tv Patrick Christys Tonight GB News March 5, 2024 3:00am-5:01am GMT
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christys tonight and you said 9000? 9000.7 >> yes , we are 9000? >> yes , we are ready 9000.7 >> yes , we are ready to 9000? >> yes , we are ready to do this >> yes, we are ready to do this is a dodgy , unqualified is a dodgy, unqualified immigrant coming round to your elderly relative's house. >> plus, so that's why i'm predicting here the next election will be about muslims vs george galloway says the quiet bit out loud and the archbishop of canterbury and other woke nutters vote down rwanda also . nana is the new age i >> labour's shadow culture secretary slams rule britannia on my panel tonight it's express columnist carole malone. trade unionist andy mcdonald and ex brexit party mep belinda d'alessio and what happens next . d'alessio and what happens next. here.7 get ready britain, here we go .
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go. are your loved ones being cared for by a foreign con artist. next. >> good evening. at a minute after nine, i'm polly middlehurst . well, our top story middlehurst. well, our top story today is the government has suffered a string of defeats to its flagship immigration policy. the rwanda bill in the house of lords tonight peers have been voting variously in favour of monitoring mechanisms which would ensure safeguards in the bill would be fully implemented , bill would be fully implemented, and making sure the bill is fully compliant with international and domestic law. nearly 50 amendments were put forward , with more being voted forward, with more being voted on wednesday. well, the prime minister, rishi sunak, previously warned the lords against frustrating the will of the people by hampering the passage of safety of rwanda passage of his safety of rwanda bill. meanwhile, a record 385 migrants crossed the english
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channel today. that's the largest number on a single day this year . gb largest number on a single day this year. gb news understands a seventh small boat crossed into uk waters this evening, carrying 49 migrant. it follows six other boats carrying 336 people, which were intercepted by border force officials earlier on today and yesterday, the home office recorded 327 people arriving in the uk after making the journey in eight small boats, suggesting an average of around 41 migrants per boat . the chancellor says he per boat. the chancellor says he wants to move the uk to a lower tax economy, but will only do so in a responsible way. jeremy hunt was visiting a new digital engineering plant in wiltshire , engineering plant in wiltshire, where he also announced a £360 million funding boost for manufacture . bring income tax manufacture. bring income tax has reached an historic high and whilst he's promised some tax cuts , the chancellor has also cuts, the chancellor has also been trying to manage expectations ahead of wednesday's budget . newly wednesday's budget. newly
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elected rochdale mp george galloway was sworn into parliament today . the workers parliament today. the workers party of britain leader pledged allegiance to the king as part of the ceremony after winning last week's rochdale by—election by more than 5500 votes. speaking today , he said it's my speaking today, he said it's my job to try to make rochdale great again and donald trump has cleared another hurdle in his bid for the us presidency after a supreme court victory today. the ruling means the republican candidate will appear on the ballot on tuesdays. colorado primary vote. the justices unanimously reversed a decision by the state of colorado to exclude him from the ballot following accusations about the capitol riots in 2021. the rally is celebrating saving more than 146,000 lives today, as it marks its 200th anniversary. the duke of kent was among those attending a service of thanksgiving at westminster abbey during which the archbishop of canterbury praised
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volunteers as models for everyone who risked their lives for people they don't even know. the royal national lifeboat institution was founded in a pub 200 years ago as a service to save ships and crew from dangerous coastlines . those are dangerous coastlines. those are the main stories for the very latest do sign up to gb news alerts, scan that qr code on your screen right now or go to gb news. com slash. alerts . gb news. com slash. alerts. >> welcome along . there is >> welcome along. there is a massive scandal here is a dodgy, unqualified immigrant working in your loved ones care home or even coming round to their house every day. there is a deadly cottage industry of people paying cottage industry of people paying thousands of pounds to crooks to lie their way into britain , britain's care homes britain, britain's care homes and the actual homes of the elderly and infirm. here is undercover footage obtained by the mail showing a baptist minister asking for £9,000 in
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cash to guarantee that a woman with no qualifications can become a home carer in the north east. >> the price already? uh, yeah . >> the price already? uh, yeah. >> the price already? uh, yeah. >> just wanted to go away . and >> just wanted to go away. and you said 9000? yes >> if you are ready to do this. >> if you are ready to do this. >> and what kind of words ? >> and what kind of words? dermot o'leary acas . what do i dermot o'leary acas. what do i need to provide it to start the process , to give me one? process, to give me one? >> okay . before you go through >> okay. before you go through normal procedures. >> okay . >> okay. >> okay. >> uh, do i have to pay everything upfront ? and i everything upfront? and i obviously don't have anything to worry about with with the home office . office. the company . office. the company. >> i suspect this will be happening everywhere. here are
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the sickening facts . we had the sickening facts. we had 164,000 care home vacancies in 2021. apparently, the government then relaxed the entry rules to make it easier for immigrants to work in the care sector. britain granted . 337,240 work visas . in granted. 337,240 work visas. in 2023, 26% higher than in 2022. this includes 140 6500 health and social care visas. that is apparently a 91% increase on the previous year. they also brought their dependents with them. 73% of family visas were reportedly for people working in the health and social care sector. that's around 204,000 people. how many of these are dodgy companies need to sponsor care workers to be granted a visa. some of these companies are bogus with copy and paste websites, fake looking reviews and po boxes as addresses . reviews and po boxes as addresses. some companies have never filed accounts and are only a few months old. at least
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268 companies, those that have never been inspected by the care quality commission , have also quality commission, have also been granted licenses . others been granted licenses. others appear to have been granted licenses by the home office, despite not being registered with the watchdog at all, the home office issued 275 visas to a care home that didn't even exist . this a care home that didn't even exist. this was a care home that didn't even exist . this was revealed a care home that didn't even exist. this was revealed in a report written by david neil, who was appointed as the independent chief inspector of borders and immigration. what happened ? well, he was sacked, happened? well, he was sacked, wasn't he possibly because he didn't keep his mouth shut . we didn't keep his mouth shut. we already scandal of already have a total scandal of patients dying in some cases because foreign care home staff are unable to speak english properly , can't explain their properly, can't explain their symptoms to 999 call handlers. what kind of life have the elderly and most vulnerable people in society got ? if they people in society got? if they can't even understand their own carers? and now it turns out that loads of those carers won't even be qualified , and they are even be qualified, and they are literally just random foreign people who have paid thousands of pounds to a to criminal lie
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their way into britain. and they've probably brought their families with well . but families with them as well. but this is the government's fault and nobody else's. instead of training more british care workers and paying them more money, they decided to just flood market with cheap flood the market with cheap foreign and way , foreign labour. and by the way, they're to do it with they're about to do it with teachers . overseas teachers as well. overseas applications for teacher training have doubled this year in unprecedented increase in an unprecedented increase after ministers began a recruitment drive in countries like and india and like nigeria and india and offered £10,000 payments for foreign teachers to come to britain . but back to the care britain. but back to the care sector . it makes britain. but back to the care sector. it makes me britain. but back to the care sector . it makes me sick that sector. it makes me sick that this is how we treat our greatest generation , our greatest generation, our elderly, our most vulnerable , elderly, our most vulnerable, all people who have paid their tax all their lives worked hard , tax all their lives worked hard, done the right thing and bear in mind that only about 1% of abuse claims in care homes actually result in a conviction. so they've got that against them as well. nothing sums up our broken immigration system more than somebody with no qualifications whatsoever being given. the key to an elderly dementia sufferers
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own home. let's get the thoughts now of my panel. i am joined this evening by daily express columnist carole malone . i've columnist carole malone. i've got trade unionist andy mcdonald and course the ex brexit and of course the ex brexit party mep belinda de lucy. carole is our immigration policy putting the most vulnerable, at risk ? risk? >> oh, completely. what you just said, you know, it gets me in this that, you know, this country that, you know, we're be we're supposed to be a compassionate society and yet we treat the most vulnerable and the people our the frailest people in our society so very badly. it's what you just said there. you know, when into a care home, when you go into a care home, it's bad enough that you're away from your family and your friends and the of friends and all the rest of it. then you're then you're you're looked by migrant care looked after by migrant care workers, whom have come workers, many of whom have come here illegally sense that here illegally in the sense that they've for visas. they've paid for their visas. and we saw that baptist minister, i cannot believe that baptist minister saying to someone, you've got to pay me nine anyway, we should nine grand. anyway, we should name shouldn't did name her, shouldn't we? did we name her, shouldn't we? did we name him? let's call the. he's called reverend um, name him? let's call the. he's ca ied reverend um, name him? let's call the. he's ca ied pronounce um, name him? let's call the. he's ca ied pronounce it um, name him? let's call the. he's ca ied pronounce it. um, name him? let's call the. he's ca ied pronounce it . are um, name him? let's call the. he's ca ied pronounce it . are you or i can't pronounce it. are you whaley are whaley? yes. whaley or are you whaley? yes. um. the most vulnerable in
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um. and the most vulnerable in our society. and you just said it your intro there. they. it in your intro there. they. you , they're understood it in your intro there. they. yotthe , they're understood it in your intro there. they. yotthe people ey're understood it in your intro there. they. yotthe people coming understood it in your intro there. they. yotthe people coming from,'stood it in your intro there. they. yotthe people coming from, you d by the people coming from, you know, to be a carer. i think you have to a very special kind have to be a very special kind of have of person. you have to have compassion. have compassion. you have to have time. you have to have understanding. will time. you have to have undelikelyiing. will time. you have to have undelikely qualifications will time. you have to have undelikely qualifications as will very likely qualifications as well, of which is the well, of course, which is the key without key point that goes without saying. but , key point that goes without saying. but, you key point that goes without saying. but , you know, even saying. but but, you know, even if didn't have qualification if you didn't have qualification , if you were all of those things that would of things that would kind of be okay it's not. it means okay ish. but it's not. it means that people are and, you that our people are and, you know, no coincidence that know, it's no coincidence that the instances of abuse in care homes has gone up hugely in the past 2 or 3 years, where families now have to put cameras in because their stories about their, loved their, you know, their loved ones are telling them they're being shoved whatever. >> okay, andy, for me, the fault here is directly with the home office instead of training and paying office instead of training and paying british workers more to do these jobs, they've accepted the trope that british individuals can't be bothered to work in a care home, and so they've just outsourced it to
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other countries, and they're not bothered to actually check if these people are qualified . yeah. >> well, absolutely. i don't yeah. >> wit's absolutely. i don't yeah. >> wit's just»lutely. i don't yeah. >> wit's just thely. i don't yeah. >> wit's just the home)n't yeah. >> wit's just the home office. think it's just the home office. it's also the government, it's also the wider government, the for education the department for education would the would be responsible for the training. you you training. uh, but, you know, you look at the home office, we've had home secretaries in had five home secretaries in five clearly not five years. this is clearly not a government takes it a government that takes it seriously. and, you know, looking wider health and looking at the wider health and social can see social care sector, we can see that a net benefit that migrants have a net benefit in the nhs, example, we've in the nhs, for example, we've got fantastic migrant got some fantastic migrant qualified and nurses qualified doctors and nurses that are the backbone of the nhs . so when do it properly it . so when we do it properly it works quite well. but it's just ridiculous that this, this bloke has been allowed to get away with seemingly . with this seemingly. >> yeah, mean, this , >> yeah, belinda, i mean, this, to be honest you, makes me to be honest with you, makes me feel got most feel sick. we've got our most vulnerable our greatest vulnerable and our greatest generation. and this isn't just about this is about about care homes. this is about domicile care. this about domicile care. this is about someone letting themselves in to your mum or dad's house or your grandma or granddad's house. okay. to care for them on a daily basis and potentially not only not speaking a word of english, but not actually being a carer .
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a carer. >> um, the home office, the government, the treasury, they've given up britain , they've given up on britain, they've given up on britain, they've on british they've given up on british workers, they've our workers, they've given up on our workforce . um, i don't know why workforce. um, i don't know why they're called home office, workforce. um, i don't know why they're citled home office, workforce. um, i don't know why they're cit seems home office, workforce. um, i don't know why they're cit seems to>me office, workforce. um, i don't know why they're cit seems to be; office, workforce. um, i don't know why they're cit seems to be more :e, workforce. um, i don't know why they're cit seems to be more of because it seems to be more of an international office and how to use and abuse this country more than anything for its own people . people. >> well, i find it immoral to constantly strip poorer countries anyway of their workforce rather than train our own, but they seem to be happy to they've the to do that. they've put the pubuc to do that. they've put the public patients at public at risk. patients at risk, elderly risk. they do risk, elderly at risk. they do not because they want not care because all they want is quick fix to their failed is a quick fix to their failed policies. it's an outrage. >> it is really. now, carol, i'll just move it over to you on this for the moment, which is that, you if are old that, you know, if you are old and you've maybe got some other kind right? kind of issue there, right? it is at times to is difficult enough at times to understand, oh, god. yes. okay. yes. and they get called all of these things. oh, gosh. you know, the old person must be so racist they couldn't racist because they couldn't understand this person understand what this person was saying, that saying, despite the fact that we've failing to we've seen people failing to alert properly to someone, alert 999 properly to someone, symptoms that person died
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because didn't because that individual didn't have a good enough grasp at the engush have a good enough grasp at the english language. the bare minimum they could do minimum that they could do is do as the courtesy. government as the courtesy. this government of that the people of making sure that the people in actually had qualification. >> what's happening? qualification. >> office it's happening? qualification. >> office it'syompening? qualification. >> office it'syou pointed’ the home office is you pointed out in your intro there that at least 268 companies were least 268 companies that were granted were not even granted visas were not even checked out by the quality care commission. what that's commission. that's what that's what for , for god's what they exist for, for god's sake. the home office gave sake. and the home office gave 1234 visas to a company that only had four staff. if that's not a bogus company, i don't know what is . and so they don't know what is. and so they don't care. but you know, this story is not new. this is what annoys me story in me. the guardian ran a story in july last year about the migrants coming over and getting dodgy visas. not the government has known about it was presented with report before christmas . with a report before christmas. it's done nothing. they don't care. >> patrick. >> patrick. >> they really don't care. and you know, they're we'll you know, they're saying we'll deal they deal with it now, are they are they going to arrest that baptist minister? are they going to people in these companies? they certainly won't deport >> they certainly won't deport anyone the companies >> well, no, but the companies that that they're that have admitted that they're lying home office to get lying to the home office to get a visa, some of companies
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a visa, some of those companies get don't even get the visas that don't even provide just provide home care. they just sell the visas. that's a criminal offence. and the home office doing it knowing office is doing it knowing exactly they're doing. yeah. >> i mean, rageous obviously this particular baptist minister is here defend himself is not to here defend himself and have to be. we and maybe doesn't have to be. we just yeah, know, and maybe doesn't have to be. we just he yeah, know, and maybe doesn't have to be. we just he deniesaah, know, and maybe doesn't have to be. we just he denies anything.n, maybe he denies anything. >> you've to >> i know you've got to say that, we just heard him. that, but we just heard him. >> now people that, but we just heard him. >> fundamentally w people that, but we just heard him. >>fundamentally wake people that, but we just heard him. >> fundamentally wake upaople that, but we just heard him. >> fundamentally wake up toyle that, but we just heard him. >> fundamentally wake up to the do fundamentally wake up to the fact that we are being completely conned completely and utterly conned here by some illegal migrants, by a cottage industry , whether by a cottage industry, whether it's lawyers fabricating asylum claims, whether it's the church baptising people who sometimes go baptising people who sometimes 9° up baptising people who sometimes go up to blow themselves up outside maternity hospital in outside a maternity hospital in liverpool , or whether liverpool, or whether it's people carers being people here or fake carers being allowed is allowed into people's homes. is it that the government just it time that the government just admitted this and admitted all of this and everyone admitted it? even the people well, yeah, absolutely. >> 5 absolutely. >> there needs to be a serious review system review into the migration system in make sure in this country to make sure that people want that the people that want to come and actually come here and actually contribute and ones contribute can, and the ones that will kept out, that won't, will be kept out, but is this it's the but the thing is this it's the same construction, same across construction, manufacturing, wider health and social there is a vacancy social care. there is a vacancy crisis. it's you know, 12 hour
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shifts minimum wage. who shifts on minimum wage. who would want that? you know, would want to do that? you know, we improve the pay. would want to do that? you know, we i improve the pay. would want to do that? you know, we i get improve the pay. would want to do that? you know, we i get that, prove the pay. would want to do that? you know, we i get that, bute the pay. would want to do that? you know, we i get that, but does pay. would want to do that? you know, we i get that, but does that not >> i get that, but does that not then sort itself out? if we actually importing actually stop importing cheap foreign labour, if we stop relying on we using relying on it, we stop using this lazy, i would argue, racial trope brits don't want trope that brits don't want to do we actually do these jobs, and we actually bother train british people bother to train british people and pay them for the biggest betrayal of conservative government. >> was amount to >> brexit was a huge amount to do with training british workforce, making our country self—sufficient, and the conservatives took it and they threw it back in our faces, and it's people risk. it's putting people at risk. but they i promise they don't. i promise you, patrick, if they cared, they would done something would have done something about it the is, if we have >> and the thing is, if we have two, are two, 3 million people who are not working, who can we have to change the benefit so change the benefit system so they can't stay. >> thrown >> they've thrown brits on a scrap heap, so they're paying people at home people to work, to stay at home more they are. people to work, to stay at home mo what's they are. people to work, to stay at home mo what's also are. people to work, to stay at home mo what's also emerged today. >> what's also emerged today. okay, throw this in okay, i'll just throw this in there as this there very quickly as well. this is something we're going to be touching so it's touching on tomorrow. so it's emerged the department for emerged that the department for work rather work and pensions have rather suspiciously publishing suspiciously stopped publishing data on welfare claims by nationality. so what nationality
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people on benefits are and hmrc has stopped publishing tax contributions by nationality? well, we cannot therefore know how many immigrants are coming here and claiming benefit s and we cannot officially even though i think we do all know, don't we, demographic people we, which demographic of people are benefits. are paying for those benefits. but anyway. our home but there we go anyway. our home office said we office spokesman has said we strongly offering health strongly condemn offering health and visa holders and care worker visa holders employment under false pretences and not tolerate illegal and do not tolerate illegal activity labour market. activity in the labour market. we've already action to we've already taken action to revoke the licence sponsors revoke the licence of sponsors engaged activity. we are engaged in such activity. we are committed stamping out committed to stamping out exploitation those working in exploitation of those working in the care sector and have announced providers in england will only be able to sponsor migrant are migrant workers if they are undertaking regulated undertaking activities regulated by quality commission. by the care quality commission. well okay. doctor well right. okay. and doctor reverend philip oyewole has said sorry, was the baptist minister filmed in the daily mail investigation? he told the daily mail he only gave advice to those needing to help get his sponsorship, never sponsorship, and he never benefited financially. he's added was added any advice i gave was solely intended to help them advance and be able to earn a
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respectable livelihood while lawfully remaining in the uk. the question remains will anything be done about this ? anything be done about this? well, it's the latest great british giveaway though. that's another and your chance to another one and your chance to win £12,345. that's one, 2345 in cash and a whole host of seasonal treats. here's how it could all be yours. >> we're springing into spring and giving you the chance to win the seasonal essentials. >> first, there's . an incredible >> first, there's. an incredible £12,345 in tax free cash to won , £12,345 in tax free cash to won, be plus a spring shopping spree with £500 in shopping vouchers to spend in the store of your choice . and finally, a garden choice. and finally, a garden gadget package to enjoy, including a handheld games console, a portable smart speaker and a pizza oven . for speaker and a pizza oven. for your chance to win the vouchers . your chance to win the vouchers. the treats and £12,345 in tax free cash tech gb win to 84 9002. text cost £2 plus one standard network rate message or post your name and number two gb
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zero three, po box 8690. derby d e19, double t, uk. only entrants must be 18 or over. lines closed at 5 pm. on friday. the 29th march. full terms and privacy nofice march. full terms and privacy notice at gb news. com forward slash win please check the closing time if watching or listening on demand. good luck okay good luck . okay good luck. >> now look, still to come, we're off to a flyer, but i've got a heck of a lot else on for we're off to a flyer, but i've got tonight.f a lot else on for we're off to a flyer, but i've got tonight. it'slot else on for we're off to a flyer, but i've got tonight. it's beense on for we're off to a flyer, but i've got tonight. it's been another' you tonight. it's been another record day of small record breaking day of small boat the of boat crossings, but the house of lords voted down the lords have voted down the government's rwanda bill. make it all make sense. well, despite up as well, and made a reference to the nazis for goodness sake, reform leader tice a reform leader richard tice has a crack shortly . but crack at it. very shortly. but up galloway is up next, george galloway is going after the labour party . going after the labour party. >> we'll be putting candidates up in all these places, and we will either win or make will either win or we'll make sure that keir starmer doesn't win . win. >> look, this is gripping for a variety of different reasons. labour were apparently plain sailing, not any more. i am asking should keir starmer fear george galloway ? former labour
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believe what archbishop justin welby has said in the house of lords. seriously. but it's time now for our head to head. well, he's just arrived back in westminster and already rochdale's new mp , george rochdale's new mp, george galloway, has been causing a little of trouble taking the little bit of trouble taking the fight right to labour's front doon i fight right to labour's front door. i give you just one door. if i give you just one example and ella rayner has a parliamentary majority, i think of around 3000. >> there's at least 15,000 supporters of my point of view in her constituency . so we'll be in her constituency. so we'll be putting a candidate up against her, either a workers party candidate or more likely , an candidate or more likely, an independent candidate that we support and that will vitally affect the election of the labour deputy leader . labour deputy leader. >> it comes after galloway emerged victorious in the previously safe labour seat of rochdale in the by—election last week, winning almost 40% of the vote and wooing voters disenchanted with keir starmer's
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stance on a ceasefire in gaza. so with galloway threatening to stand a candidate against angela rayner and in a lot more seats across the country , should across the country, should labour fear him, let me know your thoughts. gb views or gb news. com tweet me at gb news while you're there, go and vote in our i'll bring you the in our poll. i'll bring you the results but to results very shortly. but to debate now, i am joined by debate this now, i am joined by former labour minister bill rammell leader of rammell and the deputy leader of galloway's party of galloway's workers party of britain. it is chris williamson. chris, i think i'll start with you on this one. george galloway has decided to come out absolutely swinging. he's name checked. angela rayner, he's rattled off a load of other constituent arses. i've done the numbers on some of those constituencies and i think he could frankly all them . could frankly take all of them. how should labour be how scared should labour be of mr ? mr galloway? >> well, i think they should be afraid. should very afraid. they should be very afraid. they should be very afraid . patrick angela rayner afraid. patrick angela rayner only has a majority, i think, of, uh, 4263. and i've spoken to a lot of people in other constituencies, constituent says
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that the labour party would expect to win the constituencies that they won under tony blair. places like burton, places like amber valley , uh, places like, amber valley, uh, places like, um , uh, erewash and so on, which um, uh, erewash and so on, which is in my neck of the woods and, uh, i spoke to people there and they are determined to put forward candidates, not necessarily to win , but to necessarily to win, but to prevent labour from winning because people are determined to teach labour a lesson. there's a kind of visceral hatred of the labour party because of the way in which they so badly let down the people who were the bedrock of, of labour support for generations . generations. >> uh, okay. yes i mean, there's that side of it. the idea that maybe labour is no longer the party of the working class. there of course, the other there is, of course, the other side which is that side of it, which is that i think it's fair to say that labour muslim vote labour did court the muslim vote for . and now, labour did court the muslim vote for the . and now, labour did court the muslim vote for the situation and now, labour did court the muslim vote for the situation that'syw, labour did court the muslim vote for the situation that's going given the situation that's going on of those on in gaza, a lot of those people have decided to laugh. bill, i'll bring on this. people have decided to laugh. bmean, bring on this. people have decided to laugh. bmean, i'veig on this. people have decided to laugh. bmean, i've got on this. people have decided to laugh. bmean, i've got ca this. people have decided to laugh. bmean, i've got ca few. i mean, i've got quite a few seats in of me that seats in front of me here that include gorton and include places like gorton and denton, oldham west , uh, we've
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denton, oldham west, uh, we've got birmingham , ladywood. i got birmingham, ladywood. i mean, there's loads of these where when you look at the proportion of the muslim vote in those constituencies and you look the labour majority , uh, look at the labour majority, uh, labour are knackered . labour are knackered. >> well, let's have a reality check. patrick. the latest opinion poll from mori , out opinion poll from mori, out today, gives labour a 27% lead with the tories at the lowest level since mori started opinion polling . in 1978. um, you know, polling. in 1978. um, you know, we've been here before, galloway has won one of the elections and at the subsequent general election has been roundly defeated because people have trust him and know he's an ipsis who specialises in fomenting hatred and division in muslim communities. but most importantly, he won't succeed because it's clear he wants the conservatives to continue in power. >> but bill, i'm just going to stop. bill. i'm just going to stop. bill. i'm just going to stop you there . just not not for
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stop you there. just not not for any other reason. then i think we've issue with we've got a slight issue with your microphone, which we'll try and i pick and get sorted out. i did pick up lot of that, which i think up a lot of that, which i think i put to i did anyway, which i'll put to chris chris, from chris now, chris, from to paraphrase what bill said, there, vote not there, uh, your vote will not transcend nationally and george galloway whips up quite lot of galloway whips up quite a lot of hate he hate and division wherever he goes. >> well, i think bill's been a bit complacent there, to be honest with you, patrick. i mean, i do think we're in a very different situation to the one that we were after iraq that we were in after the iraq war. been that war. we've been through that experience war. we've been through that experie are absolutely outraged people are absolutely outraged about what's happening in gaza . about what's happening in gaza. but it's not just that that people are concerned about. there is no real discernible difference between the difference now between the conservative party and the labour party, whether it be on foreign policy whether be labour party, whether it be on forithe policy whether be labour party, whether it be on forithe domestic whether be labour party, whether it be on forithe domestic economic be labour party, whether it be on forithe domestic economic agenda on the domestic economic agenda ehhen on the domestic economic agenda either. and they're both committed to neoliberal economics. neither are going to obviously be, you know, addressing the profiteering, privatised utilities, rail companies and so on. and neither are going to address the fact that our manufactured industry has been absolutely decimated .
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has been absolutely decimated. jobs have been offshored to low wages, can i can i ask? >> i know, i know that you've mentioned a few other issues there, i think the point there, but i think the point stands, that major stands, which is that the major reason behind george reason behind why george galloway has got elected in rochdale in rochdale is what's going on in gaza. been a gaza. okay? and that has been a massive, issue for the massive, massive issue for the labour well. if there's labour party as well. if there's a tomorrow , right, and a ceasefire tomorrow, right, and we end up with an election in, say, november, what are you going to stand? we've got george galloway there is for rochdale thing with with the palestinian flag as the backdrop of it. right. what do you actually right. so what do you actually stand on if there's a ceasefire tomorrow and we have an election in november ? in november? >> well, let's hope and pray that there is a permanent and unconditional ceasefire. but of course, that wouldn't be enough . course, that wouldn't be enough. we'd to israel , uh, you we'd need to see israel, uh, you know, withdrawing from the occupied territories. and i think we'd also need to see think what we'd also need to see is an embargo being is an arms embargo being imposed, to see imposed, and we'd need to see a trade blockade, and we'd need to see israel removed from all international, sporting and other international civilised activities , such as the activities, such as the eurovision song contest as well.
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so, you know, i think on that side of things, the, the fact that labour, uh, was so much in the pocket of the israeli regime, they will not be forgiven, be forgiven for that. patrick >> but just just to clarify, chris, before i go back to bill then. so because i did ask you there, you know, what else are you going to on? and you going to run on? right. and it still gaza , israel it was all still gaza, israel related. that just responding ? >> well, emu— endu— >> well, i'm only responding to the made about the point that you made about that, patrick, you know, well what else you know, what else would we be? you know, and that's of issue that's the only kind of issue that's the only kind of issue that on. of that we'll be focusing on. of course, still be course, that will still still be an issue . but of an important issue. but of course, the other aspects of what talking about an what we're talking about is an economy ordinary economy that works for ordinary people, tackling the housing crisis, the fact that crisis, tackling the fact that our public services are in are in absolute meltdown . now. our in absolute meltdown. now. our infrastructure is totally unfit for purpose. look, patrick, we're the sixth biggest economy in the and we've got in the world, and yet we've got over 14 million people in over 14 million people living in poverty . that's an absolute poverty. that's an absolute scandal. and people had scandal. and people have had enough our enough of that. and look, our democracy being stolen from democracy is being stolen from us. you democracy and us. you know, democracy and politics should about giving politics should be about giving people . and there
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people a choice. and when there is choice on offer from the is no choice on offer from the labour party the conservative labour party or the conservative party, the main political party, the two main political parties , people are looking parties, people are looking around for another alternative. parties, people are looking arompeople nother alternative. parties, people are looking arompeople willer alternative. parties, people are looking arompeople will eitherrnative. parties, people are looking arompeople will either stopye. parties, people are looking arompeople will either stop at now people will either stop at home they've an home or if they've got an alternative like they had in rochdale george rochdale with with george galloway , i think people galloway, i think people will turn turn out turn out and will turn out in numbers there's numbers and there's no there's no love for the labour party . a no love for the labour party. a labour party is only riding high in the opinion polls is in the opinion polls now is because the conservative party are so incredibly unpopular to uh. but when, you know, as i say , people realise labour , people realise that labour isn't offering a credible isn't really offering a credible alternative and that's why i think the, workers party and think the, the workers party and other independent insurgent groupings can actually make a real dent in labour. >> got to ask about >> i've got to ask you about these, these independent. these, these, these independent. okay. ask you about okay. i've got to ask you about some these, this the some of these, this idea of the independent right. independent candidate. right. because i actually think i'm going discussing going to be discussing this a bit on. actually think bit later on. i actually think george galloway might have played a bit of a blinder here for suspect for a reason that i suspect you might about to get very angry might be about to get very angry with me it. okay. but it with me about it. okay. but it does mean when you've does mean that when you've got independent standing independent candidates standing independent candidates standing in hypothetically ,
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in places and if hypothetically, they decide to come out with something incredibly fruity at a hustings or something like that, and yes, let's say that is israel related . chris. okay, israel related. chris. okay, then. actually, george galloway can wash his hands of that because he goes, well, they're an independent can't an independent and they can't lose anyone lose the whip from anyone because independent. because they're an independent. and so just crack and and so they just crack on and they end up winning. and so they just crack on and the right. end up winning. and so they just crack on and the right. is end up winning. and so they just crack on and the right. is this nd up winning. and so they just crack on and the right. is this nd lactuallng. all right. is this not actually a to use. so that a tactic really to use. so that actually potentially wider elements british public elements of the british public might , might be might be concerned, might be concerned with workers concerned that with workers party britain back ing, some party of britain back ing, some of these independent candidates , of these independent candidates, we could end up with some. i'll just say it proper rhiannon we could end up with some. i'll just s.in it proper rhiannon we could end up with some. i'll just s.in parliament. annon we could end up with some. i'll just s.in parliament. chris. jones in parliament. chris. >> well, listen , i think we've >> well, listen, i think we've got about 650 proper romans in parliament right now. so we couldn't do any worse. and you know, look, thousands , know, look, there's thousands, millions of people out there who could far better than, could do a far better job than, than parliamentarians who than the parliamentarians who seem in the pockets of the seem to be in the pockets of the of military industrial of the military industrial complex and corporate capitalism. no, look , i capitalism. but no, look, i don't it's as cynical as don't think it's as cynical as that. we're saying that. patrick what we're saying is obviously field is we want to obviously field a lot of candidates, but what we're it's we're also saying is, look, it's not the highway .
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not our way or the highway. we're will work we're saying that we will work with and we've got people with others and we've got people like, uh, andrew feinstein, for example, who's going to be fielding uh, be standing fielding, uh, uh, be standing against, uh, sir keir starmer in his own backyard . andrew his own backyard. andrew feinstein, credible feinstein, a very credible candidate in with a chance, actually, , you know, as it actually, of, you know, as it were, beheading the, the labour party. he was an african national congress mp under under um, nelson mandela. um, and um, uh, nelson mandela. um, and so we're very, very happy to, to work with independent groups is what we're very keen to do though ensure that though patrick, is ensure that we don't field candidates against each other. what we're determined to do is try and maximise the alternative to labour and the conservatives by getting behind either an independent candidate or a workers party candidate, or maybe party from an maybe another party from from an insurgent , maybe another party from from an insurgent, uh, insurgent. >> . and i insurgent, uh, insurgent. >> .and i do insurgent, uh, insurgent. >> . and i do think it >> absolutely. and i do think it is going to have a massive beanng is going to have a massive bearing out in the next general election. and i think keir starmer because starmer is trapped because he can't any softer on israel, can't go any softer on israel, because he's going guarantee because he's going to guarantee to lose of the vote that to lose a lot of the vote that you sweeping up. and he you guys are sweeping up. and he can't uh, on them
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can't go any harder, uh, on them ehhen can't go any harder, uh, on them either, because then he would play either, because then he would play sorts this play into all sorts of this issue labour issue with archewell labour are back days, etc. back to the bad old days, etc. but look, thank you but look, chris, thank you very much. he much. chris williamson there he was, deputy leader of the was, the deputy leader of the workers party and now workers of britain party and now labour leader sir keir starmer did say this after george galloway's victory in rochdale . galloway's victory in rochdale. >> galloway only won because labour didn't stand a candidate . labour didn't stand a candidate. i regret that we had to withdraw our candidate and apologise to voters in rochdale , but i took voters in rochdale, but i took that decision. it was the right decision and when i say i changed the labour party, i mean it . obviously we will put it. obviously we will put a first class candidate, a unifier before the voters in rochdale at the general election. look you can say what you like about chris williamson, george galloway and all of that, okay? >> absolutely. and loads of people have done loads of people have done it and loads of people have done it and loads of people but the fact is, people will. but the fact is, if they putting their own they are putting under their own candidates or backing independent candidates on the same , that galloway same issue, that george galloway beat everyone else in rochdale on variety of different on in a variety of different constituencies, am going constituencies, which i am going to with you very,
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to run through with you very, very , i think it is very shortly, i think it is reasonable expect that they reasonable to expect that they will absolute will give labour an absolute kicking, but who do you agree with? labour mr with? should labour fear? mr galloway obvious that galloway said it's obvious that galloway said it's obvious that galloway to get galloway is trying to get starmer to bend to his way of thinking. the thing is that thinking. the sad thing is that he doesn't have the backbone to stand elliott says. stand up to him, elliott says. galloway do a galloway may even do labour a favour some of favour and drain off some of their left cronies . their toxic far left cronies. david likely david says the most likely outcome will be the labour adopt more muslim appeasing policies. that is, of course, david's view. look, your verdict is in 68% of you think that labour should fear galloway, 32% of you say they shouldn't . look, coming say they shouldn't. look, coming up, the highest tax burden in 70 years. and jeremy hunt is going for prudence legend of for quotes. prudence legend of fleet street kelvin mackenzie . fleet street kelvin mackenzie. let's rip on our lame duck chancellor very soon. but next, the house of lords have just voted down the government's rwanda bill. and about this rwanda bill. and how about this for salt in wound , for rubbing salt in the wound, 385 illegal migrants crossed the channel today, a record for channel today, a new record for the year. and justin welby, all he can do is talk about the nazis reform leader richard tice
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coming up, kelvin mackenzie is going to hit back at jeremy hunfs going to hit back at jeremy hunt's plans for the looming spnng hunt's plans for the looming spring budget. but first, it's time for a former uk leader, richard tice, now the house of lords has defeated the government by voting against the flagship rwanda bill on the same day that channel migrant arrivals broke a new record for
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2024. despite elected mps passing the safety of rwanda bill in the commons back in december , the unelected peers december, the unelected peers today blocked the legislation, which seeks to declare rwanda a safe country for migrant deportations. this comes as small boat arrivals broke records earlier , 385 illegal records earlier, 385 illegal migrants sailing into dover, being the highest daily figure of the year so far, more than 700 across the english channel since sunday. that's 700 since sunday, taking the total number of illegal migrants entering britain via small boats in nearly 3000 already this year, many are predicting it to be another record year. richard, with small boat arrivals once again battering our southern border, is it wrong that the house of lords have blocked the government's rwanda bill? >> well, look, it's no surprise that they've blocked this bill. >> all knew would >> we all knew that would happen. actually suits the happen. it actually suits the prime he now blame prime minister. so he now blame the lords for stopping the rwanda bill. we all know that it was any was never going to make any difference whatsoever. the
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difference whatsoever. and the proof in pudding. these proof is in the pudding. these arrivals week last week, arrivals this week last week, all this year, which are now some 35 to 40% higher than two years ago , right, clearly shows years ago, right, clearly shows it's not a deterrent. and when mark white did that, that report pre—christmas and there were sort of laughing at this rwanda thing, thinking the whole thing's joke, this thing's a farce and a joke, this just it's not just proves it. it's not a deterrent. ridiculous . deterrent. it's ridiculous. >> would you would would you scrap rwanda then? >> i was i knew it would never be deterrent. is the be a deterrent. our plan is the only that will work. you only plan that will work. you leave the and pick the leave the echr and you pick the boats up, people the boats up, people out of the boats, you safely take them boats, and you safely take them back to dunkirk. and calais, which legally entitled to which we're legally entitled to do two international do under two international maritime nobody . maritime treaties. and nobody. i've banged on about this for a yeah i've banged on about this for a year. no nobody has proven me wrong because i'm right. but none gutless , feeble none of these gutless, feeble people the house of commons, people in the house of commons, whether it's starmer, sunak , whether it's starmer, sunak, cleverly, any of them have got the guts to do it. that's the only way this will stop, because what we're seeing is that what we're seeing now is that actually are going what we're seeing now is that act andy are going what we're seeing now is that act andy and are going what we're seeing now is that act andy and up. are going
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what we're seeing now is that act and! and up. okaye going up and up and up. okay >> but you would actually, in a way the policy as way have the same policy as laboun way have the same policy as labour, which to scrap rwanda labour, which is to scrap rwanda even because even if it was working, because it's because it's not working. >> working. the >> we know it's not working. the proof's pudding, proof's in the pudding, literally. just talked literally. you've just talked about 380 odd coming over today. almost ten. i think ten have sadly lost their lives this yeah sadly lost their lives this year. my policy, the reform policy, our policy is the kind and compassionate one that will stop the death if you wanted to turn the boats back, would you not have to get that through parliament through parliament and then through nonsense, through law? nonsense, through the law? it's already allowed under international . it's international treaty law. it's there. it. i know there. i've read it. i know which literally which sentences of which clauses. it's unforgivable . all that the unforgivable. all that the government doesn't pick this up and with unforgivable and run with it. unforgivable >> they might be saying, well, actually, because don't >> they might be saying, well, actuato, because don't >> they might be saying, well, actuato contribute se don't >> they might be saying, well, actuato contribute to don't >> they might be saying, well, actuato contribute to more)n't want to contribute to more loss of in the channel. but but of life in the channel. but but it's opposite. it's the opposite. >> patrick. it'll literally save lives we'd done this when lives if we'd done this when i started those lives if we'd done this when i starpeople those lives if we'd done this when i starpeople who've those lives if we'd done this when i starpeople who've thosyear ten people who've died this year would still be alive. >> mhm. okay all right. um, we were also going to be talking about new data is revealing that not a single burglary was solved
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by police . in 48% of by police. in 48% of neighbourhoods in england and wales over the last three years. that's despite a 2022 pledge by all 43 police chiefs to attend every single break in. so no, this led you, richard, to declare the only all reform party will make britain's streets safe again. in that way, how? >> how so we issued our draft contract in doncaster last week. and as part of that , we say we and as part of that, we say we need an extra 40,000 police officers, which would bring us up sort of per head of population to a similar number to what they've got in france. we've got to get on with that recruitment process and we've got get bobbies on the got to get bobbies back on the beat urgently, away being beat urgently, away from being behind . the other thing behind the desk. the other thing you've in parallel is you've got to do in parallel is you've got to do in parallel is you've build at least you've got to build at least 10,000 places. you 10,000 detention places. you literally got to pick people up and the streets, and take them off the streets, take costing. we've take them away. costing. we've allocated the policing, we've allocated the policing, we've allocated an extra, i think 3 billion. for the criminal billion. and for the criminal and justice side of it, an extra 2 billion. and we identify in our contract which our
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our contract which is on our website, how you pay for all this we set out all this stuff. so we set out all the savings. >> and would you outline >> and then would you outline that i think you >> and then would you outline that want i think you >> and then would you outline that want tax, :hink you >> and then would you outline that want tax, don'tyou >> and then would you outline that want tax, don't you. also want to cut tax, don't you. >> absolutely. well the >> yeah, absolutely. so well the first you scrap net >> yeah, absolutely. so well the first you you scrap net >> yeah, absolutely. so well the first you save you scrap net >> yeah, absolutely. so well the first you save £30 scrap net >> yeah, absolutely. so well the first you save £30 billion1et >> yeah, absolutely. so well the first you save £30 billion per zero you save £30 billion per annum. serious cash 30 billion. if you stop the bank of england, if it stops paying interest, voluntary interest on all the qe money that was printed, the reserves, that's another 35 billion, literally £65 billion a year that can pay for tax cuts, lots of other investments and again, the waste in government spending. we all see it and it drives us nuts . they've got to drives us nuts. they've got to be tough on this stuff. you've got to say you've got to save 500. we're doing it at home. we're doing it in small businesses. government and businesses. the government and every spending department, every manager same . manager has got to do the same. you've scrap whole you've got to scrap whole departments . heard one departments. i heard of one today. heard of it. it today. i'd never heard of it. it was department a was a department of a department. and i thought, what a and a useless thing is that? and it sent survey . that's right. sent me a survey. that's right. it was a active live survey. and if it filled it in, i got paid a fiver . seriously? they've said fiver. seriously? they've said
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hundreds of thousands of these things out and they pay you a fiver if you fill in a survey. just don't bother with the survey first place. survey in the first place. >> and the other >> okay. and the other issue with potentially is that with this potentially is that it's about the laws it's not just about the laws that in place at the that we've got in place at the moment. it's actually enforced passing and that's passing those laws. and that's one issues, certainly, one of the issues, certainly, when to the protests. when it comes to the protests. >> but but >> that's because. yeah, but but that because of that again, that's because of the criminal justice system. they enough they haven't got enough resources. to resources. so you've got to increase the resourcing of it. resources. so you've got to increyeah,1e resourcing of it. resources. so you've got to increyeah,1e res0|actually it. resources. so you've got to increyeah,1e res0|actually got and yeah, you've actually got to have guidelines and sentences. >> this by >> you would fund this by scrapping net zero and getting absolutely. >> it's our contracts. so >> it's all in our contracts. so we identify . £146 we actually identify. £146 billion worth of savings and then where you've got to allocate that and within policing and criminal justice that's where you've to do. that's where you've got to do. and in. and we set and you've got in. and we set it out. needed out. the critical reforms needed in the 100 and in the first 100 days and thereafter the is urgent. thereafter the crisis is urgent. so you wouldn't just it, so you wouldn't just do it, you'd within days. you'd do it within 100 days. >> start the >> you've got to start the process 100 days. process within 100 days. >> at it. they'll process within 100 days. >> i at it. they'll process within 100 days. >> i mean, at it. they'll process within 100 days. >> i mean, everythingiey'll process within 100 days. >> i mean, everything isy'll process within 100 days. >> i mean, everything is so say, i mean, everything is so urgent you've say urgent. you've got to say absolute resolute , get on with absolute resolute, get on with this. hold back . this. don't hold back. >> all right, richard, well, thank very, much, thank you very, very much, richard. there the
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richard. sites there who is the leader reform look coming leader of reform uk. look coming up george galloway has just said the quiet bit out loud . the quiet bit out loud. >> so that's why i'm predicting here the next election will be about muslims . about muslims. >> the patrick christys tonight show has been warning about this for months . and the big losers for months. and the big losers in all of this will be starmer's labour party. find out more shortly. but next budget day is almost upon us. we'll reveal what jeremy hunt has planned . we what jeremy hunt has planned. we currently have a mammoth tax burden , but don't get your hopes burden, but don't get your hopes up . up. >> uh, what they will get on wednesday day is a prudent and responsible plan . responsible plan. >> grief. calvin mckenzie asks where have all the tories gone? that's next on patrick christys tonight
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that's going to have at the next general election. some general election. i've got some astonishing for you that i astonishing stats for you that i think for quite grim think will make for quite grim reading. but first, it's time for fleet street kelvin for fleet street legend kelvin mackenzie . now jeremy will mackenzie. now jeremy hunt will unveil crucial spring budget unveil his crucial spring budget on wednesday and he obviously said that you know, we would we would channel his inner gordon brown and deliver prudence for britain, didn't he? but then he doubled when speaking to gb doubled down when speaking to gb news camilla tominey british people are very smart. >> recognise gimmicks . they >> they recognise gimmicks. they don't want any tricks . what they don't want any tricks. what they will get on wednesday is a prudent and responsible plan for long terme growth. >> i mean, do they want prudence, mr hunt? at the same time , they do recognise that the time, they do recognise that the tax is the highest it's tax burden is the highest it's beenin tax burden is the highest it's been in 70 years. >> first of all, prudence, there is nothing less conservative than funding tax cuts by increasing borrowing . increasing borrowing. >> i mean, good grief . the >> i mean, good grief. the chancellor is facing party pressure to deliver pre—election tax cuts, which are rumoured to
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include a £0.02 reduction in national insurance. however other fears are growing that he could fund these tax cuts by shock, horror, raising tax in other areas cigarettes, vapes, business class flights, second homes and of course , scrapping homes and of course, scrapping tax breaks for wealthy non—dom . tax breaks for wealthy non—dom. despite previously slamming labour's plans to do the same, calvin , you're not happy with calvin, you're not happy with hunt, are you? i am not happy with him. >> and by the as he well >> and by the way, as he well knows, neither the of knows, neither are the voters of hazlemere farnham and the like. uh, he will almost certainly lose his seat come november. so that will be a sitting chancellor being thrown out and the reason for it is saying things like prudence, anybody with any memory at all hated gordon brown as chancellor. why? because he literally legged over the middle classes. so that all the middle classes. so that all the money went to the subsidised classes. so if you are a hardworking person who owns a reasonable amount of money and what is a reasonable amount of money, it's hard to tell these days anywhere between say, say,
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say 38,000 and we'll say early 50s, say 38,000 and we'll say early 505, £60,000. say 38,000 and we'll say early 50s, £60,000. you are in on the absolute, you know, arrow of somebody like a jeremy hunt. he's supposed to be a tory chancellor if he doesn't understand that the word prudence actually throws you back to a socialist world, which actually had some growth in it. and we haven't even got that today. we don't want to hear the word prudence , not from a tory word prudence, not from a tory and voters will penalise and the voters will penalise him. he's saying all this him. and he's saying all this when he knows that the polls show that the are down at show that the tories are down at 20. what what world are these people living in? >> well, this is it. and i think one the problems is that he one of the problems is that he probably knows that he's about one of the problems is that he pr at the moment what >> i look at the moment what you've got is the headboy of winchester and the head boy of charterhouse running the country, and they are. i don't really blame them. they've got liz truss in their ear all the
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time , and they're worried about time, and they're worried about what happens the pound and what happens to the pound and essentially. don't they essentially. but why don't they do something? they do something? why don't they just like, we're just say something like, we're going tax , going to scrap inheritance tax, we're going remove stamp we're going to remove stamp duty, because he's too duty, except because he's too afraid. £5 million houses, it's too afraid of the headline in the guardian that says it's a tax break for the rich. yeah, but it doesn't matter anymore. people aren't governed by what appears papers . i know. appears in papers. i know. right? it's somewhat one. it right? it's the somewhat one. it really. i don't think so . right. really. i don't think so. right. so that's the issue. don't worry about your critics say serve your own people and your own people are middle class people who actually would like to vote conservative and have no earthly reason to do it. >> yeah. strong stuff. calvin. now look, moving on to something else. but this time it's labour related because labour's thangam debbonaire woke debbonaire has joined the woke clamour to rule clamour to cancel rule britannia, take a listen. it's a decision for the people who run the proms . the proms. >> and again, like i said, it shouldn't be politicians who tell people how run cultural tell people how to run cultural events for lot of events. i think for a lot of people , that feels like very
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people, that feels like a very sort moment , people, that feels like a very sort moment, which i sort of british moment, which i think to be respected as think has to be respected as well. a lot of people it well. but for a lot of people it will feel, sheku kanneh—mason will feel, as sheku kanneh—mason said, you know, it will feel alienating . alienating. >> just the shadow >> that's just the shadow culture secretary they're calling rule britannia alienating , calling rule britannia alienating, right? >> so, um , it is incredibly >> so, um, it is incredibly well, what and what's worrying about this is if this is what she's saying when there is an election coming up and they've all had strict orders , the whole all had strict orders, the whole of the shadow cabinet don't say anything. keep schtum. no policies. if she's saying this kind of thing 6 or 7 months out, what on earth is she likely to say when she runs dcms right ? say when she runs dcms right? and what will she be saying? not only is it alienating, we find it offensive and we've spoken to the bbc and they've agreed in relation to because they're going to get their licence fee up. they've agreed actually to drop rule britannia, rule britannia has been a central part of the proms, is probably the only thing that everybody knows lots of. most people don't
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go there, never , never heard of go there, never, never heard of it. that last night rule , it. that last night rule, britannia. loads of shouting . britannia. loads of shouting. actually, it's a good thing it's about our country. and what i do nofice.| about our country. and what i do notice . i do notice the guy notice. i do notice that the guy in the orchestra who said he didn't right? nobody. didn't like it right? nobody. no, i never hear a guy called john smith who turns around and says, don't like it. it's an says, i don't like it. it's an uncomfortable feeling i have. and why people just people can't tell what happened 300 years ago. they don't care what happens with the exception of the church of england, nobody cares . cares. >> yeah, well, we're coming on to england to the church of england a bit later because apparently later on because apparently they're later on because apparently th got a wealth fund of >> they've got a wealth fund of 10 billion. what they don't want >> they've got a wealth fund of 10 do lion. what they don't want >> they've got a wealth fund of 10 do is n. what they don't want >> they've got a wealth fund of 10 do is take 1at they don't want >> they've got a wealth fund of 10 do is take at they don't want >> they've got a wealth fund of 10 do is take a billionion't want >> they've got a wealth fund of 10 do is take a billion outt want to do is take a billion out of that. them that. and therefore stop them hiring . hiring vicars. >> yeah. just just quickly, though, think that though, do you think that british under threat british culture is under threat by labour government? by a labour government? >> do, i believe everything >> i do, i believe everything at the that gb news have a the moment that gb news have a good old you know, we have a shout up and an argument about all things. i'm afraid all those things. i'm afraid when they in they'll say,
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when they get in they'll say, you're quite right. we're all britannia . um, that's a britannia. um, that's of a different time . we're banning that. >> the question is, then what do we though? we replace it with, though? because, do because, you know, we do struggle to have unifying struggle to have a unifying culture at the moment. >> we aren't going have >> well, we aren't going to have a unifying culture. that is what the labour party would like to destroy. do destroy. what they want to do is say , oh, we'll have a bit of say, oh, we'll have a bit of this a that, but the this and a bit of that, but the one won't have is what one bit we won't have is what what the the country want i >> -- >> well it's interesting calvin. thank you very much. i imagine that labour would deny they that labour would deny that they want unifying want to destroy a unifying culture, but obviously we'll have from them at have to hear it from them at some thank you very have to hear it from them at some gavin thank you very have to hear it from them at some gavin mckenzie.( you very much. gavin mckenzie. look, coming of england coming up, the church of england has told to pay £1 billion has been told to pay £1 billion in slavery reparations . welby's in slavery reparations. welby's gone. woke. will the parish go broke? but next george galloway sworn in as an mp. his message is clear. the next election, he says , is about muslims, is says, is about muslims, is george galloway right? i'll be revealing some astonishing information for you in just a couple of minutes . couple of minutes. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boiler as sponsors of
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whether on . gb news. whether on. gb news. >> evening. welcome along to your latest weather update from the met office for gb news but a fog forming overnight wet weather is pushing its way northwards. and then tomorrow, well, a few showers but for many it's going to be a fine day. far from fine out there this evening though, low pressure has been moving in, bringing some wet weather southwest , weather across the southwest, and weather fronts and these weather fronts continue north continue to track north overnight. nothing too heavy for most, but a damp, dank kind of night as it turns quite misty and murky. a few fog patches around touch of frost possible through parts of wales and southwest england. most towns and cities holding a couple of degrees above freezing , but degrees above freezing, but nevertheless a chilly start , nevertheless a chilly start, certainly across the midlands and it will be quite murky here. some fog, patchy for central and eastern of england. rain eastern parts of england. rain and over eastern england and drizzle over eastern england and drizzle over eastern england and lingering in northeast scotland . a bit of wet start scotland. a bit of a wet start for parts of northern ireland too. will into too. that rain will spread into western for a good
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western scotland, but for a good chunk of the country it'll be a dry and a bright day. once we've lost morning mist fog. lost the morning mist and fog. but heavy across but some heavy showers across the temperatures here the southeast. temperatures here could reach 12 celsius for most 10 or 11 degrees. the wind is fairly light though, so probably feeling warmer than feeling a touch warmer than today. touch frost returns , today. a touch of frost returns, though. night into though. on tuesday night into wednesday morning and wednesday , wednesday morning and wednesday, looking fairly grey again in eastern areas with a few light showers possible and many western areas dry and bright with some decent spells of sunshine, temperatures again where it's grey, 8 or 9 with a bit of sunshine. 11 or 12 looks like things are heating up. >> boxt boilers sponsors of weather on .
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allegiance to his majesty . king allegiance to his majesty. king charles galloway sworn in and then he says this. so that's why i'm predicting here the next election will be about muslims . election will be about muslims. >> but is george galloway just using the muslim community to gain power? also welby signs . gain power? also welby signs. off £1 billion to say sorry for slavery. so is the church of england just a woke lobby group and. you're important. what's really going on with kate middleton ? plus . british farmers middleton? plus. british farmers have had enough on my panel tonight it is express columnist carole malone we've got trade unionist andy mcdonnell. the next brexit party mep, belinda de lucy. oh, and i will show you what happens . next. get ready what happens. next. get ready britain here we go.
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a former islamist responds to george galloway's claim that this is a muslim election. george galloway's claim that this is a muslim election . next. this is a muslim election. next. >> it's 10:01. this is a muslim election. next. >> it's10:01. i'm polly middlehurst and our top story tonight. the government has suffered a string of defeats to its flagship immigration policy. the rwanda bill in the house of lords this evening. peers have been variously voting in favour of monitoring mechanisms which would ensure safeguards in the bill would be fully implemented, and making sure the bill is fully compliant with international and domestic law . international and domestic law. after nearly 50 amendments in total were put forward, with more being voted on on wednesday. meanwhile a record 385 migrants crossed the english channel today. that's the largest number on a single day this year . gb largest number on a single day this year. gb news understands a
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seventh small boat crossed into uk waters this evening, carrying 49 migrants. it follows six other boats carrying 336 people, which were intercepted by border force yesterday . the home office force yesterday. the home office recorded 327 people arriving in the uk after making the journey in eight small boats, suggesting an average of around 41 migrants per boat . the chancellor said per boat. the chancellor said today he wants to move the uk to being a lower tax economy , but being a lower tax economy, but will only do so in a response way. jeremy hunt was visiting a new digital engineering plant in wiltshire , where he also wiltshire, where he also announced a £360 million funding boost for manufacturing . income boost for manufacturing. income tax has reached a historic high and whilst he's promised some cuts, the chancellor has been trying to manage expectations ahead of wednesday's budget . ahead of wednesday's budget. newly elected rochdale mp george galloway was sworn into parliament today. the workers party of britain leader pledged allegiance to the king as part
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of the ceremony after winning last week's rochdale by—election by more than 5500 votes. speaking today, he said it's my job to try to make rochdale great again . france has become great again. france has become the first country in the world to make abortion a constitutional right for a woman. french parliament has voted to revise the country's 1958 constitution to enshrine women's guaranteed freedom to abort mps and senators convened at the palace of versailles, where the bill was approved with an overwhelming save 780 to 72 votes. president emmanuel macron describing the move as french pride that had sent a universal message age and lastly, a ferrari stolen from a former formula one driver 28 years ago has been recovered by the police. the sports car, stolen from austrian driver gerhard berger, is worth around
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£350,000. the ferrari . f512m was £350,000. the ferrari. f512m was one of two vehicles taken while their drivers were at the san marino grand prix in 1995. the metropolitan police says officers received a report from the carmaker in january following checks on a vehicle being bought by somebody in the united states through a uk broker last year. and they solved the case for the very latest stories, sign up for gb news alerts, scan the qr code on the screen right now or go to gb news .com/ alerts . news .com/ alerts. >> it's hard to overstate how important this moment is. >> i swear by almighty god that i will be faithful and bear true allegiance to his majesty king charles, his heirs and successors. according to law. so help me god. george galloway is a new mp for rochdale . a new mp for rochdale. >> but he said out loud what the
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patrick christys tonight show has been saying for months. >> so that's why i'm predicting here the next election will be about muslims and will be about about muslims and will be about about the taking away of civil liberties in this country. it's sunaks last hope. i pray for the social peace of our country that is a forlorn hope. this will be a muslim election , says mr galloway. >> he's going to try to take labour party big hitters . labour party big hitters. >> if i give you just one example, angela rayner has a parliamentary majority. i think of around 3000 and there's at least 15,000 supporters of my point of view in her constituency , nc. so we'll be constituency, nc. so we'll be putting a candidate up against her either a workers party candidate or more likely, an independent candidate that we support and that will vitally affect the election of the labour deputy leader .
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labour deputy leader. >> but much more than this, he outlines how this muslim election is going to unfold, and there are many constituencies in london, from ilford to bethnal green, in the heart of the city of london, in birmingham, in in other parts of the west midlands , in north west england, in the towns around rochdale , oldham, towns around rochdale, oldham, blackburn , burnley , nelson , bury. >> we'll be putting candidates up in all these places and we will either win or we'll make sure that keir starmer doesn't win. >> let's have a look at some of these areas now. so labour's shadow justice minister shabana mahmood in birmingham ladywood abstained on a ceasefire vote 42.6% muslim vote gone blackburn kate holland, 42.9% muslim vote bradford east. imran hussain 39% muslim vote all them west jim
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mcmahon 28% muslim vote it won't actually really matter whether or not they voted for, against or not they voted for, against or abstained on a ceasefire because the damage to keir starmer's labour party is among the muslim community and it has been done. like for tahir ali, for example, he's the one who said this is therefore , is it said this is therefore, is it now not the time for the prime minister to admit that he has the blood of thousands of innocent people on his hands and for him to commit to demanding an immediate ceasefire in his seat of birmingham hall green and moseley has a 49% muslim vote. i bet that goes now in all of those seats. i could have mentioned around 30 more. the labour party can wave goodbye to power. in my view. keir starmer has been absolutely shafted . he has been absolutely shafted. he can't be seen to back israel any more than he has done, because he's definitely lost those seats. if he does that and his mps rebel him. but mps will rebel against him. but but go softer on gaza but he can't go softer on gaza because it'll be accused of
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dragging back into the dragging labour back into the old won't old anti—semitism scandal. won't he? is playing he? george galloway is playing yet another blinder by confirming, in most cases in these seats that they will just back an independent. why? well, that's so that when if one of those independent candidates echo has the quite grotesque sentiment of the deputy leader of galloway's workers party of britain, chris williamson , who britain, chris williamson, who regularly and despicably compares israel to the nazis and gaza to auschwitz , galloway will gaza to auschwitz, galloway will be distanced from them. they won't belong to any party that will have to justify their comments , and they can't lose comments, and they can't lose the party whip, so they can just carry on and quite possibly win . carry on and quite possibly win. the fact is this there is now a well organised, highly energised majority—muslim pro gaza, anti —israel, majority—muslim pro gaza, anti—israel, borderline hamas sympathising movement with a charismatic, totemic leader at the helm. it will be a massive problem for labour and mark my words, after they've been served their backsides on a galloway
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shaped platter at the next election, all of a sudden the labour party will start to care a lot more about islamist extremism. but i'm joined now by an interesting character who's a former islamist and extremism prevention educator. now it's salama suhail, thank you very much. great to have you on the show. we spoke a lot there about george galloway and the muslim vote . i mean, he said it vote. i mean, he said it himself, didn't he really? but i understand that you have certain concerns about this in the sense that do you think that george galloway might be using the muslim community a bit? talk to me about that . me about that. >> i that's a very good question. see, when i was a teenager, i was quite young. uh, the very same mosque that radicalised me . he attended that radicalised me. he attended that mosque . and in that speech he mosque. and in that speech he gave, he implied very strongly that he may be muslim . he, when that he may be muslim. he, when questioned on it at the end , he questioned on it at the end, he
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responded with, oh, i can't be honest , because of the shadowy honest, because of the shadowy elite at the top. that was his kind of response . and not only kind of response. and not only did that confirm to me my own conspiratorial fears that i'd been raised with and not only did it confirm to me my the ideology i'd been raised with islamism, but it suggested to me that actually everyone was out to get me, and that as a result, i was right to be to hate everyone i.e. to hate britain. and that is incredibly damaging in and of itself. but secondly , in and of itself. but secondly, it's clearly manipulating . he's it's clearly manipulating. he's clearly suggesting that he may be muslim or implying it, but in a way that retains his ability to plausibly deny that fact. um and i don't think he's muslim at all. i don't think he is, but he's acting as though he were in order to gain votes. and that's deeply divisive, especially in a secular society where we've agreed that over vote, um ,
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agreed that over vote, um, expressions of religion in politics isn't something we do by convention. that's what we've agreed. but he's undermining all of that, and he's reversing it. it's divisive. people will look at that, look at his political speeches , and i wouldn't be speeches, and i wouldn't be surprised if many people actually started hating muslims as a result. i mean, it's strong stuff. >> i'm just going to put to you a, um, comment from george galloway spokesperson that we got in the day. it was got later in the day. it was quite short . it says george's quite short. it says george's faith is between him and so faith is between him and god. so that's their statement . um, he that's their statement. um, he was also sworn in today using a copy of the bible . i believe copy of the bible. i believe some people would say, why does it matter whether or not he is a muslim, whether or not he pretends to be a muslim from time to time? i'm sure he would deny that or any of this. why does that matter ? does that matter? >> it doesn't matter what his religion is, but it suddenly does matter when he makes it a matter of a point on which to
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convince people to vote for him when he uses religion in order to garner votes and sympathy thatis to garner votes and sympathy that is when it matters. he's the one who made it matter, not me, not anyone else. no one told him to use islam or christianity or any other religion as part of his election campaigning . he's his election campaigning. he's the one who did and that's entirely on him . entirely on him. >> okay, well, i'm sure george galloway would deny using religion for votes. absolutely and do you think then, that george galloway is , in your george galloway is, in your experience, is saying is implying his implication in your view, in your view, is implication that he may well be a muslim ? you think he's a muslim? you think he's a useful vote winner, do you? amongst the muslim community, i think it's it may be calculated and i'm in fact, i'm pretty strongly certain i can't be entirely certain, but i'm pretty certain that he's he's he's doing this in a very calculated manner so as to garner the sympathy of muslims. >> and frankly , with our
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>> and frankly, with our community, with the muslim community, with the muslim community, we have a high degree of confirmation bias. so if someone even implies that they may be muslim , someone who even may be muslim, someone who even implies certain things will kind of take that as an affirmative . of take that as an affirmative. and he knows that, and he uses that. and he knows that, and he uses that . so he's and he knows that, and he uses that. so he's weaponizing the fears of the muslim community against them. and in the process dividing them and separating them from the british people . them from the british people. okay. what is dangerous , it's okay. what is dangerous, it's incredibly interesting to have you on, suhail. >> and i do hope to talk to you again at some point very soon. nice hail ahmed there, who is nice to hail ahmed there, who is by his own admission, former islamist now an extremism prevention . i'll prevention educator. i'll reiterate that a spokesperson for george galloway said george's is between him george's faith is between him and god , and no doubt george and god, and no doubt george would deny that he is in any way using religion in order to garner votes . let's get the garner votes. let's get the thoughts from panel. now we thoughts from our panel. now we have got daily express columnist carole trade carole malone. i've got trade unionist andy mcdonald, and i've also got ex—brexit party mep
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beunda also got ex—brexit party mep belinda de lucy. i'm going to go to you first on this carol, and just ask whether or not you think that the quote unquote muslim vote is going to be seismic at this election , george seismic at this election, george galloway saying essentially it's going to be the muslim election? >> excuse me? i mean, i think that's exactly going that's exactly what's going to happen. game today happen. you saw his game today and been and all the clips we've been showing he's he's showing you know, he's he's actually places actually named all the places he's going to field a candidate. and oh, he and i know people say, oh, he never long. and palm. never lasts for long. and palm. but he's going to long but he's going to last long enough to damage this next election. i think labour could be him because they be done for him because they have of two things be done for him because they have you of two things be done for him because they have you know, of two things be done for him because they have you know, what'sthings be done for him because they have you know, what's the gs be done for him because they have you know, what's the thing now. you know, what's the thing that chilled about that chilled me most about galloway where said he galloway today where he said he said field candidate said we'll field a candidate and even don't win, we'll make even if we don't win, we'll make sure starmer doesn't. i mean, that must have them all, you know, he's he's know, cringing. he's he's already said he's going for rayner's. think it's rayner's. i think it's terrifying because are terrifying because labour are going ramp their going to have to ramp up their support gaza more than they support of gaza more than they already have to try and get the pro—palestinian vote back again, which is lost, though i think. >> i'm sorry, i think i agree
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with but think that with you, but i think that they've with you, but i think that the but mean, this >> but i mean, i think this could be damaging come the could be very damaging come the next election. i think labour thought they had it in the bag. i think have it in i don't think they have it in the anymore. the bag anymore. >> all andy, >> okay. all right. andy, i mean, angela rayner potentially goes they've goes apparently they've got a strong starmer strong candidate against starmer . the brink. . wes streeting is on the brink. i lose labour party. >> i mean this guy you know he's represented for cities for three parties decades . you parties across for decades. you know george that's what know one time george that's what they him. just they call him. oh he's just absolutely waffling . you know absolutely waffling. you know name candidate you're name this candidate that you're going against angela name this candidate that you're going you against angela name this candidate that you're going you knowainst angela name this candidate that you're going you know she'sangela rayner. you know she's a stalwart of the community. she's not defeated by not going to be defeated by some. chippy. workers party. >> he's come in a time when >> he's come in at a time when there was a there's a rising tide and we're tide of anti—islamism. and we're seeing it happening. we're seeing it happening. we're seeing the streets . he's seeing it on the streets. he's come. like the perfect come. this is like the perfect storm. this just george galloway. >> no one else is like george galloway party. he galloway in his party. he saw his deputy leader, chris williamson. his deputy leader, chris wil|we1son. his deputy leader, chris wil|we have got quite got we have got quite a charismatic chap who shamima charismatic chap who is shamima begum's who's begum's family lawyer who's going standing, believe, begum's family lawyer who's go bethnal standing, believe, begum's family lawyer who's go bethnal greeniing, believe, begum's family lawyer who's go bethnal green for, believe, begum's family lawyer who's go bethnal green for example, 5, begum's family lawyer who's go bethnal green for example, as in bethnal green for example, as an independent. >> so could happen. >> so that could happen. belinda, throw over >> so that could happen. beyou. i, throw over >> so that could happen. beyou. do throw over >> so that could happen. beyou. do you throw over >> so that could happen. beyou. do you thinkyw over >> so that could happen. beyou. do you think that over
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to you. do you think that actually we are going to be seeing muslim seeing the muslim vote essentially bring labour down here? >> uh, i don't know, and i'll tell you why. i think the circus is in rochdale were exceptional , is in rochdale were exceptional, very, very unusual. galloway is highly known, charismatic , highly known, charismatic, intelligent man sometimes, except when he talks about israel and bradford and, you know, there aren't many people like him. and i also think if there's a ceasefire between now and the election, it will fizzle out. but the words that really made skin feel quite chilled made my skin feel quite chilled is when he singled out a religious faith to be the foundation of the next election . foundation of the next election. if anyone had said it was the hindus , the christians, it would hindus, the christians, it would be absolutely alienating. and i think many brits out there are terrified of the foreign nationalism that's being shown on our streets and in our politics. >> what is terrifying about galloway is a very smart man. we've him. we've all we've all met him. i we've all had experience him. he's very had experience of him. he's very clever worries that clever and it worries me that he is going people who is going to influence people who maybe muslim to vote for. maybe aren't muslim to vote for. >> i understand all of that. i understand all that. i do
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understand all of that. i do also that live also think, though, that we live in and it up to in a democracy and it is up to other people to make the case against him if they don't want him much of a threat. him to be as much of a threat. and just sit on and people can't just sit on their about their hands and complain about him doing about him without doing anything about it. rochdale it. but they didn't. in rochdale , patrick 10,000 majority. exactly, . see? um, exactly, exactly. see? um, right. look. coming up, coming up. up. earlier tonight, up. coming up. earlier tonight, the wales uncle the princess of wales is uncle gary apparently gary goldsmith has apparently entered the celebrity big brother house. kate's mother is absolutely fuming. we'll have the full report of you, including a little clip from goldsmith soon. including a little clip from goldsrinh soon. including a little clip from goldsrin all soon. including a little clip from goldsrin all of soon. including a little clip from goldsrin all of tomorrow's that's in all of tomorrow's front pages. but next, the church of england is hoping to create a £1 billion fund for slavery reparations . has the see slavery reparations. has the see of become a woke lobby group instead of a religion? former chaplain to our late queen joins me patrick christys. me as is patrick christys. tonight .
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gb news. welcome back. tomorrow's newspaper front pages coming out very soon. but first, the church of england is drumming up money for a £1 billion fund to address the legacy of slavery, which, according to the archbishop of canterbury, justin welby , is canterbury, justin welby, is only the beginning of a multigenerational response to the appalling evil of trans atlantic chattel enslavement . it atlantic chattel enslavement. it comes at the same time as the church is hiring an anti—racism officer to, quote, deconstruct whiteness. and that's not all the church has been wasting, and its whopping £10 billion
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endowment on last week , all endowment on last week, all parishes were told to draw up a race action plan after a pro blm bishop of dover told the church to embrace being woke. meanwhile, just in, welby is still doing his level to best thwart the government's rwanda plan after he voted it down in the house of lords today and said rise in international said this rise in international human rights law grew out of the horrors of the 1940s, when for a government that in 1933 and germany had been legally and properly elected , passed properly elected, passed horrific laws that did terrible things. >> it's brought up hitler and the nazis . the nazis. >> and let's not forget, the church stands accused of helping migrants submit completely bogus asylum claims , all while asylum claims, all while parishes are closing at the fastest rate since records began. so how's the church of england become a woke lobby group instead of a religion? i'm joined now by the former chaplain to our late queen
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elizabeth, doctor gavin ashenden. very much. ashenden. thank you very much. is church england now not is the church of england now not a religion, just a woke lobby group ? group? >> well, patrick, it's doing a very good imitation of being a woke lobby group . if it is still woke lobby group. if it is still a religion, but the trouble is, the . the archbishop of the ideas. the archbishop of canterbury is promulgating in the public space are anti christian. they they've got nothing do with the faith. nothing to do with the faith. um, and i mean he wasn't always like this . i think he's become like this. i think he's become i think he's lost his way but undoubtedly these latest schemes involving reparations and racism have nothing to do with christianity. and just at a time when the church really needs reinvigorating and a new vision of what it really is all about. >> i mean, other religions don't shy about their faith. other religions are absolutely banging the i mean, love the drum. i mean, i would love to at to see the attendances at mosques attendance at mosques versus the attendance at local churches and track local parish churches and track their correlation and their incline or decline , incline or decline, respectively. but, you know, welby is talking about a £1 billion for fund to say sorry
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for slavery. does he have anything to say sorry for ? anything to say sorry for? >> well, he really doesn't. i mean, first of all, there are so many things wrong with this. we don't believe in ancestral guilt. um, we believe in putting things right in this generation , things right in this generation, in between people who fall. now, we. there is nothing else in which our ancestors which we hold our ancestors accountable for what's happened, of that we've of course, is that we've imported piece of american imported a piece of american guilt without any exploration of it . and we don't believe in it. and we don't believe in tainted money either. it's as if the archbishop has an idea that there of gold ingots there are sort of gold ingots somewhere, which stained somewhere, which are stained with somebody else's blood. money like that. money doesn't work like that. and once again , there is no and once again, there is no money we make accountable money that we make accountable and as though it kind of and treat as though it kind of carries a level of guilt with it. and most importantly , we as it. and most importantly, we as christians don't believe in racism. we believe that may sound a strange thing to do, but the trouble is, racism is much too narrow a concept. the idea we fall out with our neighbour just because of the colour colour skin is colour of their skin is ludicrous . there are all kinds ludicrous. there are all kinds of reasons why people dislike
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their neighbours, and to be a christian is to is to no longer see anybody in racial terms at all. you can't be a racist if you're a christian at and if you're a christian at and if you're a christian at and if you're a racist, you're not a christian. so the thing to do is if the archbishop doesn't like racism is to make more people more people. christians and to make christians more christian. what he's doing is a is a sub christian nonsense. >> well, and indeed some of the things that he has apparently been doing, or certainly under the church's name, actually the church's name, have actually been people been willingly baptising people who certainly not christian who are certainly not christian in order for them to gain our asylum system. and what i thought interesting about thought was interesting about that that they that as well is that they initially all of initially denied all of this stuff and said, nothing stuff and said, there's nothing to see here. and now, a couple of later, they've decided to see here. and now, a couple of a ater, they've decided to see here. and now, a couple of a review ey've decided to see here. and now, a couple of a review ey've call. ied to launch a review into it all. but thank you very, very but look, thank you very, very much. it's great have you on. much. it's great to have you on. i'll because i'll have you back on because no doubt week or doubt it's only a week or so until something else doubt it's only a week or so unti this. something else doubt it's only a week or so unti this. as something else doubt it's only a week or so unti this. as the something else doubt it's only a week or so unti this. as the former:hing else like this. as the former chaplain to our late queen elizabeth gavin ashenden, chaplain to our late queen elizefollowing gavin ashenden, chaplain to our late queen elizefollowing grannouncement now following this announcement of the new £1 billion target, the canterbury, the archbishop of canterbury, justin this in justin welby, said this in seeking for all, we must
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seeking justice for all, we must continue to work together. remember that created in remember that all are created in the god and the the image of god and the oversight group's independent work with the church commissioners beginning commissioners is the beginning of multigenerational response of a multigenerational response to evil of to the appalling evil of transatlantic chattel enslavement . my prayer is that enslavement. my prayer is that this work will stimulate further visionary and practical co—created action, put it to a vote at your local parish. if there's anybody left, their archbishop. up next, as we delve into the first of tomorrow's newspaper front pages hot off the press, i've got an astonishing update for you . not astonishing update for you. not just about kate, but also about the royal family. apparently being incredibly wound up by someone who's just wandered into celebrity big brother. i'll see you in a
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here. 42 of the 55 victims were babies aged under one. let's go to the daily express . france to the daily express. france must do more with our millions to stop small boats . so this is to stop small boats. so this is pretty patel demanding robust action after 527 migrants arrive in 48 hours. with respect to the daily express, you can tell this front page was printed a few hours ago because that's now way up 650 mark up above the old 650 mark classic. sun . harry, through classic. the sun. harry, through my niece kate under the bus. uncle gary's fury at slurs over the royals. this is a celebrity big brother exclusive and we are going to be talking about this very , very shortly. but before very, very shortly. but before then, we go to the i tory tensions as hunt and sunak wrestle over crunch budget, possibly because jeremy home wants to take millions off sunak's wife ashley . but sunak's wife ashley. but chancellor is warned he faces £2 billion nhs black hole . here we billion nhs black hole. here we go. jeremy go. we've got jeremy from accounts up against the accounts going up against the old corporate sector . uh rishi old corporate sector. uh rishi sunak. imagine is the sunak. in what i imagine is the least inspiring fight world least inspiring fight the world
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has ever seen. daily mail, vickers in uproar over church's £1 billion slavery reparations. we have just done that story is the church now a woke lobby group ? apparently it's group? apparently it's anti—christian. what they're doing. and as kate breaks cover, what will her naughty uncle gary say in the big brother house? well time to take a little look at some of these front pages with you now with my fantastic panel with you now with my fantastic panel, daily express columnist carole trade unionist carole malone trade unionist andy and former brexit andy mcdonald and former brexit party mep belinda de lucy. well, as you just heard, a close relation to the royal family has entered the celebrity big brother house as gary goldsmith, the uncle to the future queen of our country, catherine middleton, the current princess of wales. >> she is simply perfect. >> she is simply perfect. >> first time i met william, catherine was cooking and william said hi, do you want a cup of tea? very normal . william said hi, do you want a cup of tea? very normal. i'm an absolute nightmare to live with. there's a reason why i've had four wives so it's confirmed. >> gary goldsmith, the uncle of the princess of wales, will appear on itv's reality show the
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daily mail reports that kate infj's mother read the riot act to goldsmith, warning her brother to not spill any royal secrets. but that's fallen on deaf ears, judging by the sun's front page, because goldsmith is immediately told the newspaper that prince harry has thrown his niece under the he also niece under the bus, he also slammed of royal racism slammed claims of royal racism as carole could this be as bs. carole could this be a big problem for the waleses ? big problem for the waleses? >> yeah, i think it's going to be it is. there's going to be fantastic because, you fantastic for us because, you know, big brother them up know, big brother signed them up for the very reason know for the very reason they know he's is he's going to blab and he is going the thing is, going to blab. and the thing is, you can tell from that you know, you can tell from that just bit of an just clip that he's a bit of an idiot. not be idiot. so he's not going to be able keep mouth shut. he able to keep his mouth shut. he can't shut on day one. can't keep it shut on day one. so he's going and the thing so he's going to and the thing about course, the about now, of course, is the perfect to spill perfect time for them to spill on kate she's well, on kate because she's not well, that's the problem that's going to be the problem for the royal family. for for the the royal family. carole be furious if he carole will be furious if he starts the beans about starts spilling the beans about what's kate. that's what's wrong with kate. that's going big problem. going to be a big problem. >> well, that is going to be a big it's actually big issue. and ed, it's actually william about the william was out and about the other and he was asked, other day and he was asked, and this going happening. this is going to keep happening. how's kate? he
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how's kate? how's kate? and he was silent it, you know. and was silent on it, you know. and you just think not enough. you just think not fair enough. but people are to keep you just think not fair enough. but peci le are to keep you just think not fair enough. but peci le are this to keep you just think not fair enough. but peci le are this couldeep you just think not fair enough. but peci le are this could be a asking. i mean, this could be a problem royals. asking. i mean, this could be a pro maybe, royals. asking. i mean, this could be a pro maybe, but royals. asking. i mean, this could be a pro maybe, but it's'als. asking. i mean, this could be a pro maybe, but it's so;. asking. i mean, this could be a pro maybe, but it's so bizarre. >> maybe, but it's so bizarre. he's celebrity he's on the celebrity big brother. recruitment he's on the celebrity big brothefrom recruitment he's on the celebrity big brothefrom south cruitment he's on the celebrity big brothefrom south london.t he's on the celebrity big brothefrom south london. like agent from south london. like because he's kate's cousin . because he's kate's cousin. that's why he's uncle. but you know, uncle, you know, it must be a slow news day at the sun. you know, the day before the budget. is the entire of budget. this is the entire of the mad? the front page. are you mad? >> is gold dust. >> this is. this is gold dust. mother. son. >> member mother. son. >> he's a fringe member of. >> he's a fringe member of. >> he's a fringe member of. >> he's fringe member who sees >> he's a fringe member who sees kate on regular enough basis. kate on a regular enough basis. does to glean some gossip of does he? to glean some gossip of course. spill it all. he's. >> he could just be lying. how do we know he's not lying? well, it just be making it up. it could just be making it up. we we haven't had relative >> and we haven't had a relative of yet . defend of the royal family yet. defend them, for them, fight for them, battle for them, fight for them. the onslaught of them. after the onslaught of hell that harry and meghan put them so i think people them through. so i think people are to interested in are going to be interested in that. he's definitely a naughty boy. the boy. i've just been reading the list he's been up list of things that he's been up to. he's not just, you know, like to. he's not just, you know, uke one to. he's not just, you know, like one whoopsie daisy. like a one off whoopsie daisy. he's got a lot whoopsie. he's got a lot of whoopsie. daisy's racked up on his cv. that's and so that's why he, um. and so shedload may well shedload of money, he may well flap. yeah, yeah, leave
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flap. yeah yeah, yeah, leave that one there. >> up his cv anyway. >> racked up on his cv anyway. but but no, it makes a good but but but no, it makes a good point here. harry. harry three minis. kate under the bus. i mean presumably prince harry's a bit miffed about this. belinda. because he is, by sounds of because he is, by the sounds of it, pretty sound. this in it, pretty sound. this guy in some respects. >> well, yeah, i was going to say. really, i think the harry issue , he will be very issue, he will be very entertaining. i would be scared if i was carol. if i'm being honest, the idea that my loose cannon naughty brother is getting paid to be a little bit devilish, let's be honest. um, but i just hope he respects his niece as well. she's not but i just hope he respects his niece she'sell. she's not but i just hope he respects his niece she's ill she's not but i just hope he respects his niece she's ill and she's not but i just hope he respects his niece she's ill and shee's not but i just hope he respects his niece she's ill and she she's at well, she's ill and she she's at a vulnerable time that that hopefully that he'll keep schtum about the most sensitive issues of her health. >> it's spud on, you know, big brother. >> it's been, you know, controversial of platform and questionable individuals. you know, tate rose to fame know, andrew tate rose to fame in big brother. it must be said george galloway is in there. george galloway is in there. george galloway, these george galloway, you know, these people. this bloke, people. but you know this bloke, he beating he was found guilty of beating his know, with the his wife, you know, with the russell brand onslaught the russell brand onslaught was the big was like
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big brother. sorry. it was like genuine concerns women's genuine concerns about women's safety with people gone safety with people have gone into brother house. god into the big brother house. god i that like i didn't read that awful like it's performing because it's performing the guy because it's performing the guy because it's irresponsible. >> it's irresponsible. well when does that stop anybody in the pursuit ? pursuit? >> w- p“- w- pursuit? >> not in the pursuit >> it should not in the pursuit of . i mean, should of ratings. i mean, it should stop you raise an stop them. you raise an interesting earlier and interesting point earlier and you , patrick, not you said, patrick, you're not even listening. >> i listening. i am listening. >> i, i'm reading some of the sometimes do raise an sometimes do read it raise an interesting point. >> said that >> and what you said was that not but sometimes. um, >> and what you said was that not you but sometimes. um, >> and what you said was that not you saidt sometimes. um, >> and what you said was that not you said earlierimes. um, >> and what you said was that not you said earlier that. um, >> and what you said was that not you said earlier that this|, and you said earlier that this will, um. oh no, i forgot . oh yeah. >> no , wait, wait. oh, yes. one nil. >> william stayed silent. yes. okay now, i was thinking about this today and thinking yes, he would stay silent and he should, because if that's kate's wishes . because if that's kate's wishes. however, on the other hand, it makes me feel vaguely unsettled, and sure makes nation makes me feel vaguely unsettled, and unsettled. makes nation makes me feel vaguely unsettled, and unsettled. thatas nation makes me feel vaguely unsettled, and unsettled. that we nation makes me feel vaguely unsettled, and unsettled. that we don't:ion feel unsettled. that we don't know wrong her. and know what's wrong with her. and i kind of to know. i want i kind of want to know. i want to feel that it's not to feel safe, that it's not something terrible and awful. >> yeah, can imagine , as >> yeah, but can you imagine, as their seeing the their children, seeing the intimate details of your your
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mum's health issues, we must remind , you know, they're human. remind, you know, they're human. and like all of us, we go through ups and downs with our health. don't want that health. and i don't want that plaster for anyone. yeah, plaster around for anyone. yeah, but especially if it's a but i especially if it's a woman's thing, especially that she want it out there . she she won't want it out there. >> but by the same token, all >> but by the same token, i all i know is that it's not i want to know is that it's not really serious. the problem, the problem is going to be i mean, it's happening, isn't it? >> that, rightly >> which is that, rightly or wrongly, william goes. wrongly, wherever william goes. yeah, he's just going to be asked. and by the way, i don't mean this necessarily by members of press. i just mean by of the press. i just mean by well—wishers who do well—wishers who probably do mean oh, is kate mean well, oh, is kate recovering well? oh, i hope kate's hope and kate's all right. oh, i hope and at he's going have at some point he's going to have to and could to say something. and he could have said , yeah, have just said, yeah, she's fine, doing but fine, she's doing well. but he didn't say that. yeah. >> i think, when he >> i think, you know, when he was, wrexham going to was, he was in wrexham going to the stadium . you the racecourse stadium. you know, went, oh can know, someone went, oh can i have a selfie. kate. have a selfie. how's kate. yeah she's she's fine. like she's right, she's fine. like it's good it's just, it's all good and it's just, it's all good and it's just, it's pr from them. just say it's poor pr from them. just say she's fine. >> being a good husband. >> you don't to into >> you don't have to go into details. just yeah, yeah. details. just go. yeah, yeah.
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it's whatever. details. just go. yeah, yeah. it's but whatever. details. just go. yeah, yeah. it's but vobviously think it's >> but he obviously i think it's a of he, a reflection of how much he, he cares he doesn't have cares that he doesn't have a slick, you know, fobbed off answer maybe actually he's answer that maybe actually he's he he interesting he is upset or he is interesting that when from the minute charles know quite charles you know quite courageously i think told us what was wrong with him. >> really asking >> nobody's really asking about it. know we know he's it. now we know we know he's getting hope he's getting treatment. we hope he's getting treatment. we hope he's getting one's getting better. but no one's pursuing him in the they're pursuing him in the way they're pursuing him in the way they're pursuing william , which is interesting. >> that was standard >> that was the standard for years. prince philip, years. you know, prince philip, we was unwell for we all knew he was unwell for quite time. didn't quite a long time. we didn't know it was, just. oh, know what it was, just. oh, phil's well, know, the phil's and well, you know, the queen. end her queen. towards the end of her we were she's old were like, yeah, she's an old lady. unwell and lady. she's probably unwell and i should back to i think we should go back to that. just. they didn't announce things you that. just. they didn't announce things never you that. just. they didn't announce thingsnever complain, you explained. >> they also didn't really announce the queen, >> they also didn't really ann> they also didn't really ann> they also didn't really ann
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spoken to carol. presumably not. you just to send love. and we you just to send my love. and we talked kate . what's talked about kate. given what's going go . there's going on. here we go. there's lots going on with the family at the moment, so she's spinning a lot of plates right now. it's quite stressful. the last quite stressful. so the last thing to do is bring thing i'm going to do is bring any yeah. any stress to them. yeah. all right. strolling right. apart from strolling into celebrity big brother and telling them immediately. telling them that immediately. but anyway. right. our but anyway. right. look, our police have come under repeated criticism in recent years, but this response by the met to a fire in kensington shows the very best of our police officers . get out! get out, get out, get out . out. >> let's declare this critical. let's get it out in your cab. >> 107. um spades down on the floor and cover the door . well done. >> office is their office is their only took five minutes to get to the scene . thankfully, no get to the scene. thankfully, no one suffered serious injuries. a
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25 year old man has been arrested on suspicion of arson with to endanger life . he with intent to endanger life. he remains in custody but well done to those police officers. the fire brigade took a bit of stick, when they stick, didn't they? when they didn't go into some water to rescue someone a because rescue someone in a car because it height. it was above waist height. you've officers there you've got police officers there who copping moment who are copping it at the moment . sometimes when people me, . sometimes when people like me, it who that it must be sad who decided that they storm they were going to storm straight first into a straight in head first into a fire so fair play. done for fire so fair play. well done for those people . uh, right now, those people. uh, right now, in another tone , you could another shift in tone, you could win spring essentials in our win the spring essentials in our latest great british giveaway . latest great british giveaway. there's a garden gadget package, a shopping spree, and 12,345. yes, that is one, 2345 in cash. here's all the details . here's all the details. >> we have a ton of top prizes to be won in our spring giveaway . there's a massive £12,345 in tax free cash to spend however you like, along with £500 in shopping vouchers for your favourite store, a games console, a pizza oven and a portable sonos smart speaker. and the best news you could be our next big winner. just like
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phil , you, whoever wins it next phil, you, whoever wins it next is going to be as happy as i was, and they're going to get even more money this time round. >> you go in the >> so why wouldn't you go in the draw for your chance to win the vouchers, treats and £12,345 vouchers, the treats and £12,345 in tax free cash text gb win to 84 902. >> text cost £2 plus one standard network rate message or post your name and number two gb zero three, po box 8690. derby de19, double t, uk. only entrants must be 18 or over. lines close at 5 pm. on friday. the 29th march. full terms and privacy notice at gbnews.com. forward slash win. please check the closing time if watching or listening on demand. good luck, good luck. >> coming up is a salary of 120 grand a year for sadiq khan's night tsar . really worth the night tsar. really worth the money? we will expose her taxpayer funded trips around the world. as i crown tonight's greatest britain and union jackass. but next, i've got more of tomorrow's front pages. plus rule britannia alienates many
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it's patrick christys tonight on gb news. it's time to return to the liveliest pay per view. you'll get on the telly with more front pages , write the more front pages, write the guardian. doctors issued dire warning as nhs faces biggest budget cuts in 50 years. this is obviously just in time for the old budget, isn't it? obviously just in time for the old budget, isn't it ? alarm over old budget, isn't it? alarm over wild west in autism diagnosis. adults apparently awaiting an autism diagnosis face a postcode lottery in england. well, there we go. the times hunt poised to freeze fuel duty in budget boost for drivers . uh, the freeze fuel duty in budget boost for drivers. uh, the big freeze fuel duty in budget boost for drivers . uh, the big story for drivers. uh, the big story for drivers. uh, the big story for me is literally the big
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story they've gone for. though tories divided over new definition of extremism, trans rights critics and traditional christians could be caught up in a crackdown on islamism. yeah again, in the wake of everything we've got going on the conservative party, much to the disdain of some tory mps who contacted me today , have decided contacted me today, have decided to devote a lot of time to a definition of islamophobia , etc. definition of islamophobia, etc. we'll talk about that in more detail in a little bit. but, um , detail in a little bit. but, um, that's it, isn't it? for the front page, we've done all the other. so there we go. let's talk about it here to do it talk about it now. here to do it is got is my press pack. we have got the express the wonderful daily express columnist carole malone. we've got andy got trade unionist andy mcdonald, party got trade unionist andy mcd(belinda party got trade unionist andy mcd(belinda de party got trade unionist andy mcd(belinda de lucy party got trade unionist andy mcd(belinda de lucy . party got trade unionist andy mcd(belinda de lucy . belinda, mep belinda de lucy. belinda, i'll with on i'll just start with you on this one. essentially now plans one. um, essentially now plans for a new definition of extremism have raised concerns in the cabinet that groups opposed marriage , opposed to gay marriage, abortion or new transgender rights could inadvertently rights could be inadvertently penalised. was also, i had penalised. there was also, i had numerous different tory mps messaged me today in response to some comments made earlier. the tory party have essentially
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decided to roll over and appoint somebody to look into anti—muslim sentiment within the party without hitting back at labour over anti—semitism. there is a sense that they are capitulating. >> oh, i get very scared about all this . all this. >> i think there's a big difference between islamism and muslims and muslim bigotries. absolutely wrong. but we have to be able to question, uh, islamism . i have a very rational islamism. i have a very rational fear of islamist men , um, women fear of islamist men, um, women around the world. gays around the world, apostates around the world. there's a long list of victims. it's used as a springboard for a lot of violence, you know? eight 55,000 christians have been killed in nigeria over the past 15 years by violent islamists. i mean, it's essential we keep that debate really open because islamism is a political ideology that has caused a huge amount of harm, and our government's allowed it to root here, and we have to be able to not conflate them with the ordinary muslim
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population who just want to get on with their lives. and this, i think, will harm it and act as a free curtailment on free speech curtailment on justified criticism , on the ideology. >> it's like frankie boyle last week saying whenever he hears the word islamism, he thinks, oh, racist, what an idiot we have. that's what we have to stop. and we've got to look at the, you know, the british media is partly to blame here because whenever a murder whenever there's a murder in this terrorists on this country with terrorists on television when it is television and when it is committed by islamists, they don't at all. they don't say it's that at all. they say terror group , a violent say a terror group, a violent group, but they don't say the word islamist. why are they terrified of upsetting islamist murderer? it's just it's murderer? yeah it's just it's just the most i mean, there's a there's a there's a lot to unpack here when it comes to exactly they are doing. exactly what they are doing. >> help but feel as >> but i can't help but feel as though it's just going to cause more. should ban the >> we should ban the word islamophobia start, islamophobia for a start, francis did that years ago. >> because stops >> yeah, because that stops criticism of a religion that has escaped. criticism of a religion that has esc why. criticism of a religion that has esc why should ideas be free >> why should ideas be be free from can't i don't from criticism? i can't i don't get it. >> i'm just going to i'm just
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going to whizzes on because this one has got a direct labour involvement. trade involvement. i think you trade unionists might unionists aren't. he might be quite labour's quite keen on this. so labour's shadow culture secretary, tanjim debbonaire, has fanned debbonaire, has has fanned flames the rule britannia flames on the rule britannia row. so the patriotic songs, a much loved finale to last night at the proms. but debbonaire said she understood the calls for it to axed. we go. for it to be axed. here we go. >> it's a decision for the people who run the proms . and people who run the proms. and again, shouldn't again, like i said, it shouldn't be politicians who tell people how cultural events . it's how to run cultural events. it's i think for a lot of people that feels like very sort of feels like a very sort of british , which think feels like a very sort of britito , which think feels like a very sort of britito be , which think feels like a very sort of britito be respectediich think feels like a very sort of britito be respected as think feels like a very sort of britito be respected as well.1k feels like a very sort of britito be respected as well. but has to be respected as well. but for lot of people it will for a lot of people it will feel, kanneh—mason feel, as sheku kanneh—mason said, you know, it will feel alienating . alienating. >> andy. we await thangam debbonaire as our culture secretary. and uh, if she's saying that when she's not in power, then presumably she'll ban it when she is. >> well, no, she quite clearly said she's going to leave it to the that run the the bbc. the people that run the proms. what was the proms. i think what was the quote? her favourite quote? it's not her favourite piece music, you know. she piece of music, you know. she was musician for was a professional musician for the two decades. the better part of two decades. i'm practised many i'm sure she's practised many pieces, performed many pieces
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that she prefers to rule britannia and i think ode to joy . sure. well, know . yeah. i'm sure. well, you know , i think the eu anthem supported the brexit campaign. i'd check that, but i think i'd fact check that, but i think she support brexit she did support the brexit campaign maybe um, campaign. maybe not, but, um, you to a grip you know, we need to get a grip if someone's is if someone's patriotism is dictated to whether or not rule britannia is their favourite song. >> god, that's that's not the point and you know it. >> when she says, you know, >> and when she says, you know, lots of people feel really, who are people? she's are these lots of people? she's clearly never been to the proms rule, most i rule, britannia is the most i think performed . think she performed. >> i think performed at the >> i think she performed at the proms. perform. she has proms. she did perform. she has been to the proms because it is the it is the most uniting song that they ever play at the proms. >> people go nuts over it. >> people go nuts over it. >> god save the king is more united. no, i think this is. should ban that as well? should we ban that as well? >> alienate people. >> it may alienate people. >> it may alienate people. >> people if we're going down patriotism . patriotism. >> sing national anthem. >> sing the national anthem. rule, it's you know rule, britannia. it's you know full well, andy, if labour gets in music , plays, in our music, our plays, our street our statues , street names, our statues, they're all going to get washed over. they're all going to get washed over . you say that, know, over. you say that, you know, arts arts and culture arts and arts and culture funding stripped away
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funding has been stripped away over the last years by the over the last 14 years by the tory so had over the last 14 years by the t(good so had over the last 14 years by the t(good go so had over the last 14 years by the t(good go at so had over the last 14 years by the t(good go at washing had over the last 14 years by the t(good go at washing out. had a good go at washing it out. >> if you're >> well, i say, if you're alienating by one of the most patriotic out patriotic piece of music out there, problem. and patriotic piece of music out the suggest, problem. and patriotic piece of music out thesuggest, you problem. and patriotic piece of music out the suggest, you know,ylem. and patriotic piece of music out the suggest, you know, she. and patriotic piece of music out the suggest, you know, she alsoi i'd suggest, you know, she also says everyone. says culture is for everyone. >> about what about >> well, what about what about the our culture? we want it. we don't staying . don't want it staying. >> all right, all right, all right. staying. right. right. staying staying. right. okay right now. now, now. 200 farmers staged an epic protest through canterbury on sunday against foreign imports, as well as overly low supermarket retail pnces as overly low supermarket retail prices for british grown food. so both they said , were so both they said, were undercutting domestic production . the farmers are bang at it. so despite farmers frustrations , despite farmers frustrations, defra say they firmly back british farmers. but so long as the farmers feel their future is at stake, the pitchforks will remain out. it's catching on, isn't it ? we're seeing it right isn't it? we're seeing it right across europe. we're seeing it here. farmers . that
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here. back british farmers. that seems be the general message seems to be the general message there, isn't but look, it's there, isn't it? but look, it's time to reveal today's time now to reveal today's greatest britain and union jackass. greatest britain and union jackass . okay, carol, who is jackass. okay, carol, who is your greatest britain? >> please, man, is rishi sunak for finally finding the cojones to speak out against the extremists that are taking over this country. you made a powerful speech at the weekend, and he he said of galloway that, you know, an mp who denies the horror of october 7 attacks and supports hezbollah . i had to go supports hezbollah. i had to go with him. and he said, anyone who spews hatred protest and they've got to be stopped. and he's right. let's hope he also mentioned the far though, mentioned the far right, though, didn't you were going >> i wondered if you were going to that. was he to pick up on that. was he equating extremism to pick up on that. was he equ islamist extremism?|ism to pick up on that. was he equ islamist extremism? we're the islamist extremism? we're seeing? >> w- seeing? >> was just saying >> i think he was just saying extremists general. and he's extremists in general. and he's right. to it. right. we've got to tackle it. >> well, we to >> okay. well, we do have to tackle extremism in its tackle extremism in all its forms, right? on andy, uh, forms, right? come on andy, uh, my greatest britain this week is, farmers. my greatest britain this week is, i farmers. my greatest britain this week is, i you farmers. my greatest britain this week is, i you know, farmers. my greatest britain this week is, i you know, fighting >> i think, you know, fighting for their for fighting for their industries very, very industries is a very, very honourable do. you honourable thing to do. you know, it across know, we've seen it across europe. know, looking europe. you know, looking to the netherlands, europe. you know, looking to the
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netiatlands, europe. you know, looking to the netiatlandruh, at the poo at the, uh, at the parliament. you know, parliament. so you know, at least have it. a least these guys have done it. a less think less smelly way. i think solidarity they've done great. >> i'd be pro poo pro poo poo poo farmers. >> yeah. they work in it. they work in it. >> it's actually. it's a nice country smell. you're out there, the manure hits and you think, oh, i'm in the country now. and did didn't block did you notice they didn't block the entire road? >> block one lane, >> they only block one lane, which actually very which i think is actually very beautiful, ethical protesting an ethical beautiful, ethical protesting an eth yeah, yeah. um, okay. >> yeah, yeah, yeah. um, okay. good. good stuff. >> greatest threat. >> my greatest threat. >> my greatest threat. >> has to be the rnli 200th >> it has to be the rnli 200th anniversary set up in 1824, saved over 160,000 lives, over 200 years , and 600 of them have 200 years, and 600 of them have sacrificed their lives to save others over the last 200 years. they get a lot of stick for the migrant boat crisis, but that has been forced upon them by the government. so i think we should also praise and respect the brave, their volunteers. these people amazing . people are amazing. >> was surprised i was again >> i was surprised i was again surprised by that because did surprised by that because i did think initially you'd come down surprised by that because i did thi the 1itially you'd come down surprised by that because i did thi the idealy you'd come down surprised by that because i did thi the idea thatu'd come down surprised by that because i did thi the idea that they ome down surprised by that because i did thi the idea that they haveiown surprised by that because i did thi the idea that they have been on the idea that they have been acting as an uber service for illegal i think,
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illegal immigrants, but i think, as say, they've been as you say, they've been forced upon to upon them. um, be interesting to see they include see whether or not they include those saved as people in those live saved as people in the boats. anyway, now , the small boats. anyway, now, i'm you i'm very sorry, despite you going much work choose going to so much work to choose greatest tonight , greatest britishness tonight, i've over i've decided to railroad over the you and do the top of you and just do one of own. charlie peters of my own. it's charlie peters right now. the reason why it's charlie is because this charlie peters is because this guy, decide to cat. well, he guy, um, decide to cat. well, he didn't decide to be caught. somebody and somebody shoplifting. okay and i think a local branch of tesco's or sainsbury's, wherever it was at. and he apprehended them . at. and he apprehended them. okay. and then waited for the police to arrive. they didn't . police to arrive. they didn't. >> what's that pile of stuff there? >> that's the pile of stuff next in this guy's including in this guy's bag, including a woman's well as woman's purse. right. as well as some tins of olive oil and some shampoo some shampoo. yeah shampoo and some shampoo. yeah but it's amazing because a load of people the left decided of people on the left decided that done bad that charlie had done a bad thing, was grass , which thing, and he was a grass, which did think, well, where's did make me think, well, where's the woman's person. >> f- f— >> exactly. so anyway. >> exactly. so anyway. >> very >> right. we have got very quickly union so quickly your union jackass. so have you just won that great britain? >> well, charlie, i'm not entirely sure that was in the rules. okay, rules. but anyway. okay, so my jackass galloway. rules. but anyway. okay, so my jackas as galloway. rules. but anyway. okay, so my jackasas we've galloway. rules. but anyway. okay, so my jackas as we've justalloway.
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rules. but anyway. okay, so my jackas as we've just talked'. okay, as we've just talked about, this is a don't about, this is a guy. don't forget, is guy who who forget, this is a guy who who bowed of saddam bowed at the feet of saddam hussein. that the hussein. then he said that the october the 7th massacre, he was it was a it was a concentration camp breakout. that's it was a it was a concentration camp breakout . that's how he camp breakout. that's how he described. hang on. i'm not finished. rapes and murders of all people were killed. he all people were killed. um, he anyway . go on. all people were killed. um, he anyway. go on. i'm >> i've lost. i've lost the will to live. now uh, my union jackass. >> amy. lame, lame lame by name. lame by nature. 120 grand a year to be the night tsar in london. you know, you've seen iconic locations like g—a—y late shut in under uh, you know, in under her. uh, you know, sasha lord, the great manchester night—time adviser. he does it for free, and does a lot for free, and he does a lot better job make sasha lord better of a job make sasha lord the economy the uk's night time economy adviser. lame loser. adviser. amy lame loser. >> someone who can i just point out which time he had there? >> me three >> you gave me like three seconds. he had a minute seconds. he had he had a minute and there. and a half there. >> are. here we >> and yet here we are. here we are for it. are setting up for it. >> you're two minutes. >> now. you're two minutes. >> now. you're two minutes. >> just three seconds. >> just three seconds. >> uh, thangam debbonaire for the mp , a shadow culture the mp, a shadow culture secretary for labour. what a blueprint of what's going to
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come. yes she's like rule britannia alienates a lot of britons. britons britannia alienates a lot of brit0|have britons britannia alienates a lot of brit0|have definitely britons britannia alienates a lot of brit0|have definitely gotons have have definitely got a problem. it's not rule, britannia. that's the problem . britannia. that's the problem. >> yours? >> and what's yours? >> and what's yours? >> can't you to have. >> i went for debbonaire >> i went for thangam debbonaire . friend of the show tango . hey friend of the show tango andy burnham . andy burnham. >> all right, guys , thank you, >> all right, guys, thank you, thank you. >> i've had a wonderful time tonight. i'll see you tomorrow at 9 pm. >> for a brighter outlook with boxt solar sponsors of weather on . gb news evening, welcome on. gb news evening, welcome along to your latest weather update from the met office for gb news bit of fog forming overnight. >> wet weather is pushing its way northwards and then tomorrow , well, a few showers, but for many it's going to be a fine day. far from fine out there this evening though. low pressure has moving pressure has been moving in, bringing wet weather across bringing some wet weather across the southwest, and these weather fronts continue north fronts continue to track north overnight nothing heavy overnight, but nothing too heavy for most, but a damp, dank kind
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of night as it turns quite misty and murky. a few fog patches around touch of frost possible through parts of wales and southwest england . most towns southwest england. most towns and cities holding a couple of degrees above freezing , but degrees above freezing, but nevertheless a chilly start. certainly across the midlands. and it will be quite murky here. some fog patches for central and eastern england . rain eastern parts of england. rain and drizzle over eastern england and drizzle over eastern england and lingering in northeast scotland of a wet start scotland a bit of a wet start for parts of northern ireland too. rain spread into too. that rain will spread into western but a good western scotland, but for a good chunk of the country it'll be a dry and a bright day. once we've lost the morning mist fog. lost the morning mist and fog. but showers across but some heavy showers across the temperatures here the southeast. temperatures here could reach celsius for most could reach 12 celsius for most 10 or 11 degrees. the wind is fairly light probably fairly light though, so probably feeling warmer than feeling a touch warmer than today. touch of frost returns, today. a touch of frost returns, though. on tuesday night into wednesday morning, and wednesday, looking fairly grey again in eastern areas with a few light showers possible and many western areas dry and bright with some decent spells of sunshine . temperatures again of sunshine. temperatures again where it's grey, 8 or 9 with a
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its flagship immigration policy, the rwanda bill in the house of lords this evening. have lords this evening. peers have been voting variously in favour of monitoring mechanisms which would ensure safeguards in the bill will be fully implemented , bill will be fully implemented, and making sure the bill is fully compliant with international and domestic law. nearly 50 amendments were put forward with more being voted on on wednesday . the prime minister on wednesday. the prime minister previously warned the lords against frustrating the will of the people by hampering the passage of his safety of rwanda bill. meanwhile, a record 385 migrants crossed the english channel today. that's the largest number on a single day this year . gb largest number on a single day this year. gb news understands a seventh small boat crossed into uk waters this evening, carrying 49 migrants. it followed six other boats today, which had been carrying 336 people. they were intercepted by border force officials earlier and yesterday the home office recorded 327 people arriving in the uk after making the journey in eight
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