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tv   Britains Newsroom  GB News  March 8, 2024 9:30am-12:01pm GMT

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. or does it a gb news people's poll shows 46% of you voters plan to vote for labour at the next election, dwarfing just 18% for the tories. and by the way, you trust neither party to handle the economy. is it time for change? >> mps are warning that the ministry of defence has no credible plan to fund the armed forces, that the government wants, leaving the uk increasingly reliant on its allies. are we taking defence seriously enough? >> and she's back again. meghan's uk relaunch the duchess of sussex looks set to hire british pr gurus to improve her popularity here in the uk . popularity here in the uk. >> good luck. and the former prime minister theresa may is going to step down as an mp at the next general election . she's the next general election. she's represented the maidenhead constituency for 27 years. we're going to be joined by her former political adviser .
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political adviser. next. for a lot more this morning, but we really want to hear your views on this nhs fitness app. i'm calling it a fitness app. that sounds quite sort of benevolent. >> so it basically logs how many steps you've done, sends data back in real time to the government . i mean, you're going government. i mean, you're going to be the first person to download aren't you, bev? download that, aren't you, bev? no about big no i mean, talk about big brother watching . brother is watching. >> we this was coming down >> we said this was coming down the line. sunak and jeremy the line. rishi sunak and jeremy hunt get very excited about i, i don't know whether you saw how many times they mentioned the word app the budget, jeremy word app in the budget, jeremy hunt, know, an app is hunt, you know, an app is a solution to everything. is it the well, of the plans >> well, some of the plans include doctor's gps, include a doctor's gps, receptionist you an app, receptionist calling you an app, calling you a robot discuss calling you a robot to discuss your medical problems. i mean , i your medical problems. i mean, i think last person i want to think the last person i want to be discussing my medical problems a is a robot or problems with is a is a robot or ai machine, but let us know what you maybe wrong. gb >> yeah, maybe we're wrong. gb views news. com maybe views at gb news. com maybe we're being too cynical. we're just being too cynical. first though. latest first though. the very latest news wenzler.
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news with sophia wenzler. >> thanks, bev. good morning. i'm sophia wenzler in the gb newsroom . your headlines at 930. newsroom. your headlines at 930. protesters are set to demonstrate against the government's decision to house 2000 asylum seekers at raf scampton . it comes one year on scampton. it comes one year on since plans to house migrants at the historic site were revealed, as the home office tried to reduce reliance on expensive hotels. the save our scampton campaign is hoping to use the anniversary to put pressure on the government to abandon its plans . meanwhile, rishi sunak plans. meanwhile, rishi sunak has been accused of failing to stop migrant channel crossings after a record rivals topped 3000 for the year so far. but downing street has insisted the government is making progress in stopping the boats. it comes as the uk has just pledged up to £1 million as part of a deal to get libyans to return to their home country . london has become a no country. london has become a no go zone for jews during pro—palestine protests. that's the warning from the
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government's counter extremism tsan government's counter extremism tsar. it comes after prime minister rishi sunak warned forces are trying to tear the country apart. writing in the telegraph newspaper, robin simcox said mr sunak had been right to point out to an increase in extremist disruption . he said now the policies are needed to meet the scale of the challenge and urge ministers to be bolder and be willing to accept higher legal risk when tackling extremism . and former tackling extremism. and former prime minister theresa may will stand down as an mp at the next general election, bringing her 27 year career in parliament to an end. mrs. may revealed her decision to stand down as maidenhead mp , saying she would maidenhead mp, saying she would focus on championing causes including the fight against modern slavery. she had been the conservative mp for the berkshire seat since 1997, and for the latest story, sign up to gb news alerts by scanning the qr code on your screen or go to gb news. common alerts. now it's
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back to . bev. back to. bev. >> greg. good morning. it's bev and bev and ben this morning. i'm not normally here on a friday. you're normally here on a friday, aren't you, ben? yeah. >> thank you forjoining me. >> thank you for joining me. >> thank you for joining me. >> oh, it's my absolute pleasure on international women's day. >> no. exactly. >> yeah. no. exactly. >> yeah. no. exactly. >> i had a i had >> yeah. no. exactly. >>ihada|hada >> yeah. no. exactly. >> i had a i had a lovely time in whitehaven this thank in whitehaven this week. thank you to the people of you so much to the people of cumbria who had news up there cumbria who had gb news up there and gave us an amazing welcome. now, is finally going now, the nhs is finally is going to it's going to to save your life. it's going to do by monitoring phone activity. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> what could go wrong. >> what could go wrong. >> so this is the idea you all have heard in the budget. jeremy hunt talks about this amazing like is to save like technology is going to save the app can the nhs. so this app you can download your phone. download it onto your phone. it's monitor your step it's going to monitor your step counts. it's part of a government plan to tackle unhealthy lifestyles get unhealthy lifestyles and get people back work. people back to work. >> my only concern about this >> so my only concern about this is 20 years when is what happens in 20 years when we another pandemic and the we have another pandemic and the government wants everyone
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vaccinated. >> three years. good yeah >> three years. good luck. yeah >> three years. good luck. yeah >> sooner reckon? basically, >> sooner you reckon? basically, the is from the civil the fear is from the civil liberties camp is that we will go down the route. something akin to china, where they have a social credit system. isn't social credit system. this isn't some conspiracy, by way. some conspiracy, by the way. this in now, if this happens in china. now, if you a parking ticket or you you get a parking ticket or you criticise the ccp or you're a bad neighbour, whatever your social score goes down, social credit score goes down, you're restricted from, you're then restricted from, say, city say, travelling from city to city financial say, travelling from city to city so financial say, travelling from city to city so this financial say, travelling from city to city so this proposal from services. so this proposal from victoria atkins, the health secretary, seems fine on the surface. you know, encouraging people to take steps and to eat well and be healthier. but the only concern is from civil liberties camps is where does this lead to? does it open the doorin this lead to? does it open the door in 510? i think maybe a bit longer. 20 years to something more sinister. >> about i agree with >> it's also about i agree with everything you said there, but it's also and i think people need to just be aware of what's happening because the government aren't talking about the longer tum this of tum implications of this kind of paradigm shift that we're experiencing moment, but experiencing at the moment, but it's your personal it's where's your personal responsibility in this? like if,
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if at the moment we're not walking enough because walking enough steps because we're know, it's we're i don't know, it's sometimes nicer to just sometimes it's nicer to just take a taxi or drive or whatever. are we actually going to change our behaviour because we think the nhs is going to be a bit cross with us if we don't walk that relationship between the state and the individual infantilising people. so that you're being watched all the time and forgetting everything else, it's just, you know, how much do you want to be nannied by the state? >> exactly. it's actually not that i've said this before and you're to lambast me now you're going to lambast me now on emails again. i'll it on the emails again. i'll say it again, though, because i believe it. not that hard be fit it. it's not that hard to be fit and lose weight. get and to lose weight. just get some a calorie some steps in eating a calorie deficit, a few weights if deficit, lift a few weights if you can. and for most people, i understand there are some health implications for some people, but just a matter but for most it's just a matter of the right things and of doing the right things and consistently and it's your data, it's your life. >> that's bothers me. the >> that's what bothers me. the health secretary, victoria atkins, that the service health secretary, victoria atkins,make that the service health secretary, victoria atkins,make that of; service health secretary, victoria atkins,make that of; seiwhat you would make use of the what you call wealth of data call the wealth of data to
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prevent serious illness . and she prevent serious illness. and she said it's the front door to prevention to boost economic prevention and to boost economic growth itself growth data in and of itself will not change human behaviour. i think they are completely deluded at the idea that if you've suddenly feel that your doctor knows your activity, imagine what that gp surgery appointment is going to look like when you go and you sit down and you need to have an empathic, sympathetic relationship with your doctor and they go, well, i looked at your data , mrs. turner, and you your data, mrs. turner, and you only walked steps last. but only walked 500 steps last. but what happens if you leave your phone with your kid and they're running it all day, running around with it all day, racking up 30,000 steps, the racking up 30,000 steps, and the doctor that you're doctor thinks that you're really active in actual fact, you've been sofa eating been sitting on the sofa eating doritos. controversial, doritos. yeah, controversial, but frankly, as but not, frankly, as controversial should be. controversial as it should be. what think? what do you think? vaiews@gbnews.com. maybe you disagree with us. maybe this would everything . would change everything. >> a fresh blow to rishi >> now, in a fresh blow to rishi sunak, gb news people's poll sunak, the gb news people's poll has that nearly half plan has found that nearly half plan to labour at the next to vote for labour at the next election, 18% election, compared to just 18% planning tory, though planning to vote tory, though most those polled don't trust most of those polled don't trust either party. most of those polled don't trust eitiwithirty. most of those polled don't trust eitiwith the economy and most
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>> with the economy and most brits seem to be running out of patience as 37% want an election called as soon as possible . called as soon as possible. >> well, rishi sunak has now refused to rule out a may general election. so should he just get it over with? and yeah, go to the polls. >> well, joining us now in the studio is the director of jl partners and the best pollster in the business at scarlett mccgwire, scarlett . it's the mccgwire, scarlett. it's the poll we're now. we're poll season we're in now. we're going blindsided by polls, going to be blindsided by polls, aren't everywhere we look, aren't we? everywhere we look, but they are painting a very bleak not just for the bleak picture, not just for the conservatives, but for both labour the conservatives labour and the conservatives now. i mean, i think we now. yeah. i mean, i think we still have sort of still have to sort of acknowledge that you acknowledge that labour, you know, ahead know, 20 points plus ahead in the polls. know, 20 points plus ahead in the liolls. know, 20 points plus ahead in thei think everything is >> i think everything is pointing towards a labour majority election. majority at the next election. that quite amazing that is quite an amazing turnaround given their turnaround from them given their result however, i do result in 2019. however, i do think one thing that that poll flagged which is something flagged up, which is something that sort seeing that we're sort of seeing increasingly, of increasingly, is this none of the above. so when asked increasingly, is this none of the ionee. so when asked increasingly, is this none of the tone was» when asked increasingly, is this none of the tone was about when asked increasingly, is this none of the tone was about handling (ed increasingly, is this none of the tone was about handling the that one was about handling the economy, seen on who economy, but we've seen on who would the best would make the best prime minister actually, know, minister actually, you know, more people for none of
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more more people go for none of the above than keir starmer or rishi despite the fact rishi sunak, despite the fact that starmer now has lead that keir starmer now has a lead on rishi on these on rishi sunak on most of these things, complete things, why is there complete disillusionment, then, with the political voters? political class from voters? why, know, it's why, i don't know, it's something hear a lot. we hear something we hear a lot. we hear that there is this political disillusionment, i think partly it's at least. it's the people, at least. people to us they feel people say to us that they feel like politicians have made lots of promises. they then haven't kept this is pattern kept saying, this is a pattern that's gone the last few that's gone in the last few years. i think another thing that's this that's quite pervasive is this sense feel like sense that people feel like they're same, and that they're all the same, and that there's not much difference between not between them, and they're not necessarily sort of necessarily being sort of straightforward it is straightforward about what it is they to do. and i think they want to do. and i think there is a growing sense of there is also a growing sense of that, you know, politicians are saying are saying things which are actually, ironically, given what i focus groups and to sort i do to focus groups and to sort of and of trying to triangulate and guess people were guess around what people were actually know, actually thinking, you know, instead actually leading instead of actually leading people. people can people. and i think people can pick that insincerity. and pick up on that insincerity. and i think that's all part of i think think generally the think i think generally the class of politicians we have today low grade, you today are just so low grade, you know, if you put half of them into company you into a ftse 100 company or, you know, massive corporation,
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know, in a massive corporation, i think they'd last two i don't think they'd last two minutes. >> think they're >> i don't think they're capable. think most of them capable. i think most of them are very incompetent people. >> about incompetent. >> i don't know about not not not only incompetent, but out of touch well. touch as well. >> them on their incompetence. >> you can pull them on their incompetence. yeah sure. no. incompetence. yeah sure. no, no. i think, though, you're i do think, though, what you're saying is mirrored by an awful lot public. that's lot of the public. that's something hear absolutely all something we hear absolutely all the they are quite fed the time. and they are quite fed up the political class in up with the political class in general. i think, though, that all drives towards all actually just drives towards the fact people are ready the fact that people are ready to as that poll also said, to vote, as that poll also said, quite an election, quite keen for an election, quite keen for an election, quite vote change. quite want to vote for change. and that's we've seen and that's something we've seen that's to be, you know, that's going to be, you know, a continuing problem rishi continuing problem for rishi sunak, budget. continuing problem for rishi sun had budget. continuing problem for rishi sun had the budget. continuing problem for rishi sunhad the autumn budget. continuing problem for rishi sunhad the autumn statement we had the autumn statement before won't any before that won't make any difference because people already in minds. already moved on in their minds. it's interesting isn't it, as you when you say about the you say when you say about the fact that this is so different to 2019, when now in 2024, obviously the main issue that every country dealt with in that time been, covid time has been, the covid pandemic, whatever want to pandemic, whatever you want to call almost the call it. so it's almost like the pubuc call it. so it's almost like the public let down during that public feel let down during that penod public feel let down during that period time parties, period of time by both parties, regardless of you sat, on
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regardless of where you sat, on which side of that narrative you felt you sat on. nobody has come out of that. well, from labour or conservative. >> yeah. i do think that there was no one in particular. i think there was partly because there wasn't much policy difference the two. difference between the two. labour they were labour decided that they were going sort of follow the going to sort of follow the conservatives something conservatives and something that, more closely that, you know, more closely resembled of government resembled or sort of government of least in of national unity, at least in the of the the early stages of the pandemic. i think of pandemic. i think it's kind of it's that also we've seen it's that but also we've seen this trend, especially amongst sort democracies, sort of western democracies, that government that whichever government was presiding but presiding over covid, but actually, importantly, actually, more importantly, the covid the time covid recovery or the short time covid recovery or the short time covid recovery or the short time covid recovery got a real kicking at the ballot box. and actually, that's something that joe have to joe biden's going to have to deal as well in america, deal with as well in america, something we've seen across something that we've seen across europe. now rishi sunak is europe. and now rishi sunak is looking can looking at saying, what can sunak will the tories do now to salvage sort election? salvage some sort of election? >> victory, but to, >> i won't say victory, but to, you to the pain, it you know, to ease the pain, it does look like looking at the polls at least. >> and know, just >> and again, you know, just sort of speaking to people, not just groups, but just in focus groups, but anecdotally that the best the
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tories can do at moment tories can do at the moment is sort of damage limitation and damage them or damage limitation for them or for political i mean, for any political party. i mean, i guess, holding on to your sort of votes your base, of core votes and your base, which they're not even particularly at the particularly doing at the moment. why we're seeing moment. that's why we're seeing some these shares, like some of these dire shares, like 20% i that 20% of the vote. i mean, that sort existential for them. so sort of existential for them. so they sort of rally they need to sort of rally around those people that are currently they don't currently saying they don't know, vote conservative know, but did vote conservative for people that saying for those people that are saying they're reform, they're going to vote reform, i think they've but given up think they've all but given up on people who've already on the people who've already switched those who switched to labour and those who didn't in the first. >> do you think do you agree with concepts from the with the concepts from the reform and people like reform camp and people like arron the arron banks? you say that the best thing tories is best thing for the tories is complete annihilation, they complete annihilation, so they can conservative can rediscover some conservative principles sort principles and, you know, sort of foundations and of rebuild their foundations and rise like a rise from the ashes like a phoenix you know, five phoenix and, you know, five years or whatever. >> funny, it's not >> yeah, it's funny, it's not just, banks say that, >> yeah, it's funny, it's not just some banks say that, >> yeah, it's funny, it's not just some conservativesay that, >> yeah, it's funny, it's not just some conservatives evenit, >> yeah, it's funny, it's not just some conservatives even say but some conservatives even say that. know, that. so i mean, i don't know, it's are going it's sort of they are going to have do thinking. have to do a lot of thinking. i think the battle for the sort of conservative party to conservative party is going to be very interesting after the next in some next election. i think in some ways, sort of ways, and everyone sort of already looking that. already looking forward to that. the even asking
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the fact that you're even asking that telling the fact that you're even asking that things telling the fact that you're even asking that things stand telling of where things stand at the moment, the moment, i'm talking to the people cumbria this people up in, in cumbria this week, who week, the number of people who came us and say hello came to talk to us and say hello and said, want conservative and said, we want a conservative government think, government and you might think, you red wall kind you know, it's the red wall kind of they say want of area. and they say we want somebody represents what, somebody that represents what, what conserving? what are they conserving? what are conserving? they are they conserving? are they conserving the family know, the small know. they small businesses know. are they conserving. life. that's that's a problem >> no, that's that's a problem for the in for voters, for the tories in the as well. because the future as well. because people kids. people aren't having kids. they're their homes, people aren't having kids. they're said, their homes, people aren't having kids. they'resaid, bev. their homes, people aren't having kids. they're said, bev. they ir homes, people aren't having kids. they're said, bev. they have nes, as you said, bev. they have nothing conserve in the nothing to conserve in the future. so what what use to the tories have . tories have. >> yeah, i mean i think it's a big problem for them. this big problem for them. and this is why we're seeing them is why i think we're seeing them particularly with particularly struggle with younger even younger voters and not even actually only actually that young, but only 1 in 10 50 say they're going in 10 under 50 say they're going to vote conservative. at the moment. shocking to vote conservative. at the mo them shocking to vote conservative. at the mothem to shocking to vote conservative. at the mothem to lead ocking to vote conservative. at the mothem to lead them] for them and going to lead them into just for this into problems, not just for this election, election, election, this election, but the, know, next couple, the, you know, the next couple, if out . if they don't sort it out. >> yeah. okay. thank you scarlett. to see you scarlett. always good to see you , thanks much. so up next, , thanks so much. so up next, theresa former prime theresa may, the former prime minister, of course, is standing down. joined a very down. she's joined a very long list conservative mps list of conservative mps standing next standing down at the next
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general . general election. >> i do so with no ill will, but with enormous and enduring gratitude to have had the opportunity to serve the country . i love are brexit means brexit. >> oh, i know , but it didn't in >> oh, i know, but it didn't in the end, did it really? >> theresa? i'm sure, i'm sure she actually i've heard she's a great mp in her constituency and, you know, a lovely lady. but yeah, in terms of prime ministerial success, oomph. i don't know. >> well, we're going to be joined by her former political adviser next. are you sorry to see her go? you're with britain's newsroom
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gb news. >> welcome back. i told you that i would rile some viewers with my comments about losing weight and just not eating. and that's exactly happened. i'll exactly what's happened. so i'll share some of those share with you some of those emails sure you'll emails shortly. i'm sure you'll be but now, be entertained. but now, a former theresa
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former prime minister, theresa may will be standing down at the next general election. she was first maidenhead's mp first elected as maidenhead's mp in joins a growing in 1997, and she joins a growing list conservative mps to step list of conservative mps to step down. whilst the tide seems to be on her party. be turning on her party. >> so, writing in the maidenhead advertiser , she says since advertiser, she says since stepping down as prime minister i've enjoyed being a backbencher again and having more time to work for my constituents and champion causes close to my heart, most recently heart, including most recently launching a global commission on modern slavery and human trafficking . trafficking. >> she says these causes have been taking an increasing amount of my time, and because of this, after much careful thought and consideration , i've realised consideration, i've realised that ahead, i no that looking ahead, i would no longer do my job as longer be able to do my job as an in the way i believe is an mp in the way i believe is right my constituents right and my constituents deserve. therefore the deserve. i therefore taken the difficult to stand down difficult decision to stand down at the next general election. >> probably not that difficult a decision though, is it? joining us now is former political adviser charlie rowley. charlie, you advise theresa may. you used to advise theresa may. what what's your response then to the fact that she's going to
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stand down? >> i think it's a classic, >> well, i think it's a classic, theresa. know , she theresa. you know, she recognises that she's only been able home able to become the home secretary and prime minister because in because of her constituents in maidenhead. she's maidenhead. that's why she's there. she's always put her constituents first. and so giving it to the main head advertiser, i think is just a nice i quite like that. >> as a former, a local newspaper reporter. hats off to you theresa. >> and she was, >> yeah, exactly. and she was, you , she is mrs. you know, she is mrs. maidenhead. local. maidenhead. she is very local. even when she was prime minister. and sometimes you'd be scratching head scratching your own head thinking, my god, okay, thinking, my god, why? okay, well, spending well, why are we spending another we've another weekend here when we've got brexit problems got all these brexit problems going on? she was committed going on? but she was committed to she was to her constituents. she was committed in committed to public service in maidenhead country maidenhead and for the country andifs maidenhead and for the country and it's a very sad to see her go. >> all right, charlie, i've got a bone to pick with you. you were during the were her advisor during the brexit. as pm brexit. her time as pm and dunng brexit. her time as pm and during the so—called brexit betrayal with the chequers agreement, your handiwork? absolutely not. there >> absolutely not. there were there were plenty of other advisers who pick on in this. >> this is a confessional, charlie. you'll feel better if you just tell us the truth.
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>> well, i had a wonderful role spending most weekends with theresa in maidenhead and sort of, you know, picking her up and travelling there from london to maidenhead, going around, making sure that the weekend duties were of covered. and should were sort of covered. and should there be any issues, there there be any issues, as there often were with london, you were able those able to communicate those effectively and make sure that she sort kept up to date she was sort of kept up to date throughout and she throughout the day. and but she in all of same meetings in all of those same meetings and she was relentless and visits, she was relentless in her don't go anywhere, charlie. >> we just got a little breaking news. we want to bring the audience morning. go audience this morning. don't go anywhere, this is about the anywhere, so this is about the firearms police officer charged with kaba . with the murder of chris kaba. let's cross live to our home. security mark white. good security editor mark white. good morning. mark. remind us of this story. and how has it developed this morning? >> yes. this was, chris kaba, age 24, who was shot dead after his vehicle was stopped by armed police in september of 2022. well, the officer who has been charged with chris cooper's murder had been known only as nx
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121. he'd been the subject of an anonymity order today. we can now name that officer as martin blake , a 40 year old police blake, a 40 year old police officer. after that anonymity order was lifted, it was challenged by members of the media on the grounds of open justice. the anonymity order was originally granted by a magistrates judge in september of last year, when this officer was originally charged with the murder of chris kaba. this incident, it was the 5th of september, 2022, when a vehicle that chris kaba was in an audi vehicle was pulled over by armed officers in streatham hill in south london during that operation, a single gunshot was fired through the windscreen of that vehicle and struck chris kabain that vehicle and struck chris kaba in the head. he died in
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hospital. the next again day. a year later, a decision was taken by the crown prosecution service to charge this officer with murder that led to a real crisis within armed policing in the caphal within armed policing in the capital. as hundreds of firearms officers handed in their certificates effectively stepped back from firearms duties. and then again, there was real concern expressed by the metropolitan police at the naming of this officer because of potential safety concerns. so it remains to be seen what the reaction of those firearms officers in the capital will be towards this move . a decision by towards this move. a decision by the judge at the old bailey , the judge at the old bailey, mark lucraft kc, to name this officer as 40 year old martin blake, the judge said that he had looked at all of the raw intelligence available to him, and he had decided that there was no imminent threat to this officer or indeed this officer's
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family. but the will without doubt be very significant concern amongst those firearms officers in the capital and elsewhere who say they undertake very difficult operations on behalf of the public to keep them safe. these are split second decisions that these officers make , and then the officers make, and then the possibility that they could be charged and indeed named will be something that, for some firearms officers , they feel firearms officers, they feel it's no longer worth it. >> okay. >> okay. >> thank you very much, mark charlie rowley. we were going to come back and spend time come back and spend more time with have with you, but we have unfortunately beaten the unfortunately been beaten by the clock. whilst theresa clock. in a word, whilst theresa may, of our greatest ever may, one of our greatest ever prime i think she will prime ministers i think she will go down as one of those. >> absolutely. because of her commitment to service, i think that's that's sums her up in a word. and, yes. >> so you've learnt a lot about diplomatic answers from your political paymasters. >> i don't i like to and >> i don't care, i like to and i think on international women's day, it's good to reflect on one
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of very well, one only of our very well, one of only two prime ministers. two female prime ministers. right. we're right. still to come. we're going crossing over to raf going to be crossing over to raf scampton, where hundreds of protesters are gathering. this is since the is one year on since the government the yep government used the site. yep >> weather. yeah >> first now your weather. yeah >> first now your weather. yeah >> a brighter outlook with boxt solar sponsors of weather on gb news . news. news. news. >> hello there. good morning and welcome to your latest gb news weather update. dry weather for many of us through the rest of the day, but there'll still be cloudier conditions cloudier and cooler conditions across the north—east coast. there's an easterly breeze still dragging on, quite a lot of cloud, and some drizzly rain that will fall as snow over the high north eastern high ground of north eastern scotland. though , scotland. further south, though, to be a fairly dry day across the south and east, be the south and east, there'll be more sunshine more in the way of sunshine throughout today we've drier throughout today we've got drier air off the near air coming off the near continent, so that's bringing that for those that brighter weather for those areas across many parts of western and western england and wales. and scotland. there'll be plenty of sunshine. and through this afternoon to be
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afternoon it's going to be breezier day though than recent days, feel days, but it'll still feel fairly in the sunshine. fairly pleasant in the sunshine. tonight we start to the tonight we start to see the cloud thicken from the south and west as some drizzly rain starts to arrive across parts of devon and cornwall, and further east across the south coast by the early hours. so there'll be quite a lot more cloud around by the day of on the start of the day of on saturday. further north, though, it will stay fairly dry and clear, particularly across the north—west, there a risk north—west, so there is a risk of of frost to the of a touch of frost to start the weekend . but that easterly weekend. but that keen easterly breeze continue for many breeze will continue for many northern areas throughout the weekend. as result, it will weekend. as a result, it will stay cloudier across eastern areas of scotland, north eastern england two but across north western areas of scotland and parts northern ireland. it parts of northern ireland. it should stay dry and should stay fairly dry and bright. drizzly rain, bright. that drizzly rain, though, will come and go for more areas with a risk more southern areas with a risk of some heavier showers in any brighter breaks south brighter breaks in the south later all for later on. that's all for now. bye . bye bye. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers , sponsors of boxt boilers, sponsors of weather on . gb news.
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weather on. gb news. >> more to come on britain's newsroom this morning, including outrage over the defence budget. why was no money allocated to the mod and our armed forces in yesterday's budget from the chancellor? also, the f1 scandal and international women's day. are you excited? >> not as excited as you are. oh, yeah. >>
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us. >> good morning. it's 10 am. on friday, the 8th of march. this is britain's newsroom on gb news with me, bev turner and ben leo. >> coming up, taking a stand in scampton. taking scampton. protests are taking place outside raf scampton after the government's to the government's decision to home 2000 asylum seekers there. >> and meghan's uk relaunch. the duchess of sussex looks set to hire british pr gurus to improve her popularity . we here in the her popularity. we here in the uk, what would she have to do to win your heart back?
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>> i wouldn't bother, i don't think a labour government looms. or does it? a gb news people's poll shows 46% of you plan to vote labour at the next general election, dwarfing just 18% for the tories . and you trust the tories. and you trust neither party to handle the economy. so is it time for a change, is it a no go zone for jews? that's how the counter extremism tsar describes london with the ongoing pro—palestine protests. do you agree with him ? protests. do you agree with him? >> and bringing britain to a halt. average speeds on our roads are at their slowest for almost a decade. because of roadworks and smart motorways. what's your biggest bugbear on the roads? and i'll tell you what i spent some time in australia, of course, in december, following nigel farage's jungle exploits. celebrity. i drove from brisbane down the gold coast to the base about an hour and a half in rush
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hour on their motorway. i never once took my foot off the gas , once took my foot off the gas, never once went below the speed limit. do that on the m25. you'll stuck there three days. >> you have experienced >> you will have all experienced it. it drives me mad. it. i know it drives me mad. every day i drive in to work and i don't think i get over about well, i never get over 20 miles an hour. no. and sometimes i don't get over ten miles an hour all the way here. it is a crawl and a creep. let us know your thoughts on this gbviews@gbnews.com. because the irony is, of course causing irony is, of course it's causing guess more pollution. guess what? more pollution. >> and it's not traffic, it's >> and if it's not traffic, it's potholes. you're doing your car in, your suspension is getting snapped, out there. >> so add it to the list of frustrations right? lots more this your this morning. first though, your news . news with sophia wenzler. >> thanks, bev. good morning . >> thanks, bev. good morning. it's 10:02. >> thanks, bev. good morning. it's10:02. i'm sophia wenzler in the gb newsroom . first, some in the gb newsroom. first, some breaking news. the met police officer firearms officer charged with the murder of chris kaba
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has been named for the first time as martin blake. has been named for the first time as martin blake . the 24 time as martin blake. the 24 year old was shot once in the head through the windscreen of a car in south london in september 2022. the officer was initially identified only as nx1 21, but it was ruled the 40 year old can now be named because it posed no real or risk to his life or his family . protesters are set to family. protesters are set to demonstrate against the government's decision to house 2000 asylum seekers at raf scampton. it comes one year on since plans to house asylum seekers at scampton were revealed as the home office tried to reduce reliance on expensive hotels. since then , expensive hotels. since then, west lindsey district council has been fighting the proposals to house migrants there, even taking legal action. meanwhile, rishi sunak has been accused of failing to stop migrant channel crossings after record arrivals topped 3000 for the year. so far . but downing street has insisted the government is making progress in stopping the
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boats. it comes as the uk has just pledged up to £1 million as part of a deal to get libyans to return to their home country . return to their home country. london has become a no go zone for jews during pro—palestine protests. that's a warning from the government's counter extremism tsar. it comes after prime minister rishi sunak warned forces are trying to tear the country apart. writing in the telegraph newspaper, robin simcox said mr sunak had been right to point to an increase in extremist disruption. mr simcox said now the policies are needed to meet the scale of the challenge and urge ministers to be bolder and be willing to accept higher legal risks when tackling extremism . former prime tackling extremism. former prime minister theresa may will stand down as an mp at the next general election . mrs. may general election. mrs. may revealed her decision to stand down as maidenhead mp, saying she would focus on championing causes including the fight against modern slavery. she had
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been the conservative mp for the berkshire seat since 1997. treasury secretary gareth davies is sad to see her go. >> i'm so disappointed to hear this. she's somebody who served this. she's somebody who served this country with great skill and dedication, as you say. for many years, she's known around westminster as somebody that is completely dedicated to her constituents , despite the constituents, despite the significant responsibilities that she's had in government. and i just want to pay tribute to her today for all that she's done, not just for her constituents, but for the country as well. >> now, mps are warning britain will be left increasingly reliant on military allies due to a £29 billion financial black hole in defence spending . the hole in defence spending. the influential public accounts committee warned the government currently lacked a credible plan to fund the ministry of defence. the gap between the mod's budget and the cost of the uk's desired military capabilities is its largest ever, at £169
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military capabilities is its largest ever, at £16.9 billion. labour said the report was more proof that the conservatives had failed . the us will build a port failed. the us will build a port on the coast of gaza to deliver a supply of emergency aid, president biden announced the plan in his annual state of the union address last night. plan in his annual state of the union address last night . when union address last night. when completed in the coming weeks, a temporary pier will allow hundreds of lorry loads of food to daily. officials to be shipped daily. officials have insisted us troops will not be deployed in gaza, but will operate offshore during construction . meanwhile, construction. meanwhile, president biden used his state of the union speech to take a swipe at his republican rival, donald trump. biden said mr trump sought to bury the truth about the 2021 january 6th attack on the us capitol , and attack on the us capitol, and also condemned his recent comments about russia and nato . comments about russia and nato. >> former republican president tells putin, quote , do whatever tells putin, quote, do whatever the hell you want . that's the hell you want. that's a quote , a former president quote, a former president actually said that bowing down to a russian leader, i think
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it's outrageous. it's dangerous, andifs it's outrageous. it's dangerous, and it's unacceptable . and it's unacceptable. >> and for the latest story , >> and for the latest story, sign up to gb news alerts by scanning the qr code on your screen, or go to gb news. com slash alerts . now it's back . slash alerts. now it's back. >> oh right. it is. 1006 with britain's newsroom. we think i'd know what i was doing by now on gb news with me, bev turner and ben leo this morning. >> emails flying >> yes, lots of emails flying in, commenting on in, including one commenting on my, experience in australia about driving. it was very quick to brisbane down the to get from brisbane down the gold someone said gold coast. someone said australia place. ben australia is a big place. ben yeah, i know, which is exactly my point. there's too many people here, too many cars on the road. so thank you for proving my point. >> cars on the road. >> oh, so many cars on the road. you've all been getting touch you've all been getting in touch about it's on the about this nhs app. it's on the front page of the times this morning. nhs morning. this is how the nhs is going alive, because going to keep you alive, because they're watching going to keep you alive, because they're doing. watching going to keep you alive, because they're doing. and ching going to keep you alive, because they're doing. and neil has
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what you're doing. and neil has said who in their mind said who in their right mind would nhs it would install this nhs app? it starts step count, starts with your step count, then location, then then your location, and then they to your they will listen to your microphone. says nhs microphone. jill says the nhs are touch with health are so out of touch with health guidance , they can stick app guidance, they can stick an app to steps where the sun to track my steps where the sun doesn't shine. and, a lot of you are feeling the same way about this. graham. i'm a 76 year old veteran. if anybody calls me and tells me to get walking, well, god help them. >> what it's mum? always god help them. >> wito it's mum? always god help them. >> wito it"mum. mum? always listen to your mum. >> it's your >> that's okay. if it's your mum, that's all right. but do you what? that's you know what? that's the perfect because perfect word to use. because that's what the state is doing. becoming our parents. stop parenting us. admit that we're adults and we can make our own decisions of how many steps we want. >> and also, you get people who say well, don't say things like, well, i don't care because care about privacy because i've got actual got nothing to hide. an actual fact edward snowden of fact edward snowden has one of the ever. i love the greatest quotes ever. i love it, saying that you it, he says, saying that you don't care about privacy because you've nothing is you've got nothing to hide is like don't about like saying you don't care about free because you've got free speech because you've got nothing just doesn't nothing to say. it just doesn't make stupid. make sense. it's stupid. >> to show you something >> i want to show you something that gb news that one of our lovely gb news viewers gave me in whitehaven viewers gave to me in whitehaven this up me and
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this week. he came up to me and he said, bev, you've got to show this show is this on your show and this is some electioneering material. it's for an mp who wants a candidate for labour in southampton. and within the leaflet they put through the doom leaflet they put through the door, they put a little thing for you to put in your window that says, you. if you that says, no thank you. if you can this, no thank you. no can see this, no thank you. no door sales or cold callers , all door sales or cold callers, all other, all of the callers will require proof of identification . require proof of identification. and i think that is really chilling. in other words, you put this in your window and then when the conservative or reform or green or liberal democrat or the green candidate your candidate come and knock on your door , i don't mind it. door, i don't mind it. >> i think i think it's fairly shrewd . the only, the only shrewd. the only, the only laughable thing about it is where it says what does it say? all all other callers will require of id. oh, isn't require proof of id. oh, isn't it great? labour suddenly endorsing the idea of id? they're against a voter id when it elections. yeah , it comes to elections. but yeah, i think really sinister and i think it's really sinister and really chilling. >> do you know why? because it's anti—democratic. you want to anti—democratic. if you want to vote election, if you're vote in the election, if you're a candidate , you
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a confident candidate, you should be stand on the should be saying, stand on the doorstep. to doorstep. listen to what everybody say to you and everybody has to say to you and then where your foot. >> i just think it's fairly shrewd of political shrewd bit of political anchoring, bit of anchoring, a smart bit of marketing. i don't think it's that sinister. no. >> well, anyway, thank you to the who came and it the viewer who came and gave it to me you think at to me. tell me what you think at home. vaiews@gbnews.com. >> on. it's been a >> right. moving on. it's been a year since plans to 2000 year since plans to house 2000 asylum at raf scampton asylum seekers at raf scampton were leaked to the press as the home office tried to reduce reliance on expensive hotels £8 million i think the bill million a day. i think the bill was at the time, well, now it's about £14,000,000.14 a day now i know it's eye—watering. >> well, since then west lindsey district council and community groups have fought to prevent progress at this historic site. they say it puts a £3 million regeneration project at risk. >> yes. and despite the high court ruling that the government plans were lawful, the people of scampton are again scampton are once again preparing fight. preparing to fight. >> let's go to see our reporter, anna who is there this anna riley, who is there this morning. good morning, anna,
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bnng morning. good morning, anna, bring us up to speed with you on what's been happening in scampton. >> good morning. yes, well, we're here at raf scampton , near we're here at raf scampton, near lincoln, the home of dambusters , lincoln, the home of dambusters, and we're in a camp that's actually been set up by campaigners who say that plans to move 2000 male asylum seekers to move 2000 male asylum seekers to this area is the wrong place. one year on and i'm joined now by sarah carter . you've been by sarah carter. you've been part of this campaign since that announcement was made. why don't you think it's the right area ? you think it's the right area? >> well, we have a £300 million regeneration deal that has been agreed literally two days before sir bradley announced the home office plans to, you know , office plans to, you know, preserve the history and the heritage, but also be an investment to the local area . so investment to the local area. so £300 million of private money and, you know, up to 1000 jobs that are going to be created as opposed to, you know, having it being used as an asylum centre,
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it just doesn't make sense. >> and what do you make to the home office saying that we can't keep spending taxpayer money putting up asylum seekers in hotels . it's costing millions. hotels. it's costing millions. >> do what you say you're going to do and stop the boats. and you've been saying that you know , this hasn't just an overnight problem . it's been escalating problem. it's been escalating for years. and by them not actually doing their job properly and stopping the boats, you know, it's led to the situation that we're in now. so you know, it's not our place to have to sort that out. they should be doing that at source and the home office say that they have been working with people in scampton and that they think this is the best plan, but you feel very unheard, don't you? >> we have meetings, okay. >> we have meetings, okay. >> so they'll come and they'll lecture us. they'll tell us what the what the case is and we ask questions . and each meeting questions. and each meeting there's a different answer. so we have to keep asking the same questions to actually sort of
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keep up to speed. and we don't get told anything that's going on just by an online newsletter. that's updated now and again, and any questions that we have asked over any of the meetings, they don't actually come back to us with an answer. so yeah, we feel sort of left in the feel very sort of left in the dark . dark. >> and why are you so passionate about campaign? mean , about this campaign? i mean, this, this camp that we're in at the you've set the moment. you've set up, you've meals you've you've made meals here, you've sleep are you so passionate? >> well, it was actually set up by another campaign group and we took over a month ago when they left. but my, my husband has been living on the former married quarters for 29 years in june. i've lived here for nine years. his zareff he did 22 years. his zareff he did 22 years. his zareff he did 22 years. his dad did 27 years, and his dad was also on the barrage balloons during world war two. so we've got, you know, an investment in that history that we want to preserve, but also for our community, you know, the jobs that it could bring. we're quite rural. we only get a bus every two hours. so to have
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something like this on our doorstep would be absolutely amazing the locals. amazing for the locals. >> and what are the next steps? i you've you've not heard i know you've you've not heard much, but what are the plans now? one year on, are you any further in knowing if this is going become a camp for going to become a camp for asylum seekers? >> next step for >> well, the next step is for the home office to get a special development be able to development order to be able to have three years planning permission moving forward once section q runs out. so now it's about campaigning on the mps to sort of vote against it. so that's the next step. >> thank you so much, sarah. so sarah and many other campaigners gathering here today at raf scampton to get their voices heard and to show that they don't feel that this is the right site for up to 2000 male asylum seekers to move into . asylum seekers to move into. >> okay. thank you. anna ben and i are sat here a bit baffled as to where you are. it looks like you're in an underground bunker and you mentioned that it's a camp. can you just tell us a little bit more about it?
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>> yes. so the main entrance to raf scampton is just a couple of hundred metres next to us, by the side of the road you can maybe hear road noise. there's lorries going by, cars going by. that's where the, the raf base is and this has been set up. we've got tarpaulin over the top. you can see in front of us we've got sofas set up behind us. i don't know if you can see we've got the kitchen area. so it's a base for for, people to, to come in to, to stay overnight, to keep warm as well as a place to campaign today outside the raf base. >> okay. fascinating. thank you anna. thank you so much. thanks, anna. thank you so much. thanks, anna. to everybody down there in scampton . scampton. >> i think the concern with scampton is i think people in the community would be a lot happier migrants were happier if the migrants were contained the camp and not contained to the camp and not allowed out into the community, but gather that's probably but i gather that's probably a very controversial concept also, but i gather that's probably a veryleastroversial concept also, but i gather that's probably a veryleast because concept also, but i gather that's probably a veryleast because of 1cept also, but i gather that's probably a veryleast because of the it also, but i gather that's probably a veryleast because of the health not least because of the health aspect. there was a i think it was it tb or was it
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was was it tb or was it diphtheria outbreak at some point year , so yeah, right. point last year, so yeah, right. >> still to come. it's international women's day. i'm feeling a little bit conflicted about it this year. and i'll tell you why in just a moment. but also, should include but also, should it include trans women? today we're going to fiery debate to be having a fiery debate about that in just a moment. this is britain's newsroom on .
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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 of the argument. >> we are the people's channel.
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>> we are the people's channel. >> we are the people's channel. >> we will always stand by the freedom to express yourself on tv, radio and online. >> this is gb news, britain's news channel . news channel. >> welcome back. it's 1019 on britain's newsroom. i forgot where i was then on gb news with me, ben, leo and bev turner and we're joined by former editor of the daily star, dawn neesom and author and broadcaster amy nicole the studio, nicole turner in the studio, which very apt line up on which is a very apt line up on international women's day, surrounded ladies. you surrounded by lovely ladies. you can identify ben. that's fine. >> only at weekends we'll accept you . only a weekend. it's free weekends. >> ben jemima comes out soho. >> ben jemima comes out in soho. >> ben jemima comes out in soho. >> that actually suits you. >> that actually suits you. >> yeah >> what? ben? jemima? yeah i could probably pass for it. i'd rather not, though. i enjoy need it, though. >> do we need international women's ladies women's day? ladies >> we shouldn't do we shouldn't need international women's day because all women should support one another all the time. the fact that we are expected to
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make a big deal of it on one particular day, i find a bit disturbing still. however, when we're living in an era where women's rights, i feel bev are being spun backwards really fast, i feel like by who? by men. mostly and trans women, i feel like now i am being told to sit down and shut up more than i was working as a young female journalist on a male dominated newspaper back in the 80s. >> do you really? but who? >> do you really? but who? >> so i do. >>- >> so i do. >> so i do. >> so when you say you're being told to shut up, you mean you're being told, not literally. your rights are somehow less important than certain other minority important than certain other miryesy important than certain other miryes . i important than certain other miryes. i think female rights >> yes. i think female rights now have become like now have become almost like a game of trumps. my right out trump yours. everyone has rights. everyone has human rights. everyone has human rights. trans women have rights. women have rights. no one's rights are greater than the other. feel now we are other. but i feel now we are locked considering trans locked into considering trans women are want to be women think they're women are locked into this battle of sisterhood and it
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shouldn't be that way . shouldn't be that way. >> no, amy, i do agree with dawn. >> oh, steady on amy, take one day. it should be international women's day every day. and the fact that we still have to have international day, international women's day, surely suggests that the inequality still there. inequality is still there. and of course, statistics do of course, the statistics do back that up, because it remains the that women can expect the fact that women can expect to earn 15% less than men, i think all the time about the medical misogyny that i see regularly that women's health conditions don't have the research just because they didn't bother , because they only didn't bother, because they only started reproductive started researching reproductive things since about 1990, because it male stuff it was all the male stuff i think about when i got in the car today and i put my seatbelt on and i have the knowledge that that seatbelt was designed for a man's and a woman's man's body and not a woman's body. really? >> yeah. body. really? >> ieah. know that even >> i didn't know that even everything designed around men. >> writer who drew real >> the writer who drew real attention to that, caroline perez . perez. >> yeah, there's a book on medical misogyny and the whole the whole world is kind of built around men. even the fact that
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when you take a paracetamol, it takes takes into takes into, it takes into account the average male body weight rather than when weight rather than women. when it suggested dose. it says the suggested dose. >> oh, so they do that like that, i think. >> they do, they do. >> but yeah, they do, they do. >> but yeah, they do, they do. >> me pick a point >> let me pick up on a point that dawn about that dawn mentioned about women's being eroded by women's rights being eroded by certain trans certain groups, including trans women, who you are a big supporter of. you are happy with trans women being in women's toilets, women's toilets, playing in in women's sports. so, i mean, you can't have it both ways. you can't say women's rights being eroded women's rights are being eroded yet. playing yet. i support men playing biological . biological sport. >> i can't see any evidence of, trans women eroding women's rights. but what i can see a lot of evidence is of is of trans women's rights being eroded by women. i see that a lot. >> ehm . how can you say that >> ehm. how can you say that about sport? i can give you just one example of sport. lee thomas, the male born female male born swimmer, swimming in women's races, that is a cast iron. >> lee thomas was playing in america in a college level team and the following year she was
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beaten by a cis woman. so it's not really cis women. you know what? >> we're just women. >> we're just women. >> the thing that i find funny is people only care that when trans play sports, when trans women play sports, when they win, so is the principal. >> oh, they can play , but they >> oh, they can play, but they can't win. >> sorry. it's the safe. it's the aspect of it as well. the safety aspect of it as well. how many videos and clips have we of biological men we seen online of biological men playing sports, playing in women's sports, playing in women's sports, playing them, playing rugby, manhandling them, throwing them around? >> you wouldn't have a haven't >> you wouldn't have a i haven't seen many. seen that many. >> there would happen. >> oh there would happen. >> oh there would happen. >> there was. >> yeah there was. >> yeah there was. >> a lot son >> i've seen a lot of my son plays contact rugby i found plays contact rugby and i found that that's got that terrifying. that's got nothing the gender. nothing to do with the gender. >> you as a woman >> imagine you as a woman playing against rugby, against a biological man. >> rugby >> you can't support rugby i have but you could see it. >> it does happen. and i think when you say, well, it only matters if they win, that's only when incensed. yeah when people are incensed. yeah because sport is about winning but really but they rarely win, really matter. rarely, rarely win. matter. they rarely, rarely win. >> male born, vanishingly small numbers of trans women who are evenin numbers of trans women who are even in sport. because actually they're very unlikely, because of this. if of conversations like this. if you woman living you were a trans woman living in the would want go
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the uk now, would you want to go get you've do get into sport? you've got to do sport. get into sport? you've got to do spoi've people going like >> i've got people going like how parkruns, you know, how many parkruns, you know, people parkrun to people going along to parkrun to try and have a have a fun day. >> now people are saying, >> and now people are saying, oh, trans women shouldn't be allowed. were trans allowed. so if you were a trans woman in the uk now, woman living in the uk now, would feel welcome anywhere would you feel welcome anywhere you as fine you talk about parkrun as a fine example, in example, the record holder in aberystwyth , for example in aberystwyth, for example in wales, is a biological man who absolutely exceeds any records held by women and what parkrun did . did. >> it's not a competitive, you know what parkrun did they they deleted their records and deleted all their records and said we're going we're said look we're going to, we're going this going to appease to this, this cheating that's it cheating because that's what it is biological and we're is by biological men. and we're going all records. i going to scrap all records. i feel you don't. feel like you don't. >> like you've been >> i feel like you've never been to because to a parkrun because it's not about it's not competitive. >> competitive. >> lot of sport. i >> i've played a lot of sport. i play >> i've played a lot of sport. i play probably more and play probably more sport, and i'm fitness i'm into more fitness and probably most and probably most people. and i understand biology understand the innate biology of biological . it's not just biological men. it's not just abouti biological men. it's not just about i have a question then what one second? what did you hang on one second? it's about reducing it's not just about reducing testosterone. it's not just about reducing testorthrough male puberty , they gone through male puberty, they have more muscle mass. they have more bone more lung capacity, bigger bone density with them
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life. >> all the arguments. but i just find it. >> it ironic w“ >> i find it ironic that you're here rights here saying women's rights are being are. being eroded, yet you are. >> say they've >> i didn't say they've been eroded. say stagnated. eroded. i say they stagnated. >> you're happy to >> but you're you're happy to not progressing. >> happy to destroy men. not progressing. >> also, happy to destroy men. not progressing. >> also, can py to destroy men. not progressing. >> also, can iy to destroy men. not progressing. >> also, can i just destroy men. not progressing. >> also, can i just put:roy men. not progressing. >> also, can i just put to' men. not progressing. >> also, can i just put to you n. and also, can i just put to you caster semenya? i always think of this example. do you remember caster yeah. caster semenya? yeah. >> yes. and she >> she's intersex. yes. and she has the bone density and the lung capacity and all the things that levelled . that's fine, that are levelled. that's fine, because biological man. >> but ml m minute . how the >> but hang on a minute. how the makeup, complexity makeup, the complexity of biology and human experience and condition can be in the form of someone like caster semenya. so why are you willing to accept her natural advantage? >> she's rare example. >> she's a rare example. >> she's a rare example. >> phelps massive >> michael phelps massive wingspan, alien wingspan, some would a man and competed >> and he's a man and competed that unfair? >> that unfair? >> is that unfair? >> is that unfair? >> because he born >> no, because he was born a man. because racing man. because he was racing against trans. he against men, were born trans. he wasn't against wasn't racing against against weaker feebler women. >> he was racing against weaker feebler men who could never have his wingspan. so you're his wingspan. so if you're argument that this whole argument is that this whole biological while biological difference while we're issue, can we we're on this issue, can we have a at a little clip?
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a look at a little clip? >> actually, labour's >> actually, this is labour's angela eagle because we're talking about this from the perspective conservative perspective of a conservative party backdrop, conservative government. so we often think how would this issue play out under labour. well we've got a little bit of an insight now as to what that might look like. here you go. here's angela eagle. >> we'll also strengthen the law. anti—lgbt+ hate crimes law. so anti—lgbt+ hate crimes are as aggravated are treated as aggravated offences which is. and there will be a much needed modernising of gender recognition processes which are humiliating. and so effectively dawn, what angela eagle is saying is that trans rights are going to be further consolidate , going to be further consolidate, dated and further empowering to people in under a labour government. >> look, everybody has rights , >> look, everybody has rights, right? trans people should have rights, women should have rights, women should have rights, even men should have rights. and that hurts, believe me. but even not you. me. thank you. but even not you. i say you specifically, i didn't say you specifically, but men have rights. but even men should have rights. it no one's. no rights it no one's. no one's rights trumps. didn't really
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trumps. i didn't really understand what angela was saying there. there's a lot of words. there's brief. words. there's a little brief. no, there was a lot no, no, no, no. there was a lot of she used. none of it of words she used. none of it really much sense , to be really made much sense, to be honest slightly honest with. i'm slightly disappointed because i feel that she as she should be more pro—women as i one of the things i said. well, one of the things that she was saying there is that she was saying there is that gender transitioning should be made easier and less humiliating about the gender recognition certificate, isn't it? >> yes. and actually, this originated with who we were talking about a lot today. theresa may theresa may thought this be gay marriage, this would be her gay marriage, her marriage moment, her equal marriage moment, and she could be as a she could be seen as a progressive politician this progressive politician with this whole progression. whole trans rights progression. however, it started be however, then it started to be used the political football used as the political football that we see. it is used today. all the gender recognition recognition certificate does is mean birth mean that your birth certificate, your marriage certificate, your marriage certificate and your death certificate and your death certificate will align with the genderin certificate will align with the gender in which you lived your life. if was to life. and if it was open to abuse, that's also acknowledged. and to use and if they be found to use fraudulently , then that can be fraudulently, then that can be that's taken into consideration. and in the example of spain, the grc would be removed . so if you
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grc would be removed. so if you went to try and get a grc, which is often the argument you know, a man could walk in and just say he's that's fraud. so he's a woman, that's fraud. so that work. and in that wouldn't work. and in ireland, they have this ireland, in spain they have this and it works very, very well. >> it's interesting you >> but it's interesting that you use fraud because for use the word fraud because for me, of we being me, so much of what we are being asked i can separate, asked to do and i can separate, i that no one wants to be i think that no one wants to be unkind individual trans unkind to an individual trans person. no, i don't want to see unkind to an individual trans prworld no, i don't want to see unkind to an individual trans prworld in , i don't want to see unkind to an individual trans prworld in which,�*t want to see unkind to an individual trans prworld in which, as/ant to see unkind to an individual trans prworld in which, as you to see unkind to an individual trans prworld in which, as you say, ee a world in which, as you say, trans people can't freely walk down street and live their down the street and live their lives because vast majority lives because the vast majority just quiet life just want to live a quiet life and just. and get on just. >> always on with it. >> we always get on with it. >> we always get on with it. >> yes, but being asked if i am asked look at a man born a asked to look at a man born a male in a dress and say, that is a woman, you're asking me to lie. >> i think we're imagining such different things, aren't we? like, i'm picturing brianna ghey . i'm picturing john fay, i'm picturing india willoughby, well, in india, willoughby is now threatening to go to the police . but when jk rowling police. but when jk rowling called man, her do you called him a man, see her do you honestly, in your heart, ever
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think , man? think, man? >> because i don't believe woman. >> i see a trans woman i don't i don't think that even matters. >> india willoughby is asking and that's a simple there's difference. >> there's a difference. a trans woman woman . that's it. woman and a woman. that's it. there's cis women, the there's no cis women, by the way. we're okay, that's way. we're women. okay, that's it. a prefix, >> but it's just a prefix, isn't it? brown it? we're blonde women, brown haired women. haired women broadcasting women. pretty steady on with. >> i see it so different. >> i see it so different. >> i see it so different. >> i mean, i think you're missing the point by saying, does this person look like a real woman? that's the thing real woman? that's not the thing here. about her is a here. everything about her is a woman. problem with india woman. the problem with india and india . and jk rowling is india. willoughby to willoughby is threatening to censor the free speech and the biological reality and facts of human life by going to the police because she called him a man. nothing do you. man. nothing to do with you. >> india's passport. >> look at india's passport. there's fibre of there's an f every fibre of india's being is well, it isn't every fibre of her being. >> that's what's interesting. professor winston marshall, professor robert winston, sorry, very said, your very famously said, your biological sex is identifiable in every single cell in your body. >> quote has been it's been criticised. it's been emotionally. but you can't
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change your chromosomes. i'm not sure this argument gets us anywhere, because india should neverin anywhere, because india should never in a million years be treated as a male or called such i >>i -- >> i will lam >> i will treat her as a trans woman. >> is a biological male . >> is a biological male. >> is a biological male. >> what j.k. rowling said is undeniably derogatory and it was in calling them a man. you, ben, you know that. that's intended to be derogatory. you just know it. >> in india has got form himself being abusive and doing the same to yourself to say himself, why do that? because india willoughby is a biological man and i'm within my rights to say you are a man. i am not going to lie. i'm not going lie to lie. i'm not going to lie to myself that to me and distort my reality to other people reality to make other people feel better. >> really hateful facts. >> really hateful facts. >> many things to make >> we use so many things to make people feel better all the time. >> trans rights. >> i support trans rights. i want people to live happy, want people to live in a happy, loving, accepting, equal world. >> an equal world. >> an equal world. >> you said you liked this top even though it's covered in cat. you know it's you're you know it's great. you're a kind person. >> lies to people >> i say lies to make people feel better. >> i say lies to make people feeii'mtter. going to distort my
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>> i'm not going to distort my own reality someone feel better. >> that's not your reality. you're a new you're telling yourself a new reality yourself feel, reality to make yourself feel, to your argument. to feel right in your argument. >> so much of this is about language. yeah. for india language. yeah. for me, india willoughby is a trans woman, and it's five letters that it's those five letters that really matter because that matters completely to all of us, because of the biology and because of the biology and because of the biology and because of your first point about medical testing. if we start including trans women in the medical testing, we are still losing because we are physiologically so different. >> okay. fascinating. i'm nicole dawn neesom, thank you very much. let's get news with much. let's get your news with sophia . sophia wenzler. >> thanks, ben. it's 1032. sophia wenzler. >> thanks, ben. it's1032. i'm sophia wenzler in the gb newsroom. the met police firearms officer charged with the murder of chris kaba has been named for the first time as martin blake. the 24 year old was shot once in the head through the windscreen of a car in south london in september
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2022. the officer was initially identified only as nx1 21, but it was ruled the 40 year old can now be named because it posed no real risk to his life or that of his family . real risk to his life or that of his family. he appearing at the old bailey. he's pleaded not guilty to charge . protesters guilty to the charge. protesters are set to demonstrate against the government's decision to house 2000 asylum seekers at raf scampton . it comes one year scampton. it comes one year after the plans were revealed as the home office works to reduce reliance on expensive hotels . reliance on expensive hotels. meanwhile, the prime minister has been accused of failing to stop the boats, with channel crossings topping 3000 for the year so far. downing street insists the government is making progress. it comes as the uk pledges up to £1 million as part of a deal to get libyans to return to their home country , return to their home country, and london has become a no go zone for jews during pro—palestine protests. that's the warning from the government's counter extremism
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tsan government's counter extremism tsar. it comes after prime minister rishi sunak warned forces are trying to tear the country apart. writing in the telegraph newspaper , robin telegraph newspaper, robin simcock said policies are needed to meet the scale of the challenge and urge ministers to be bolder and be willing to accept higher legal risk when tackling extremism . for the tackling extremism. for the latest story, sign up to gb news alerts by scanning the qr code on your screen , or go to gb on your screen, or go to gb news. com slash alerts . news. com slash alerts. >> for stunning gold and silver coins, you'll always value. rosalind gold proudly sponsors the gb news financial report , the gb news financial report, and here's a quick snapshot of today's markets. >> the pound will buy you $1.2831 and ,1.1733. the price of gold is £1,690.94 per ounce, and the ftse 100 is at 7674
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points. >> rosalind gold proudly sponsors the gb news financial report . report. >> still to come this morning. we're going to get stuck into this scandal at red bull and formula one. it's not going anywhere. this it's more than just a sports story this year. >> it's going up a gear. excuse the pun , but yeah, it's the pun, but yeah, it's definitely more than a sports story, especially on international women's day. very apt because i'd like to know whether and ask you whether women and i'll ask you this whether geri this, bev as well, whether geri horner was right to go horner halliwell was right to go to that bahrain gp and publicly support husband who's support her husband who's involved in the scandal. but yeah, in the fast lane now. >> new gb news series innovation britain looking at the success of british manufacturing around the country here it is. >> you want a great uk manufacturing story? >> well, i've got one for you
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with mark here at engineering . with mark here at engineering. and it's all to do with these fantastic parts and the story began ten years ago, right? >> yeah. we started dealing with this , as you say, ten this customer, as you say, ten years ago when they were prototyping work and trying to develop a new product to the market, grew , they moved market, as they grew, they moved a lot of their production requirements the east requirements to the far east for the cheaper , production, we the cheaper, production, we carried on dealing with them on a smaller basis on deal a much smaller basis on deal prototyping, development work , prototyping, development work, but then during the pandemic, when they couldn't get supply from china or their products, they turned to us and asked to us see if we could do supply for them, we couldn't compete quite with price on what they were buying from the far east. but then you put in the entire then when you put in the entire price , component, including price of, component, including shipping quality, turnaround and delivery and lead time, it actually works out better for them to buy the product from the uk. and they've actually made a decision to try and reshore much of their in production of their work in production terms. to the uk, and we're terms. back to the uk, and we're supporting them that product. >> w-
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e fantastic . and i >> absolutely fantastic. and i think you're doing a great job doing exactly what i've doing exactly that. what i've really learned from this, it's not per part , but not so much price per part, but it's more price of the production made you win it. >> yeah, it's it.— >> yeah, it's a it. >> yeah, it's a total price of purchase. it's a total price of quality. making sure product gets them right first time that they have availability for it. reaction time. you know it's 12 weeks normally from the far east. and we can produce in 12 hours if need be. you know, so it's that relationship and having that clear line of communication. >> well done mark. and let's see more of this in the future. >> i'm so.
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>> thank you to gb news viewers and listeners. because we've had some record numbers in the last week and yesterday, we were the
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number one news channel across the uk . your favourite news the uk. your favourite news channel? yeah, what's the reaction that you get, like on the streets now, ben, i was on a plane to tenerife last week and i had two guys come up to me and they, said, thank you. they, they said, thank you. >> love, love the show, love >> we love, love the show, love the thank you for the channel. thank you for speaking up for us because we feel like we haven't got a voice. if do speak up, voice. and if we do speak up, you you get called all you know, you get called all sorts names so and sorts of names and so on, and i also had a neighbour up the road from the day. bumped also had a neighbour up the road from and day. bumped also had a neighbour up the road from and was day. bumped also had a neighbour up the road from and was talking bumped also had a neighbour up the road from and was talking abouted into her and was talking about the she oh, the weather and she said, oh, thank sun's etc. thank god, the sun's out, etc. etc. she you look like etc. and she said, you look like that from gb news. i said, that chap from gb news. i said, oh, funny that. that chap from gb news. i said, oh, and|y that. that chap from gb news. i said, oh, and i that. that chap from gb news. i said, oh, and i find. that chap from gb news. i said, oh, and i find recently like the >> and i find recently like the response from, from people that we on the street you we meet on the street and you know say about gb know what people say about gb news. never had this news. i've never had this before. for every before. i've worked for every other in the last other channel almost in the last 20 say we watch gb 20 years. they say we watch gb news all day and that does not happen anywhere else because we are news. but in the evening it's that close to entertainment. remember that it's your channel as well. >> it is called the people's
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channel for a reason. and i know it sounds corny, but it's true. and all the emails you send in are you know, support are both of, you know, support and on how we and criticism on how we can improve. take it all in. we improve. we take it all in. we do. and everything do here is do. and everything we do here is for you. as i said, we're giving you a voice. so thank so you a voice. so thank you so much tuning in your much for tuning in in your numbers, growing numbers right now, a very hectic now, it's been a very hectic week in westminster. >> course, we spring >> of course, we had the spring budget , yes, >> of course, we had the spring budget, yes, but been budget, yes, but it's been criticised nothing criticised for having nothing new britain's armed forces new for britain's armed forces and has actually appeared to track a decline £2.5 billion track a decline of £2.5 billion in spending . so joining in defence spending. so joining us now is labour mp for bootle, peter dowd, peter good morning. thank you so much for joining us. what did make of the us. what did you make of the budget , not a us. what did you make of the budget, not a lot, as eric morecambe would say. i think it was a transactional budget. i think it was a budget that, was there to get the tories across a particular line in advance of a general election. it was just pretty lots of lots of organisations. pretty lots of lots of organisations . institute of organisations. institute of directors said, for example, it was unremarkable . all, in that
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was unremarkable. all, in that regard , what do you make of the regard, what do you make of the lack of defence spending , lack of defence spending, especially at a time when we've got the russia invasion of ukraine, the situation in the red sea with the houthi rebels, not for our armed not a penny for our armed forces. well, the thing is, with the defence of the front line starts on the home front in that regard. so. and what we've got problems with at the moment are issues maybe around recruitment and retention in the armed forces as well, because, to stay in any organisation or to be attracted to an organisation, you've got to have you've got to believe that it's committed to you. and i think at the moment the government are not sending the government are not sending the right messages out for people who we want to join the armed forces , that it's not not armed forces, that it's not not so much it's not welcoming. it's just it's got to be a place that you're you're committed to and you're you're committed to and you want to commit. you're you're committed to and you want to commit . you're you want to commit. you're committed by, so to speak, by
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the government. >> and that that particular issue, peter, was brought sharply into focus when there was the public debate just a few weeks ago about whether we should have a sort of national service whether would service and whether we would need conscription again need to have conscription again one course, the younger >> and, of course, the younger generation to social media generation took to social media and memes about generation took to social media andfact memes about generation took to social media andfact that memes about generation took to social media andfact that they memes about generation took to social media andfact that they wouldn't bout generation took to social media andfact that they wouldn't got the fact that they wouldn't go and fight for this government. what labour to create a what would labour do to create a country that the younger generation would literally die for? >> well, look, i think what you've got to do is you've got to have, for example, defence spending , which which is spending, which which is commensurate with the needs of our country. but i go back to the point about it starts on the home front. so you've got to be paying home front. so you've got to be paying people appropriately for a kick—off. you've got to know that they're secure for the future. that their pensions are reasonable, that the accommodation actually accommodation that they actually live in with their families when they in the armed forces is they are in the armed forces is important. so you've got to get those basics right. and there, that's the starting point for
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any, any, any armed forces. is that what is it like for you and your family if you're committing to 5 or 10 years in the armed services? >> it's sort of it is, and it isn't. and i agree with you. and i would think all of our soldiers and all of our troops should be treated better when they're service when they're in service or when they've as well. but they've retired as well. but it's that, peter. it's more than that, peter. it's about you world about because, you know, world war two, we didn't war i, world war two, we didn't have british male soldiers saying, well, i'll in the saying, well, i'll go in the army, only they give me army, but only if they give me a nice that nice house. my point being that it's in the hearts it's that passion in the hearts of the next generation to believe in this country. what would labour do to encourage that? >> well, that yes , but that's >> well, that yes, but that's i think personally, i think you're missing the point. what? you've got a lot. my, my grandmother was a war widow for 67 years, and my mother was a, was a, was and my mother was a, was a, was a war widow for 49. she got a war widows pension for 49 years. it's about sending the message that the armed forces, our armed forces, which are they're top
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notch in the world. they really are . they really are top notch. are. they really are top notch. it's sending the message to them to people who want to join. you're committed to us. we are going to be committed to you. it starts at home with all those those sorts of things. and that issue about the abstract , about issue about the abstract, about committed to your country. yes, of people are. but of course, people are. but they've got to be they've got to be in an environment for them that it isn't all take and it isn't all give. it's a mix of both. and that's where it's got to start on the home front, but about but it's about values as well, isn't it. >> about what what would a labour government what does what would britain look like under labour government what does what wlabourbritain look like under labour government what does what w labour government? ke under labour government what does what wlabour government? how1der labour government what does what wlabour government? how can you a labour government? how can you define the characteristics that will be applicable to this amazing country that we have? what are the values you're going to represent? because i'm very unclear about that. >> well, i'll tell you what the values are. let's take a value. is it right in this country that we tens thousands of we have tens of thousands of foodbanks? is that is that right? i think that's right? i don't think that's right? i don't think that's right . is it is it
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right? i don't think that's right. is it is it right that we have hubs where people have warm hubs where people can't , have to go to, to can't afford, have to go to, to be protected? is the sort be protected? is that the sort of country that we want? no it isn't. so we want is we isn't. so what we want is we need investment, stability and social country . social cohesion in our country. we need investment from the government. we need investment from private sector and from the private sector and a partnership between the private and to make sure, and public sector to make sure, make sure our country has the productivity levels and the growth levels. it needs to look after everybody in the country. that's what we need. that's the environment or that's what i want to do. and that's what people, in a sense, what what whether you're whether you're a in the armed forces or not, that's what we all want. don't we want a decent, cohesive country to live in? we do. i don't think we have, with all the variations , all the the regional variations, all the regional variations,'iations, the regional variations, all the regional variations, right|s, the health variations, right across the country, that's where you start to make sure that people are cared for and looked after. whether you're in work or whether you're not in work. >> all right, peter, just changing the topic slightly. what's thoughts on
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what's your thoughts on international women's day? are you a big supporter? you you a big supporter? do you think it ? think we even need it? >> well, yes, i am a big supporter international supporter of international women's . so for example, women's day. so for example, women this country women even in this country are still paid well below the male average. and so we have to keep the whole question about the rights of women on the agenda. it isn't just about, you know, the old fashioned suffragette movement. it's about making sure that women a fair crack of that women get a fair crack of the whip, so to speak, and that they're getting a fair deal from , from, from who they're employed okay employed by. okay >> peter, thank you so much. really enjoyed talking to you. labour mp for bootle there, peter dowd, what did you make of what he had to say there? >> he was talking about the allure of people joining the armed forces. but you know, when the discriminate against the raf discriminate against white have white pilots and they have to apologise for being apologise about it for being racist, basically. how are you expecting people to feel expecting british people to feel that affinity with protecting their country girl? >> let us know your thoughts. gb views at gb news. com up next, christian horner of red bull fame. well, his accuser ,
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fame. well, his sixteen accuser, the woman who accused him, who took complaint to the team , took the complaint to the team, she has been suspended. did red bull make the right move, especially on international women's day? that's more. women's day? that's a lot more. this is britain's newsroom .
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well, we're looking at the pictures of christian horner well, we're looking at the pictures of christian homer and his mrs. geri on the front pages of all the papers. still, this sex and motorsport scandal story is going nowhere. we're joined in the studio by aidan magee to let us know what the latest is. this is this is sort of nightmarish for the family. aiden isn't it? but also for the red bull team. >> well, it is, and i mean, first of all, i can't remember
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the last time i've in a major way seen f1 on the back pages of the newspapers because there's been the been so little happening on the track. processional track. it's so processional since massive war on the since that massive war on the track between hamilton and verstappen two and a half years ago. so to see it on the front pageis ago. so to see it on the front page is almost unchartered territory, certainly for the first while, he first time in a long while, he wants draw a line under wants to draw a line under things. wouldn't be if things. wouldn't it be nice if every time we got into a bit of trouble just say to the trouble we could just say to the media, you just media, you know, you can just move now? nothing to move on now? there's nothing to see can understand see here so you can understand his what's turning see here so you can understand his though,nhat's turning see here so you can understand his though,nhat'is:urning see here so you can understand his though,nhat'is that1g see here so you can understand his though, nhat'is that the now, though, bev, is that the sponsors to sponsors are starting to get involved when the sponsors involved and when the sponsors start getting nervous, that's when the end is nigh. i don't think in his position think he'll be in his position for longer. now, for that much longer. now, what's red what's interesting is that red bull's . bull's engine partner, honda. yes. okay. it sounds like a bit of bit of a small time. role of a bit of a small time. role in terms of the sponsorship, but they're a big, big company. they're a global and they're a global company, and they're we need they're starting to say, we need to detail on this. and to hear more detail on this. and so questions questions are beginning to be asked. and beginning to, to be asked. and that's when the net closes in. because this is a hugely commercialised sport. it's enormous the world. if
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enormous around the world. if you're associated with it and you're associated with it and you're looking at it even dispassionately or from a distance and thinking, you know what? is a boil what? this one bloke is a boil that needs to be lanced. and you know what? if he's not, he's not a major investor in the company. he's an employee. i think he's an employee. and i think they to dispense they might decide to dispense with him. >> on international women's with him. >> whatn international women's with him. >> what do |ternational women's with him. >> what dorternationaoflomen's with him. >> what do |ternationa of geri n's day, what do you make of geri halliwell? horner, as now halliwell? horner, as she's now known horner's known his christian horner's wife, to the bahrain wife, turning up to the bahrain gp , a day after all gp last weekend, a day after all those leaked messages. what apparent messages were leaked to show public support for horner? was she weak ? is it the right was she weak? is it the right thing for her to do? >> in opinion, hate being >> in my opinion, i hate being psychic, i'd said on twitter psychic, but i'd said on twitter in morning that my in the morning that my prediction be she prediction would be that she would frock and would put on her best frock and she out she she would walk out and she would hold she would kiss hold his hand and she would kiss him. it's exactly what she did. >> there is there is a subplot to forget, there's to this. don't forget, there's a netflix filmed to this. don't forget, there's a nethe: filmed to this. don't forget, there's a nethe moment filmed to this. don't forget, there's a nethe moment of filmed to this. don't forget, there's a nethe moment of what? filmed to this. don't forget, there's a nethe moment of what? offilmed to this. don't forget, there's a nethe moment of what? of just.d at the moment of what? of just. it's life at red bull it's just about life at red bull . really. it's really. it's called, i can't remember what it's called . it's got quite it's called. it's got quite a fancy name, but i'm not that psychic. >> i didn't see that coming. >> i didn't see that coming. >> good. it's content. >> it's good. it's good content. i when tottenham
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i remember when tottenham had this a couple of ago and this a couple of years ago and amazon a documentary. the amazon did a documentary. the great was the managers great content was the managers were getting sacked all the time. upheaval and time. there was upheaval and they generate they need that to generate a decent within the decent narrative within the context series. and context of the series. and so it helps. not saying that that helps. i'm not saying that that it all contrived, it was. it's all been contrived, but to there . i but she needs to be there. i believe that. >> well, the accuser has >> well, and the accuser has been now we don't know been sacked now we don't know what, but that will doubt be what, but that will no doubt be rolling over the weekend. rolling on over the weekend. aiden thank you so here is aiden thank you so much. here is annie your weather. annie with your weather. >> a brighter outlook with boxt solar sponsors of weather on . gb news. >> hello. good morning. welcome to your latest gb news weather update. it will be a dry afternoon for many areas with some sunshine, but there's a relatively brisk easterly breeze for many areas that says this area of high pressure across scandinavia still brings in that easterly wind . further south easterly wind. further south though, we'll start to see low pressure arriving, bringing some weather fronts and some rain for the weekend. but that easterly
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breeze across northeastern areas will continue to drag in cloud and some drizzly through and some drizzly rain through the further the next few hours. further south, though, parts of the southeast, it will be a much sunnier and brighter afternoon compared to yesterday, so it will little bit in will feel a little bit warmer in the that easterly the sunshine. but that easterly wind feel wind will bring a chilly feel for areas through tonight. for many areas through tonight. the cloud will thicken from the south and west as this band of showery rain pushes up to cover many southern coasts by tomorrow morning. further north, though, it should stay dry, but it will be quite a cloudy and windy night, so that does mean it will be frost free by the start of the weekend, but it's still going to be a fairly chilly start. the winds be a bit start. the winds will be a bit stronger, through saturday stronger, so through saturday compared to today, particularly across northwestern areas as the winds are squeezed over the high ground. so quite a gusty afternoon , but it will dry afternoon, but it will be dry and bright western and bright for many western areas scotland , parts of areas of scotland, parts of northern and northern ireland and northwestern england, but further south, cloud will thicken through the day and there'll showery there'll be some showery outbreaks rain. these outbreaks of rain. these could turn across the turn quite heavy across the southwest afternoon , but
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southwest in the afternoon, but it will still feel fairly pleasant any brighter breaks . pleasant in any brighter breaks. see you later bye bye. see you later on. bye bye. >> feeling inside from >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers, sponsors of weather on
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gb news. >> good morning to you. it's 11 am. on friday, march the 8th. this is britain's newsroom on gb news with ben elliott and bev turner. britain's favourite news channel. >> thank you for watching at home and listening on the radio. so a new nhs app. it's going to monitor your step count. that's right. and then it will tackle your unhealthy lifestyle. it's going to get you back to work. are you a fan? we're not. >> maybe just eat less. perhaps meghan's uk relaunch the duchess of sussex looks set to hire british pr gurus to improve her popularity here in blighty. >> good luck with that and no go
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zone for jews. that's >> good luck with that and no go zone forjews. that's how >> good luck with that and no go zone for jews. that's how the counter—extremism tsar describes london, with the ongoing pro—palestine protests . do you pro—palestine protests. do you agree with him? >> and the former prime minister theresa may will stand down as an mp at the next general election . she's represented the election. she's represented the maidenhead constituency for 27 years and britain is grinding to a halt. >> average speeds on our roads are at their slowest for almost are at their slowest for almost a decade because of roadworks and those very annoying, smart motorways. what's your biggest bugbear on the roads? what is the possibility that meghan markle can revive her character and her pr image here? do you think? >> ben leo i think she's probably finished and the problem is brits compared to americans see through people americans we see through people and we judge them by the content of their character. whereas i think americans bless them, think the americans, bless them, they're with
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they're very generous with their, know , hospitality. their, you know, hospitality. >> i'm sort of baffled to >> and i'm sort of baffled as to why she wants us to fall in love with her again . why? like she with her again. why? like she she caused chaos with her husband amongst the royal family, and then she's gone back to america and i kind of think if she needs to revive her image here, do something. just do something good. don't tell us how wonderful you are via a pr company. come over here and do some good. do you agree? gb views at gb news. com first though, the very latest news with sophia wenzler. >> bev. ben. thank you. it's 11:02. i'm sophia wenzler in the gb newsroom. your top story this hour. gb newsroom. your top story this hour . met gb newsroom. your top story this hour. met police firearms officer martin blake has denied the murder of chris kaba after being named publicly for the first time. the 24 year old was shot once in the head through the windscreen of a car in south london in september 2022. the
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officer was initially identified as 121, but it was ruled the 40 year old can now be named because it poses no real risk to his life or that of his family. he's been released on bail and is due to face trial in october. protesters are again demonstrating against a decision to house asylum seekers at raf scampton. it comes a year after the home office plans were revealed as the government works to reduce its reliance on expensive hotels. west lindsey district council launched legal action against the proposal and conservative councillor robert patterson says the fight will continue . continue. >> we've got a legal stop order in place which the home office are ignoring. they're not doing the portacabins, but they are building on the accommodation blocks and they've been doing it openly, in breach of the stop order for months. we've lost a judicial review, but we have a we've been able to appeal the judicial review. so we're going
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to appeal the judicial review. and the council is also going to launch another legal challenge . launch another legal challenge. >> meanwhile, the prime minister has been accused of failing to stop the boats with channel crossings topping 3000 for the year so far. downing street insists the government is making progress. it comes as the uk pledges up to £1 million as part of a deal to get libyans to return to their home country . return to their home country. former prime minister theresa may will stand down at the next general election, bringing her 27 year career as an mp to an end . announcing her decision to end. announcing her decision to stand down as the member for maidenhead , she said she wants maidenhead, she said she wants to focus on causes including the fight against modern slavery. she's been the conservative mp for the berkshire seat since 1997. exchequer secretary to the treasury gareth davies is sad to see her go. >> i'm so disappointed to hear this. she's, somebody who served this. she's, somebody who served this country with great skill and dedication , as you say. for
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and dedication, as you say. for many years, she's known around westminster as somebody that is completely dedicated to her constituents , despite the constituents, despite the significant responsibilities that she's had in government. and i just want to pay tribute to her today for all that she's done, not just for her constituents, but for the country as well. >> the counter extremism tsar has warned london has become a no go zone forjews during no go zone for jews during pro—palestine protests. writing in the telegraph , robin simcock in the telegraph, robin simcock said the prime minister was right to point to an increase in extremist disruption. he says policies are needed to meet the scale of the challenge , and urge scale of the challenge, and urge ministers to be bolder and be willing to accept higher legal risk when tackling extremism . risk when tackling extremism. mps are warning britain will be left increasingly reliant on military allies due to a £29 billion financial black hole in defence spending. the influential public accounts committee warned the government currently lacked a credible plan to fund the ministry of defence.
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the gap between the mod's budget and the cost of the uk's desired military capability is its largest ever, at £169 military capability is its largest ever, at £16.9 billion. labour said the report was more proof that the conservatives had failed . the uk will join the us failed. the uk will join the us and other allies to create a maritime corridor to deliver aid directly to gaza . the foreign directly to gaza. the foreign secretary made the announcement after president joe biden said dunng after president joe biden said during his annual state of the union address that the us will build a port in gaza to deliver a supply of emergency aid when completed in the coming weeks. a temporary pier will allow hundreds of lorry loads of food to be shipped daily. officials have insisted us troops will not be deployed to gaza, but will operate offshore during construction . meanwhile, construction. meanwhile, president biden used his state of the union address to take a swipe at his republican rival donald trump . biden said swipe at his republican rival donald trump. biden said mr trump sought to bury the truth about the 2021 january 6th attack, and also condemned his
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recent comments about russia and nato . nato. >> former republican president tells putin, quote, do whatever the hell you want . that's the hell you want. that's a quote , a former president quote, a former president actually said that boeing down to a russian leader. i think it's outrageous. it's dangerous andifs it's outrageous. it's dangerous and it's unacceptable . and it's unacceptable. >> and for the latest story, sign up to gb news alerts by scanning the qr code on your screen or go to gb news. com slash alerts. now it's back to ben and . bev. ben and. bev. >> very good morning. it's britain's newsroom with me, bev turner and ben leo this morning . turner and ben leo this morning. should we have a little look what people have been saying at home? ben. >> yes, good morning. rob >> yes, rob. good morning. rob you getting sick and you say i'm getting sick and tired women muscling you say i'm getting sick and tired way women muscling you say i'm getting sick and tired way into women muscling you say i'm getting sick and tired way into things muscling you say i'm getting sick and tired way into things that cling you say i'm getting sick and tired way into things that areg their way into things that are of concern trans of no concern to them. trans women and they women are not women, and they already have their own day on
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the march. already have their own day on the judith 'ch. trans >> and judith says trans women and absolutely but and men are absolutely fine, but real women must not real biological women must not be deleted. virginia says only biological women should be included in women's day . audrey included in women's day. audrey says to all women, you are enough just the way you are. and lots of you saying that you're enjoying ben and i together this morning. >> are you gonna read that tweeter? >> well, i did get one tweet from and says. from someone called and it says. and i mute the tv every time that woman's on. this is talking about me. it's not very sisterly, is it? i literally can't bear to listen to the garbage that comes out of her mouth. woman andrew pierce. mouth. vile woman andrew pierce. is that you masquerading as and is that you masquerading as and i bet it is on international women's day as well. >> vile. >> vile. >> that's an andrew pierce word. i think he's sat at home tweeting. but andrew and tweeting. right. but andrew and i monday i will be back on monday morning. labour have morning. okay, so labour have been their strategies been outlining their strategies to lgbt community this to protect lgbt community this morning. this is what angela eagle had to say. >> labour will offer the country to pick up legislating to protect the lgbt community with
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a comprehensive , trans inclusive a comprehensive, trans inclusive ban on conversion therapy. i would have liked to get it done soonen would have liked to get it done sooner. it will happen. we just have to make progress and it's very sad that , as honourable very sad that, as honourable friend said, it's taken longer than the brexit negotiations . than the brexit negotiations. >> well, michael walker from novara media joins us now to talk about that and other issues as well, i feel like we've got a little bit of a clearer idea now. michael no major surprises there about the fact that the rights of trans people would be further consolidated under a labour government , potentially. labour government, potentially. >> i mean, i think it's not going to be a big issue in the next general election. i think there of certain there are sort of certain spheres media, and spheres within the media, and i mean, tories would mean, i think the tories would quite a issue quite like it to be a big issue at the general election. at the next general election. but ultimately going into this, it's about people it's going to be about people realising have realising that nhs services have declined. realising that nhs services have decline
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this a massive talking point in this election. think this general election. i think labour doing labour will probably be doing everything in their power to. why avoid it? >> would conservatives >> why would the conservatives want this to be a big issue? >> well, because they think it's an country is an issue that the country is somewhat on, i think somewhat divided on, and i think their is somewhat their sort of base is somewhat divided so i they divided on it. so i think they prefer talking prefer to be talking about issues they as issues that they think are as more unifying. >> i mean, that >> i mean, isn't that what political should political parties should be doing, about things doing, talking about things that their concerned doing, talking about things that their yeah concerned doing, talking about things that their yeah no, :oncerned doing, talking about things that their yeah no, i'marned doing, talking about things that their yeah no, i'm notd doing, talking about things that their yeah no, i'm not a bad thing. >> it's not a critique. i'm saying this is perfectly reasonable. angela eagle, reasonable. i'm angela eagle, they're i think reasonable. i'm angela eagle, they'rethis i think reasonable. i'm angela eagle, they'rethis point. i think reasonable. i'm angela eagle, they'rethis point. yeah. i think reasonable. i'm angela eagle, they'rethis point. yeah. so think she is this point. yeah. so i mean, you know, i know that lots of who would who would mean, you know, i know that lots of the who would who would mean, you know, i know that lots of the labourould who would mean, you know, i know that lots of the labour partyvho would mean, you know, i know that lots of the labour party willnould mean, you know, i know that lots of the labour party will have hope the labour party will have a, know, a more positive a, you know, a more positive attitude, let's say, towards trans people and trans rights. but i don't think we're expecting them sort of expecting them to put it sort of top their manifesto. top line in their manifesto. >> going to get a >> are we going to get a situation jk this situation where jk rowling this week said india willoughby week said that india willoughby was that was a man and india said that he'd reported her to the police for it? are we going to get a situation under labour where actually jk actually by doing what jk rowling and stating rowling did and stating biological facts that will end you up in the cop shop and potentially in court, well, i
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mean, people disagree about sort of the biological bases of transness, but i don't want to get into that right now in terms of where policy would lie on this . i can't of where policy would lie on this. i can't imagine that happening. the happening. and for me, the priority for me isn't really having politicians who are willing to police what people say. my priority is not having politicians seem to politicians who seem to proactively want to create divisive debates such as these, which, let's face it, you know, most of us aren't experts on it. there are people who know a lot about this, and in way, i'd about this, and in a way, i'd prefer leave them. prefer to leave it to them. >> let's move on people's >> let's move on then. people's poll a poll poll gb news have done a poll here, revealed that a here, and it's revealed that a staggering 44% of viewers do not trust or a labour trust a tory or a labour government to lower taxes after the next general election, even conservative voters from 2019 have moved away from rishi sunaks government. 45% saying that neither party will lower taxes, 36% have little strength in either of them , improving in either of them, improving little faith either of them will strengthen the economy. this is going to go one of two ways.
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we're either going to get lots of people spoiling their ballots, voting for independence, just voting independence, or just not voting at i think that's the at all. and i think that's the worst all worlds. don't you ? worst of all worlds. don't you? >> mean, potentially, i mean, >> i mean, potentially, i mean, we situation, though we are in a situation, though it's not like of the it's not like sort of the general public saying, god, general public are saying, god, we want either of them. >> i think the majority the >> i think the majority of the pubuc >> i think the majority of the public we kind of public are saying we kind of want we're not that want labour, but we're not that excited it. know, excited about it. you know, they're polls. they're at 46% in the polls. they're it they're going to do okay. it might in fact be a landslide. now, the worry will be what do they they're power? they do when they're in power? because made, in because i think they've made, in a of somewhat a way, a bunch of somewhat inconsistent they've inconsistent pledges. they've said improve said they're going to improve funding services , funding for public services, they're not going tax more they're not going to tax more and going to borrow and they're not going to borrow more. difficult more. now, that's a difficult square circle, right. but square to circle, right. but i don't we'll yet at a point don't think we'll yet at a point where we're talking about sort of despondency next of mass despondency at this next general election, because i think in way, you think there is in a way, you know, if, even if not know, even if, even if not enthusiasm starmer as a enthusiasm for keir starmer as a person, think is person, i think there is some enthusiasm for change in general. >> what's the best scenario >> what's the best case scenario for now ? for the conservatives now? damage limitation? >> think are doing >> well, i think they are doing damage limitation. i'm not a psephologist not to psephologist. i'm not going to sort of a number out of sort of pluck a number out of
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the i think that budget the air, but i think that budget i mean, way i'm surprised i mean, in a way i'm surprised that was so small c that that budget was so small c conservative you know , conservative because, you know, cutting national insurance by £0.02 they already did that last autumn and no one noticed. like i'm a political journalist and i'd forgotten yeah you i'd forgotten that. yeah you know, when when i sort of know, when i, when i sort of heard the what they heard on the radio what they already this already they'd already done this and they've again and then they've done it again and then they've done it again and hoping this is going and they're hoping this is going to around for them. so to turn it around for them. so they to much of they don't seem to have much of a a way. i'm a strategy in a way. i'm wondering rishi sunak has wondering if rishi sunak has already on job already got his eye on a job in california. jeremy hunt wants to sort as a responsible sort of go down as a responsible chancellor. so they've sort of given on next election already. >> nick clegg, of course, went to i mean, it's been a great >> i mean, it's been a great career him. losing that career move for him. losing that election career move for him. losing that electiythe is the ground >> is the is the training ground for technocrats, it? for the technocrats, isn't it? it that budget it feels. but does that budget for indicate looking for you indicate we're looking at because at a may election. because having categorically, having said categorically, i've sat desk saying sat at this desk and saying definitely now the definitely not in may. now the mood music that it was mood music is that it was preparing for a may preparing people for a may election. they don't want reform to get more, organs , let's say, to get more, organs, let's say, before may. and they're just thinking we might as well we might as well. it's not a great reason to go for an election , is
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it? >> well, i mean, these are also, you know, people with human psychology you know, psychology and, you know, the amount know, amount of time you know, someone, whether they're inevitably break up inevitably going to break up with and they'd with their partner. and they'd be it sooner rather with their partner. and they'd be later it sooner rather with their partner. and they'd be later . it sooner rather with their partner. and they'd be later . but it sooner rather with their partner. and they'd be later . but obviously'ather with their partner. and they'd be later . but obviously they' than later. but obviously they leave in case leave it a little while in case something up. you know, something comes up. you know, maybe sort maybe there'll be some sort of, you something released you know, something released about that suddenly about keir starmer that suddenly changes everything. so i think they be be sort of they will probably be be sort of pushing it out for, for as for as long as possible in the hope that up, even that something comes up, even knowing know, most knowing that, you know, the most likely they likely situation is they were just waiting for big rabbit just waiting for that big rabbit out weren't we? out of the hat, weren't we? >> think it was such >> and i think it was such a damp squib budget. that suggests to will in to me that it will be later in the year so he can maybe announce something proper in the autumn statement, a autumn statement, just a quick word international word on international women's day. a good day. do you think it's a good idea?is day. do you think it's a good idea? is a good thing. idea? is it a good thing. thoughts >> yes. love it. but no. i mean, isuppose >> yes. love it. but no. i mean, i suppose the history of it is important. i can talk about the history of it. so it sort of came out of socialist came out of actually socialist movements , i north america movements, i mean, north america and adopted and europe. then it was adopted by union. but it was by the soviet union. but it was it was sort of very in it was sort of very much in favour of suffrage. favour of women's suffrage. so it a it sort of was started with a big i there big purpose. and i think there
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are of and are still lots of people and feminists who would it still feminists who would say it still really a purpose, really does have a purpose, because have because we still don't have equal for women in this equal rights for women in this country. we do sort of politically, in terms politically, but in terms of, you deep equal i you know, deep equal rights, i think need think we're going to need an international eventually. michael, know about >> michael, i don't know about you it feels like the you because it feels like the one thing that is against all of us our tech, our us is actually our tech, our apps. i feel like we're going to need a like a sentient human day. >> i think if we're only getting one day a year, we're going to be in some real big problems. if the ai gets the other 364. although suppose you could although i suppose you could say that about that same critique about international women's day. how come to have the come the men get to have the other 364? >> have an international >> do we have an international men's yet ? i think we do, men's day yet? i think we do, don't we? men's day yet? i think we do, dori: we? there's so many xkcd >> i think there's so many xkcd that you just lose track of them and they're pointless. yeah, and also, the calendar also, it's for good the calendar industry. of industry. i caused a bit of controversy earlier because i was saying that actually the most male feminists always most vocal male feminists always turn out to be the biggest creeps. so i'm not going go creeps. so i'm not going to go around, international around, you know, international women's for me. women's day is every day for me. 19th, mum , 19th of november 19th, my mum, 19th of november is international is apparently international men's , are you are you a
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men's day, are you are you a feminist, yeah, probably. i would like to say i don't think any creep. i don't think any political movement has a monopoly on creeps. >> this is true. >> this is true. >> you'd be honestly do some research very vocal male research into very vocal male feminists, that feminists, and you'll see that actually they're of actually, they're some of the biggest going. biggest female predators going. and just some, like and that's not just some, like off the cuff, but it's okay. >> i i think it's okay >> but i but i think it's okay to a feminist. i think you're to be a feminist. i think you're a feminist. to be a feminist. i think you're a fewell,t. to be a feminist. i think you're a fewell, what does it mean to be >> well, what does it mean to be a feminist? >> it just you. we believe >> it just means you. we believe in opportunities men in equal opportunities for men and that case, you're and women. in that case, you're a feminist. >> w- >> no, because it's been hijacked hating militant. >> that's a bit of thing >> that's a bit of a passe thing to say. that's what people said in the 1970s. >> what was going to >> this is what i was going to say. would say actually say. i would say that actually in 70s, a much more, in the 70s, we had a much more, sort militant feminist sort of militant feminist movement . then a lot of it was movement. then a lot of it was was built upon kind of lesbian commentators as well at that time. and, you know, women were they achieved important they also achieved important things know, things by the way, you know, it's to of it's important not to sort of dismiss particular dismiss that particular movement, that movement, but that was a movement, but that was a movement which bit more movement which was a bit more hostile than, i hostile towards men than, i think, day think, sort of modern day feminism. yeah. think feminism. yeah. i don't think we've as much as we've moved on quite as much as we'd to, but we all have to
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we'd like to, but we all have to come because, as i say, come together because, as i say, the threat to our future is not men women. robots men versus women. it's robots versus minute now, i versus us. and any minute now, i will on the phone to say, will be on the phone to say, i want an international day want an international ai day right you much. right. thank you so much. michael novara michael walker from novara media. this media. still to come this morning, to morning, we're going to be reflecting very us reflecting on a very animated us president . president. >> joe biden had a few too many coffees, i think, hadn't they? >> well, they definitely upped his he his medication. it seems he pulled about donald pulled no punches about donald trump overnight. stay tuned for that
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i >> -- >> it's 1120. you're with britain's newsroom on gb news with ben elliott and bev turner. britain's favourite news channel. nonetheless. >> officially, yeah. >> officially, yeah. >> thank you very much. again to your viewers for supporting us. very appreciated. now let's very much appreciated. now let's go across the pond. last night, american president joe biden took his republican took aim at his republican rival, trump during his rival, donald trump during his state address. state of the union address. and this is be missed. he was
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this is not to be missed. he was highly on coffee. highly charged on coffee. i suspect , to congress. take a suspect, to congress. take a look at this. suspect, to congress. take a loo formers. suspect, to congress. take a loo former republican president >> former republican president tells putin, quote, do whatever the you want . that's the hell you want. that's a quote , a former president quote, a former president actually said that boeing down to a russian leader. i think it's outrageous. it's dangerous, andifs it's outrageous. it's dangerous, and it's unacceptable . and it's unacceptable. >> also facing accusations of being too old, mr biden hit back at his critics. >> i know it may not look like it, but i've been around a while . when you get to be my age, certain things become clearer than ever. whether young or old, i've always been known. i've always known what endures. i've known our north star, the very idea of america's that we're all created equal and deserves to be treated equally throughout our lives. we've never fully lived up to that idea , but we've never up to that idea, but we've never walked away from it either . and
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walked away from it either. and i won't walk away from it now . i won't walk away from it now. i'm optimistic. >> right? there we are. we're joined now by former editor of the daily star , dawn neesom, and the daily star, dawn neesom, and author broadcaster amy author and broadcaster amy nicole dawn . that was nicole turner, dawn. that was a uncharacteristically energetic performance . performance. >> he was very joe biden in in playground fighting mode , wasn't playground fighting mode, wasn't he? i mean, sort of like it's not the state of the union, it's the union, the state, isn't it? you what, ben? i think you know what, ben? i think american do huge american politics do us a huge favour because they exist favour because they only exist to look sane . to make our politics look sane. it's very, low bar, very it's very, very low bar, very low i just think of all low bar. but i just think of all the people in america. what is the people in america. what is the population it's the population of america? it's a it's of people. how a lot. it's a lot of people. how are to these two? i know are we down to these two? i know technically how down technically how we're down to these but these two, by the way, but really, i mean , and i look really, i mean, and i look i mean, trump and biden and it's like rock and a hard place. but i would be watching that as an american last night thinking, 330 million people don't. >> i know that is all they can. >> i know that is all they can. >> nearly as many as you said this morning, nearly as many what used to this what viewers are used to this morning, almost brilliantly gb
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news the channel. >> thank you very much for watching, it's isn't watching, amy, it's bleak, isn't it ? when you look at i mean, his it? when you look at i mean, his face is almost completely frozen now biden, they've now, joe biden, because they've obviously injected him with so much cosmetic surgery much botox and cosmetic surgery to convince people that to try and convince people that he's than he is. he's younger than he is. >> i think he did all right there. didn't you feel quite proud of him, considering recent occurrences? although i do wish he was still holding that ice cream. to be honest, that was cute. wasn't. cute. that wasn't. >> yeah, but thing is, we >> yeah, but the thing is, we shouldn't at him like shouldn't be looking at him like a we're proud of. >> no no no no no, i agree, >> no no no no no no, i agree, but the thing that i take from this think this this is i'm. i think this appues this is i'm. i think this applies all applies to actually all politics. sick of politics. i'm really sick of politicians about politicians always talking about what side aren't doing politicians always talking about wishould side aren't doing politicians always talking about wishould be side aren't doing politicians always talking about wishould be doing. aren't doing politicians always talking about wishould be doing. whyt doing or should be doing. why can't politicians just stand up and say hello? this is my plan, my ideas. say hello? this is my plan, my ideas . and do you like them? ideas. and do you like them? rather than constantly depending on criticising the other side? i think it's not productive and it appues think it's not productive and it applies to here as well. i've been thinking it all week . you been thinking it all week. you know you watch prime ministers questions and just see them questions and you just see them being insult ping pong. and i'm
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not really demonstrates not sure it really demonstrates what their actual policies are. we don't if biden's got we don't know if biden's got a great today. you know great policy today. you know what he said gaza and the what he said about gaza and the aid getting in. why didn't he just say proudly what that is instead of taking the opportunity he's not opportunity to well, he's not got policy on the got a good policy on the southern border. he's just letting uncontrolled mass migration, border migration, that southern border story thought interesting story i thought was interesting because to dawn in story i thought was interesting bec break, to dawn in story i thought was interesting bec break, they to dawn in story i thought was interesting bec break, they they to dawn in story i thought was interesting bec break, they they bundled| in story i thought was interesting bec break, they they bundled two the break, they they bundled two very different together, very different bills together, didn't put ukraine didn't they? so they put ukraine aid the southern border aid with the southern border stuff so that they could play politics and go, look, you didn't put that through when actually they weren't actually they were they weren't even dawn, who even really related. dawn, who was politics, who would be was all politics, who would be the best the west and the uk the best for the west and the uk in terms of president donald trump? >> boris johnson wrote a column in saying trump in the mail saying that trump was peace the was needed for peace in the west. was needed for peace in the we:who would i rather have >> who would i rather have leading country, this isn't leading my country, this isn't even a political decision. i would probably say donald trump , would probably say donald trump, because i do think not for the politics, but i think he's more, got more of his faculties intact and i don't mean that in a
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horrible way. i mean, i do feel for biden. well trump was the first no war president. >> he he was the first person president to meet, korean president to meet, north korean leader in the demilitarised zone. biden. meanwhile, he he oversaw the absolutely diabolical evacuation of afghanistan. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> trump . russia invaded >> trump. russia invaded ukraine. she ping president. she xi jinping and the migration policy. >> what's really interesting, ben, is that at the moment, there's a huge swathe of blacks for trump and hispanics for trump. >> didn't he make that with i though that picture this week of like of oh no, i was listening to it. >> i was listening to an interview with a real life black person, but he was mock one up with i it probably with i just it probably did. i mean, who who knows if mean, who knows if who knows if we're real? amy. but we're even real? amy. but i mean, were saying that sort mean, they were saying that sort of like, you know, certainly the hispanic issue , hispanic vote, the border issue, they hard, got their they worked hard, they got their green they're green card. they're they're legally very, very legally and they feel very, very strongly letting strongly that biden is letting them a open them down by having a more open border . border policy. >> can we about issues >> can we talk about issues closer and there won't closer to home and there won't be a viewer watching this who isn't frustrated by the of isn't frustrated by the state of the whether
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the roads? whether you're a driver regular driver or just a regular passenger, on bus passenger, or you sit on the bus trying to get past traffic, roadworks traffic lights . roadworks and traffic lights. dawn, it's now official. we've got slowest average speed, average speed of a car in 2023, in the uk, on on major a roads 57 miles an hour. >> yeah i know, well who knew i mean sort of like major a—roads and smart roads. it's like they're constantly being dug up but one actually but there's no one actually doing digging. no doing any digging. there's no one digging. one doing any digging. that's what understand. it's what i can't understand. it's our roads are a nightmare. i mean, even main roads in london now, bev, are of potholes. now, bev, are full of potholes. i like, you i mean, it's just like, you know, can't drive over 20 know, you can't drive over 20 miles hour in london miles an hour in london now, in any otherwise get shot any case. otherwise you get shot or but it's, or something or other. but it's, you to drive in you know, trying to drive in this i don't actually this country. i don't actually drive. given driving drive. i've given up driving because london, because i live in london, and it's absolutely pointless. but it's absolutely pointless. but it's frustrating mean, it's so frustrating now. i mean, there everyone goes, oh, it's there is everyone goes, oh, it's not a war on the motorists. there the motorway. there is a war on the motorway. there is a war on the motorway. there really is. there is really is. >> there's just too many >> i mean, there's just too many people isn't there? >> i mean, there's just too many peoi le isn't there? >> i mean, there's just too many peoi don't isn't there? >> i mean, there's just too many peoi don't thinkt there? >> i mean, there's just too many peoi don't think it'sere? >> i mean, there's just too many peoi don't think it's that >> i don't think it's that i think is that the aren't think is that the roads aren't being maintained there's being maintained like there's
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too many roadworks, too many potholes . and the link to smart potholes. and the link to smart motorways i think is interesting because smart motorways were deemed so dangerous that a group of coroners wrote a letter to the national highways agency to say we need we need to have a word about these because they're just they're death traps. let's explain. >> just sorry to interrupt you, but just if people are watching and not sure what and they're not sure what a smart is, course smart motorway is, of course it's motorways it's one of those motorways which hard shoulder. which is has no hard shoulder. so no run off area if so there's no run off area if you get into difficulties and it has the, digital screens at the top motorway, and if top of the motorway, and if there's red cross in there's a big red cross in it, you're not allowed in that you're not allowed to go in that lane. on those in a lane. it depends on those in a watch watching and watch centre watching and putting on, and they putting a cross on, and they changed the speed limit don't they, so, so many accidents. >> but you know when you say about the speed what's the speed. the average speed 57 on major roads motorways. why major roads and motorways. why can't a bit slower. can't we just go a bit slower. most can't any most accidents we can't go any slower amy at speed. so i've always this there are so always thought this there are so many deaths on the road. it's
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like one of the most common ways to be injured in the uk. but we have. we just insist on going fast i ever understand fast and i don't ever understand properly . well, because properly why. well, because that's do. that's what cars do. >> fast and that's they >> they go fast and that's they get little later. get there a little bit later. >> most, day roads and >> but most, most day roads and motorways have loads of motorways don't have loads of pedestrians wandering up the side them, they? side of them, do they? >> are traditional. >> motorways are traditional. motorways are actually statistically the safest road you can drive on, even though you can drive on, even though you go faster. you can go faster. >> not about speed. >> so it's not about speed. >> so it's not about speed. >> all right. jeremy clarkson i don't well, true don't know. well, it's true i mean, i just i just always think, why do we have go so think, why do we have to go so fast when people are like, i want go 80 miles hour want to go 80 miles an hour outside the 20 an hour outside the 20 mile an hour zones, we out? zones, are we sent out? >> absolutely i >> you absolutely cruel. i but i get i cycle everywhere, right. >> apart the >> because it's apart from the potholes. i actually flashed potholes. i actually get flashed on over, you on my bike for going over, you know, down. you're going know, slow down. you're going too i'm on push too fast. yeah, i'm on a push bike and you're going 20 bike and you're going over 20 miles an hour. >> speed camera you on >> the speed camera gets you on your yeah , yeah, yeah. >> obviously, you know, the ones that like, that flash and sort of like, say, slow down. that flash and sort of like, saywell, down. that flash and sort of like, say well, talking that flash and sort of like, saywell, talking of brother, >> well, talking of big brother, should the fact should we talk about the fact that government should we talk about the fact th going government should we talk about the fact th going save government should we talk about the fact th going save all government should we talk about the fact th going save all ofjovernment is going to save all of our lives make nhs lives and make the nhs a wonderful beacon of health care across is to
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across the world, amy, is to monitor us with an app. what a surprise. that coming, surprise. who saw that coming, because now your doctor will know how many steps you've taken if the app. well, if you download the app. well, they they? they won't, will they? >> because one can see their >> because no one can see their doctor, this the doctor, i think this is the government have these government have seen these waiting seen waiting lists. they've seen everyone's massive dissatisfaction nhs, everyone's massive diss they're on nhs, everyone's massive diss they're thinking nhs, everyone's massive diss they're thinking we nhs, everyone's massive diss they're thinking we need to and they're thinking we need to be seen to be we need to be seen to be doing something. so they've always got tiny, tiny they've always got a tiny, tiny little put it little plaster and just put it over massive wound. over the massive gaping wound. that health. because that is people's health. because how many economically inactive people there moment ? people are there at the moment? 3 million. right. and i don't really think that counting their steps is going to make much of a dent, which is the ultimate goal dent, which is the ultimate goal, is it not? >> have you got any concerns about civil liberties here and what this will mean further down? i don't want the government anything government monitoring anything i do at the moment. >> i don't them. wouldn't >> i don't want them. i wouldn't trust to a bath, let trust them to run a bath, let alone country. i you alone the country. so i you know, the fact that they are monitoring in a monitoring how far i walk in a day and where does that day and, and where does that end?i day and, and where does that end? i mean, you end? i mean, what are you eating? calories are eating? how many calories are you drugs you taking? >> exactly what drugs are you
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taking because you are being forced drug as forced to take that drug as well? yeah >> how much are you drinking? yeah. get up. i would yeah. don't get up. i would concede though that probably do all need to take. >> i speak myself . >> well, i speak for myself. really? i don't know about you guys. do steps. guys. i need to do more steps. so maybe like this, but so maybe i would like this, but i don't like the implication. >> mean , you don't >> i mean, you don't need a massive problem i mean, massive problem because, i mean, you need to do any more you don't need to do any more steps and you don't need to, but you that yourself. you you know that yourself. you don't app pinging don't need an app pinging up saying, got to saying, oh my god, you've got to walk steps. walk more steps. >> that's i've wanted >> that's the i've always wanted a, tracker. so when i a, smartwatch tracker. so when i saw story, i thought, saw this story, i thought, is this kind doctor this not just kind of a doctor sponsored fitness tracker? you know, it's not just that. use >> no, it's not just that. use your imagination, amy. you have to this goes. to work out where this goes. this conditional health this is about conditional health care. conditionally based on care. a conditionally based on your lifestyle. and that is chilling. beth. >> how much is costing ? >> how much is it costing? >> how much is it costing? >> billions. >> billions. >> yeah, because if they look at my insurer, go for my insurer, if i go for insurance then they take insurance and then they take this then my premium this data and then my premium goes exactly what's this data and then my premium goes happen.:actly what's going to happen. >> amy. >> amy. >> all slammed this idea. >> we've all slammed this idea. but problem it but the actual problem behind it is there's million is the fact there's 9.3 million people who aren't people of working age who aren't working, through sickness
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people of working age who aren't wcjustg, through sickness people of working age who aren't wcjust g, titheyh sickness people of working age who aren't wcjust g, tithey just kness or just choosing. they just can't be bothered. >> i think very few can't be bothered . that's always a no for bothered. that's always a no for exaggeration. right? >> you ladies , dawn and >> thank you ladies, dawn and amy, they're up next. sophia wenzler has the news. don't go anywhere. lots more to come . anywhere. lots more to come. >> thanks, bev. it's 1130. anywhere. lots more to come. >> thanks, bev. it's1130. i'm sophia wenzler and the gb news room. met police firearms officer martin blake has denied the murder of chris kaba after being named publicly for the first time. the 24 year old was shot once in the head through the windscreen of a car in south london in september 2022. the officer, who was initially identified as nx1, 21, has been released on bail and is due to face trial in october. the counter—extremism tsar has warned london has become a no go zone for jews during pro—palestine protests. writing in the telegraph, robin simcox
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said policies are needed to meet the scale of the challenge faced and urged ministers to be bolder and urged ministers to be bolder and willing to accept higher legal risk when tackling extremism . the uk will join the extremism. the uk will join the us and other allies to create a maritime corridor to deliver aid directly to gaza. the foreign secretary made the announcement after president joe biden confirmed the us will build a port off the strip in the coming weeks. a temporary pier will allow hundreds of lorry loads of food to be shipped daily. former prime minister theresa may will stand down at the next general election, bringing her 27 year career as an mp to an end, announced her decision. the member for maidenhead said she wants to focus on causes such as the fight against modern slavery. and for the latest story, sign up to gb news alerts by scanning the qr code on your screen or go to gb news. com slash alerts .
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slash alerts. >> for exclusive limited edition and rare gold coins that are always newsworthy , rosalind gold always newsworthy, rosalind gold proudly sponsors the gb news financial report . financial report. >> and here's a quick snapshot of today's markets . the pound of today's markets. the pound will buy you $1.2833 and ,1.1734. the price of gold is £1,690.32 per ounce, and the ftse 100 is at 7657 points. >> rosalind gold proudly sponsors the gb news financial report . report. >> welcome back a cracking good afternoon britain coming up with the one and only tom and emily. what's in store for our lovely viewers? >> thank you for the support. it is going to be a cracking show, actually. i wonder what you think, ben, about anda and bev. ben and bev, i know, got a ring to it. a ring to it. it does
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indeed, what can you make of the possibility of a meghan markle pr blitz in britain? >> i just, pr blitz in britain? >> ijust, i pr blitz in britain? >> i just, i just i pr blitz in britain? >> ijust, ijust i don't pr blitz in britain? >> i just, i just i don't hate >> ijust, ijust i don't hate meghan markle. i just kind of think, just go away. no one's interested. and you know, she's been proven to bend the truth on more than one occasion. here's a story for you. in 2013, i think it was. she went on to the roof of a kensington bar, sank prosecco mail prosecco with the daily mail showbiz editor katie hind and said, please katie, get me some column inches in showbiz column inches in the showbiz spread that i'm being linked to ashley i think ashley cole. but then i think he was chelsea. footballer was at chelsea. footballer >> well, she, she needs to >> yes. well, she, she needs to climb it's climb the ladder and it's worked. fine. i worked. that's fine. fine i get it. international women's in >> international women's day in her itv, tom her interview with itv, tom bradbury, she said she said i was to the way the was so naive to the way the tabloids worked in britain. i wasn't, aware of how wasn't, i wasn't aware of how everything here. you everything worked here. you know, not i'm know, i wasn't i'm not okay, i'm not absolute liar . you not okay. absolute liar. you knew they work because you knew how they work because you engineered column inches. well, we're going be >> well, we're going to have be having about having a bit of a debate about whether back whether they can win back britain . britain. >> just say i've been just >> can i just say i've been just through through through the through my head, through the through my head, through whole conversation, through the whole conversation, because meghan markle doesn't really for me. no, really.
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really do it for me. no, really. but but when you said the names , but but when you said the names, when you were saying ben and bev, tom and emily, right. sounds a bit like this is ridiculous . sounds a bit like this is ridiculous. this is very ridiculous. this is very ridiculous. but we had this joke the other day who hosts the brilliant sunday morning gb news political programme here. camilla tominey camilla tominey emily. oh camilla tominey camilla tominey emily. on tom. >> yeah, i mean, the dad jokes will continue on into the afternoon . i apologise in afternoon. i apologise in advance, of course. political news to tory exodus . i mean, news to tory exodus. i mean, theresa may's 60th serving conservative mp to announce they're stepping down. are they just jumping off a sinking ship? >> well, we're going to give tom harwood whatever joe biden had harwood whateverjoe biden had yesterday before the show starts in 25 minutes, he was able to stand up. >> he was able to deliver that speech.i >> he was able to deliver that speech. i know it was actually kind impressive. kind of impressive. >> remarkable , right. >> it was remarkable, right. that more with that and a lot more with tom and emily. good afternoon, britain in 25 minutes. for now, though, you're with britain's newsroom on gb news. don't go anywhere.
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>> welcome back. good morning to you. it's 1138 >> welcome back. good morning to you. it's1138 on britain's newsroom on gb news with me. ben. leo and bev turner. >> very good morning. thank you for joining us. officially forjoining us. officially britain's favourite news channel all day yesterday. it is of course, international women's day. every other channel you will watch will just treat this like it's a positive that there's no ambiguity about this issue at all that we need to have international women's day i personally little bit personally feel a little bit conflicted about it. this morning driving in, morning when i was driving in, i was do we? know that was thinking, do we? i know that things for women. i know things are bad for women. i know that aren't on the that we still aren't on the boards companies and boards of many companies and everything, but it's so complicated feels like complicated and it feels like there's identity there's so much identity politics. that's sort of a bit embarrassing. i don't think i really need it. >> i'm gonna keep reading off the line. you gave me this morning. every morning. what was that? every day is international women's day, especially for my wife and my every is international >> every day is international women's day. for all women women's day. for all the women who working hard every who are working hard every single day
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single day. it's mother's day on sunday, of course, this weekend, for there, for all the women out there, particularly the don't particularly the mothers, don't forget your flowers, forget your cards, your flowers, keeping afloat , and keeping the ship afloat, and this, course, led on earlier this, of course, led on earlier to about trans to this debate about trans women, labour's policy on trans. we a sense of it from , we had a sense of it from, earlier, from one of the appg, the parliamentary the all party parliamentary group debates about this. and virginia only biological virginia says only biological women should be included in women's day. ray says trans women should not be included, please stop this idiocy. there are two sex and your sex cannot change no matter how you might feel. and, nick says women's day should be banned. as amy nicole said, it's just an excuse to run men down. it should be called international. let off men day because we're more important than they are. >> i'll just read a quick one from chris. good morning chris, he stop that he says. ben, stop saying that everyone work at the everyone else of work at the moment it through moment is doing it through choice. actually choice. i didn't actually say that, but i've written to various shows on gb news to explain a plus explain that as a 50 plus straight man, now straight white man, i am now unemployable for reason, unemployable for some reason, the e56 unemployable for some reason, the esg woke the box ticking esg woke infected companies now seem to think important than think that's more important than experience, yeah, i get you,
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chris. i was just merely mooting the point about those 9.3 million people out of work. how many are actually sick? i don't know the answer. just know the answer. i was just asking question. asking the question. >> on. royal >> right. moving on. royal matters. william is matters. prince william is visiting oval in london visiting the oval in london later to meet an later this afternoon to meet an earthshot prize winner. >> yeah, we're now joined by our royal correspondent, cameron walker, grounds walker, who is on the grounds now. what's going on? now. cameron what's going on? >> well, ben, one of the questions i get asked more recently at the moment is where is prince william? why isn't he doing many public engagements? and have an answer and i think i may have an answer for you now. and it appears prince william been secretly prince william has been secretly working on a new strategy, working away on a new strategy, moving away these public moving away from these public facing royal engagements and instead doing a lot work instead doing a lot of work behind the scenes to what he hopes will have real world impact. so i'll give you an example. he launched his earthshot prize in 2020 to find solutions to repair our planet over the next decade. of the over the next decade. one of the winners small start—up from winners is a small start—up from london called notpla, and they found to create food
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found a way to create food packaging using seaweed instead of plastic and over the last few months prince william, i'm told, has been busy trying to help negotiate some kind of deal between notpla and the uk's largest food and drink caterer for sporting venues such as this. at the kia oval in london, around the country . now, this around the country. now, this stadium has a capacity of 27,500 that times around 50 in the country. that's an awful lot of food waste no longer or plastic waste no longer going into the ocean. so that's prince william's ambition . but will it william's ambition. but will it pay william's ambition. but will it pay it's also huge pay off? it's also a huge gamble, isn't it? because the late queen said that members of the royal family need to be seen to be believed, so perhaps it won't be palatable with certain members of the public who want to see prince william and princess rest princess catherine and the rest of in public more often of them in public more often than they currently are. now, aides insist, and tell me, that prince william is not stopping pubuc prince william is not stopping public engagements altogether . public engagements altogether. far his focus is far from it. but his focus is very this behind the very much on this behind the scenes work. so in the long
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terme can create a what he terme he can create a what he describes as tangible impacts in things such as the environment, mental health provision and homelessness prevention. so later on today, prince william will be here at the oval cricket ground meeting members of, well, the sorry cricket team and of course members of notpla as well , trying to highlight this kind of deal that been struck in of deal that has been struck in the hope that he can perhaps persuade people that all this work is doing the scenes work is doing behind the scenes can an impact in long can have an impact in the long tum, is a gamble and it's tum, but it is a gamble and it's going be a long time before going to be a long time before we going to pay off. we see if it's going to pay off. >> good for him. >> well, good for him. that's almost proper job for the almost like a properjob for the prince of wales. very prince of wales. i'm very impressed. opposition, one impressed. in opposition, one might to meghan markle, who might say to meghan markle, who just back here and just wants to come back here and hire a pr company so that we're all convinced that she's basically going to be the saviour of what the royal family know herself. probably what do we know about her plans? cameron >> yeah, it was a really interesting exclusive in the mail this morning. i must
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stress, it's not been confirmed by meghan markle's team, but nonetheless, if it is true, it is into that narrative , is feeding into that narrative, isn't it? of first, they relaunched sussex royal relaunched their sussex royal website , then they appeared on a website, then they appeared on a mountain for the countdown to the in canada. the invictus games in canada. and you look at the opinion polls, meghan markle is only one above prince andrew in terms of popularity in the united kingdom, according to the latest yougov poll , prince harry isn't yougov poll, prince harry isn't doing much better either. so what the mail is saying is that, or claiming is that meghan markle was looking for a pr person in the uk to try and rebrand her and make her more popular in the united kingdom. at the time , where this void has at the time, where this void has been left in the united kingdom with of royal family with members of the royal family when king's receiving cancer when the king's receiving cancer treatment, out treatment, kate's obviously out of william doing of action. prince william doing less engagements less public engagements for reasons , and reasons i've just discussed, and the rest of the working royals are ageing so could meghan markle and harry fill that void thatis markle and harry fill that void that is the accusation. whether or not that's going to come to fruition, we'll have to wait and see. but of course, as you
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mentioned, ben, are claims mentioned, ben, there are claims that she very much did meet that male to try and male showbiz, editor to try and get herself some column inches. so the thing is , now she's very so the thing is, now she's very famous, isn't she? so i don't think would with think she would get away with that she going to be that if she was going to be creating kind of back door creating that kind of back door strategy, i think people would know about it. >> definitely did . i >> yeah, she definitely did. i know cameron, just know she did. cameron, just in your what went your opinion, what went wrong for it for meghan here? why didn't it work ? work out? >> a good question, i think what they found is that complaining about their time in the royal family, particularly when the oprah interview came out, etc, and the world was suffering from lockdown and covid, it just didn't sit well with members of the public. and i think that reflected in the opinion ratings and what they have shown is since harry's book memoir, spare, that he's continued to complain, complain about being a member of the royal family and everything that went with it , everything that went with it, that was also not helped the opinion rating. so i think that's probably what went wrong. so is this
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so what we're seeing now is this rebrand , trying to capitalise rebrand, trying to capitalise and themselves more and try and make themselves more philanthropic and do more charity work, etc. like the other members the royal other members of the royal family , to if pays family do, to see if that pays off so much. >> cameron cameron walker. they're awaiting the arrival of prince william, which we will no doubt bring you here on gb news. >> also, props to prince william doing all this at a time when his kate, the his dad's ill. kate, the princess of wales, is also ill, so him actually so well done. him actually getting single plastics. >> i am absolutely on board with that in terms of keeping our oceans nice and plastic free. right. still to come just right. still to come in just a moment. anton joshua. we all know him. british boxing megastar . know him. british boxing megastar. he's going to be fighting somebody but they're not actually a boxer. >> mbappe ufc
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welcome back. it's 1149 on britain's newsroom here on gb
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news with me, ben, leo and the lovely bev turner. oh, lovely. >> it's only. it's international women's day saying that. right. there's a massive british heavyweight fight tonight. anthony is going to be anthony joshua is going to be boxing a former ufc champion. we'll explain that in a minute frances ngannou. but if he loses , he can return to the ring. can he return to the ring with any respect ? can't you explain this? respect? can't you explain this? can you just explain this to me? so he's had a anthony. >> has had a troubled >> joshua has had a troubled recent fights . so recent couple of fights. so i actually i think he's won his last couple of proper boxing fights. before that was fights. but before that he was beaten big title fights beaten in some big title fights and reputation kind of went and his reputation kind of went down now down the drain. now he's fighting cage fighter, here to fighting a cage fighter, here to tell us the predictions and everything else is boxing expert spencer oliver spencer . just lay spencer oliver spencer. just lay it out in layman's terms for our viewers who don't know what ufc is or cage fighting, what's anthony is he anthony joshua up to? why is he doing this? >> well, first of all, hi guys. how you? are you both how are you? how are you both doing? and, yeah, listen, it's a massive fight tonight massive a massive fight tonight in saudi arabia. anthony joshua
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goes against francis ngannou. goes in against francis ngannou. like you said, the ufc champion . like you said, the ufc champion. and he had his first professional fight back in october actually against none other than tyson fury. and the people that saw that fight would have that francis ngannou have seen that francis ngannou went people went in the ring and people thought was a joke, this thought this was a joke, this fight, it a crossover fight fight, it was a crossover fight because coming from because ngannou coming from a different discipline against, the, power , best the, the, the best power, best heavyweight in the world right now in tyson fury . well, and now in tyson fury. well, and gani come out of there with a lot of credibility. he had tyson fury on the seat of his pants in the third round, and a lot of people, including myself, actually who had actually felt ungarn, who had won the fight. he'd done enough. so, look, he's come out so, look, i know he's come out of come out from a different discipline, this guy is a discipline, but this guy is a different breed. you know, like you look his backstory, where you look at his backstory, where he's , the journey to he's come from, the journey to get to where he's got to is an incredible one. it really is. and, anthony joshua in and, anthony joshua goes in tonight and puts his reputation on ngannou on the line against ngannou because i lost here tonight would be really damaging for joshua. so i listen to what you
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guys said in the build there. guys said in the build up there. you're he to you're right. he lost to oleksandr a couple of times, and a people felt that a lot of people felt that anthony since anthony joshua was done. since then. he's he's come back. he's had wins in the last had three good wins in the last 11 he jermaine 11 months. he beat jermaine franklin . a lot of people still franklin. a lot of people still weren't convinced. went weren't convinced. then he went in robert helenius and in against robert helenius and knocked seven rounds. in against robert helenius and knoc people seven rounds. in against robert helenius and knoc people start seven rounds. in against robert helenius and knoc people start to seven rounds. in against robert helenius and knoc people start to think rounds. in against robert helenius and knoc people start to think ,ounds. in against robert helenius and knoc people start to think , is nds. now people start to think, is that old anthony joshua that the old anthony joshua coming is the guy ? coming back? is this the guy? and then in last fight and then in the last fight against wallin, december against otto wallin, december the in saudi arabia, we the 23rd out in saudi arabia, we saw the old anthony joshua, the guy that had that confidence back and he was letting his shots go. and it was an impressive performance. but this is fight. we've is an intriguing fight. we've got two time world heavyweight champion, olympic gold medallist world silver medallist going in against that has had one against a guy that has had one fight and lost it. >> spencer, you say that crazy. you say that. aj's reputations on the line. what's the sweetener ? how much is he sweetener? how much is he getting paid, listen, he's getting paid, listen, he's getting i think he's getting in the region of $50 million before this is before pay per view cut. so that's what he's getting paid. it's risk versus reward.
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now what it is, is it's a high risk for joshua because now what it is, is it's a high risk forjoshua because he's reputations on the line. but the reward is guys. may the 18th tyson fury goes in against oleksandr usyk for the undisputed heavyweight title. and anthony joshua boxes the winner of that. i personally think that'll be tyson fury. and then we get the fight that we've all been craving for anthony joshua versus tyson fury, a fight that we've wanted for so long. >> so just tell us what we know, what boxers do, but tell people what boxers do, but tell people what ngannou will traditionally what ngannou will traditionally what how he fights. how is it different to boxing? here he is francis ngannou because he can kick and do all sorts of stuff, can't he? >> absolutely. he's from the mma world, so he's in the ufc. he was ufc heavyweight champion , was ufc heavyweight champion, he's a that he's very, very he's a guy that he's very, very tough. saw against tyson tough. we saw that against tyson fury, you know. and like you say they punch, they they kick, they punch, they elbow , but you know i think it's elbow, but you know i think it's francis if you look francis and ngannou. if you look at him, the guy that he is, where come from, you know, at him, the guy that he is, whejourneyyme from, you know, at him, the guy that he is, whejourney thatrom, you know, at him, the guy that he is, whejourney that he's you know, at him, the guy that he is, whejourney that he's been
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he's from cameroon, you know, he was poverty was was there. the poverty was terrible was in. he had terrible that he was in. he had a about being a he a dream about being a boxer. he fled cameroon. across he fled cameroon. he went across he went countries , went through numerous countries, ended up in france. he ended up in jail twice on the way, trying to get france well. got to to get to france as well. got to france, said in 2000 this was and says, listen, i want to be a 2012. sorry. listen, i want to be a boxer . 2012. sorry. listen, i want to be a boxer. and 2012. sorry. listen, i want to be a boxer . and the 2012. sorry. listen, i want to be a boxer. and the trainer said a quicker way to earn money is go the mma. he went into go into the mma. he went into the become mma world the mma, become the mma world champion , ufc world champion. champion, ufc world champion. then finally his then he's he's finally got his dream of becoming a boxer against fury and puts the wbc champ on the seat of his pants. quite an incredible story. the journey the guy has had. brilliant. you know where he is. he's he's remarkable. when you look at inspirational stories and he's got that as as aj. thanks, spencer. >> and you explained it beautifully spencer oliver there boxing expert even am now boxing expert even i am now enthusiastic. love his energy about that, right . that enthusiastic. love his energy about that, right. that is it from britain's newsroom for this morning. i've had a lovely time. >> me too. thanks forjoining us
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and for all your emails on international women's day and for here's and for watching. here's tom and emily good afternoon britain. emily on good afternoon britain. >> government's >> well, the government's counter extremism tsar has said that britain has in some ways become a permissive society for extremism . what can be done? extremism. what can be done? >> yes. and he's also warned that london has become a no go zone for jewish people that london has become a no go zone forjewish people . we'll zone for jewish people. we'll find out what exactly is behind those claims after the weather. >> looks like things are heating up . boxt boilers sponsors of up. boxt boilers sponsors of weather on gb news. >> hello. good morning. welcome to your latest gb news weather update. it will be a dry afternoon for many areas with some sunshine, but there's a relatively brisk easterly breeze for many areas that sets this area of high pressure across scandinavia still brings in that easterly wind . further south easterly wind. further south though, we'll start to see low pressure arriving, bringing some weather fronts and some rain for the weekend. but that easterly
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breeze across northeastern areas will drag in cloud will continue to drag in cloud and some drizzly rain through the further the next few hours. further south, though, parts of the south—east, it will be a much sunnier and brighter afternoon compared to yesterday, so it will bit warmer in will feel a little bit warmer in the but that easterly will feel a little bit warmer in the will but that easterly will feel a little bit warmer in the will bring ut that easterly will feel a little bit warmer in the will bring a that easterly will feel a little bit warmer in the will bring a chillyzasterly will feel a little bit warmer in the will bring a chilly feel rly wind will bring a chilly feel for many areas through tonight. the cloud will from the the cloud will thicken from the south and west as this band of showery rain pushes up to cover many southern coasts by tomorrow morning. north, though, morning. further north, though, it should stay dry, but it will be quite a cloudy and windy night, so that does mean it will be free by the start of be frost free by the start of the weekend, but it's still going to be a fairly chilly start. the winds will be a bit stronger through saturday compared to today, particularly across northwestern areas , as across northwestern areas, as the winds are squeezed over the high ground. so quite a gusty afternoon , but it will dry afternoon, but it will be dry and bright western and bright for many western areas scotland , parts of areas of scotland, parts of northern and northern ireland and northwestern england, but further south, cloud will thicken through the day and there'll showery there'll be some showery outbreaks . these could outbreaks of rain. these could turn heavy the turn quite heavy across the southwest afternoon , but
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southwest in the afternoon, but it will still feel fairly pleasant brighter pleasant in any brighter breaks. see by by that see you later on. by by that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers sponsors of weather on
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gb news. >> good afternoon. britain. it's 12:00 on friday, the 8th of march. >> tory exodus. theresa may becomes the 60th serving conservative mp to step down at the next election. this is an exclusive gb news poll reveals fewer than 1 in 5 voters say they'll back the tories at the next election. have the conservatives given up the fight ? >> 7- >> oh no. 7_ >> oh no. go, ? >> oh no. go, london. 7 >> oh no. go, london. the government's counter—extremism tsar has slammed his own bosses for letting extremists go unchallenged for too long. he claims london is a no go zone for jews and prepare for
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relaunch . relaunch. >> meghan markle has reportedly reached out to british pr gurus to help boost her popularity. but what can we expect from a meghan pr blitz on britain? and a very happy international women's day to you if you are a woman. and to those who celebrate, absolutely. >> i love international women's day. tell me why. it's day. go on, tell me why. it's one of my favourite days of the yeah >> go on. why >> go on. why >> well, because on one day it's international women's day and then the men have all the others i >> -- >> all the other days. >> all the other days. >> well, that's one way of looking at it, tom. it's a joke, but the campaign theme today is , but the campaign theme today is, is inspire inclusion. so how are you today? inspiring inclusion, by by keeping my mouth shut. right. being seen and not heard.
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