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tv   Patrick Christys Tonight  GB News  March 6, 2024 3:00am-5:01am GMT

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and, as you've for tax cuts. and, as you've been hearing, suella braverman has told gb news she doesn't believe the former tory mp lee anderson is islamophobic. today's exclusive interview with the former home secretary comes after mr anderson claimed islamists had got control of the london mayor. >> he is not racist, he is not islamophobic. he's calling out very poor performance by the mayor of london, who is completely failed to hold the met commissioner to account, and which is why we've seen emboldened islamism in the streets of london. we've seen an mp hounded out of office because of islamism . of islamism. >> meanwhile, gb news understands that the policing of a pro—palestinian protest in london for this weekend remains unchanged. officers will reportedly use existing public order and anti—terror laws, but it's after rishi sunak called on the police to crack down on extremist behaviour . a extremist behaviour. a government minister has paid damages to an academic after suggesting she supported hamas ,
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suggesting she supported hamas, but the cost of that payment is covered by taxpayers. the science secretary, michelle donelan, has now retracted her comments about professor kate sang after a government investigation found the allegations were baseless . and allegations were baseless. and finally thousands of staff at greggs are to get, shall we say, a slice of the profits. more than £17 million in bonuses. evidently, it's after the high street bakery saw profits rise by 27% in the last year, so staff can expect to see their extra dough in their pay packets at the end of this month to recognise their hard work, and it's all the icing on the cake for the workers, who already get a share of the profits each year for the very latest news stories, do sign up for gp news alerts. scan the qr code on your screen to gb news. common screen or go to gb news. common alerts . welcome along a message alerts. welcome along a message to the prime ministerjust boots
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out the jihadis. >> it's not hard. france are doing it. they've just kicked out a hate cleric called mahjoub. mahjoub for saying that the french flag was satanic and stirring up hatred against women and jews . 15 police officers and jews. 15 police officers turned up at his house and eight hours later he was on a plane back to tunisia. despite living in since the 1980s, bish in france since the 1980s, bish bash bosh ! he then said this bash bosh! he then said this would never have happened in britain. were you damn right it wouldn't. in britain he'd be outside parliament every saturday a megaphone. last saturday with a megaphone. last friday, rishi sunak stood outside downing street and said ineed outside downing street and said i need to speak to you all this evening because this situation has long enough . he also has gone on long enough. he also said this to the police . said this to the police. >> we will back you when you take action, but if we are asking more of the police, we in government must also back up that call with action. >> in response , the met police >> in response, the met police just ignored it and said they'd carry on doing what they're doing, which is not a lot. but were he not, rishi sunak has
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told michael gove to come up with a new definition of extremism. it will come as tremendous comfort to jews and able walk freely. that able to walk around freely. that able to walk around freely. that a new definition of extremism is on the way. the victims of the manchester arena bombing will sleep easy now. a new definition of extremist is on the way. here's the mad thing because we now live in a society where a politician cannot possibly just single out islamist extremism, we now end up with guff like this. the new definition of extremism is, quote, the promotion or advancement of an ideology based on intolerance, hatred or violence that aims to undermine the rights or freedoms of others. it will include those who seek to undermine or overturn the uk's liberal system of democracy and democratic rights , and any groups or rights, and any groups or individuals who intentionally create a permissive environment for extremism would be banned from working with government bodies. yes you heard that last one correctly. it turns out that taxpayers have been giving money to key figures in organisations
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funded by our counter—terror programme , prevent, who are programme, prevent, who are alleged to have supported the taliban , defended militant taliban, defended militant islamist groups banned in the uk and hosted hate preachers. but there is another problem with this new definition of extremism. the fact is that it might now make you an extremist. do you believe in women only changing rooms .7 you're an changing rooms.7 you're an extremist. are you pro—life.7 extremist right? are extremist. are you pro—life? extremist right? are you a member of a concerned religious group? extremist right. there is going to be a new government unit, another layer of taxpayer funded bureaucracy by the way, to determine whether individuals or groups have met the above criteria . they're also drawing criteria. they're also drawing up a list of foreign hate preachers who will be banned from entering the uk . great from entering the uk. great apart from that, does absolutely nothing to change the fact that we can't deport the ones who are already here. if they came already here. and if they came across a small boat, they'd across on a small boat, they'd just anyway. so in just get to stay anyway. so in summary , the police are ignoring
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summary, the police are ignoring our prime minister, our prime minister is admitting that the taxpayer has been funding radical extremists for years , as radical extremists for years, as the solution to that is to turn ordinary people into extremists . ordinary people into extremists. conceivably, 85 year old marjorie from number 42, who doesn't believe in gay marriage, is now in the same bracket as a hook handed al—qaeda cleric and we're not actually deporting anyone , rearranging, decking the anyone, rearranging, decking the titanic. but let's get the thoughts of my panel now. it is gb news presenter nana akua. i'm also joined, of course, by conservative stoke on trent nonh conservative stoke on trent north mp jonathan gullis, an author and broadcaster. amy nickell , neil turner , jonathan, nickell, neil turner, jonathan, i'll start with you. i mean , i'll start with you. i mean, seriously, can we not just deport the jihadis and be done with it? i mean, that's the real issue, isn't it? >> well, i never thought i'd say this, patrick, but it's time to be like the french, which be more like the french, which is that should all is something that we should all terrify we've got to terrify us, that we've got to that point. but you were bang on the money that whilst i'm
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perfectly happy see full perfectly happy to see the full detail and it and engage detail and review it and engage with prime minister with the prime minister regarding a new definition, ultimately in ultimately we have already in place you can't place laws that say you can't incite or hatred, you incite violence or hatred, you can't discriminate. we have the human equality human rights act, the equality act regard. obviously, human rights act, the equality act can't regard. obviously, human rights act, the equality act can't also ard. obviously, human rights act, the equality act can't also have)bviously, human rights act, the equality act can't also have the)usly, human rights act, the equality act can't also have the terror you can't also have the terror act. so for those inciting terrorism, and we have the ability prescribe, we ability to prescribe, as we already ut—tahrir already saw with hizb ut—tahrir very added to very recently being added to that for me, it's that list. so for me, it's actually about looking at what laws already have and laws we already have and ensuring are enforced ensuring that they are enforced and that chief and making sure that chief constables clearly told and constables are clearly told and police crime commissioners, there consequences to there will be consequences to actions being taken on the actions not being taken on the front line because it's not the bobbies on the beat. they're the ones who want to impose it. it's the managers in their cushy offices all offices who are all too seemingly happy pander to the seemingly happy to pander to the twitterati, which is the last thing us do. thing any of us should do. >> mean, no, no, we do >> yeah. i mean, no, no, we do already have laws here like being a jihadi. well yeah, exactly. >> the problem to me, >> the problem is, to me, they're just trying to make themselves busy. so they themselves look busy. so they want us to want to feel they want us to feel that they're actually doing something they're something about it, but they're just around the edges
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just tinkering around the edges because laws projecting, for example, you know, horrible slogans i think, slogans on big ben is i think, the act of people who are being extremist. but they weren't tackled at all. also, i think when you start changing definitions, all you're doing is you're changing where who's determining what is extreme because, for example , to me, because, for example, to me, a man cannot be a woman, a woman cannot be a man. you've gone from one extreme of a man to a woman, which is another. that to me is an extreme thought that you believe is true. yet me is an extreme thought that you ielieve is true. yet me is an extreme thought that you i wille is true. yet me is an extreme thought that you i will be is true. yet me is an extreme thought that you i will be seen true. yet me is an extreme thought that you i will be seen asie. yet me is an extreme thought that you i will be seen as the 'et me is an extreme thought that you i will be seen as the gender me, i will be seen as the gender critical one. yet i am. i am telling the truth and then there's final thing there's the final thing that when start changing when you do start changing definitions, it starts to encompass so for encompass other things. so for example couple of years example, about a couple of years ago, changed the definition ago, they changed the definition of woman to include men who identify which identify as women, which means now a man who now it legitimises a man who says he's woman in a female says he's a woman in a female only space. i was to only space. if i was to complain, then i'm the extremist. i think these are extremist. and i think these are the issues. it's not necessary. we have the laws in place. they're tinkering they're just tinkering around the look busy. yeah, the edges to look busy. yeah, i'm going to pick that i'm going to pick up on that because is just about
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because i think it is just about looking busy, isn't it? >> do already have these >> we do already have these laws. absolutely no laws. there is absolutely no need we can see need whatsoever. we can see things going on right now before our need rishi our eyes. we do not need rishi sunak up with sunak to come up with a framework here. we and i agree with i think that with you actually, i think that this just because they've this is just because they've seen the, the palestine marches over the weekends and they're panicking. >> they're panicking about what to do it. so they think a to do about it. so they think a broader thing, this definition, we down more easily on we can clamp down more easily on people very people with actually very acceptable not extreme beliefs. and we can put them all under an umbrella of extremism. more easily. and i think the people that this will affect are groups such as the palestine solidarity campaign, the muslim council of britain have expressed their concerns over this broadening . concerns over this broadening. they have of the definition . and they have of the definition. and even groups like just stop oil, they they could fall under this. they're not extremists . well, they're not extremists. well, you don't think that they are extremist for me. >> no, they are for me. >> no, they are for me. >> extremism has to entail the target people. >> violence at the end of it. it has to create violence. >> wouldn't you say?
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>> wouldn't you say? >> standing, i think democratically protest thing is very different. >> and we've seen this with the curtailing of protest laws already not climbing on the prime personal prime minister's personal residence . do you residence up in richmond. do you mean that was greenpeace, wasn't it? an it? well that's that's an extremism itself. but but extremism in itself. but but it was an extreme act . was was an extreme act. it was an extreme act. it wasn't extremist. >> just on the old greenpeace stuff that active case. so stuff that is an active case. so we will leave that one. >> sorry, patrick. i'll get in trouble every week and he was out. >> so. yes. yes. so obviously remains to be seen exactly what the outcome of that case is. however, the point still stands about forms about some other forms of extremism. like, oh, i don't extremism. i'm like, oh, i don't know, stop oil our extremists. >> well, are i think >> well, they are i think they're extremists. obviously >> well, they are i think they'probablyiists. obviously >> well, they are i think they'probablyiists. (wanthly >> well, they are i think they'probablyiists. (want the law they probably don't want the law to or definition to be to be or the definition to be changed, then they'll changed, because then they'll definitely be in there. but the things anyway are illegal. >> the thing is, i don't get >> but the thing is, i don't get why was about to say, i think why i was about to say, i think the one thing we all agree on ultimately, is that by broadening it to be such a big umbrella, there will people broadening it to be such a big umbsimply1ere will people broadening it to be such a big umbsimply1ere have people broadening it to be such a big umbsimply1ere have differences who simply just have differences of opinions. >> yes, they get caught up in
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this i'm worried about this and i'm very worried about who what who gets to determine what extremism is the tsar is extremism is. who is the tsar is appointed and why is their worldly view more than worldly view more correct than anyone very anyone else's? it's all very subjective, the end, but subjective, this at the end, but the interesting thing is that rishi one saying rishi sunak is the one saying this a conservative this is a conservative government about these government talking about these british government talking about these britthis a minister who >> this is a prime minister who stood and in my opinion, said stood up and in my opinion, said something very extreme, which is transphobic, his transphobic, which was his comments a man can comments about, oh, a man can never woman and this never be a woman and this transphobic agenda. >> interesting, a lot of >> so it's interesting, a lot of people those margins, the people on those margins, on the level the same. people on those margins, on the levrbul the same. people on those margins, on the levrbul the the same. people on those margins, on the levrbul the problem the same. people on those margins, on the levrbul the problem to he same. people on those margins, on the levrbul the problem to suggest. >> but the problem to suggest that this is going to clamp down on critical is very not. >> you've just proved the problem by saying that, he said. you what said, a you said that what he said, a man cannot be a woman. a woman cannot a it's cannot be a man. it's transphobic. it's it's the transphobic. it's not. it's the truth. now, if biological reality, it's a reality. if we're going to take that as a definition extremist, then definition of an extremist, then i'm i'm telling i'm one. yet i'm telling the truth. >> reason i would 9—- >> the reason i would say that is because real world is because the real world consequences are the impact on trans which have been trans lives, which have been violent. call it violent. so that's why i call it extreme evidence, because hate violent. so that's why i call it extremihaveience, because hate violent. so that's why i call it extremihave gone because hate violent. so that's why i call it extremihave gone up cause hate violent. so that's why i call it extremihave gone up tenfold ate crimes have gone up tenfold since transgender. since this whole transgender.
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there no evidence there is absolutely no evidence that rights have been that women's rights have been amended eroded in any way. amended or eroded in any way. but there is plenty of evidence to suggest that women's rights have been eroded. okay. >> do you want to hit back on the that there's women? the idea that there's women? there's evidence women's there's no evidence that women's rights have been eroded in any way? >> i think that that's absolute poppycock. and you must know that women evidence it that well, me evidence okay. well, let me evidence it. okay. let's take leah let's take let's take leah thomas, who's swimming in let's take let's take leah tiwomen's who's swimming in let's take let's take leah tiwomen's game?)'s swimming in let's take let's take leah tiwomen's game? college ming in let's take let's take leah tiwomen's game? college in ng in a women's game? college in america. well, you've for america. well, you've asked for some evidence. america. well, you've asked for soncanvidence. america. well, you've asked for soncan you1ce. america. well, you've asked for soncan you give us a uk based example? >> okay. you want a uk based example? well, let me have a think about one. all right. let's okay. let's take isla bryson. okay. i'll that is a uk i'll bryson, that is a uk example of somebody who you ask me a question going to me a question i'm going to finish it. somebody who was then changed the definition or decided a decided that they were now a woman to sent woman and was going to be sent to female until until to a female prison until until it became clear that he really shouldn't going at all. shouldn't be going there at all. >> idea just to drag it >> but the idea just to drag it back to exactly the point here, under potentially this guidance, okay, that that under potentially this guidance, okwrong that that under potentially this guidance, okwrong could that that under potentially this guidance, okwrong could very that that under potentially this guidance, okwrong could very easily at that under potentially this guidance, okwrong could very easily be :hat is wrong could very easily be classed as extremists . classed as extremists. >> and that's what we end up
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with, where people who are very, very vocal about saying potentially that a male rapist shouldn't be in a females prison could well be classed as extremist , i could well be classed as extremist, i think. could well be classed as extremist , i think. meanwhile, extremist, i think. meanwhile, meanwhile, just say mean? meanwhile, can i just say mean? while a jihadi who's come across in this country to this country in this country to this country in a small bow could still not be deported, which i would argue, jonathan, is the bigger issue ? issue? >> absolutely. look, and >> well, absolutely. look, and i think know views on think you well know my views on this regarding deport. and this issue regarding deport. and to fair to prime to be fair to the prime minister, he doing everything minister, he is doing everything he from what i've been he can from what i've been witnessing in the witnessing, in all the conversations to conversations i've had to actually the boats. actually try and stop the boats. he's gone anywhere near as he's not gone anywhere near as quick as like to have done. quick as i'd like to have done. obviously, i think there's other ideas solutions, ideas to the solutions, like leaving absolutely leaving the echr is absolutely got something that do, got to be something that we do, but ultimately, i think once we undo house of undo all the pesky house of lords their ridiculous lords with all their ridiculous amendments and the virtues signalling from people like justin welby, ignored signalling from people like justiresigned ignored signalling from people like justiresigned dustbinj signalling from people like justiresigned dustbin of and resigned to the dustbin of history, can actually history, then we can actually make get that flight make sure we get that flight off. and ultimately, like you say, protect this country. because we've because at the moment we've got all young males or
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all these young single males or undocumented coming into this country. idea who undocumented coming into this coun are, idea who undocumented coming into this coun are, what idea who undocumented coming into this coun are, what their idea who undocumented coming into this coun are, what their intentions they are, what their intentions are, far too many are, and actually far too many of are entering the black of them are entering the black market, which means that ultimately, they're ultimately, you know, they're putting at risk as well as putting lives at risk as well as pushing being vulnerable pushing or being vulnerable themselves to extremism. and i've that stoke on trent i've seen that in stoke on trent with ut—tahrir targeting with hizb ut—tahrir targeting the people have with hizb ut—tahrir targeting the kept people have with hizb ut—tahrir targeting the kept as people have with hizb ut—tahrir targeting the kept as si people have with hizb ut—tahrir targeting the kept as si king ple have with hizb ut—tahrir targeting the kept as si king as have been kept as si king as a recruiting ground, that is the last my michael last thing i need for my michael gove up with a framework gove coming up with a framework as far as i can tell, does not do anything about that. >> like it's too >> and also it's like it's too late, it? too late along late, isn't it? too late along the road because left wing extremism and right wing extremism and right wing extremism forms of extremism are all forms of extremism are all forms of extremism same extremism come from the same place, place of place, come from a place of alienation, out of step alienation, feeling out of step with with the society that with the with the society that you're in. surely we need to you're in. so surely we need to get earlier rather get this much earlier rather than broadening definition, we than broadening a definition, we need the problem. need to solve the problem. >> yeah, again. that is >> yeah, again. but that is a point of agreement that we need to he skirting to sort. where is he skirting around it? >> enforce the law is where is the centre? earlier, the centre? as i said earlier, who decides what is extreme and that the issue. who decides what is extreme and thai the issue. who decides what is extreme and thai mean, ssue. who decides what is extreme and thai mean, ssthink it who decides what is extreme and tha i mean, ssthink it will who decides what is extreme and thai mean, ssthink it will be >> i mean, i think it will be fascinating. i would argue that under now under under these rules now potentially anyone any of potentially anyone from any of
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the religions like major the country religions like major religions, major religions with a more conservative outlook on those religions. so whether it's, say, the catholic church or whatever, could very easily find themselves falling foul of being classed as an extremist and therefore being denied any kind of government funding or anything that, which just anything like that, which i just think is bonkers, when really the absolutely overwhelming problem is at rampant militant jihadis doesn't seem jihadis. and this doesn't seem to with that anyway, to do anything with that anyway, in a massive shift in tone, it's the latest great british giveaway chance to win. giveaway and your chance to win. £12,345. yes that is 12345 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 £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 gadget package to enjoy, including a handheld games
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but up next, though, conservative ronald conservative mp ronald jayawardena goes head to head with former labour speechwriter james matthewson to find out whether or not the rumoured may election would benefit the tories or the labour party. more i suspect it will benefit the tories . this is patrick christys tories. this is patrick christys tonight. we're only on .
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gb news. this is patrick christys tonight we're only on gb news. coming up. sunak backs police to front up. sunak backs police to front up to the pro—palestine mob. but are their hands tied? but right now it's time for our head to head. now it's time for our head to head . so labour's jonathan head. so labour's jonathan ashworth has been taking the fight directly to rishi sunak this morning. so here's what he said. >> i think now after 14 years of the conservatives, it really is time for change. but i think that opportunity for change is coming because i think there's going to be a major general election. lots of gossip swirling around in this place about a may general election. and i think rishi sunak and this is my demand for rishi sunak. i'm sure he's watching gb news this morning. my demand to rishi sunakis this morning. my demand to rishi sunak is name the date i'm sure he's quaking in his boots. >> jonathan. but we reports today that ceasefire talks between hamas and israel have stalled and labour looks set to continue tearing themselves apart. don't they, over this war in the middle east and yesterday
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george announced he george galloway announced he will support candidates to stand against right across against labour mps right across the country, including deputy leader angela rayner. so who would a may general election actually benefit more tories or labour? let me know your thoughts by emailing me gb views at gb news. com tweet me at gb news. and while you're there, go and vote in our poll. i'll bring you the results very shortly to debate this. now i'm joined by the former environment secretary ranil and former ranil jayawardena and former labour speechwriter james mathewson. ranil is there going to be a may election and who will it benefit more if there is? well i mean, i clearly know. >> there's man who >> there's only one man who knows what he wants to do. but i tell you this , the labour party tell you this, the labour party are going to come majorly unstuck. i mean, they've faced no on their policies no scrutiny on their policies because they're not the government. they've had government. all they've had to do complain. when people do is complain. and when people really that they're really find out that they're going hive off money back to going to hive off money back to their heartland, ads in london backing sadiq khan's approach to running london when they learn
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that they're going to copy the welsh government's approach 20 mile hour speed limits mile per hour speed limits everywhere and when they hear that they're going to up that they're going to put up taxes, think are taxes, then i think people are really going say , hang on, really going to say, hang on, i'm not sure labour's for me , okay? >>i okay? >> i mean, james, think >> i mean, james, i think arguably the bigger issue is that an election in that if sunak has an election in may, there every chance that may, there is every chance that this israel hamas situation is still going going on and still going to be going on and labour ripping themselves labour are ripping themselves apart, that jonathan has to apart, and that jonathan has to be careful what he wishes for. >> sorry, am i living in the >> i'm sorry, am i living in the in the same world as the rest of you here? we've had 40 years of tory party government. it's the same tory party we've had that whole time . think about the whole time. think about the state of the country is currently in things. i know, patrick, that you and i miss may disagree on, but i'm sure we'll agree that it's not where we would like country to be. would like the country to be. who in charge of the country, who is in charge of the country, who has been in charge of the country whole time? country for the whole time? james, tories now. james, it's the tories now. >> got galloway >> you've got george galloway causing you all kinds of problems. george galloway is one mp. is george galloway is one
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mp. >> and the second that we have a general election, he will no longer be an mp because the labour party will win that seat back. george galloway is a distraction for everybody. george galloway cares about himself. he's an egotistical maniac. knows that. maniac. everybody knows that. but the tories are using them as a the fact that a distraction, and the fact that we were talking about george galloway instead of 14 years of tory party failure, jonathan ashworth knows that if he calls the bluff on this, they can't go to an election right now. they're hoping that more time will them some way to will give them some way to wriggle out of the failings of that face didn't quite that currently face didn't quite hear everything you said there, but didn't too but it didn't sound too nice about i'll about george galloway, so i'll just, the of safety , just, for the sake of safety, will say not here to defend will say he's not here to defend himself, but ranil, um, i if i, if sunak any he'd if sunak had any balls, he'd call a general election in may. if sunak had any balls, he'd calihe'deneral election in may. if sunak had any balls, he'd calihe'd gotal election in may. if sunak had any balls, he'd calihe'd got it election in may. if sunak had any balls, he'd calihe'd got it done.)n in may. if sunak had any balls, he'd calihe'd got it done. he'd may. if sunak had any balls, he'd calihe'd got it done. he'd crack >> he'd got it done. he'd crack open the cavernous wounds in the labour party the gaza labour party over the gaza situation. no. >> well well, you're >> well, well, i think you're absolutely right to call out labour's huge divides on this issue. >> and it's not just george galloway, but you've got people
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like diane abbott who are backing galloway . it seems from backing galloway. it seems from what i've from what i've heard. so you're right, there are huge divides in the labour movement, as they like to say. and you know, the socialists will be exposed for what they are. the divides on this issue and others will be exposed, um, in an election campaign. and, and here's the thing. you know, in an election campaign , i think an election campaign, i think it's on the conservative party to be able to take a positive case to the country . and i don't case to the country. and i don't think we've got anything to be afraid in that regard. afraid about in that regard. i think really think we've got a really positive case to take to the country, particularly the country, particularly if the budget tomorrow cuts taxes further , and it's rumoured that further, and it's rumoured that there's going to be a further cut to national insurance helping families helping hard working families across country. i think across this country. i think there's a really positive story to take the country, and the to take to the country, and the opposite is true. if we don't stick with that plan to cut taxes, we'll back to square taxes, we'll be back to square one higher taxes under one with higher taxes under laboun one with higher taxes under labour. uh, if people labour. um, if, uh, if people choose so i think there's choose that. so i think there's a there. and i think a real choice there. and i think labour are going to come unstuck. >> what is labour's message,
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james? apart from we're the james? apart from we're not the tories exactly . tories exactly. >> we need to see that. and that's exactly what we'll see in a election campaign. a general election campaign. i would from the would hope to be seeing from the labour party right now, to be honest, by this point, if we're talking potentially talking about potentially going to general election, to a major general election, more policy pledges, more direction, do need more policy pledges, more di|see)n, do need more policy pledges, more di|see)n, of do need more policy pledges, more di|see)n, of that. do need more policy pledges, more di|see)n, of that. even need more policy pledges, more di|see)n, of that. even people to see more of that. even people like are like alastair campbell are calling for that from keir starmer. so hopefully that's a message listen to. message that we'll listen to. but the same and we but at the same time and we talked desperate stuff talked about desperate stuff from hearing from the tories to be hearing that we're talking diane that we're talking about diane abbott. talk about abbott. we still talk about diane so far diane abbott. she's so far removed the front of removed from the front bench of the of the labour party currently that it's, it's fantastic that we're about fantastic that we're still about her george as the her and george galloway as the only attack the labour only way to attack the labour party. starmer. party. talk about keir starmer. talk reeves right. talk about rachel reeves right. >> mean i think it's i think >> i mean i think it's i think it's the case though, that it's more the case though, that they going be standing they are going to be standing quite independent quite strong, independent candidates against some labour big hitters areas there big hitters in areas where there is large, sizeable proportion is a large, sizeable proportion of the muslim vote and a lot of those people are massively in favour of a ceasefire, which labour did not provide. which is
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exactly what i'm literally just saying, exactly what george galloway saying. and galloway has been saying. and also that we've been also one thing that we've been talking this talking about massively on this show of months, and show for a period of months, and i i'm massively i'm in agreement. >> i'm massively in favour of a ceasefire myself. i'm proudly pro—palestine , ceasefire myself. i'm proudly pro—palestine, understand pro—palestine, i understand that, the the damage that, but the damage, the damage has for this. has been done for this. >> this is this is my point, >> is this is this is my point, james, that if a general election is called in may and there is no way that keir starmer has got time to repair the damage that done to the damage that he's done to that community, is there. the damage that he's done to tha' so, community, is there. the damage that he's done to tha' so, you community, is there. the damage that he's done to tha' so, you know,nunity, is there. the damage that he's done to tha' so, you know, youty, is there. the damage that he's done to tha' so, you know, you are s there. the damage that he's done to tha'so, you know, you are in here. trouble. >> they may well lose some votes somewhere, but i do not look at that general election. do not that general election. i do not think there was anything that general election. i do not think about.ras anything that general election. i do not think about. if anything that general election. i do not think about. if they hing that general election. i do not think about. if they had stood worry about. if they had stood a proper candidate and not cocked up what they cocked up and actually proper campaign actually ran a proper campaign with the with a candidate all the way through. don't george through. i don't think george galloway have won at all. galloway would have won at all. >> well, interesting. >> okay, well, interesting. obviously we'll never know. but there ronald, look in there we go. ronald, look in your hearts. you know, your heart of hearts. you know, the minister probably the prime minister is probably watching right now. watching this right now. i bet he yeah. when do you want an he is. yeah. when do you want an election he is. yeah. when do you want an ele�*well, always happy to go >> well, i'm always happy to go to the to my constituents and
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speak to them and see what they're thinking. and hopefully count on their support. i'd be perfectly election perfectly happy with an election in may if that's what the prime minister decides to do. i think, as i say, we've got a really positive case to take to the country. i think we can do it on our own terms. we in may, our own terms. if we go in may, rather letting it being rather than letting it being timed out towards the end of this parliament and, you know, i think also call labour's think it'll also call labour's bluff because really they bluff here because really they don't want the election in may. they're saying that they want one in in order to try and put us off. i think we're going to i think, you know, we could very easily their bluff. easily call their bluff. >> is it not quite devastating that many your own mps are that so many of your own mps are jumping election, jumping ship before an election, though? that, yeah. though? i find that, yeah. >> mean, i'm very sad to see >> i mean, i'm very sad to see people go like paul scully, who i think is great guy, um, i think is a great guy, um, a really good mp for sutton and jim. sure we'll select some jim. i'm sure we'll select some really candidates place really good candidates in place of people like paul, though, and there people there are some great people coming so, you coming through. um, so, you know, the know, i don't think the conservative is short of conservative party is short of new . um, that's really positive. >> ronald. just final one to you
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on this. i mean, i suppose if they were that confident a they were that confident of a general they general election victory, they won't anywhere, would won't be going anywhere, would they? won't be going anywhere, would the well, some have like >> well, some people have like like served in like paul said, he served in local he served in local government. he served in parliament for a long, long time. wants to do something time. he wants to do something new. i think that's perfectly fair. change fair. people want to change careers. people have multiple careers. people have multiple careers he careers now. and he said he didn't retire in didn't want to retire in politics. so good luck to him or or in politics will or be retired in politics will be way of putting. be another way of putting. >> all right, both of you. thank you.thank >> all right, both of you. thank you. thank very, much. you. thank you very, very much. we find out. we've not got we will find out. we've not got long to wait. if it is now long to wait. if it is may now anyway. was anyway. all right. that was former secretary former environment secretary ranil jayawardena former ranil jayawardena and former labour who do agree matthewson. who do you agree with? so the gaza ceasefire talks have broken down. all right. that's happening. so right. so that's happening. so you protest want on you can protest all you want on a the fact is hamas a saturday. the fact is hamas actually ceasefire. actually don't want a ceasefire. all right. who would all right. so who would a may general election benefit more the tories or labour rupert says i don't understand this i honestly don't understand this nonsense. i honestly don't understand this nonsensethey are irrelevant to finished. they are irrelevant to the and nothing can the uk now and nothing can change i'm probably the change that. i'm probably the biggest conservative i know and i destroyed . i grieve
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i want them destroyed. i grieve rupert, i hope you're all right, mate. all right. anyway, leah says the gaza conflict is more damaging to labour, but the longer the tory mp supports sunak , the greater their damage sunak, the greater their damage is too. all right, peter says neither the public have more important things to worry about. what their general election. peter, anyway, your verdict is now right. so 39% you say now in right. so 39% of you say may a may election will benefit the tories . more 61% of you the tories. more 61% of you think it will benefit labour. that's really interesting. so the majority of you think that what's going on in gaza and israel, i would assume that's what i would that. you what i would say from that. you don't is going have don't think is going to have a catastrophic impact, even if that in may. whilst that election is in may. whilst it's all still ongoing. interesting. very much interesting. thank you very much for part. now up . for taking part. now coming up. excuse me, prince kate's uncle could be one of celebrity big brother's most controversial housemates ever , but is it fair housemates ever, but is it fair for itv to put such pressure on the princess just as she recovers from serious surgery ? recovers from serious surgery? chairman of the uk's leading talent agency, professor jonathan shalit , offers his
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jonathan shalit, offers his expert industry analysis . are expert industry analysis. are itv wrong to be putting the uncle of kate in there at this time? for the royal family? do you think? and next after the met police confirmed they will ignore the prime minister's plea to crack down on inflammatory protests in the heart of the caphal protests in the heart of the capital, suella braverman hits back. >> i think the time for words has come to an end and we do need to see action, retired police officer norman brennan weighs in on the growing tension between the government and our country's largest police force, and at ten, i'll also be talking about the refugee grooming gang scandal. >> it's patrick christys tonight. we're only on gb news. gb news is the home of free speech. we were created to champion it and we deliver it day in, day out. >> free speech allows us all to explore and debate openly the issues most important to us, our families and of course, the british people having challenging conversations to enlighten each other. >> which is why we hear all sides the argument. sides of the argument. >> are the people's channel. >> we are the people's channel. >> we are the people's channel. >> we are the people's channel. >> we will always stand by the
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freedom to express yourself on tv , radio and online. tv, radio and online. >> this is gb news, britain's news channel
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>> welcome back. coming up, our itv show aimlessly disrespecting our royal family but first gb news kan exclusive reveal that the policing of a huge pro—palestine protest in london this weekend will be no
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different from usual . that's different from usual. that's despite rishi sunak demanding police chiefs do more to crack down on extremist mobs. in a speech last week. so talking today met police boss sir mark rowley hit back at sunak's criticism . criticism. >> in his context, the polarised pubuc >> in his context, the polarised public debate um, i do think sometimes that we're the first people to be able to be labelled simultaneously as woke and fascists . we have to police the fascists. we have to police the law as it is not as others would wish it to be. >> the only people calling you fascists are people who don't want to get nicked for having extremists anyway . whatever. but extremists anyway. whatever. but could the met not do more? indeed, their policing of a vigil to remember sarah everard back in 2021 was slammed for being heavy handed, with widespread outrage at some women even being bundled to the ground. well former home secretary suella bravermans had enough, she's told gb news earlier today that it's time for
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deeds, not words. >> i think the time for words has come to an end and we do need to see action. you know, the next day we saw tens of thousands of people take to the streets chanting hateful slogans and behaving in a totally unacceptable way. and we need to see a step change in the police response . they need to be response. they need to be enforcing the law. they need to be arresting people are be arresting people who are using, threatening or abusive language. we need to be holding the police to account in a better way, and i would have liked to have seen an emergency law introduced to actually take steps to restrict some of these marches . marches. >> i'm joined now by retired london police officer of 31 years. it's norman brennan. norman, are the police being properly backed , do you think? properly backed, do you think? or is that weak from rowley ? the or is that weak from rowley? the police have not been backed for many years. >> uh, mark rowley is correct. i understand exactly where the pubuc understand exactly where the public are coming from . i follow public are coming from. i follow social media all the time . uh, social media all the time. uh, they want police to go in heavy handed. uh, what sir mark rowley
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just said, and rightly so, is that the police have to act within the law, not how others would wish the law to be. which basically means , uh, he has to basically means, uh, he has to comply with the legislation , uh, comply with the legislation, uh, made under statute and some of the public want him to go in with his officers, uh, and crack a few heads. well, the prime minister, i'm sure, won't be there the following day when hundreds of thousands of the pubuc hundreds of thousands of the public are demanding those officers be sacked, suspended, and put before a discipline board. so the met are walking a tightrope. uh oh. oh i think we've lost norman there. >> i'd be quite keen to see what everybody here actually thinks about all of this, though. really i mean, are we seriously in a situation where there is a difference? there, between difference? isn't there, between going cracking a few going in and cracking a few heads as norman said, there ? oh, heads as norman said, there? oh, i'm afraid we're going to have
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to
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break welcome back. right okay. so i'm just going to reintroduce norman brennan into the fray here. retired london police officer with 31 years experience, norman, thank you very much for hanging on the line there. so um, suella braverman is saying, look, to have brought in look, we need to have brought in more laws to be to more bespoke laws to be able to sort out what's going on on the streets. rishi sunak said he wanted officers police wanted police officers to police the not just manage the marches and not just manage them. rowley turns and them. mark rowley turns up and says, simultanee says, oh, we've simultanee called woke and fascist. i do put it to you. normally the only people calling them fascists are people calling them fascists are people with things like paragliders on their back. you don't get nicked for don't want to get nicked for being terrorists. >> right. look being terrorists. >> the right. look being terrorists. >> the law right. look being terrorists. >> the law is. right. look being terrorists. >> the law is. underght. look being terrorists. >> the law is. under the look what the law is. under the pubuc what the law is. under the public order act. it's threatening abusive words threatening words, abusive words and behaviour. threatening words, abusive words and behaviour . and and threatening behaviour. and it's a visible sign or it's also a visible sign or representation . the visible sign representation. the visible sign or representation is what the paragliders . uh, were on the max paragliders. uh, were on the max of them. two girls and the representation was the sign on
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big ben. so all of them are breaching the law when they go over all of what i've just said. however, london is like a tinderbox at the moment . the tinderbox at the moment. the anger and the hatred, uh, amongst the hundreds of thousands , predominantly law thousands, predominantly law abiding members of the public. if there was, say 1500 or 2000 uh, officers on duty, patrick and we had to arrest 250 people, right. went in with the batons. it takes two officers per arrest . suddenly, a third of your contingent of overseeing several hundred thousand officers is reduced to such a degree that if other elements within there started , uh, sort of basically started, uh, sort of basically all out public disorder , london all out public disorder, london would london would be in major trouble and hundreds if not thousands of officers will be phoned at home. all the outside just don't seem to have any problem, though , norman. problem, though, norman. >> they just don't seem to have any problem policing hate speech onune any problem policing hate speech online they don't seem to online or they don't seem to have around
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have any problem going around to, people's houses or to, you know, people's houses or , it comes to things , uh, when it comes to things like whether not someone's like whether or not someone's been bit nasty twitter or been a bit nasty on twitter or they to have any they don't seem to have any problem you're a christian problem if you're a christian preacher in streets. i just preacher in the streets. i just don't why they why don't understand why they why they seem to struggle with this stuff. >> yeah, i mean, i share the frustrations as well. but patrick, it's not the front line men and women. uh, and it's the front line men and women, predominantly on media predominantly on social media and that get and on the streets that get criticised. these officers are caught rock hard caught between a rock and a hard place. of them do place. the majority of them do not want to be there every week. their leave is cancelled. they not want to be there every week. theirto ave is cancelled. they not want to be there every week. theirto miss; cancelled. they not want to be there every week. theirto miss an ncelled. they not want to be there every week. theirto miss an adversarieszy have to miss an adversaries birthday, presents take in a kids school, etc. these officers want to be on their own boroughs and these hundreds of thousands of that come in week in of people that come in week in and are depleting in and week out are depleting in paris, in paris , they get the paris, in paris, they get the water cannons out, they get the tear gas out, and these things stop right. >> in spain, we've seen it in italy. they do it. you do it once. it's a bit like if we do turn that very first boat back, it's come across the channel. we wouldn't now, wouldn't have this problem now, but it happen. and so
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but we've let it happen. and so all these police with all these police officers, with respect going , oh, you know, respect to going, oh, you know, they've got the leave cancelled. yeah. they just yeah. all right. if they just sort out in first place, sort it out in the first place, they wouldn't be here. >> management issue. you >> it's a management issue. you highlight paris. i've seen paris as and i've seen as well, patrick. and i've seen where police have in where the police have gone in heavy handed. see us gas, uh, batons as you rightly say, batons and as you rightly say, water and suddenly water cannons. and suddenly there's hundreds of cars there's a riot. hundreds of cars are businesses are are torched, businesses are burned to the ground. and i've got say, play to mark got to say, fair play to mark rowley and patrick by criticise , rowley and patrick by criticise, uh, senior management of the police as much as anyone else. but the thing is, the met are walking basically around a tinderbox, if that tinderbox goes up, there will be people that may well be killed or seriously injured . businesses seriously injured. businesses destroyed. the met are doing their best, and i just wish these demonstrators that have said their piece will go home because unfortunately, some elements are walking around and behaving in such a way. it's almost like for a few dollars more, that pocket watch is ticking louder and slower, and
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the met are caught between that rock and the hard place. good or bad, right and wrong. and they cannot win. um, and i think the pubuc cannot win. um, and i think the public have just got to be patient because the police cannot enact laws that they cannot enact laws that they cannot enforce, because the law is not there. >> and politicians , what needs >> and politicians, what needs what needs to change, right? because like i, i would expect and i think the vast majority of the public would expect it to be illegal to go and shout some hateful stuff, like really hateful stuff, like really hateful stuff, like really hateful stuff outside parliament to climb a statue to graffiti. something to do all of this. i mean, surely that is illegal. >> all it is . okay, who's going >> all it is. okay, who's going to be brave enough to take that action on to make that decision? >> i love you, man. but the police . police. >> yeah, no, but what i'm saying is, is that who is within the police going to take it? mark rowley is the met commissioner. you've got sadiq khan, the police crime commissioner. nobody can make that decision . nobody can make that decision. um, without being criticised or
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feeling that what they do is for is for wrong. they can't, they cannot. they're between a rock and a hard place. it really is that serious, aren't they? >> they're in the wrong job. you know, if it's if it's, you know, if they can't, if they can't take a bit of criticism for enforcing the law. look, enforcing the law. but look, norman, look, appreciate i'm norman, look, i appreciate i'm not to disagree with not trying to disagree with you. i don't want it to come i know i don't want it to come across that you're a great across that way. you're a great guy, across that way. you're a great guy, but i see your frustration. >> share frustration, >> i share your frustration, patrick. that the patrick. i share that with the pubuc patrick. i share that with the public was time public and there was a time within policing we would rule the streets and we would take them like public want them over like the public want us do. however, policing us to do. however, policing has changed yes , changed and sometimes, yes, there bit of wokeness. there is a bit of wokeness. there a bit of weakness and there is a bit of weakness and i despair, along with the public and police officers and even the police officers wish could do more wish that they could do more than they can currently do. than what they can currently do. all thank you all right, norman, thank you very your time very much for your time this evening. very much for your time this evewe;. really appreciate it. >> we do really appreciate it. as former police officer norman brennan. right. okay now, look, just ahead just a little teaser ahead to something. coming your something. i've got coming your way the syrian way at 10 p.m. it's the syrian paedophile gang member that back in portrayed as
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in 2016, was portrayed as a victim by bbc newsnight. but first, itv have drafted the princess of wales scandal hit uncle gary goldsmith into their latest line—up for celebrity big brother. all all. while kate attempts to recover from a significant surgery . significant surgery. >> listen, the nation needs to know we'll be watching . if she know we'll be watching. if she is said to be behind the sofa, i guess , well, she has every guess, well, she has every reason to be hiding because not only does goldsmith have a history of being caught giving out hard drugs and assaulting his fourth and most recent wife , his fourth and most recent wife, he also spoke to the sun newspaper before entering newspaper before even entering the house in which the big brother house in which he slammed prince harry's racism claims bs . claims as bs. >> fine. but he also did did allude to some of the issues that kate is facing at the moment and let's be honest, we know why he's gone in there. don't we? i'm delighted to welcome management welcome talent management kingpin professor jonathan kingpin professorjonathan shalit. thank you. jonathan, do you think itv are disrespecting the royal family here? >> i don't think reality
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television works like that. they're simply putting a cast together. they think the viewers at home will like, and the advertisers all want to spend money advertising on. >> isn't it amazing , though, >> isn't it amazing, though, that the advertisers would be fine to advertise with someone who's been caught handing out hard drugs and, uh, get into a fracas with his fourth wife? that's all. okay. i mean, obviously when was in the obviously when nigel was in the jungle, couldn't possibly jungle, we couldn't possibly have that. that was obscene. wasn't it? >> think the advertisers are >> i think the advertisers are advertising on the brand. that's big brother. they're not thinking or thinking about backgrounds or certain royals who certain individual royals who haven't been committed a criminal offence . but bigger criminal offence. but the bigger question , of course, why he question is, of course, why he is doing it in the sense of his perspective. i don't mean why is he doing it in a sense, we know he's doing it, as you rightly alluded to, the money could be paid very well, but the fact his niece, his sister's daughter is the wales , he should the princess of wales, he should just out limelight and just keep out the limelight and keep his life private, be embarrassing his family in this way horrendous. listen, if we way is horrendous. listen, if we if we're we're honest, most if we're if we're honest, most of have gotten embarrassing.
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of us have gotten embarrassing. member of family. but we're member of our family. but we're not the future king or queen, so it's a bit different. >> no, that. i mean, >> yeah. no, i get that. i mean, presumably though, you you presumably though, you know, you have the situation have to look at the situation that's on at moment. that's going on at the moment. the king is recovering from cancen the king is recovering from cancer. camilla's knackered to the point where going to the point where she's going to have take break. william is have to take a break. william is obviously bang up it. obviously bang up against it. kate only kate i mean, goodness, only knows going on knows exactly what's going on with you think itv with kate. and you think itv think plunk in think it's all right to plunk in the dodgy uncle into the the old dodgy uncle into the middle who's probably middle of that? who's probably going absolutely rogue at going to go absolutely rogue at some and dish all some point and maybe dish all the secrets out. the family secrets out. >> i don't think i just simply don't think itv give it that level thought. think level of thought. i don't think they're there thinking they're sitting there thinking at highest level about the at the highest level about the implications put in the implications of it. put in the only implication they're thinking is creating a cast thinking of is creating a cast that's of interest. and i'm not sure where we are. democracy. we're a free country. people will vote as they want. and if people don't like him, they've got the chance to vote for him immediately. >> that's fine. you don't think itv should have maybe considered the absolute turmoil that our royal family are in now, and
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whether wanted to whether or not they wanted to add that by plonking this add to that by plonking this bloke celebrity big bloke into celebrity big brother, you just don't think they should they should they should have. they should have. whether not they did have. whether or not they did consider one thing, do consider it is one thing, but do you they should have you think they should have considered you think they should have conyes,'ed you think they should have conyes, id you're >> yes, i think you're absolutely right. i think even though are corporation, though there are corporation, they're they're of they're full of, they're full of decent people . and i'm surprised decent people. and i'm surprised knowing the trauma that family are going through now, sort of the right time to add to that trauma, because i think the thing correct about, thing you're correct about, imagine the pressure right now that his forget the princess, his sister's going under their sister being the mum of the grandmas , the princess's grandmas, the princess's children, as having presumably to look at help with looking after the children because to all intents and purposes, we know she's a good grandma and the that family the pressure that family is directly private directly under as a private family, alone a royal family, let alone as a royal family, immense. so having family, is immense. so having the brother on national television , embarrassing the television, embarrassing the family in the way is , is family in the way he is, is a pretty horrific thing to your own your own family . pretty horrific thing to your own your own family. i own to do to your own family. i mean, to me that's low life. it doesn't matter whether you got
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family royal or not. there family or royal or not. there are things that are right are some things that are right and things that are wrong and some things that are wrong and some things that are wrong and wrong. what he's doing and some things that are wrong an his wrong. what he's doing and some things that are wrong an his familyg. what he's doing and some things that are wrong an his family and,1at he's doing and some things that are wrong an his family and, uh,1e's doing and some things that are wrong an his family and, uh, ie's doing and some things that are wrong an his family and, uh, i suspect to his family and, uh, i suspect he's probably a complete loner. i you know, the way kate's very classy, as is his sister. never talk about him. but i can't imagine he's having christmas dinner with them . dinner with them. >> no, i absolutely can't do you think itv should edit out anything that he says? let's say he just reveals something about kate's or something like kate's illness or something like that. have that. do you think itv have a duty moral obligation duty or a moral obligation to edit that out? yeah i would hope that they would. >> well , first of all, i don't >> well, first of all, i don't think he probably knows that much because i think his sister think he probably knows that muckate:ause i think his sister think he probably knows that muckate:auseknow1k his sister think he probably knows that muc kate :ause know he'ss sister think he probably knows that muc kate :ause know he's the ;ter think he probably knows that muc kate :ause know he's the one and kate will know he's the one person don't so person you don't trust. so i suspect he's basing everything on what he's read as opposed to what kind of what he knows. that kind of imagine a moment they can imagine for a moment they can find him or tell him secrets. but equally, think he said but equally, i think if he said anything could be anything that could be distressful princess distressful to the princess and his family, should be edited his family, it should be edited out . um, i his family, it should be edited out. um, i doubt he'll ask that long. i suspect the public will find him pretty repulsive doing
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what he's doing to his family. so i'd be very surprised if he was in for that long. >> well, we'll have to see. he's one of the i mean, he's got he's got a lot of charisma where that charisma from, course, charisma comes from, of course, is, to be seen. but is, uh, remains to be seen. but look. much, look. thank you very much, jonathan. absolute pleasure to have show association as. >> and that's the problem. he's nobody his own right. he's nobody in his own right. he's only somebody because who his only somebody because of who his mother daughter married only somebody because of who his mothedaughterlaughter married only somebody because of who his mothedaughter married married sister daughter married i suppose but now about suppose so, but he is now about to trouser huge amount of to trouser a huge amount of money from itv on celebrity big brother. >> so there go. how long that >> so there we go. how long that lasts to be seen. lasts remains to be seen. jonathan winner. he's jonathan is the winner. he's jonathan. thank you. take care jonathan. thank you. take care jonathan there. right. jonathan charlotte there. right. that talent management that is, uh, talent management kingpin, professor jonathan. kingpin, professorjonathan. charlotte. look charlotte. right. okay. look coming up, coming up. coming up, coming up, coming up. big our. so as the safety of mps continues to make headlines with the bbc's chris packham encouraging protests outside politicians homes , i reveal the politicians homes, i reveal the sickening email sent to one prominent member of parliament, which threatens serious harm, including the rape of her young son. and next, a syrian grooming
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gang has been convicted of abusing a child in newcastle. i'll review the bbc newsnight apparent puff piece on the grooming gangs. older member back. grooming gangs. older member back . in 2016 grooming gangs. older member back. in 2016 and asking grooming gangs. older member back . in 2016 and asking whether back. in 2016 and asking whether or not they now need to apologise. stay tuned . for that apologise. stay tuned. for that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers. >> sponsors of weather on . gb news. >> good evening . welcome to your >> good evening. welcome to your latest weather update from the met office for gb news. showers today , but they are fading away today, but they are fading away and most will have a dry night. a little bit of fog and frost likely in the southwest. most low pressure is out in the atlantic. it tries to move in but getting blocked and but it's getting blocked and stopped high stopped by a big area of high pressure. that the dominant pressure. that is the dominant feature, it is allowing feature, and it is allowing a bit more cloud drift into the bit more cloud to drift into the east. seen heavy east. we've seen some heavy showers southeast. showers across the southeast. they are drifting still they are drifting away. still a few scattered showers here and there through the night. a lot
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of eastern england and of cloud in eastern england and eastern scotland. clearer skies further that will allow it further west that will allow it to turn quite cold. a touch of frost rural of frost through rural parts of wales england , and wales and southwest england, and some freezing fog patches around maybe affecting the m4 and the m5 first thing in the morning. could take a few hours to clear away. generally grey day away. generally quite a grey day again in the east, particularly on coast , with again in the east, particularly on coast, with a again in the east, particularly on coast , with a breeze on the east coast, with a breeze freshening here through the day. a few scattered showers over eastern of england, a bit eastern parts of england, a bit of times in eastern of rain at times in eastern scotland, mostly over the hills and some showers creeping into cornwall of the cornwall later. but much of the west, bright through west, dry and bright through tomorrow some spells tomorrow with some decent spells of sunshine. 11 or here. of sunshine. 11 or 12 here. colder in the east, where it stays cloudy, and that cloud likely to stick around on thursday day we'll a few thursday day we'll see a few more i suspect on more showers. i suspect on thursday over parts of southern england, developing through england, then developing through wales some wales and the midlands. some heavy downpours are possible. they'll be hit and miss, but do watch a lively shower on watch out for a lively shower on thursday again. many places dry. some sunny spells in the south and fairly and chilly and west fairly glum and chilly in east. in the east. >> looks like things are heating
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gb news at 10 p.m. i'm patrick christys tonight night. >> i felt she didn't want any foreigners in this country and thatis foreigners in this country and that is why she made up the whole story . whole story. >> a refugee grooming gang is exposed and sent ernst, this refugee family quickly found in taking up the offer of sanctuary. >> they replaced a war zone with a different kind of hell. >> but bbc newsnight stands accused of doing their pr also , accused of doing their pr also, if it's a peaceful demonstration in a non—violent, peaceful demonstration , then we in the uk demonstration, then we in the uk for all of the laws that have been radically changed in the very recent times , have to very recent times, have to preserve that right to protest after eco fanatic chris packham
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said that this happened. i speak to the mp whose child was threatened with rape. plus . he threatened with rape. plus. he had blood on his hands. threatened with rape. plus. he had blood on his hands . well, had blood on his hands. well, the mob are back at it and 20% off a new jacket. if you admit your white privilege, well , i've your white privilege, well, i've got all of tomorrow's newspaper from pages today with gb news star nana akua tory mp jonathan gullis and author amy nicole turner . oh, and gullis and author amy nicole turner. oh, and i will be telling you what happens next here. poor woman. get ready britain, here we go . britain, here we go. i blow the lid off a refugee grooming gang scandal. next. >> it's one minute after ten. i'm polly middlehurst. and our top story tonight from the gb news room is that the labour led
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birmingham city council has approved a wave of budget cuts in what's been described as a devastating double whammy of tax cuts and fewer services . the cuts and fewer services. the plans include a 21% increase in council tax over the next two years, and a £300 million worth of cuts to public services. speaking during today's meeting, the council leader, john cotton, unreservedly apologised to the city's residents for the budget. but birmingham's conservative leader said the cuts will mean streets are no longer cleared and broken street lights aren't repaired and well, the news from birmingham comes just hours before the chancellor unveils his new budget with jeremy hunt expected to ask councils to cut their wasteful spending on equality and diversity programmes , as it's also being programmes, as it's also being rumoured he could announce a £0.02 in the pound cut to national insurance contributions. he's aiming to put the uk's economy and rishi sunaks popularity back on the road to recovery. we asked local
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residents in glasgow and in east yorkshire what they want to see in tomorrow's budget. i'd like to see him listen to the people as well for a change. >> they seemed to give all these promises and never keep them. it'd be nice for the petrol to go down and stop putting money on council tax and stuff like that. >> people can't afford it. >> people can't afford it. >> uh, businesses are struggling at the moment. the market's struggling, so i think they just need a little bit of a more stable in the stable background in the economy. please >> allowance because >> your tax allowance because now, uh, some pensioners are going to find themselves in a tax bracket. well in the united states, where donald trump is expected to dominate rather, today's super tuesday , where today's super tuesday, where voters in 15 states are choosing their preferred presidential candidate. he's been speaking mr trump's only remaining challenger, nikki haley, is struggling to secure enough votes to stay in the race, but the former president path to nomination faces various legal troubles , with 91 ongoing
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troubles, with 91 ongoing criminal charges across four states, most of which he denies . states, most of which he denies. scientists have revealed the case of a hyper vaccinated man who's reportedly received 217 covid jabs . the 62 year old man covid jabs. the 62 year old man from germany received the staggering number of vaccinations , he says, for vaccinations, he says, for private reasons . over 29 months private reasons. over 29 months research has heard about the man in a newspaper and asked if they could study his body's response to the multiple jabs. could study his body's response to the multiple jabs . they say to the multiple jabs. they say despite his extraordinary hyper vaccination , no noticeable side vaccination, no noticeable side effects have been found so far . effects have been found so far. and finally, if you were a fan of soap operas in the 1990s, you will probably remember this coming . people stand in the coming. people stand in the darkness . are you singing along darkness. are you singing along well , that became the world's well, that became the world's most watched tv series during its original run, and now those red bathing suits and that slow motion jogging across californian beaches is set to
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return . it's a new series of return. it's a new series of baywatch and it's been commissioned by us tv network fox, and we will see a whole new generation of lifeguards embarking on daring ocean rescues. the original series ran for a decade from 1989 until 1999, and made superstars of its cast, including david hasselhoff and pamela anderson is expected to premiere this autumn . for the to premiere this autumn. for the very latest stories, do sign up for gb news alerts. scan that qr code on your screen right now, or go to gb news .com/ alerts . or go to gb news .com/ alerts. >> i'm reporting this because no other television news channel will be warned . the following will be warned. the following information is distressing a grooming gang of refugees from syria and kuwait raped and abused a child in newcastle , abused a child in newcastle, passing her around like a toy . passing her around like a toy. josepha al—aboud and omar and mohammed badreddin subjected a
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13 year old girl to repeated rapes , taking it in turns, rapes, taking it in turns, leaving her physically and emotionally scarred for life. they groomed the young girl, pued they groomed the young girl, plied with alcohol and took turns raping her, while another individual, kuwait national al—sami, pictured third from the left, laughed at her. they threatened to killer or take her out of the country if she spoke out of the country if she spoke out about it. they tried to convert her to islam. she started reading the quran and the court heard that in return, they repeatedly raped, assaulted and abused her. the badruddin brothers also pleaded guilty to violent disorder in relation to a blm march in 2020, while they were on bail for the sex offences . but this story somehow offences. but this story somehow gets even more shocking. omar badreddin was previously acquitted of a different sexual assault charge in 2016, and bbc newsnight, who claimed they'd been following the story of the badreddin since they arrived in the uk , decided to do a full the uk, decided to do a full feature on them. it was released
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the day omar badreddin was cleared of that previous unrelated sex charge eight years ago . that feature is still ago. that feature is still available on youtube and it is called unbelievable . alley to called unbelievable. alley to hell and back. the story of one syrian family given refuge in the uk. the idea that omar badreddin had been through hell in britain was repeated in tweets promoting the feature. it follows their journey of being accused of sexual assault . in accused of sexual assault. in the piece, the bbc claims the refugee family quote quickly found that in taking up the offer of sanctuary, they had replaced a war zone with a different kind of hell . omar different kind of hell. omar then claims that he thinks the girl made up all the allegations against him because she didn't like foreigners. he said i felt she didn't want any foreigners in this country and that is why she made up the whole story . she made up the whole story. omar raped . a girl on numerous omar raped. a girl on numerous occasions when she was so drunk she was vomiting and unable to
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stand up and even after she told him that she was self—harming , him that she was self—harming, the bbc newsnight piece also makes the claim that syrian men in many ways were less sexually experienced than the girls they were supposed to have attacked . were supposed to have attacked. but the bbc journalist said omar told her he'd never even had a sexual relationship of any kind. now the bbc newsnight reporter katie razzall wrote after they were initially found not guilty of sexual assault in 2016, omar bedreddin's father marwan in the pubuc bedreddin's father marwan in the public gallery began to cry when he heard the verdict. but when i walked into the bedreddin's home this afternoon, there was little celebration and the tears shed were not of joy. the family told me, ever since their son's arrest that they'd felt humiliated and dishonoured in syrian culture, this type of accusation is so damaging to their reputation. varne omar is now serving 18 years for multiple counts of child rape. his brother mohammed is serving 13 years. of course, the bbc
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were unaware of the awful crimes that he would go on to commit. but it doesn't end here. allah buddhu was convicted of two counts of rape, assault by penetration and assault occasioning actual bodily harm, was sentenced to just five and a half years al—sami guilty of three counts of sexual assault and assault by penetration. got and assault by penetration. got a suspended sentence . there is a suspended sentence. there is no talk of even trying to deport these monsters. in fact , we these monsters. in fact, we asked the home office if they were considering it. they told us it wasn't really their responsibility before the ministry of justice referred us back to the home office, who then eventually said that those eligible will be deported at the earliest opportunity. it's a circus, isn't it? the bbc's documentary on a member of this vile refugee rape gang is still online. this grotesque case highlights several things we are giving refuge to some people who rape and abuse children. our state broadcaster stands accused
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by some people online of doing a pr for job these people. by some people online of doing a pr forjob these people. the bbc denies this, of course, but where is the bbc newsnight follow up on this story? the other things it shows is if people come here and rape kids , people come here and rape kids, we still don't deport them. sickening the bbc has said in 2015 and 2016, newsnight followed the story of the badruddin family, who were syrian refugees who were settling in the uk during 2016. their son omar was tried for sexual assault and he was found not guilty two years afterwards. in 2018 and 2019, omar badreddin and his brother mohammed committed multiple counts of rape . they were found guilty and rape. they were found guilty and were jailed. last week, the bbc reported this in any situation, the bbc can only report on the facts as they stand at the time, which is what we did in 2016. the badreddin subsequent crimes are appalling and we express our sincere sympathies to the victim . let's get the thoughts now of
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my panel. i'm joined by gb news presenter nana akua. i've got conservative, stoke on trent, nonh conservative, stoke on trent, north mp jonathan gullis and i've got author and broadcaster amy nicholl turner, jonathan, i'll start with you. i mean , we i'll start with you. i mean, we are clearly importing some people and giving them refuge. who then go on to commit crimes like this and it appears that the bbc tripping over themselves to try to, at the earliest possible opportunity, do a nice bit of pr. >> so first of all, i reiterate the point i made earlier. patrick which is we have particularly young single males who under aged over 75% are who are under aged over 75% are coming illegally via small boats . we have no idea who they are. we have no idea if they've committed any crimes in their country of we have no country of origin. we have no idea what their intentions are. therefore, they posing therefore, they are posing a danger the danger and a risk to the residents of our great nation and should be automatically and they should be automatically detained, the hotel detained, not kept in the hotel where allowed to wander where they're allowed to wander off disappear the off and disappear into the night. happening far too night. that's happening far too regularly, why we must regularly, which is why we must build our detention capacity and
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then schemes like then make sure that schemes like rwanda getting the rwanda are getting off the ground. as soon as possible. now, regards to this now, with regards to this particular case, if we have to do some deals with countries like syria in order to immediately return these people, then we should be willing to do those deals and end of the day, syria holding, i think, syria is holding, i think, 25,000 national 25,000 foreign national offenders went to fight on offenders who went to fight on behalf isis . offenders who went to fight on behalf isis. uh, and, offenders who went to fight on behiknow, isis. uh, and, offenders who went to fight on behiknow, someiis . uh, and, offenders who went to fight on behiknow, some of . uh, and, offenders who went to fight on behiknow, some of those and, offenders who went to fight on behiknow, some of those will be you know, some of those will be british. i and whilst i don't want those people return, if want those people to return, if there's deal done that there's a deal to be done that we bring british people back we bring the british people back here and they serve life in prison for being here and they serve life in prisoto for being here and they serve life in prisoto deport for being here and they serve life in prisoto deport people being here and they serve life in priso to deport people who eing here and they serve life in prisoto deport people who have able to deport people who have come over here and have obviously, literally, as we've heard, 13 old girl, heard, raped a 13 year old girl, then ultimately that's the type of deal that i think we have to have that honest and frank conversation have that honest and frank conversa'bbc newsnight have >> does bbc newsnight nana have to do, you know, with due prominence this has prominence now that this has happened, you think they happened, do you think they should be going and doing something like this and reporting they story reporting this? they put a story on from what on their website from what i could see. >> well, i think they should really i they should put really i think they should put a bit detail in because first bit more detail in because first of fact that they were of all, the fact that they were
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following this and following this, this family and then of happened then this kind of happened around time they were around about the time they were following them. so this whole the initial court proceedings must happening when the initial court proceedings mustwere happening when the initial court proceedings mustwere filming. ippening when the initial court proceedings mustwere filming. butning when the initial court proceedings mustwere filming. but there vhen they were filming. but there were many, many clues. as i listened to that, there was a bit where he that he'd bit where he said that he'd never a sexual relationship. never had a sexual relationship. this an 18 year old and that this is an 18 year old and that he's never even seen two people kissing. was kissing. and then there was another bit where out another bit where it turns out that they'd left that the son that they'd left behind the family had left one of the sons behind, and this son had been killed, was had now been killed, which was very apparently it was very sad. but apparently it was because he was an islamic fundamentalist couldn't fundamentalist and they couldn't wait telling us about wait to keep telling us about the right . and there were the far right. and there were other elements this as well. other elements of this as well. and i actually was quite incensed with way they kind incensed with the way they kind of castle off because of knew castle came off because i born in newcastle in 1971, i was born in newcastle in 1971, and i was we were literally the only black family there. we loved it, i loved it, but we were the only black family there as far as i could see. and we were treated incredibly well. so i just find the whole thing was real, real insult to the people of newcastle as well. >> kept >> yeah, the way they kept cutting to images of edl
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cutting to images of the edl marches stuff that, marches and stuff like that, rather than actually understanding the outrage. >> yeah, i just find it absolutely that absolutely remarkable that that you know, the of all the you know, the of all of the things would have been things that would have been going on 2016 at going on in 2016 at that particular our bbc particular time when our bbc newsnight episode, it's like they couldn't get this they couldn't wait to get this out i find that out there. and i find that astonishing. now it's astonishing. and now it's massively amy, should astonishing. and now it's ma:bbc.y amy, should astonishing. and now it's masbbc apologise amy, should astonishing. and now it's masbbc apologise oramy, should astonishing. and now it's masbbc apologise or should ould the bbc apologise or should these people deported? these people be deported? >> i honestly, ijust want >> i, i honestly, ijust want to be i to make a couple of be i want to make a couple of points. there a problem at points. so there is a problem at the with, um, rape the moment with, um, false rape accusations being levelled at asylum there's problems accusations being levelled at as'ireland, there's problems accusations being levelled at as'ireland, there's1ere's problems accusations being levelled at as'ireland, there's problemsilems accusations being levelled at as'ireland, there's problems inms in ireland, there's problems in cornwall. so i can see why there would be interest in a story about seekers being about asylum seekers being accused of rape. however, they did unfortunately wrong. accused of rape. however, they did unfo they tely wrong. accused of rape. however, they did unfo they said, wrong. accused of rape. however, they did unfo they said, can1g. but like they said, they can only the facts at the only deal with the facts at the time and they they did say that they updated the news. so i don't think they don't really think they apologise. moving should apologise. moving on to should they deported. 1 in 4 they be deported. so 1 in 4 women are raped in their lives. 1 children suffer sexual 1 in 6 children suffer sexual abuse. shows abuse. so i think that shows that violence against women doesn't a nationality. so doesn't have a nationality. so we just need to make it clear before we put out like a beer,
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saying that fear this story is saying that i fear this story is a little bit of a dog whistle about the threat from asylum seekers. program was seekers. the program was actually, programs actually, i thought the programs were reality is, actually, i thought the programs wereknow, reality is, actually, i thought the programs wereknow, womenreality is, actually, i thought the programs wereknow, women are ity is, actually, i thought the programs wereknow, women are at is, actually, i thought the programs wereknow, women are at risk of you know, women are at risk of sexual assault. >> the is, amy, that >> the reality is, amy, that this a refugee rape gang. this is a refugee rape gang. >> it is . but there's just as >> it is. but there's just as much likelihood that it could have been a white gang from glasgow as we in glasgow as, as we saw in november. but focusing in november. but we are focusing in on your case with asylum on it's your case with asylum seekers. that's what the story. that's the story we are discussing, bbc story we're discussing, the bbc story we're discussing tonight. and it is true in, in society at the true that in, in society at the moment, in society at the moment, in society at the moment, we do have a problem with that. there's a fear that asylum more asylum seekers create more crime, just crime, which is just statistically untrue. well, no, i think is that you're i think the fear is that you're letting people in who you don't know their background. >> problem . so the >> that's the problem. so the ones that are going to come here illegally, have done , illegally, which they have done, they breaking the they are already breaking the law. there are lot of them law. so there are a lot of them may well be right, but i think we we need to focus on the we need we need to focus on the good of that, that syrian resettle resettled, resettle scheme that resettled, what, people was what, 20,000 people and was fantastic real success
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fantastic and had real success and majority , well, they and the majority, well, they should the majority , should have done the majority, shouldn't they? >> do a programme on that. shouldn't they? >> they do a programme on that. shouldn't they? >> they should'ogramme on that. shouldn't they? >> they should havenme on that. shouldn't they? >> they should have done>n that. shouldn't they? >> they should have done that. t. >> they should have done that. >> they should have done that. >> should, you know, the >> should, should, you know, the government. think under government. i think it was under david cameron this came in. david cameron when this came in. should they should the government the government apologise to the family this third. family and indeed this third. well anymore but well she's not 13 anymore but the girl who had to suffer at the girl who had to suffer at the of people that the hands of these people that we threw our around. we threw our arms around. >> of all, the >> i think, first of all, the government should absolutely >> i think, first of all, the goveintoent should absolutely >> i think, first of all, the gove into the ;hould absolutely >> i think, first of all, the gove into the particularolutely >> i think, first of all, the gove into the particular case ly >> i think, first of all, the gove into the particular case of look into the particular case of this can't remember this family. i can't remember about brother who was about the older brother who was left behind that was in the i'm not disbelieving see. i not disbelieving you see. i can't it, but can't recall it, but i ultimately we should able to ultimately we should be able to look and answers look into that and give answers about why this particular family was of all was granted. out of all the syrians were. syrians that were. >> it's not the bbc, is it? >> but it's not the bbc, is it? >> but it's not the bbc, is it? >> and with the bbc, is it not more sorry with the with more about sorry with the with the bbc? because i think look, at the the bbc at the end of the day, the bbc does quickly on the does jump quickly on the bandwagon kind of push this progressive. >> but he'd been cleared. >> but he'd been cleared. >> and actually what they don't do is actually think about the story fact story itself, about the fact that grooming gangs, which they didn't in proper didn't really report in proper numbers, predominantly,
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didn't really report in proper nunwords predominantly, didn't really report in proper nunwords of predominantly, didn't really report in proper nunwords of sajid)minantly, didn't really report in proper nunwords of sajid javid,1tly, didn't really report in proper nunwords of sajid javid, when the words of sajid javid, when he home secretary, in his he was home secretary, in his case, too many case, uh, it's far too many pakistani gangs are pakistani grooming gangs are leading there was leading the way. and there was far woke policing. far too much woke pc policing. they call it out they didn't want to call it out for what it was. and stoke on trent has sadly had its own case where one of my own constituents, has sadly constituents, it's has sadly lost to alcoholism, lost her life to alcoholism, having victim a having been the victim of a grooming gang, individual is grooming gang, the individual is walking the streets of walking free on the streets of stoke on trent, unable to actually get justice for the family the victim in family that was the victim in this kind of accused. >> you've kind summed my >> you've kind of summed up my point because you've point there because you've unked point there because you've linked gangs linked pakistani grooming gangs to some syrian, some some syrian. so basically saying foreigners are grooming gang about that's what about grooming and that's what i'm hearing. >> lots of grooming gangs of all races. >> okay. all right. now in a statement to us just statement given to us just before went on air tonight, before we went on air tonight, the home said foreign the home office said foreign nationals who commit crimes here the home office said foreign nathe als who commit crimes here the home office said foreign nathe uk who commit crimes here the home office said foreign nathe uk will commit crimes here the home office said foreign nathe uk will face mit crimes here the home office said foreign nathe uk will face the crimes here the home office said foreign nathe uk will face the fulles here in the uk will face the full force of the law, including deportation, earliest deportation, at the earliest opportunity eligible. opportunity for those eligible. right. brits right. coming up, should brits be privilege be made to do white privilege tests to get 20% off a north faced right. i mean, faced coat? all right. i mean, personally, don't not. personally, i don't think not. but anyway, my returned to but anyway, my panel returned to debate already got go
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debate that i've already got go there warmed up. here we go. there warmed up. now here we go. of newspaper of all of tomorrow's newspaper front next, bbc front pages. but next, bbc poster boy chris packham says he has no problem intimidating has no problem with intimidating process outside now process outside mps homes. now amid a rising security threat . i amid a rising security threat. i sit down with an mp that received a vile anonymous email wishing harm against her own son. it's patrick christys tonight on .
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gb news. welcome back. now i speak now to the latest mp facing chilling threats, even towards their own family. more and more mps homes have been targeted by protesters recently, but according to the bbc's chris packham, this isn't really a problem at all. >> do you think it's going too far to go to an mps house? well if it's a peaceful demonstrate in a non—violent, peaceful demonstration , then we in the uk demonstration, then we in the uk for all of the laws that have been radically changed in the very recent times , have to very recent times, have to preserve that right to protest . preserve that right to protest. >> well, downing street has since branded those comments irresponsible and intimidatory, and the widower of murdered mp jo cox has also hit back at packham , calling it a clear act packham, calling it a clear act of intimidation . and just this of intimidation. and just this morning a prominent mp shared a truly sickening email that was sent anonymously, anonymously to former education minister dame andrea jenkyns. it says dear
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dame jenkyns, i hope you are doing well. i've been facing anti—semitism for a long time in morley that got your attention, you dirty little posh white slut . hope your little boy clifford is getting molested at school by his black and brown nannies that would teach you a thing about multiculturalism . maybe he might multiculturalism. maybe he might get raped by a refugee. we know where you are. and your filthy little clifford. and we hope hamas comes for you lot. so obviously, we weighed up whether or not to read that out, but i think it's important to get the detail out there. i'm pleased to say that andrea jenkins joins me now. andrea, how are you just heanng now. andrea, how are you just hearing it again? >> patrick, actually, um , i'm a >> patrick, actually, um, i'm a strong person. patrick this is about my ninth one now. um, i've had people walking down morley high street threatening to blow me up. i've had, um , eight me up. i've had, um, eight emails from one constituent which the police dismissed. i had to get the home secretary at the time involved tell me to buy a stab vest. i've had the c—word
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used and telling me to be filled with barbed wire, die in a pool of my own excrement. it just goes on and and. and every goes on and on, and. and every time people get let off. patrick and said it's not credible and said it's not a credible threat. and i'm sick of it, to be honest with you. but today is the only time i really wanted to quit. they've after the only time i really wanted to quitlittle they've after the only time i really wanted to quitlittle boy,'hey've after the only time i really wanted to quitlittle boy, and ve after the only time i really wanted to quitlittle boy, and people after the only time i really wanted to quitlittle boy, and people likeer my little boy, and people like chris packham. um, you know, he could end up with blood on his hands day, patrick, because , hands one day, patrick, because, you you've got mps you know, when you've got mps that their families at that have their families at home, got little six home, i've got my little six year who i adore and i've year old who i adore and i've got cctv and everything, and people pulled my fences down before and it's just, you know, you should not invite people to go to your home and, and protest in that way. it's irresponsible of chris parker. >> i mean, yeah, obviously chris packham will look, was packham will say, look, it was peaceful protest. was talking peaceful protest. he was talking about, you but about, i think, you know, but still identifying house, still identifying the mps house, which becomes a target for which then becomes a target for the people. yeah. and it's i suppose the knock on suppose it's the knock on effect, it. what was the effect, isn't it. what was the police response like to an email that received, again , that you received, which again, sorry to say this again, but i
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mean, it did threaten your own child with rape . well . my team child with rape. well. my team didn't tell me immediately they want to deal with the police. >> i was trying to protect me, but obviously i'd rather them tell me because then i can put measures in place. i can understand they was doing. understand what they was doing. definitely. they tried to definitely. so they tried to handle it, bless and handle it, bless them. and then i this morning and, um, i got told this morning and, um, i got told this morning and, um, i just felt numb . i got told this morning and, um, ijust felt numb . i felt sick i just felt numb. i felt sick and i burst out crying and it's not like me. i'm not. i'm quite a strong person. and i phoned the police. um, and. yeah. fair play. you know, people i'm speaking to, they're doing their full, um, investigation on, but. oh, it full, um, investigation on, but. oh, it was looking at the time of the email to be told the person was probably drunk. i'm sorry , but that's no excuse. no sorry, but that's no excuse. no excuse. and i'm sick of it time and time again to say that things are not a credible threat. and i i'm really angry about this , patrick. actually,
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about this, patrick. actually, i dormer boy, i live for my little boy, like most parents do, and, um, he's six years old, for god's sake. and . the way they god's sake. and. the way they wrote that there obviously , um, wrote that there obviously, um, against israel for saying, oh, that got you attention . that got you attention. obviously racists, they keep saying about hate crimes, you know, is this not a hate crime? for god's sake ? and they keep . for god's sake? and they keep. saying, and look at the end what it said about hamas. so i think that sort of speaks volumes of the kind of person this is. but i'm sick of it. we look at the streets. it's not just about mps. patrick it is about everybody on the street, the up to here with the two tier policing system. and i want to see the prime every see the prime minister every police force, useless police force, the useless mayor of of every of london, get a grip of every police force on, on the country. we need zero tolerance policing. no crime should enough no crime should be small enough that isn't punished. that it isn't punished. everybody's enough and we everybody's had enough and we got get a grip. got to get a grip. >> you've had a lot >> patrick. so you've had a lot of . threats basically, and of death. threats basically, and
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some really vile things. yes >> and i mean, the worst one was in the hairdressers. i was on my morley high street, the hairdressers, my niece was getting married. the next day as i was getting my hair done and, and i was phoned up by the police. stay there. somebody is walking police. stay there. somebody is walkinthreatening blow you street threatening to blow you up.andi street threatening to blow you up. and i said to the hairdressers, have you a hairdressers, have you got a back back door in case back route, a back door in case ineed back route, a back door in case i need run? then i was i need to run? then i was thinking, how i keep thinking, god, how do i keep them safe? and it was horrible and then the guy said, oh, it was joke. i hate tories. was a joke. i hate the tories. and got let off and just and he got let off and i'm just sick of this. patrick, you know, it shouldn't be one rule if you're, you know, does this happen labour they happen to labour mps? do they keep let i'd love keep getting let off? i'd love to the stats because they to see the stats because they keep let the people keep getting let off. the people with me. >> i'm going to introduce >> i'm just going to introduce actually this is by actually something this is by the not as, um, you know, the way, not as, um, you know, not as, i suppose, as not as graphic as, i suppose, as what you now, but what happened to you now, but i believe we've got a picture. it was development happened was another development happened earlier today. so this is chancellor hunt's chancellor jeremy hunt's constituency surrey chancellor jeremy hunt's cons graffitied surrey chancellor jeremy hunt's consgraffitied with surrey chancellor jeremy hunt's consgraffitied with di surrey chancellor jeremy hunt's consgraffitied with di toryay chancellor jeremy hunt's consgraffitied with di tory scum was graffitied with di tory scum just a day before he announced his is crucial spring budget .
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his is crucial spring budget. what are disgusting is this part of being a politician now you know are you are you now fair game in all of this, you know and this this is just this is just seen as as okay now is it. well do you know, i mean, joe in the 2019 election, um, somebody graffitied on my office. >> andrea , i don't you just kill >> andrea, i don't you just kill yourself and do you know the only newspapers would pick it up would be the centre right? newspapers. you know, the conservative newspaper. the bbc didn't pick it up. nobody did. and why get so annoyed. and that's why i get so annoyed. these double standards and, um . these double standards and, um. and think the sad thing is and i think the sad thing is it's a reflection of it's a true reflection of society. and i the general society. and i think the general pubuc society. and i think the general public feels this as well. they feel quite helpless. and the thing i've had that many now thing is, i've had that many now i become numb to it. thing is, i've had that many now i become numb to it . and that is i become numb to it. and that is a sad reflection of society. patrick and nobody should be in that place. society should not be in that place. no. >> um. very. finally. is your son okay? i mean, presumably, yeah. >> i mean, he doesn't know about it is a happy little six year
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old blessing and the police, thankfully, have been in touch with both the schools and so have l have i. >> well, andrew, thank for >> well, andrew, thank you for coming know, coming on and, you know, sticking your above the sticking your head above the parapet it and revealing, you parapet on it and revealing, you know, reality. frankly, know, just the reality. frankly, i'm not going to give up on this, patrick. >> going even more >> i'm going to fight even more now. going to now. they're not going to silence me. >> well, thank you very much. and luck and and good luck to you. and obviously you obviously stay safe. thank you as dame andrea jenkins. as well as dame andrea jenkins. they're very, very moving indeed. up, a indeed. um, look, coming up, a bit bit of a different bit of a bit of a different topic for you now, 20% off outdoor retailer north face. if you admit your white privilege , you admit your white privilege, are the most are they now the most ridiculously woke company the ridiculously woke company in the uk ? ridiculously woke company in the uk 7 my ridiculously woke company in the uk ? my press pack gets stuck uk? my press pack gets stuck into that . and course i will into that. and of course i will have of tomorrow's newspaper have all of tomorrow's newspaper front pages coming your way in just a sec. stay
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welcome back. it's time to bring you all tomorrow's newspaper front pages. let's do it . all front pages. let's do it. all right, so we start with the
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metro palace. is anger at kate date clanger. now, this is an embarrassing falling out . um, embarrassing falling out. um, between, uh. well the royal family, basically. and essentially the government , essentially the government, because it appears as though the government revealed that kate was back in royal was going to be back in royal dufiesin was going to be back in royal duties in june . they've now hit duties in june. they've now hit back on that. we'll talk about that in more detail shortly. let's go to the daily telegraph uh, tax cuts sparked election talk. hunt slashes national insurance by £0.02, giving £450 in workers pockets. giveaways caused speculation that you might go to the polls in may. scots tory leader furious as oil and gas levy is extended. um, there's quite a bit on the front page of the telegraph there, including our very own allison pearson, who says we must bring muslim women into the fold, not isolate them. interesting. now the has defies public the guardian has defies public services. alarm with pre—election budgets, tax cuts, which is apparently quite difficult for me to say. um, basically the guardian guardian is not wanting tax cuts. shocker. really. anyway
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palestinian prisoners abused by israel says un report . let's go israel says un report. let's go to the eye. labour fears tory budget trap as hunt cuts national insurance by £0.02 in giveaway . i remain unconvinced giveaway. i remain unconvinced that we're going to get a huge amount in the budget, but hey ho right, okay, let's get stuck into this all now with my press pack.i into this all now with my press pack. i have of course got gb news presented a quick conservative mp for stoke on trent north, jonathan gull is an author and broadcaster. amy nicole turner. author and broadcaster. amy nicole turner . let's talk nicole turner. now let's talk first about the palace . anger first about the palace. anger uh, kate de clanger. what's really going on here? nana? i think it seems to be, uh, it seems to be a bit of a bit of an issue, doesn't it? >> well, i think apparently there was, um, i think somebody announced that kate will be there trooping of the colour there for trooping of the colour in june, but then it seems that that hasn't been confirmed. so the have backed the palace have not backed up that that be that claim that she'll be back in action then. so that's what this is about? yeah um, there seems bit of confusion seems to be a bit of confusion as to when kate will be returning. >> i think she's binned it off
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because she's gone into hiding since gary turned up since uncle gary turned up on celebrity brother. celebrity big brother. >> i mean, he's potentially going quite a menace for going to be quite a menace for them. we did do a them. to be fair, we did do a section earlier on about whether or itv right or not itv were right to plonking in there. or not itv were right to plon but in there. or not itv were right to plon but there in there. or not itv were right to plon but there we in there. or not itv were right to plon but there we go. in there. or not itv were right to plon but there we go. um,are. um, but there we go. um, jonathan, look, do you think that everyone is just back off and leave? kate alone? i mean, the fact is that unfortunately, it the date is it does appear like the date is getting and back getting pushed back and back and back. yeah. >> i mean, if donald >> look, i mean, if donald surgery extremely intrusive surgery is extremely intrusive and in terms and of course, painful in terms of and so that think of recovery, and so that i think ultimately she needs to be given the space to recover and she'll return when she can return. she's to she's shown she's dedicated to her duty, as is her husband, and i think we all need to respect their privacy at what is a difficult time. well, on that note, let's move on. >> because if you want to bag yourself is not one of my yourself this is not one of my giveaways, you want to giveaways, but if you want to bag yourself a 20% discount from outdoor retailer north face, you will have to complete an will first have to complete an hour long lecture on racism and diversity. this is not a joke. so the recently launched
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allyship in the outdoors program aims to bring awareness of how people of colour can feel excluded from nature and encourages participants to recognise their white privilege . recognise their white privilege. it claims that white people have better access to transport to reach the mountains than people of colour. this is not. this is just what i'm just reading out what it says, right? and it gives examples on how you can be such an activist, right? telling people off for making racist jokes . i people off for making racist jokes. i mean, well, people off for making racist jokes . i mean, well, yeah, jokes. i mean, well, yeah, obviously. but reports colleagues to their manager for using the terms woke are going to be busy. nana north face gone south here. >> oh, they're just honestly so what i did this afternoon was i tried to take this thing, this test to see whether i was a racist or not. i took the test. the test is for white people, by the way. so clearly north face haven't considered that black people do and there people might do it. and there were things like the first. it starts saying how many starts off by saying how many people of colour have you seen on listen, on the on the slopes? listen, on the
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slopes, the slopes. know slopes, on the slopes. i know the reason i don't go on the slopes. and may not slopes. yeah and they may not have it, but black have noticed it, but black people have got this melanin in their skin protect them from their skin to protect them from their skin to protect them from the we're the sunshine, which is why we're black. so obviously like the black. so we obviously like the heat. have inbuilt heat. so we have an inbuilt mentality to the heat. mentality to like the heat. i hate the cold most black people i don't really like being i know don't really like being in don't think that in the cold. i don't think that would the first reason. and would be the first reason. and then it talks about people of colour three times more likely to in deprived and to live in deprived area and blah blah blah. it literally it is literally sort of indoctrinated narrative indoctrinated a racist narrative to there are these to you. and then there are these other of colour who are other people of colour who are there. nobody's as dark as me, by way, on although by the way, on there, although i'm in my family i'm the lightest in my family and there are these people there, and one girl saying, and iused there, and one girl saying, and i used to put on my hat and because of hair was so big, i because of my hair was so big, i couldn't get the hat on and it became a thing. and i got i'm like, well, listen, if north face are the goddamn face are making the goddamn hats, they should have thought face are making the goddamn hats, 1that. hould have thought face are making the goddamn hats, 1that. exactly. ave thought about that. exactly. so it literally on like that. and literally goes on like that. and then there are questions where if don't give the if you don't give them the answer they you to answer that they want you to give, move on, they give, you don't move on, they don't no, can't go on
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don't move. no, you can't go on and until so i had to go back because i thought, well, i'll just answer got it comes just answer them. i got it comes up and you have to then go back and with the. and then and answer with the. and then you on. so i asked and you can carry on. so i asked and then you get 20% off a jacket. i'm couldn't get to the end. >> you just go to bicester village. i couldn't get to the end because there one bit end because there was one bit where freely say what where you could freely say what you think. >> i freely down something you think. >> iireely down something you think. >> ii don't down something you think. >> ii don't thinkywn something you think. >> ii don't thinkywn syliked|ing that i don't think they liked and could i and i literally could not. i moved the next bit and moved on to the next bit and i couldn't go beyond it. >> jonathan, you have, you have, uh, looked as though you're about all about to punch a wall during all of in a bad dream. of this, living in a bad dream. >> patrick can't believe me. like this. i can't believe this nonsense exists. like to nonsense even exists. like to basically say you must answer nonsense even exists. like to bas questionsyou must answer nonsense even exists. like to bas questions with nust answer nonsense even exists. like to bas questions with nustanswers nonsense even exists. like to bas
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me for being really nice. report me to my boss. report me to the 70,000 people of stoke on trent north, kidsgrove and talk because i the word woke and because i use the word woke and just jog and do one. if i just jog on and do one. if i could f and jeff i would because i'm so exhausted. it's the white privilege nonsense. privilege of this nonsense. white privilege. >> that. they >> they define that. they define it to stoke on trent. >> they tell some of the people that serve, some of that i serve, some of them sadly, most deprived sadly, who are the most deprived parts country, that parts of the country, that they're somehow privileged when they're somehow privileged when they fewer they have got 50% fewer bus journeys like london. journeys than like london. >> is >> there is, there is, there is a to be had about a conversation to be had about white but not by white privilege, but not by nonh white privilege, but not by north like this. for me, north face like this. for me, i can't defend this . i found can't even defend this. i found this annoying, this incredibly annoying, especially think about this incredibly annoying, espe(north think about this incredibly annoying, espe(north face think about this incredibly annoying, espe(north face is. think about this incredibly annoying, espe(north face is. theyk about this incredibly annoying, espe(north face is. they sellout what north face is. they sell overpriced exactly to overpriced clothes. exactly to posh people. i'm doing adam brooks and they're fast fashion . brooks and they're fast fashion. they've had them, they've had their their factories have been unked their their factories have been linked to all sorts of like questionable practices . questionable labour practices. they a good company to they are not a good company to be virtue signalling. oh my god , be virtue signalling. oh my god, i said it. >> i beth mead it's happened. gb hero amy the north face has done it. >> amy nichols this is it.
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>> amy nichols this is it. >> we've reached the peak of wokeness. >> we reached we reached out to nonh >> we reached we reached out to north face for comment and we're yet to hear from them. so there we go. but it is. can i just ask is no one was clamouring for this, but now north face nana will be able to say to, i don't know, presumably a shareholder there look. see, we've there that oh look. see, we've done, we've done our bit to get more people in the countryside. >> well, that's they think. >> well, that's what they think. but i don't but i mean, listen, i don't know, black unless you tell know, i'm black unless you tell me black i think it's me i'm black and i think it's really bad. now i'm going to go into the countryside and there there's there. there's one of them there. quick, let's you know, that's ridiculous. a debate ridiculous. there is a debate that that is that i don't want that there is a that debate. a place for that debate. >> there's >> there's a there's a commentator in manhattan. she she this really well she talks about this really well , but want to hear north , but i don't want to hear north face. it that's my point. >> not though. >> it's not true though. >> it's not true though. >> what this whole >> what about this whole countryside >> what about this whole couthere's no white privilege >> there's no white privilege isn't >> there's no white privilege isn'everyone. such thing. to >> everyone. no such thing. to be don't with be clear, i don't agree with that. very privileged. >> very, very privileged. >> very, very privileged. >> goes back in the >> the pin goes back in the grenade. everybody now a 71 year old in wales, been old cleaner in wales, has been caught on camera shoplifting. sorry. correction. she was
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actually lifted by a shop . the actually lifted by a shop. the grandmother and mother of three can be seen. all bless her. yes. 0h, can be seen. all bless her. yes. oh, no . oh, no. >> the bag. >> the bag. >> that must be terrified . >> that must be terrified. >> that must be terrified. >> having to hold on to her shopping trolley as her coat is caught by the shutters lifting her up and leaving her mid—air, doesn't look that old. >> oh, she's there for so long. >> oh, she's there for so long. >> god bless her. >> oh god bless her. >> oh god bless her. >> shopkeeper rushed >> luckily, a shopkeeper rushed out. i mean that that's britain . out. i mean that that's britain. >> we help each other. >> we help each other. >> no, no, no, i think he'd get sued. >> it's his shop. >> it's his shop. >> oh, bless. >> oh, bless. >> bless her. >> oh, bless her. >> oh, bless her. >> oh, bless her. >> oh, just one more. sorry one more. oh, she got a 20% discount. oh, hoist it up. >> i hope she got a 20% discount at the shop lifting. >> she's the way she clings to on let it go. on the trolley. i let it go. love it go anyway. right love let it go anyway. right okay. coming up. should the woke archbishop justin welby be stopped from spending £1 billion on slavery reparations? we discussed the fall of the church of england . that's in tonight's of england. that's in tonight's greatest britain and jack greatest britain and union jack carson braverman carson. but next braverman comes out swinging for lee anderson.
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>> lee anderson is a great colleague of mine . i'm totally colleague of mine. i'm totally abhor the accusation , ones that abhor the accusation, ones that have been launched against him, he not he is not he is not racist. he is not islamophobic. >> i'm bringing more of our exclusive interview the exclusive interview with the former secretary. is former home secretary. this is patrick christie's tonight. oh, i'll some more pages patrick christie's tonight. oh, i'll asome more pages patrick christie's tonight. oh, i'll as well�*nore pages
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welcome back. it's time now for some more of tomorrow's front pages for you. the daily express first hunts tax cut gamble will put £900 in workers pockets. all right. i'll believe it when i see it. now we go to the daily mail . there see it. now we go to the daily mail. there we go. now for five sas soldiers in murder probe over jihadi death . i'm sas soldiers in murder probe over jihadi death. i'm going to overjihadi death. i'm going to be going into this story in a bit more detail in just a second for you. so stay tuned for that. the sun party girl i'll put harry vegas snaps on onlyfans
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fans grief. see 2012 prince in the buff a party girl called carrie royale. yeah, there we go . let that one sit. there is threatening to sell. never before seen photos of prince harry naked at a las vegas bash. she vowed to post them on her onlyfans adult subscription site and teased i have some nice pictures of him in the buff. that's an exclusive apparently. i mean, to me i just sound like a woman who is desperately trying to get a bit of money off prince harry. but hey, i could be wrong. let's go to the mirror. meghan put a stick in the spokes. right , so prince the spokes. all right, so prince william, harry and kate's happy bond was shattered when meghan markle scene. markle arrived on the scene. this else goldsmith . this is who else gary goldsmith. yes, he's accused the duchess of putting a stick in the spokes. he is of course, the one in celebs party big brother. there we go. right. okay, now look , i we go. right. okay, now look, i am of course drawing with my partner . fantastic stuff. i'm partner. fantastic stuff. i'm going to go in with this. partner. fantastic stuff. i'm going to go in with this . this. going to go in with this. this. and are reading this for the and we are reading this for the first read the
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first time. so i'll read the detail to you as i get it here. but this is in the daily mail. it's on the front of the mail. five in murder five sas soldiers in murder probe jihadi death probe overjihadi death in syria. apparently five syria. so apparently five serving soldiers are facing serving sas soldiers are facing a murder charge a possible murder charge over the of a suspected jihadi the death of a suspected jihadi in syria in a case that provoked fury inside the special forces, top brass have alleged that the troops used excessive force and should have arrested the man. instead. the soldiers do remain on active duty . they're adamant on active duty. they're adamant that he posed a threat and intended to carry out a suicide attack, according to the special air service of the sas, a primed suicide vest was found nearby, but the suspect was not wearing it. when he was killed . okay, it. when he was killed. okay, the soldiers are remaining on active duty. they uh, are adamant that they've done nothing wrong. i mean , jonathan, nothing wrong. i mean, jonathan, obviously, you know, we are reading this for the first time, so. and we are we are like everybody else on this. we will wait to see more detail. but i
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mean, it does have a whiff, does it not? of armed, our armed it not? of our armed, our armed forces thrown under the forces being thrown under the bus, okay. bus, potentially. okay. >> me when we're >> well, look, for me when we're deploying sas of all, uh, deploying the sas of all, uh, regiments of the armed forces, ultimately there do ultimately they're there to do the serious jobs, the most the most serious jobs, the most dangerous and when they're dangerous jobs, and when they're deployed, they're not deployed to they're to make arrests. they're deployed to take out people. as we heard in the documentary, when came to the hostages when it came to the hostages being held in this country at the iranian embassy, uh, in the past. so ultimately, i think we have to bear that in mind that these troops are there to shoot, to kill. they're not there to capture. and ultimately they were doing and made judgement calls in that moment. and i think it's always to best trust those the ground that they those on the ground that they made a judgement and made a judgement call. and ultimately, hope nine times ultimately, we hope nine times out ten proven to be out of ten it's proven to be accurate. right one. yeah. accurate. the right one. yeah. >> case that it could >> no case that it could potentially be a war crime. and you have to be sure that was you have to be sure that it was within for take within the law for this to take place although they, place because although they, they, know, they're they, you know, they're in combat situation, need to combat situation, they need to still within the law and still be within the law and within, although it's within. we
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can't endorse war crimes as well i >> -- >> but they are i mean, look, the special forces, they've gone down they've seen this in down and they've seen this in syria. in syria as well. syria. this is in syria as well. there's suicide vest nearby , there's a suicide vest nearby, and there's a guy who's a jihadi and there's a guy who's a jihadi and that they have executed him to he cannot to make sure that he cannot carry crimes. that if carry out his crimes. that if they encourage people to they want to encourage people to join the army, the armed forces, the sas and things like this, this of behaviour is not this kind of behaviour is not going to we saw issue with going to we saw an issue with our armed police officers our actual armed police officers recently , where one them was recently, where one of them was put a murder charge and put up on a murder charge and a load of other armed police officers their weapons load of other armed police officers they their weapons load of other armed police officers they said, weapons load of other armed police officers they said, well, ons load of other armed police officers they said, well, this because they said, well, this could and i've got could happen to me and i've got a and kids or whatever a wife and kids or whatever i fancy getting for in fancy getting done for murder in line of duty. >> line of duty. » m line of duty. >> it remains to be seen the exact details of all of this, and no doubt it will be, uh, covered quite extensively on tomorrow's on tomorrow's shows right here on gb news. so i'm just going to park there for now, because park that there for now, because in exclusive with in an exclusive interview with our political editor, christopher suella christopher hope, suella braverman responded to the accusations anderson. here levelled at lee anderson. here we lee anderson great >> lee anderson is a great colleague of mine . i'm totally colleague of mine. i'm totally abhor the accusations that have
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been launched against him. he is not racist. he is not islamophobic. out islamophobic. he's calling out very poor performance by the mayor of london, who is completely failed to hold the met commissioner to account, and which is why we've seen emboldened islamism in the streets. >> all right, so that's suella braverman there in a bumper exclusive with our political editor earlier on. jonathan, should should lee welcome should should lee be welcome back fold . back into the fold. >> i want to return to the >> i want lee to return to the fold. but i do think that he was clumsy in his own in clumsy in his own words in regards comment regards to the specific comment he sadiq khan and he made about sadiq khan and i think that some form of apology should for should therefore be given for the clumsiness specific the clumsiness on that specific point, islamism and point, not about islamism and the dangers of it. not about the poor policing on the streets of the two tier policing. and lee anderson not anderson is certainly not an islamophobe and a racist. islamophobe and not a racist. and i that if can and so i hope that if we can just get that very specific just get past that very specific point made sadiq khan about point made to sadiq khan about being controlled his mates , being controlled by his mates, which i think was over the line, then we can move on. >> okay. i mean, what did you make braverman? make of what sort of braverman? >> well, i think right. >> well, i think she's right. people busy chucking out people are too busy chucking out labels, calling people names.
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he's certainly he's not he's certainly not racist . anderson's lovely. racist. lee anderson's lovely. i've met him, spoke to him on many . i think people many occasions. i think people are just quick jump are just too quick to jump on a bandwagon. know what he meant bandwagon. i know what he meant when he was talking about sadiq bandwagon. i know what he meant when because alking about sadiq bandwagon. i know what he meant when becausealkicouldn't sadiq khan, because he couldn't understand sadiq khan is so understand why sadiq khan is so inactive. things inactive. with all the things that have been going on. um, so i it's down him whether i think it's down to him whether he apologise . i don't he wants to apologise. i don't know i were know whether i would if i were him, but think the him, but i think the conservative him back conservative party need him back and get him back. and they should get him back. yeah, heard people the yeah, i've heard people on the other saying much worse other side saying much worse things, rayner things, like angela rayner calling all this things, like angela rayner callinthat's all this things, like angela rayner callinthat's even all this things, like angela rayner callinthat's even worse, all this things, like angela rayner callinthat's even worse, not this thing that's even worse, not even on the same level . even on the same level. >> it is on the same i >> it is on the same year. i think is suella braverman think it is suella braverman feels for feels somewhat responsible for what up what lee anderson ended up saying, of saying, because she kind of planted with her piece planted this seed with her piece for which for the telegraph, which said, oh, about islamism? oh, whatever about islamism? and then anderson took it then lee anderson took it clumsily, it out there. but clumsily, put it out there. but he did. he did suggest that a muslim mayor has islamist mates, that is, come what? well, how is that is, come what? well, how is that not islamophobic ? and if it that not islamophobic? and if it was me, i would say suella should lose the whip as islamophobic. >> do you know what it's. what's the definition in your head of
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islamophobe the definition in your head of isléum,hobe the definition in your head of isle um, creating idea that >> um, creating an idea that muslims are in some way a threat, an irrational fear of muslims? >> well, how is that what he's just said there? >> saying saying that because you are a muslim mayor, you are in pockets of . islamists in the pockets of. is islamists extreme extremists in the pockets of extremists just by, by, by merit of being a muslim yourself. i don't think that's really what he was saying. >> i was saying that i think he was more saying that because of the inaction of sadiq khan, with all are going all these things that are going on, like there are on, it feels like there are people and let's be people around. and let's be honest, sadiq khan, he's been had where there's honest, sadiq khan, he's been had nine. where there's honest, sadiq khan, he's been had nine. he'sere there's honest, sadiq khan, he's been had nine. he's had1ere's honest, sadiq khan, he's been had nine. he's had nine. been nine. i think he's had nine speeches where he's been around people are islamic people who are islamic fundamentalists. so you know, not to that not that's not to say that he knows them. but let's be honest, even david cameron pointed out some have had so much some of his we have had so much hate and so much islamophobia coming out of the likes of suella braverman. >> it comes to the marches. >> when it comes to the marches. so she said something so where she said something completely mischaracterised as islamophobic, then what is she calling the pro—palestine march, hate march, hate marches? they are london is. but you know, you
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know, you know by now a minority of people who take part in those marches, a minority are hateful. but you have to admit, why now ? but you have to admit, why now? >> why do the majority, the majority still joining? and it's highly with hateful highly with the hateful minority, . minority, inflammatory. >> it would be like you joining the pin back in the grenade the pin goes back in the grenade because face it's because by hate north face it's totally yeah burgess . totally yeah burgess. >> all right. it's time to reveal today's greatest britain union jackass. all right. nana. who's your greatest? >> britain plays. it's got to be gary goldsmith going into the big house. big brother house. >> britain >> greatest britain >> greatest britain >> yes, going into the big brother house. and he's prepared to stand up for royal family brother house. and he's prepared to stargoodness royal family brother house. and he's prepared to stargoodness royal ftcan.' brother house. and he's prepared to stargoodness royal ftcan. and brother house. and he's prepared to shisjoodness royal ftcan. and brother house. and he's prepared to shis piece.ss royal ftcan. and brother house. and he's prepared to shis piece. and royal ftcan. and brother house. and he's prepared to shis piece. and ro absolutelylnd say his piece. and he absolutely loves them. and clearly he loves kate. good. the kate. so that's good. i like the fact that we used a bedroom outside court that anyway. >> right. that >> all right okay. right. that way. your greatest britain. >> my. mine is how a cox who's a dear friend of mine. i know he's a friend of the show. he has been championing for fair fuel uk now for years. he has uk now for 14 years. he has managed to make sure for the 14th year in a row, we've had a
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freeze on inflationary increases . kept the £0.05 cut in . we've kept the £0.05 cut in fuel duty going save fuel duty that is going to save people and people money at the pump and i think that he deserves a big shout out all right good stuff amy greatest present. amy is your greatest present. >> because >> it's kate winslet because she's i love to elaborate. she's right i love to elaborate. it's all i love. >> i was waiting for the picture. there she is. um, for putting out some concerns about the weight loss drug ozempic. and saying it might not be the quick fix. everyone's saying, because i've been feeling this for a while and have a few concerns about myself. concerns about it myself. >> no. enough. look, >> yeah, no. fair enough. look, actually, all hands up >> yeah, no. fair enough. look, actit..ly, all hands up on it. >> i'm using it at the moment. 0h >> i'm using it at the moment. oh yeah, and i've lost two stone and today. so what cost? and a half today. so what cost? >> and what happens when you come it feels like come off it and it feels like going to be it for the rest going to be on it for the rest of life? of your life? >> a second. of your life? >> we'll a second. of your life? >> we'll see second. of your life? >> we'll see what1d. of your life? >> we'll see what happens. look. >> we'll see what happens. look. >> well, he looks brilliant. i'm so jealous. >> you, thank you. so jealous. >> but you, thank you. so jealous. >> but you,not|nk you. so jealous. >> but you,not condoning >> but you're not condoning taking awful. >> all right, all right. it's that there, right? great. that right there, right? great. right gone right now, my winner. i've gone rogue sorry about rogue again. i'm sorry about this. i will stop doing it. but it was dame jenkins it was dame andrea jenkins because before because she came on before and said said. sorry,
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said what she said. sorry, everyone. quickly. everyone. right. very quickly. we've a seconds. we've only got a few seconds. quickly. union jackass quickly. your union jackass nonh quickly. your union jackass north their stance and north face of their stance and that quiz they that ridiculous quiz that they put right. >> right. >> right. >> stuff. go on. >> strong stuff. go on. >> strong stuff. go on. >> john lydon. yeah justin welby or for continuing to or woke welby for continuing to virtue the virtue signal. imagine if the church spent church of england spent £1 billion maintaining church billion on maintaining church buildings, their buildings, investing into their communities where most churches in of the community, communities where most churches in than of the community, communities where most churches in than trying; community, communities where most churches in than trying to ommunity, communities where most churches in than trying to a1munity, communities where most churches in than trying to a virtue y, signal. >> yeah, we got we got it. yeah. >> then you are not going to win how. >> now. >> jk rowling for laying bare at last a transphobia. oh my god, oh my calling my friend a hero. >> she's a hero. >> she's a hero. >> she's a hero. >> she's amazing. >> she's amazing. >> the winner is north face . >> the winner is north face. yeah. hey there we go. right. thank you, thank you, thank you to my wonderful panel. thank you to my wonderful panel. thank you to everybody who's been watching and listening. please back and listening. please do go back and listening. please do go back and check out what we at and check out what we did at the top the on the grooming top of the ten. on the grooming gangs issue. i'll be back tomorrow p.m. more of tomorrow at 9 p.m. for more of the same. well a brighter outlook with boxt solar sponsors of weather on . gb news. of weather on. gb news.
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>> good evening. welcome to your latest weather update from the met office for gb news showers today, but they are fading away and most will have a dry night. a little fog and frost a little bit of fog and frost likely in southwest. low likely in the southwest. low pressure is out in the atlantic. it tries to move in but it's getting blocked and stopped by a big pressure that big area of high pressure that is the dominant feature, and it is the dominant feature, and it is allowing a bit cloud to is allowing a bit more cloud to drift the east. we've seen drift into the east. we've seen some heavy showers across the southeast east. they are drifting . still a few drifting away. still a few scattered here and there scattered showers here and there through the night. lot of through the night. a lot of cloud eastern england and cloud in eastern england and eastern clear skies eastern scotland clear skies further will it further west that will allow it to cold. a touch of to turn quite cold. a touch of frost through rural parts of wales and southwest england, and some fog patches around some freezing fog patches around maybe affecting the m4 and the m5 first thing in the morning. could take a few hours to clear away. generally quite a grey day again in the east, particularly on east coast, with a breeze on the east coast, with a breeze freshened here through the day. a few scattered showers over eastern parts of england, a bit of rain at times in eastern scotland, over the hills scotland, mostly over the hills and creeping
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and some showers creeping into cornwall much of the cornwall later. but much of the west, bright through west, dry and bright through tomorrow with some decent spells of 12 here. of sunshine. 11 or 12 here. colder in the east where it stays cloudy, and that cloud likely around on likely to stick around on thursday day we'll a few thursday day we'll see a few more showers. suspect more showers. i suspect on thursday of southern thursday over parts of southern england , then developing england, then developing through wales and the midlands. some heavy downpours are possible. they'll be hit and miss, but do watch out for a lively shower on thursday. again. many places dry, some sunny spells in the south fairly glum and south and west fairly glum and chilly in the east. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers . sponsors of boxt boilers. sponsors of weather on
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gb news. it's 11:00. >> you're with gb news. i'm polly middlehurst and the top story tonight , right? well, it's story tonight, right? well, it's the budget tomorrow and the chancellor has promised permanent cuts in taxation for families on the eve of the budget, which is expected to feature a £0.02 in the pound cut to national insurance contributions, he's aiming to put the uk's economy and rishi sunak popularity back on track . sunak popularity back on track. that's despite the fiscal watchdog suggesting the government has little scope for tax cuts to make the figures add up. jeremy hunt's expected to extend a windfall tax on energy firms profits, and possibly tighten the rules on non—dom tax status . meanwhile, tighten the rules on non—dom tax status. meanwhile, birmingham city council has approved a wave of budget cuts that have been
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described as a devastating double whammy of tax cuts and fewer public services . the fewer public services. the labour led authority's planning a 21% increase in council tax over two years, and £300 million worth of cuts to public services . council leader john cotton unreservedly apologised to the city's residents for the budget , city's residents for the budget, blaming tory austerity . blaming tory austerity. birmingham's conservative leader said the cuts will mean streets are no longer cleared and broken street lights aren't repaired . street lights aren't repaired. gb news understands that the policing of a pro—palestinian protest in london this weekend will remain unchanged. officers will remain unchanged. officers will reportedly use existing pubuc will reportedly use existing public order and anti—terror laws after rishi sunak called on the police to crack down on extremist behaviour , and a extremist behaviour, and a government minister has paid damages to an academic after suggesting she supported hamas. but the cost covered by the taxpayer, the science secretary, michelle donelan, has now
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retracted her comments about

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