day, a lot of people said it was great. i thought it was vacuous and he missed the point. he talked, he talked about, he said , liberated talked about, he said, liberated multiculturalism again in his speech.i multiculturalism again in his speech. i don't know if you picked that up. yeah he talked about, you know, celebrating people muslim or hindu. people being muslim or hindu. um, all within the context of the church of england . well, of the church of england. well, of course you can't do that . you course you can't do that. you can't be a muslim and a hindu in the context of the church of england . it a kind of, england. and it was a kind of, uh , he was trying to use uh, he was trying to use language to get away with the multiculturalism to which, you know , suella braverman has know, suella braverman has repeatedly pointed is not working. no, it's not. and that's what we've seen in
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rochdale and what rishi sunak should have come out and said after was, we've made after that was, look, we've made after that was, look, we've made a this country. we've a mistake in this country. we've got too many immigrants coming in too many diverse in from too many diverse backgrounds . multiculturalism backgrounds. multiculturalism isn't . we need to get isn't working. we need to get rid of diversity, equality and inclusion, which is the policy that promotes minority ethnicities minority ethnicities and minority religions over and above and to the detriment, in my view, of the detriment, in my view, of the majority. dei has got to go . the majority. dei has got to go. everyone in this country is equal and he could give effect to that policy agenda overnight. he could stop issuing visas for people coming to this country. he could repeal the equalities act, which is anything but equal act, which is anything but equal. he could make it illegal to recruit people on the basis of the colour of their skin. all of the colour of their skin. all of this could be done overnight and you would neuter the ability to get someone like , um galloway to get someone like, um galloway elected in rochdale. but instead of doing that, they take a ridiculous stance of not swearing him in. he is a democratically elected member of
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parliament. he has to be sworn in. what went wrong with your campaign? >> because there was a chance there. you picked simon danczuk , there. you picked simon danczuk, a former mp in rochdale. he was very good on the grooming gangs. >> but the local boy, yeah , but >> but the local boy, yeah, but he was kicked out of his own labor party because sent labor party because he sent inappropriate text to a 17 year old that was never going to old girl that was never going to wash rochdale's muslim wash well with rochdale's muslim population, with the groom, with all saga of grooming gangs. all the saga of grooming gangs. >> . you know, i mean, it, >> yeah. you know, i mean, it, um, sixteen a 17 year old girl is not a great look, to put it mildly. even though it's technically legal, i suppose, which is why he wasn't charged. um, but it was a filthy by—election, you know , the whole by—election, you know, the whole of them are, though. yeah, they are . all by elections place are. all by elections take place in a bad environment, funnily enough. actually, rochdale , um, enough. actually, rochdale, um, the died, so it wasn't the incumbent died, so it wasn't as controversial as perhaps wellingborough, where i stood, and , where, you know, and kingswood, where, you know, someone stood and cost the someone stood down and cost the exchequer of exchequer a huge amount of money. yeah. skidmore you know. yeah. for vanity's sake , as far yeah. for vanity's sake, as far as i could see, stood down as an mp and caused us over £1 million
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worth of expenditure as a country, because if he wanted to leave a few months early. yeah um, and then before that, obviously nadine dorries seat was a was a complex and difficult by—election, as indeed was tamworth by elections take place because something odd has happened. rochdale wasn't one of those, but rochdale does being bnng those, but rochdale does being bring into stark relief . the ten bring into stark relief. the ten thing at the social fabric that we are experiencing as a country and if we don't get ahead of this problem, we are facing. i've written an article actually for gb news. i don't know if it's going to be published soon. um, but i think we're facing the extinguishing of the united kingdom as we know what do kingdom as we know it. what do you well, you mean by that? well, economically , we've got national you mean by that? well, econiand ally , we've got national you mean by that? well, econiand taxation've got national you mean by that? well, econiand taxation at got national you mean by that? well, econiand taxation at aot national you mean by that? well, econiand taxation at a hightional you mean by that? well, econiand taxation at a high gdpl debt and taxation at a high gdp is now shrinking . debt and taxation at a high gdp is now shrinking. gdp debt and taxation at a high gdp is now shrinking . gdp per capita is now shrinking. gdp per capita is now shrinking. gdp per capita is going down even faster because of immigration. a rampant unskilled immigration, you know , taking an unskilled you know, taking an unskilled labour from abroad is undercutting the united kingdom , undercutting the united kingdom, um, as ability to get people
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into work. we've got 6 million people on on surviving on universal credit to a greater or lesser extent. so we've got a complete busted economy. and then on top of that, we've got all the tearing at the social fabnc all the tearing at the social fabric that has come through. in my view, this ill conceived, um, die policy, diversity, equality and inclusion. the promotion of minorities to the detriment of the majority in this country. how can that be? right? we've got the armed forces recruiting people on the basis of the colour their skin, rather colour of their skin, rather than on whether they can fly a jet properly or fire a shell out of a tank properly. you know, we want the best doing the best that they're at for this country . so the country can do its best so we can prosper. so we can prosper. >> so we can prosper. >> worth pointing out that you say that the son a say that as the son of a pakistani origin family, am i correct your. well, my dad's a pakistani muslim. >> mother is a white >> my mother is a white christian english born and bred and i'm proud of my pakistani heritage. i'm very proud of my pakistani heritage, but i'm british and we have to look
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after the united kingdom and first and foremost in that is obviously a healthy and prosperous economy , but prosperous economy, but fundamental to it is having borders that work. we haven't got borders that work at any level. >> if rishi sunak had come out and done the sort of speech you were talking about, then to criticise mass immigration, how would the media have handled that, though? >> we what happened >> because we saw what happened when that when suella braverman said that she thought that multiculturalism hadn't worked. what pages of all what were the front pages of all the cast as well? the papers cast him as well? >> i think the daily mail would have been rather pleased because we've high. have been rather pleased because we'well, high. have been rather pleased because we'well, let high. have been rather pleased because we'well, let me high. have been rather pleased because we'well, let me tell high. have been rather pleased because we'well, let me tell you,|. >> well, let me tell you, sustainable levels of immigration. >> time, everyone immigration. >> reportime, everyone immigration. >> report it e, everyone immigration. >> report it like feryone immigration. >> report it like that. |e wouldn't report it like that. >> gb news might report it like that, i don't think you'd that, but i don't think you'd find any channel, do find any other channel, do anything their anything other than clutch their pearls anything other than clutch their peai.s i've given up looking >> i mean, i've given up looking at what mainstream say, at what mainstream media say, but the reason labour party won tamworth mid—bedfordshire kingswood wellingborough is because the tory vote is staying at home. the centre right small c vote , the people who believe c vote, the people who believe in the united kingdom, who are
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proud of the union flag, who want this country to operate as a settled social construct, as a prosperous social construct. that vote is staying at home. if rishi sunak made that speech, if he enacted the policies which would take five seconds for him to enact, there would be a chance of a thumping majority at the next election. it's not for me to advise rishi sunak. i'm deputy leader of reform uk, but i tell you he wouldn't i can tell you he wouldn't have lost by elections and the lost those by elections and the country be better country would be in much better shape. we'd be on a much better trajectory. say, trajectory. and can i also say, as someone who is half pakistani, pakistani pakistani, half pakistani people, pakistani extract people, pakistani extract people, people from india who are now british citizens don't want to be that they need want to be told that they need a special leg up society , that special leg up in society, that they diversity, equality they need diversity, equality and inclusion policies to be promoted that incredibly promoted. that is incredibly patronising and critical of ethnic minorities. people who come to this country want to succeed on their own merit. meritocracy should be at the heart of everything . all other heart of everything. all other policies which which seek equal
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outcome times rather than equal opportunities should be binned. >> let me ask you, because lee anderson , who's been suspended anderson, who's been suspended from the tory party because what he said about islamism and the mayor of london, but he would agree with lot you agree with a lot of what you said. is he going to be said. yeah. is he going to be recruited by reform uk? >> well i can't, i mean it's an open secret, it's an open secret. so i can say discussions have taken place . yeah. you have taken place. yeah. you know, they met famously i think he should reform. he should join reform. >> written in the >> well i've written in the daily mail today that you're not exactly fan his. exactly a fan of his. >> i'm circumspect of >> well, i'm very circumspect of taking on, if i may say so, any tory mps, because it is a tory mps collective who've delivered the to the position it's the country to the position it's at. i love what suella says. i love what pretty, says jacob rees—mogg couldn't say anything wrong . but when they get into wrong. but when they get into office they don't do as they say and so any tory mp wishing to join reform uk great, obviously great. you know , we'll have great. you know, we'll have a chat but we would need to be
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very confident that they are solid people of integrity who actually believe what they say and will deliver for the country, that it's not just a mechanism of avoiding being obliterated at the next election, which is where i think the conservative party is going. and the issue for a new party like reform uk is gazing, gaining prominence and awareness in the minds of the public who may not know who you are. >> they may know who you >> they may not know who you represent. they see represent. and when they see that lee anderson is one of your mps, go, that's mps, they might go, oh, that's the the anti—islam guy . the guy, the anti—islam guy. that's that party are . so that's what that party are. so he would with a pr risk , he would come with a pr risk, wouldn't he? >> i mean, one of things i'm >> i mean, one of the things i'm not i come back to not changing, i come back to that. the things that that. but one of the things that brexit so right or brexit party got so right was or got correct rather, was that it wasn't. no one could pin it as being a right wing, swivel eyed anti—image arrant xenophobic fringe , um, racist party because fringe, um, racist party because we actually were from multiple ethnic backgrounds . we came from ethnic backgrounds. we came from all different walks of life, and we were a fantastic force with
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which to be reckoned. and we won that thumping , uh, you know, that thumping, uh, you know, majority in the european elections in 2019. and reform uk should, in my view , emulate that should, in my view, emulate that model. you know , we speak for model. you know, we speak for everyone in the united kingdom. we speak for the british people, we speak for the united kingdom itself . and we make policies itself. and we make policies unashamedly for the national interest. that's what we are. and i think anything that detracts from that is a risk. okay >> thank you ben. always good to see you ben habib there, deputy leader of reform uk. well labour's liz kendall she still talking. she is . well you know talking. she is. well you know we said she was setting out her plans to help young people get back into work. targeting back into work. she's targeting the 16 to 24 year olds not in education employment. education or employment. there she now having a chat she is. she's now having a chat to somebody. we will try and surmise that she's surmise what it is that she's promising generation . promising for that generation. >> a career service, apparently. >> apparently, maybe with >> apparently, yeah, maybe with britain's newsroom on
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gb news. >> thank you . you're on the >> thank you. you're on the telly. andrew pierce . it's 1121 telly. andrew pierce. it's 1121 with britain's newsroom on gb news with me bev turner. and they're slightly badly behaved. andrew pierce, for the first time, we're joined by former labour adviser matthew laza and writer columnist emma woolf, writer and columnist emma woolf, now former home secretary now the former home secretary priti on breakfast priti patel was on breakfast earlier this morning talking about here's she said. >> i actually think i mean, i found i found the whole issue very disappointing, right now. we another tragedy we saw another tragedy yesterday, you know, in the channel yesterday, you know, in the channel, which was just appalling. think it could appalling. and i think it could have been prevented. do think have been prevented. i do think the should do lot more. the french should do a lot more. quite frankly, paying quite frankly, we're paying them, sums of them, i think record sums of money. the sad thing is i look back on all of this. we had a plan. we had a plan called the new plan for immigration linked to the rwanda policy building greek style reception centres . greek style reception centres. and i'm sorry to say this, but people came afterwards people that came in afterwards and fact, the current and in fact, the current government didn't support that plan. get all we've plan. and all you get all we've
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seen with revolving door is people coming in with new ideas. and doesn't embed, you know and that doesn't embed, you know , with enough time, proper structure plans and structural reform that's required , reform that's required, including the lawyers , the legal including the lawyers, the legal profession , i put forward the profession, i put forward the one stop shop payment where basically you do no longer see or you shouldn't see asylum seekers going back to the courts again. and again and again appealing their cases. that still hasn't been fully implemented . implemented. >> a much underrated politician in my opinion. emma woolf i when i met priti patel, priti patel, i met priti patel, priti patel, i did say to her, i said i didn't think i was going to like you and i like you enormously. she's so much better than the pubuc she's so much better than the public perception of her. >> the opposite. >> i think the opposite. >> i think the opposite. >> i think the opposite. i >> i think the opposite. i don't think very how do say think she's very how do i say this i, i was actually this? i, i was actually underwhelmed with her. i'm always underwhelmed with her because i agree with her on a lot of things, but she doesn't. she's sharp. she doesn't she's not sharp. she doesn't have the facts and figures. she's wishy she's she's very wishy washy. she's one politicians that one of these politicians that says things. but says all the right things. but actually, drill down,
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actually, when you drill down, i don't there's that don't think there's that much substance behind. priti patel compared to a lot of compared to suella braverman , for example, suella braverman, for example, who extremely who i think is extremely intelligent. okay. >> matthew . >> matthew. >> matthew. >> so she's very charismatic . >> so she's very charismatic. um, pretty. >> yeah. and actually when you meet her, she's she's very she's she's very charming. i know, i know you bev, but know what you mean, bev, but i am to say it, you know, uh know what you mean, bev, but i ashe, to say it, you know, uh know what you mean, bev, but i ashe, diagnoses'ou know, uh know what you mean, bev, but i ashe, diagnoses the (now, uh , she, she diagnoses the problem, was there meant problem, but she was there meant to putting the solutions to be putting the solutions in place. the with place. she signed the deal with france. that's meant to be. got a lot for nothing. a lot of money for nothing. >> she'll tell you privately. a lot of money for nothing. >> fhometell you privately. a lot of money for nothing. >> home office,| privately. a lot of money for nothing. >> home office, uh,vately. a lot of money for nothing. >> home office, uh, tied y. a lot of money for nothing. >> home office, uh, tied her the home office, uh, tied her hands opportunity. she hands at every opportunity. she the at every the civil servants, at every opportunity. wanted opportunity. they never wanted the well, home is, as >> well, the home office is, as we mean, john reid, we know. i mean, john reid, labour's john reid 20 years ago said was fit for purpose. said it was not fit for purpose. absolutely purpose. it absolutely purpose. and it should. frankly, if i'd should. i mean, frankly, if i'd been government, been in government, i would, i would would it and would get i would scrap it and create department, create a safety department, you know, the police know, to look after the police and when fire service, when and when she fire service, when she accused bullying her she was accused of bullying her in good, in immigration, i thought good, you because you should be bullying because they're useless and they don't do and boris stuck when >> and boris stuck by her when she was accused of. >> and that's. and going to >> and that's. and it's going to be big issue. the of the
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be a big issue. the state of the home office in civil service home office in the civil service reluctance in there for labour because be because it's not going to be leaping joy at what labour leaping for joy at what labour wants to do on immigration, enhen >> what also quite >> what was also quite refreshing, to refreshing, though, listening to her morning, she's her talk this morning, she's obviously very relaxed here, chatting is chatting to eamonn and isabel is that entirely saying chatting to eamonn and isabel is that she entirely saying chatting to eamonn and isabel is that she wasn'tentirely saying chatting to eamonn and isabel is that she wasn't saying saying chatting to eamonn and isabel is that she wasn't saying her ng that. she wasn't saying her government has got it all right. she was saying certainly not your very your frustrations. that's a very brave to give brave speech interview to give in yeah brave speech interview to give in year. yeah but in an election year. yeah but she doesn't have she doesn't have know. she doesn't have she doesn't havshe know. she doesn't have she doesn't havshe doesn't know. she doesn't have she doesn't havshe doesn't have /. to >> she doesn't have much to lose, does i mean, she lose, does she? i mean, she she's. but she's only saying she's. no, but she's only saying what british what the majority of the british pubuc what the majority of the british public it would be public agree with. it would be failed on immigration. exactly exactly. have absolutely failed on immigration. exactly exactlyi have absolutely failed on immigration. exactly exactlyi mean, ave absolutely failed on immigration. exactly exactlyi mean,ave hometely failed on immigration. exactly exactlyi mean, ave home office, failed on immigration. exactly exa keep mean, ave home office, failed on immigration. exactly exa keep sayingive home office, failed on immigration. exactly exa keep sayingive not1e office, failed on immigration. exactly exa keep sayingive not fitz)ffice, we keep saying it's not fit for purpose, over the few purpose, but over the last few months, that we've months, the scandals that we've seen, of seen, the that their lack of ability to manage the visa system, the immigration system, really fundamental . really fundamental. >> and you can do proper deals with france because labour got the sangatte migrant camp closed , was the , uh, in calais, which was the one causing all the one that was causing all the grief, the wave of this 15 grief, the first wave of this 15 years got in the years ago. we've got in the house of this rwanda house of lords this week, rwanda is on ping pong. >> and they are still claiming flights are going to take off. and seems last week,
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and it just seems last week, unlike through the lords this unlike it through the lords this week, a flight to week, there could be a flight to rwanda march. rwanda by the end of march. >> that's why some people >> and that's why some people think there might be an election. think think there might be an edon'tn. think think there might be an edon'tn. there's think think there might be an edon'tn. there's going1ink think there might be an e don'tn. there's going to < i don't think there's going to be a may election because i think that that, that isn't think that that, that that isn't going enough. the going to be enough. when the tories as we tories are as far behind as we see them in the poll this see them in the poll we saw this morning an outlier, but morning may be an outlier, but they're the 20s at best. >> matthew will transform everybody's life. >> n everybody's life. >> absolutely, because i mean that one, one off the that that one, that one off the off insurance while off national insurance while millions higher rate millions are paying higher rate tax actually, i think tax and actually, i think actually threshold actually this the threshold thing is so serious because it disincentivizes people to get on andifs disincentivizes people to get on and it's and if labour done it would have been crucified by teachers nurses are getting teachers and nurses are getting caught . exactly. do you caught into. exactly. do you remember andrew, and remember i mean, andrew, you and l, remember i mean, andrew, you and i, old enough to i, the are old enough to remember ads in 1992 when remember those ads in 1992 when if major double if john major labour's double tax was pictures if john major labour's double ta1police was pictures if john major labour's double ta1police officers was pictures if john major labour's double ta1police officers , was pictures if john major labour's double ta1police officers , teachers, ures of police officers, teachers, nurses , builders all being hit nurses, builders all being hit by labour's tax and it's the tories have hit them by making them higher . them higher. >> even so, even so, a penny here, a penny there. we know the fact is everybody well not everybody.
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>> people are feeling poorer. people are poorer, their bills are soaring . their pay has not are soaring. their pay has not gone up. it's not going to make any difference . and it's any difference. and it's a rwanda flight takes off. give me a break. you think any body is going to change? >> anybody think we can have a may election wager? >> no one will change their mind. no. yes. i would. >> i have money may >> i have money on a may election, but i'm being. >> wish hadn't now advised. >> well, looking at the polls, though, there's fiver. though, now there's a fiver. >> actually i'm mad. >> actually i'm mad. >> , can we talk about this? >> absolutely amazing university of florida has become the first university. pretty much. i think , in the world, particularly in the western world, to eliminate hate. all diverse equity and inclusion positions , rules, inclusion positions, rules, ethos, ideology . ethos, ideology. >> we can we bring this instantly to this country. >> matthew , and bring it into >> matthew, and bring it into government. what do you make of it? >> well, backward step. >> well, backward step. >> i think it is about i think it is a backward step. um to get rid of all i know, i know you've got a range of views, um, to get
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rid of all of them. i think that look, sometimes it's look, in america, sometimes it's gone um and i believe gone too far. um and i believe in speech has , um. in freedom of speech has, um. and i think but i think that diversity and inclusion is, is important. but it shouldn't be a tick box exercise. what really annoys it isn't annoys me is when it isn't integrated into the company, when we'll employ when it's like, oh, we'll employ somebody know, somebody and they can, you know, they a you know, nice they can do a you know, a nice thing year. but actually thing once a year. but actually it should be ingrained in, in all of the way that all our companies and organisations work, the roots of diversity, equality that equality and inclusion, that whole movement, of course, that of positive and of course, that was positive and it at time . it was laudable at the time. >> but gone way too far . >> but this gone way too far. let's stop obsessing about people's race, about their genden people's race, about their gender, about what's in their underwear, about sexuality underwear, about their sexuality . i don't care, i don't want anyone employed or promoted or , anyone employed or promoted or, you know, whatever. >> i don't believe in quotas. >> i don't believe in quotas. >> okay? >> okay? >> people as let's treat >> treat people as let's treat people as people. this has gone out of control . out of control. >> gender pay gap? >> what about gender pay gap? emma >> yeah. what about that? >> yeah. what about that? >> about the genuine? >> yeah. what about that? >> we about the genuine? >> yeah. what about that? >> we willioul the genuine? >> yeah. what about that? >> we will stillthe genuine? >> yeah. what about that? >> we will still do genuine? >> yeah. what about that? >> we will still do the uine? >> yeah. what about that? >> we will still do the same job as the men and will get paid as the men and we will get paid less. obviously will, but
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diversity makes no diversity training makes no difference no, is difference to that. no, that is that that your that is your that is your equality part. >> it's it's not >> exactly. it's not. it's not all about training. it all about diversity training. it should ensuring should be about ensuring that companies pay companies close the gender pay gap that the glass gap that, um, that the glass ceilings are removed, that impediments are removed. and, you know, this is across the whole about race, whole thing. it's about race, but also about disability but it's also about disability and gender. >> employers of >> the biggest employers of diversity , you diversity departments, you couldn't get a more diverse employer than the nhs wildly. >> well, that's because mostly we have enough uk workers we don't have enough uk workers to up. but yeah, to fill up. but yeah, nevertheless, it's a point, isn't it? >> e“- e are we e are we wasting isn't it? >> are we wasting money >> and why are we wasting money in on diversity training in the nhs on diversity training when people's hips fixed? >> this f.- @ this policy in >> what this what this policy in america is basically saying under ron desantis is that the equality war has been won, that we now have equality across the board. >> so if a black woman walks into a job, she would get the same opportunity as a white man. well i think all the evidence is that case. that isn't the case. >> elianne true. yeah, exactly. that isn't the case. >> that'se true. yeah, exactly. that isn't the case. >> that's patentlyeah, exactly. >> that's patently untrue. exactly. actually we. but exactly. but actually we. but but but sense also, if you but but my sense also, if you look at this data , that is
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look at this data, that is patently but but my patently untrue. but but my sense , emma, it has sense, emma, is that it has somehow gone too far. >> yes it has bev. >> yes it has bev. >> and there are times when, as a white middle class person, you're actually you are , um, you're actually you are, um, discriminated against. so actually and i think, i think we just, i just want to get back to a state where we can focus on how good people are and we can value them for the work that they do. >> you say, get back to that place never existed. exactly, exactly. forced to exactly. because they forced to be prejudiced workplace. be prejudiced in the workplace. >> barriers >> and there have been barriers in the workplace. i mean, in the in the workplace. i mean, you i remember when i went you know, i remember when i went to talking of to my career fair talking of careers this morning, careers teachers this morning, i quite fancy being diplomat. quite fancy being a diplomat. not that would not sure how well that would have there was the have gone. and there was the brochure my brochure when i was at my careers fair at saying, oh, careers fair at 15 saying, oh, you don't employ any you know, we don't employ any homosexual know, homosexual boys. um, you know, and my, you know, and this is in my, you know, lived, lived. yeah. it's yeah, exactly. so i'm saying things lived, lived. yeah. it's yeah, exa not so i'm saying things lived, lived. yeah. it's yeah, exa not that 'm saying things lived, lived. yeah. it's yeah, exa not that loneging things lived, lived. yeah. it's yeah, exa not that long ago. things lived, lived. yeah. it's yeah, exa not that long ago. i'm gs lived, lived. yeah. it's yeah, exa not that long ago. i'm not are not that long ago. i'm not that andrew. um so what that old. andrew. um so what we're is, is that we're saying is, is that is that life has employ life has don't employ any homosexuals, life has don't employ any homosexu heard life has don't employ any homosexuheard of burgess. >> never heard of burgess. >> never heard of burgess. >> well, i think it might have been a sort of of been a sort of a sort of the most famous. >> may be.
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>> it may be. >> it may be. >> have been after the >> it may have been after the horse's bolted. >> yes. >> yes. >> i mean, no irony there. >> i mean, no irony there. >> of. exactly i mean, >> full of. yes. exactly i mean, some but yes, i some irony there, but yes, i think maybe they thought they'd had . but what i'm had too many. but what i'm saying is hellotalk is barriers have been there, historic barriers have been there . yes. barriers have been there. yes. >> and i'm not saying we should row progress. that row back on that progress. that progress was incredibly important. point is we have important. my point is we have gone down the rabbit hole with this i mean, cannot this stuff. i mean, you cannot i cannot cross a i cannot go across a road crossing in my in my neighbourhood of london without rainbow hitting in without a rainbow hitting me in the a rainbow with a, you the face, a rainbow with a, you know, when i don't want my bank telling me or, you know, telling me about diversity me about their diversity training, will be interesting training, it will be interesting to florida. to see what happens in florida. >> interesting see what >> it be interesting to see what happens data as this >> it be interesting to see what happerforward. data as this moves forward. >> wouldn't it be a brave >> and i wouldn't it be a brave university here? university that does it here? >> yes , yes, andrew will be >> yes, yes, andrew will be about funding, won't it? >> yes, yes, andrew will be abotheynding, won't it? >> yes, yes, andrew will be abotheynding, be n't it? >> yes, yes, andrew will be abotheynding, be because it will >> they won't be because it will be right tatiana be about funding. right tatiana sanchez very sanchez has been waiting very patiently she is patiently for us. here she is with as .
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with your headlines. as. >> good morning. it's 1131. >> good morning. it's1131. these are your top stories from the gb newsroom. the chancellor's under growing pressure to lower taxes with the former home secretary, priti patel saying voters need their money back. income tax has reached an historic high and while promising some cuts , while promising some cuts, jeremy hunt has been trying to temper expectations ahead of wednesday's budget. today, he's announced £360 million worth of funding for manufacture , trying funding for manufacture, trying to help boost the economy . dame to help boost the economy. dame priti patel told gb news the government can't keep on borrowing and it needs to be more cautious when it comes to spending. >> we have over 500,000 civil servants now even to shave a degree off. that would cut pubuc degree off. that would cut public expenditure by at least £1 billion and that would be great. back again in 2010, 2016, we had under , i think, around we had under, i think, around 400,000 civil servants and that saved a significant amount, amount of money, the spending, the costs alone. i think, came down to something like £11 billion. this is where we have
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to be again, to be an agile government that's fit in the sense of financially sound, sound money, conservative principles, but actually making sure the public keep more of their their money. george galloway is due to be sworn in as the new rochdale mp, later arriving at the commons this morning, he was asked how he feels about his comeback. >> well, i'll tell you what's happening inside the bill. i always loved the building, the people not quite so much . people in it not quite so much. >> the workers party of britain leader won last week's by—election by more than 5500 votes. the focus of his campaign was the ongoing war in gaza, warning sir keir starmer that labour would pay a high price for enabling what he says is a catastrophe . mr galloway was a catastrophe. mr galloway was a labour mp for 16 years. he was suspended from the party in 2003 over remarks made at the start of the iraq war, and pupils from low income backgrounds in england are still behind in their maths grades. compared
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with before the covid pandemic , with before the covid pandemic, a new think tank report has revealed . performance levels revealed. performance levels dropping back to 2017 levels for pupils in years 3 to 9. the research shows the disadvantaged gap has widened from around seven months to almost nine. for the latest stories , sign up to the latest stories, sign up to gb news alerts by scanning the qr code on your screen or you can go to gb news. comment alerts . alerts. >> for exclusive , limited >> for exclusive, limited edition and rare gold coins that are always newsworthy, rosalind gold proudly sponsors the gb news financial report . news financial report. >> here's a quick snapshot of today's markets. the pound will buy you $1.2677 and ,1.1678. the price of gold is £1,644.78 per ounce, and the ftse 100 is at
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7646 points. >> rosalind gold proudly sponsors the gb news financial report . report. >> the here up at noon, good afternoon britain with tom and emily. so what's coming up? >> we are indeed well in our time on air, george galloway will be sworn in with his buddy jeremy corbyn. >> yes , it's interesting when an >> yes, it's interesting when an mp, of is introduced to mp, of course, is introduced to the commons, have the house of commons, they have to people side to have two people either side introducing . it's been a bit of introducing. it's been a bit of controversy. there was some suggestion david davis, the suggestion that david davis, the veteran conservative, me he veteran conservative, told me he was then he out of it was and then he backed out of it over weekend . and so now sir over the weekend. and so now sir peter bottomley , the father peter bottomley, the father of the the longest serving the house, the longest serving mp, sort of by mp, is doing it sort of by tradition . but on the other tradition. but on the other side, corbyn. so it will side, jeremy corbyn. so it will be interesting to see the atmosphere the house of atmosphere in the house of commons. >> i wonder be jeered, commons. >> i vwould be jeered, commons. >> i vwould incrediblyered, which would be incredibly childish they do, he may well childish if they do, he may well be well be childish. be there, may well be childish. >> will >> there always will be. interesting how many allies interesting is how many allies he finds in there, because there may be more than you think. >> and will he swear on a bible or yeah, lots of or a quran yeah, lots of different questions . different questions. >> and where is he going sit?
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>> and where is he going to sit? >> and where is he going to sit? >> mhm. >> and where is he going to sit? >> whor. >> and where is he going to sit? >> who wants nobody. so of course next to the last parliament 2012, parliament he was in from 2012, the last by—election through to 2015 when he lost his seat in bradford west. >> he used to sit up at the back sort behind the snp benches, sort of behind the snp benches, which is also where jeremy corbyn now sits. so they could be sitting buddy buddy together . be sitting buddy buddy together. they're old and willie habit—forming this is he allowed to wear his hat in the house? >> hats off strangers. the hats on. if he's going, he's going to want to make the most of the next few months. >> however it between >> however long it is between now the election break with now and the election break with convention and the maiden speech is be uncontroversial. is tends to be uncontroversial. >> will be the opposite. he >> this will be the opposite. he won't today, but when it won't do it today, but when it comes, will be a be comes, it will be a would be a humdinger. yes, yes , certainly. humdinger. yes, yes, certainly. >> certainly brilliant >> certainly a brilliant speaken >> certainly a brilliant speaker. course , this all speaker. but of course, this all comes into the context what comes into the context of what the doing to the government is doing to challenge extremism, extremism on the streets and in our politics. and we're going to be discussing what the definition of extremism is, because this is what the government is looking to change for the first time in
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a decade . what other moves are a decade. what other moves are going to emanate from the prime minister's landmark speech on friday? >> it's interesting . chris >> it's interesting. chris packham has come out and said that no groups just apple that no groups like just apple should always be allowed to protest outside mps homes , so protest outside mps homes, so that's quite interesting. but also one other story that you may or may not have seen yet is the church of england. the row over slavery reparations continues . they've been told by continues. they've been told by a report that they commissioned themselves that £100 million is not enough . instead, they have not enough. instead, they have to raise £1 billion to atone for their historic role you wish for. >> it gets gets to be a bit like austin powers, doesn't it, where you sort of have doctor evil going 1 billion squillion for billion , a billion. billion, a billion. >> i mean, it's all just pretend money to get that sort of money from. >> well, i have no idea. but hopefully they're raising it rather taking it out of rather than taking it out of some roots . some roots. >> church would be fixed >> church roofs would be fixed before they sort of got to sending . sending. >> parishes are furious, of course. >> well, it's just wokery >> well, it's just more wokery by canterbury .
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by the archbishop of canterbury. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> okay. emily and tom, for three hours from midday. for now, with britain's now, though, you with britain's newsroom don't go newsroom on gb news. don't go anywhere.
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>> it's 1140 >> it's1140 as britain's newsroom on gb news with andrew pierce and bev turner. so we're going to hear what the chancellor, jeremy hunt, has to say the budget on say ahead of the budget on wednesday, which i bet you wednesday, for which i bet you can wait. can hardly wait. >> believe that if you look around countries around the world, the countries which fastest , which are growing the fastest, whether it's north america or asia , to have lower taxes asia, to have lower taxes because that makes a more dynamic , more energetic, more dynamic, more energetic, more entrepreneurial economy. so we do want to move to a lower tax economy, but we're only going to do so in a way that is responsible and recognises that there are things that taxes pay for , that we couldn't cut taxes for, that we couldn't cut taxes
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by borrowing. we'll do so in a responsible way. but if we can spend money on public services more efficiently , then that will more efficiently, then that will mean less pressure on taxpayers . mean less pressure on taxpayers. >> you're reportedly going to crack down on non—doms . crack down on non—doms. >> um, have you run out of your own ideas? are you setting traps for labour? why are you pinching labour policies ? labour policies? >> you'll have to see on wednesday precisely what i'm going to announce . yes, but let going to announce. yes, but let me be clear. there is a plan for growth compared to the labour party that has just had to abandon the central plan they had for growth. this 28 billion number, that one day they were supporting . the next day they supporting. the next day they weren't our plan is working. we've halved inflation in. we have 800 more people in work for every day. conservatives have beenin every day. conservatives have been in office since 2010. more jobs , more investment, lower jobs, more investment, lower inflation. and we are laying the foundations for long terme growth and finally, we've seen
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pubuc growth and finally, we've seen public outrage at the post office scandal contaminated blood victims have been waiting decades longer. >> the government was advised to pay >> the government was advised to pay out last year and yet it's still not happening. are you delaying to help you fund these tax cuts that we hear? >> are coming? >> are coming? >> i am personally committed to paying >> i am personally committed to paying the victims of the contaminated blood scandal as quickly as possible . i was the quickly as possible. i was the health secretary that set up the inquiry. i've given evidence to the inquiry twice. it is an appalling scandal and the government will not do anything to stand in the way of payments being made as quickly as possible . when the inquiry has possible. when the inquiry has concluded its results. but sir bnan concluded its results. but sir brian langstaff, of the inquiry , brian langstaff, of the inquiry, said you could start making payments straight away. >> why is that not happening, sir brian langstaff has said that he will report his findings . on the 20th of may, and the government wants to give its response to that as quickly as
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possible because this is an appalling scandal and we need to pay appalling scandal and we need to pay the families any compensation their own as quickly as possible . chancellor. quickly as possible. chancellor. thank you. thank you, thank you very much. >> not at all. >> not at all. >> thank you for coming down. well, there we are. >> jeremy hunt gearing up with that sort of slightly lack of you know, there was a time when you know, there was a time when you or heard a word you never saw or heard a word from the chancellor in the month before, a budget. >> it was called purdah. nothing. and he's everywhere. >> yeah. everywhere. >> and |. everywhere. >> and most of the stuff that's beenin >> and most of the stuff that's been in the the budget, we been in the in the budget, we already be in already know i'll be in whitehaven on wednesday, as will michelle will nigel farage. >> andrew will be in westminster for day. are for budget day. if you are there, do come and say hello to for budget day. if you are the|and) come and say hello to for budget day. if you are the|and icome and say hello to for budget day. if you are the|and i cane and say hello to for budget day. if you are the|and i can interview hello to for budget day. if you are the|and i can interview you.o to for budget day. if you are the|and i can interview you ono me and i can interview you on the telly. now, first of all, one the biggest girls one of the biggest girls football country football leagues in the country faces shut down for faces being shut down for refusing boy to refusing to allow a boy to play in matches. in their matches. >> boy's parents asked >> the boy's parents asked her west riding girls league if their could us. he their son could join us. he didn't play with other didn't want to play with other boys they were worried about boys and they were worried about his honestly. his ability level honestly. >> joining is the >> well, joining us now is the director of campaigns, sex matters. mckenna.
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matters. fiona mckenna. good morning really morning fiona. it's really disappointing. this story isn't it, because effectively what this mother of this boy is saying, well, he's he's not good enough to play in the boys league. so i want him to play in the girls league . um, and i the girls league. um, and i don't think anybody wins in that situation, particularly not the boy. maybe his parents are saying, you're not good enough. go them. go and play with them. >> what we understand is >> yeah. what we understand is he's been playing with girls for a while, but that's just storing up trouble because sooner or later has let the girls later he has to let the girls have their own teams and their own league. you know, the girls teams there for them when teams are there for them when boys and girls play football together. we often hear that the boys pass to the girls. boys don't pass to the girls. there are good reasons for having girls. girls sports separately. so this is just storing up trouble. it makes no sense at all. and there already is a mixed so girls who is a mixed league. so girls who want play with and boys want to play with boys and boys who play girls have want to play with boys and boys w place play girls have want to play with boys and boys wplace to play girls have want to play with boys and boys wplace to goylay girls have want to play with boys and boys wplace to go .ay girls have want to play with boys and boys wplace to go . um, girls have want to play with boys and boys wplace to go . um, thisirls have want to play with boys and boys wplace to go . um, this is; have want to play with boys and boys wplace to go . um, this is theve a place to go. um, this is the girls league. it's for the girls who chose not to play with boys. so outrageous that so it's really outrageous that
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they put under they they're being put under pressure . and it's kind of pressure. and it's a kind of emotional blackmail on them. pressure. and it's a kind of emyi'm1al blackmail on them. pressure. and it's a kind of emyi'm surprised 1ail on them. pressure. and it's a kind of emyi'm surprised theyyn them. pressure. and it's a kind of emyi'm surprised they agreen. pressure. and it's a kind of emyi'm surprised they agree to >> i'm surprised they agree to allow the boy to play in the first place. fiona. they could have just said very politely, this is girls and it's this is a girls team and it's only to be played with only going to be played by with girls. that girls. well i think that illustrates the pressure that girls can be put under. >> andrew, you know , this has >> andrew, you know, this has come to light now because this boy wants to play competitively with all these other teams in the league . um, but presumably the league. um, but presumably there's already a set girls there's already a set of girls who either they're really felt or felt they had no choice but to say it was okay. >> so , so, so sorry to interrupt >> so, so, so sorry to interrupt you so this this child is practising with the girls, is that right? >> is doing the training with them, but they don't want him to play them, but they don't want him to play competitively in the matches. >> well, i don't know the full details, what is the details, but what i know is the justification that was given to the other teams in the league was that he had already been playing girls for a while playing with girls for a while right me, that's right now. to me, that's completely irrelevant , right? completely irrelevant, right? and they had have and the fact they had to have a special ask only
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special meeting to ask only proves that it's inappropriate. yeah because they don't have to have meetings for anyone else. yeah because they don't have to haerah,etings for anyone else. yeah because they don't have to haerah,eti|would anyone else. yeah because they don't have to haerah,eti|would be yone else. yeah because they don't have to haerah,eti|would be outrageous >> yeah, it would be outrageous if they're suspended . if they're suspended. >> yes, it would be outrageous. >> yes, it would be outrageous. >> but i think show the, >> but i think it does show the, the, the sort of contradiction that arises when you start to break down some simple rules. you know, the faa already allow, uh, men who say they're women if they claim a trans identity, they're already allowed into women's leagues. and we know the problems that that has caused and to cause . this and continues to cause. this boy, i don't believe, is claiming a trans identity, but it's no different than i would be furious . be furious. >> thank you. fiona, we've got to move on. i'd be furious if basically that would take basically that boy would take a place the girls team and it's place in the girls team and it's hard girls to hard enough to get girls to stick when they stick with sport when they become anyway become young women anyway as it is. after threatening west is. so after threatening west riding league with riding girls league with suspension, have released suspension, the fa have released this statement. west riding fa is with the relevant is working with the relevant league on league and associated clubs on this matter, and we will continue to support them that continue to support them so that an solution an appropriate solution can be found all. found for all. >> want to ensure everybody
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>> we want to ensure everybody has opportunity to play has the opportunity to play junior with junior football, including with the mixed teams. >> best option, we >> if that's the best option, we have place, go on have rules in place, they go on which designed to create which are designed to create opportunities girls opportunities for boys and girls to together to play football together and ensure child feels excluded ensure no child feels excluded from our game. ensure no child feels excluded frorandr game. ensure no child feels excluded frorand igame. ensure no child feels excluded frorand i would include that >> and i would include in that the to play on the girl who wants to play on the girl who wants to play on the who might excluded the team, who might get excluded because the and it seems because of the boy and it seems it's girls and it's it's a girls league and it's appropriate my appropriate that i'm wearing my new that says new necklace today that says womanhood is a birthright. are my football's gone mad. come, football's gone mad. national do come, football's gone mad. natiknow do come, football's gone mad. natiknow which do come, football's gone mad. natiknow which singer do come, football's gone mad. natiknow which singer butchers you know which singer butchers like best? andrew. just don't say meatloaf. >> meatloaf didn't write it. >> meatloaf didn't write it. >> you with britain's newsroom on
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gb news. now the week you've all been waiting for it is national butchers week. >> bev and i are big fans of butchers. >> that's right. this is a time to celebrate the skill and craftsmanship of our butchers. but can afford to go to but can people afford to go to their butchers anymore? do their butchers anymore? where do you chops from? you get your lamb chops from?
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well, is our reporter well, joining us is our reporter , anna riley. good morning anna. we neglect our butchers at our peril, don't we? we see them closing on our high street. we have to go and buy the cheaper meat from the supermarkets. but i think it's a very high price to pay . to pay. >> good morning, bev and andrew. >> good morning, bev and andrew. >> well, yes. butchers are a staple of our high street. it's a trade that goes back to the middle ages and we've got over 5600 butchers businesses in the uk, and it is one that we want to see continuing compared to going to a supermarket to buy your meat, you can get so much more at your local butchers. you've got that, uh, customer facing role so you can the butcher can really get to know you . you can really get to know you. you can really get to know your local butcher . you. you can really get to know your local butcher. you you. you can really get to know your local butcher . you get good your local butcher. you get good value for money well , because value for money as well, because you're buying pre—packaged you're not buying pre—packaged meat are at meat like you are at supermarkets. you can buy exactly you want
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exactly what cut you want and exactly what cut you want and exactly how much you want exactly how much meat you want to buy, which helps us while we're struggling financially at the moment . and it also helps the moment. and it also helps the moment. and it also helps the local businesses in the area. and it also supports local farmers as well. you're not buying meat, say, from new zealand . when you go to zealand. when you go to a supermarket, you're buying locally sourced meat from local farmers . i'm locally sourced meat from local farmers. i'm here in hull, i've been speaking to dean dixon . he been speaking to dean dixon. he owns dixon's brothers butchers business that's been going since 1950. and this is what he had to say. i think the main thing for a local butcher is you can get what you want. >> you're not getting a pack size that's stipulated to you by the supermarket . if you want two the supermarket. if you want two rashers of bacon, you come in and get to of bacon. and get 2 to 2 rashers of bacon. if you want four sausage, you get four sausage. if you want three quarters a of three quarters of a pound of mince, three quarters of mince, you get three quarters of a mince. so you're not a pound of mince. so you're not stuck to the to the stipulation of sizes that they do in their packs, which can then obviously cut waste for you using cut down on waste for you using it expense because you're
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it and expense because you're not things you need i >> -- >> so dean , they're just telling >> so dean, they're just telling the benefits of going to your local butcher and supporting the local butcher and supporting the local economy. i asked him as well with the chancellor's spnng well with the chancellor's spring budget coming up on wednesday what he wants to see, and he said he wants to see more support for local businesses, local butchers like himself, to keep high streets thriving . hugh keep high streets thriving. hugh anna, anna reilly there. >> honestly, i went to the britwell salome farm shop on saturday and that point that the butcher made, then you don't have to go in and buy a load of bacon if you just want a few rashers. yeah, actually you rashers. yeah, so actually you end less food away. end up throwing less food away. so even though it might be more expensive know where it's come because you know where it's come from and it's healthy and it's well reared, you probably don't waste well reared, you probably don't wasthey might cut your the joint >> they might cut your the joint you and they and they you want and they and also they tell to cook it for. >> yeah i got some lovely sausages , i got some bacon. sausages, i got some bacon. >> and you know what? i've a >> and you know what? i've got a renewed appreciation for this might you. black
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might surprise you. black pudding. i've recently developed a taste for black pudding. >> i don't like black pudding. >> i don't like black pudding. >> i don't like black pudding. >> i thought you might say that. >> i thought you might say that. >> know it's a northern >> no, i know it's a northern delicacy. >> and on that bombshell, you were going to say >> well, it's a delicacy. tom harwood . andrew harwood. andrew >> i can't believe you there. but also, my goodness, black pudding is delicious. but also, my goodness, black pudding is delicious . and you pudding is delicious. and you should try some sometime . but should try some sometime. but we're going to be moving on from delicacy intricacies of delicacy to the intricacies of what is going on in our politics. are we safe in this country ? the government is country? the government is looking to redefine extremism, to keep those hate preachers off the streets. we'll be looking into all of the detail here on good afternoon britain. after this looks like things are heating up. >> boxt boilers, sponsors of weather on . gb news. weather on. gb news. >> hello, i'm alex deakin and this is your latest weather update from the met office for
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gb news fog this morning. >> clearing away for most. it's a dry and a bright afternoon, but there is rain in the south—west of england and south wales from this area of low pressure , the isobar squeezing pressure, the isobar squeezing together as well so as well as rain. it is also turning windy. some pulses of rain as some heavy pulses of rain as well, not great on the m5 and well, so not great on the m5 and parts of m4 as that rain parts of the m4 as that rain spreads south wales later spreads into south wales later ahead of it for most dry and bright. some fog this morning, but that's clearing away now and some good spells of sunshine and temperatures struggling a little bit. still single figures for many , maybe 11 or 12 in the many, maybe 11 or 12 in the south east, but feeling colder with the wind and the rain in the south—west. now that rain spreads across of wales into spreads across all of wales into the this evening, parts the midlands this evening, parts of england then to of southeast england then to northern and southern northern ireland and southern scotland , easing off does scotland, easing off as it does so as it moves through, leaving the moisture behind. it will turn quite murky for a while. some fog patches, particularly by dawn over parts of the midlands and eastern england , midlands and eastern england, turning quite chilly too for wales southwest england.
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wales and southwest england. some pockets frost here on some pockets of frost here on tuesday . a bit of a mish tuesday morning. a bit of a mish mash then to start tuesday. some fog around but that clear fog around but that should clear . northeast . fairly damp over northeast england and eastern scotland. staying damp across staying a bit damp across aberdeenshire most of the aberdeenshire for most of the day. some showers in the south for parts hampshire moving for parts of hampshire moving up towards or heavy ones towards kent. 1 or 2 heavy ones possible here, but for many it will be a dry and bright day will be a dry and a bright day on and feeling a touch on tuesday and feeling a touch warmer that warm feeling warmer too. that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers sponsors of weather on .
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gb news. >> good afternoon britain. it's 12:00 on monday, the 4th of march. >> extremism could be redefined for the first time in a decade as part of a wider crackdown on those who seek to undermine our democracy . democracy. >> this comes as george galloway is to be sworn into parliament. this afternoon, introduced by
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his old friend jeremy corbyn. will he be shunned or find other allies in the commons ? allies in the commons? >> hm and labour comes under fire as a shadow minister, says young people will have no option for a life on benefits if they win the election is a tougher stance on welfare , though a vote stance on welfare, though a vote winner reparations the church of england has been told that its proposed £100 million in investments is not enough to atone for its historical links in the slave trade, and that they should instead invest ten times as much. >> £1 billion as. >> £1 billion as. >> there's one chipper man today, isn't there ? there is. today, isn't there? there is. george galloway . george galloway. >> he's already been spotted swanning into parliament and saying that he actually quite likes the place. at least the buildings. not the people. >> yes, he says he's a feeling good. that's what george
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galloway

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