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tv   Patrick Christys Tonight  GB News  March 27, 2024 9:00pm-11:01pm GMT

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gb news. way. >> it's 9 pm. i'm patrick christie's tonight . manhunt christie's tonight. manhunt after a knife attack on a train in broad daylight. also the pakistani flag flies over westminster abbey. what on earth is going on here? >> and those allegations were put to me. i got expert tax advice to make sure that i hadnt advice to make sure that i hadn't done anything wrong. >> will the police look into angela rayner again and keir starmer could be investigated ? starmer could be investigated? and is this what brings labour down? plus is there a part of you that can see you and your family going back to the uk, becoming working royals with the
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monarchy? >> no . >> no. >> no. >> prince harry has just cost you half £1 million. find out why and we've got me. >> launch with this electric lawnmower. he's got batteries on. lord, look at that . on. lord, look at that. >> lee anderson is live. he's picked fights with the home secretary, eco fanatic dale vince, and the nhs . on my panel vince, and the nhs. on my panel tonight is director of popular conservatives mark littlewood , conservatives mark littlewood, activist adam brooks and author rebecca reid. oh, and can you guess what wrong here? guess what went wrong here? >> this is, the letter i'm delivering to wes streeting . it delivering to wes streeting. it appears that there's no police here this time . here this time. >> get ready. britain, here we go. should the pakistani flag be hoisted above our churches .
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next. >> first, the latest from the gp newsroom at 10:02. good evening. our top story. a poll has found that fewer than 1 in 4 people in britain are satisfied with the national health service. that's the lowest level since records began 40 years ago. with lack of access gps among the top access to gps among the top concerns. long waiting lists are also a major worry, with just 24% saying they're satisfied with the service, down from 70% in 2010. the report found that tight funding and staff shortages over the last decade have left the nhs in a continual state of crisis . labour has said state of crisis. labour has said today it's going to ban the bonuses of water company bosses when they oversee the polluting of britain's waterways. it's after new figures show raw sewage was dumped into england's rivers and seas for more than 3.6 million hours in 2023. that's more than double the previous year and the highest level on record. helen wakeham from the environment agency says
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more investment is needed in storm overflows . storm overflows. >> the environment agency required water companies to monitor all their discharges. we've got 100% coverage now of the sewage network and that accounts for some of the increase, but actually it just shows the scale of storm overflow operation in a wet yeah overflow operation in a wet year. and the purpose of putting the monitoring in place was to make an argument's for more regulation and more investment in storm overflows. and i think, you know, the results from last year show exactly why that's required . required. >> now, giving out free vapes in emergency departments could help thousands of smokers to quit, according to a new study. the university of east anglia conducted a trial in six emergency departments across the uk. one group of daily smokers were given a free vape with guidance on quitting smoking. the other group was given only written information on how to stop smoking, and after six months, those given the vapes were 76% more likely to have
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quit smoking . a mural by banksy quit smoking. a mural by banksy in north london has been fenced off by the local council. the artwork in finsbury park features splashes of green paint on a residential building, which is behind a cutback tree, giving the appearance of lush green leaves . credit was claimed by leaves. credit was claimed by the street artist on social media, but just days later it was vandalised with white paint . was vandalised with white paint. islington council came in saying it's now discussing future solutions with the homeowner and that will mean the public can enjoy the artwork while also keeping it protected . and keeping it protected. and lawmakers in thailand have voted overwhelmingly in support of same sex marriage. it's a historic step for one of asia's most liberal countries, and will make it the only nation in southeast asia to recognise same sex unions. it comes after years of campaigning and a bill that's almost ten years in the making. it's expected to be passed into law by the end of the year. that's the news. for the latest
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stories, do sign up to gb news alerts. scan the qr code on your screen right now or go to gb news. carmelites . news. carmelites. >> welcome along the pakistani flag with the islamic crescent and star was hoisted above westminster abbey during lent. now, before the usual time starts shouting at me, yes, i am aware that they do this to mark pakistan day and they do it for other countries as well. but i do find it's a little bit laughable. okay, special prayers were offered to the continued friendship between our nations. the highlight of the occasion, apparently, was that they kept the flag flying all day. christians are persecuted in pakistan. occupations that are deemed low, dirty and degrading, such as working as a sewer cleaner, are reserved for christians by the authorities. reportedly, many are referred to as chura, a derogatory terms meaning filthy. in august last
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yean meaning filthy. in august last year, 20 churches and almost 100 homes were attacked. now i could be wrong about this , but i don't be wrong about this, but i don't think there are too many mosques flying the saint george's flag. this is, of course an isolated incident, am old enough to incident, but i am old enough to remember back in 2012 when some british muslims burned the saint george's flag and told the queen to go to hell because we were knighting salman rushdie. now i think we might need a few more of archbishop welby's special prayers, don't you? anyone who had problem with the pakistani had a problem with the pakistani flag over our most prominent church laughed at and church was laughed at and called. and apologies if you find this terms offensive. a flag shagger . it find this terms offensive. a flag shagger. it makes me laugh this because the people throwing that slur around tend to have a load of flags in their twitter bios the palestine flag, the ukrainian flag, the gay pride flag, the eu flag, sometimes all of them. in fact, in britain it seems like the only flag you're not allowed to like is your own. in luton, the local council has hoisted the palestinian flag above their building. we've got
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above their building. we've got a hospital in that a hospital in bromley that unveiled bridge wrapped in a unveiled a bridge wrapped in a giant, three intersex giant, three sided, intersex inclusive flag showing the lgbt+ rainbow in glasgow , the council rainbow in glasgow, the council debated a motion from the greens that wanted to remove the union flag and replace it with get this, a rolling roster of the palestinian flag, the cuban flag, the french flag for bastille day, the german flag, the pakistani flag, the ukrainian flag , and of course ukrainian flag, and of course not to be forgotten. the scottish flag as well . now scottish flag as well. now forgive me. okay, but they're making love to a lot of other flags there, aren't they? now compare this to the royal mail banning the saint george's flag being flown on their vehicles. i mean, they are called the royal mail for goodness sake. then there's the left leaning independent headlines independent running headlines like this is flying a saint george's flag, an act of patriotism, or a symbol of all thatis patriotism, or a symbol of all that is bad about england. one labour council banned the saint george's flag because it was offensive to their 16 muslim
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constituents. p&o cruises reportedly stopped people flying the union flag as their ships sailed back to britain because apparently it was deemed offensive. emily thornberry's infamous tweet during the old rochester election campaign appeared to mock the saint george's flag and indeed, white van men before our very own stephen dixon handed her rear end to her live on gb news like he done . he done. >> i mean, seriously, you could hardly recognise it as the england flag, can you? i mean, england flag, can you? i mean, england flag, can you? i mean, england flag is a simple white background and a red cross. seems to me. why can't they just leave it alone? >> to be fair, you're not a particular fan of the saint george's cross, you? what do george's cross, are you? what do you mean? well, i mean, you had to. you. you took the mickey out of someone flying the england flag and had to resign as a result of it . result of it. >> there is a sense in britain that we have to bow down to every other culture, religion and flag other than our own. now i'm just going to ask a question. okay are this lot not
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the real ones? obsessed with flags? cate hollis devere group . flags? cate hollis devere group. you're perfect, i promise. >> i promise you all this lot. >> i promise you all this lot. >> hey, you rejoin eu , rejoin eu i >>i -- >> i think they are. let's get the thoughts now of my panel. i am joined this evening by the director of the popular conservatives, mark littlewood. ihave conservatives, mark littlewood. i have got businessman and activist adam brooks and author and journalist rebecca reid. mark, i will start with you now. as the pakistani flag was flown above westminster abbey, the palestinian flag above luton town hall , do palestinian flag above luton town hall, do you think the left are ashamed of the saint george's cross and desperate to celebrate other countries before our own same as that way, doesn't it, patrick? >> it seems that on the i don't know what you'd call it, the progressive left there is this sort of virtue signalling that you need to show that you're
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incredibly cosmopolitan, worried about other countries. not so worried about our own. i'd just put it this way. i'm very simple, man. i just want things labelled correctly . and if labelled correctly. and if you're a public building in england, you should be flying the union flag and or the saint george's, scotland. the scottish flag or the union jack. just label things correctly. private lee, by the way, i don't mind. somebody wants to go on demo somebody wants to go on a demo with palestinian flag draped with a palestinian flag draped over ori with a palestinian flag draped over or i don't if over them, or i don't know if you're a portuguese person living you to living in london, you want to fly portuguese flag for the fly the portuguese flag for the euros, public buildings and euros, fine public buildings and are established church. the church of england very different , very simple rule label things correctly . that means the saint correctly. that means the saint george flag or the union flag. >> that's mark steyn adam, your views on this? >> it just astounds if >> yeah, it just astounds me. if it's not an lgbtq+ an a million letters flag. it's a rainbow flag or another country's flag . flag or another country's flag. why can it can this country not embrace its own flags? it. you know, no other country is like
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this. we're not great britain anymore. we're pathetic . anymore. we're pathetic. britain. we have so many people that are ashamed of their own flag or think it's trendy. they get on this bandwagon to attack their own country and embrace others . you know, i'm pretty others. you know, i'm pretty sure we shouldn't have put like ukraine flags on all our churches either. why why do we virtue signal like this? so we can support causes without the these display displaying of foreign flags. it drives me crazy i suppose. >> rebecca. you know look , if we >> rebecca. you know look, if we weren't all so simultaneously doing things like certain companies like royal mail saying, oh, you can't fly the saint george's cross in case people find it offensive, or p&o cruises or whatever, then i suppose it maybe wouldn't really matter much . but there seems matter so much. but there seems to a simultaneous promotion to be a simultaneous promotion of and also the of other flags and also the denigration of our own. no. >> yeah, i can see why you'd feel way, because feel that way, because this, the pakistan bit of a pakistan flag is a bit of a non—story in the sense that it's pakistan flag is a bit of a n
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well, should talk them well, we should talk about them not commonwealth. not being in the commonwealth. but in the but currently i believe in the commonwealth. think it's a commonwealth. i think it's a really and we are really special union and we are being embracing the being embracing of the commonwealth. that's why that's there. that's always been flown there. that's always been flown there. certainly whole there. certainly my whole life. i as i remember going there as a small child. grown up in small child. i've grown up in london, seen that flag on london, i've seen that flag on that was about that building since i was about five. this is not new. what five. so this is not new. what is in report that five. so this is not new. what is did, in report that five. so this is not new. what is did, you in report that five. so this is not new. what is did, you conflatedort that five. so this is not new. what is did, you conflated at that five. so this is not new. what is did, you conflated a lot at five. so this is not new. what is did, you conflated a lot of you did, you conflated a lot of examples from about examples with flags from about the years. so emily the last 12 years. so emily thornberry's experience i thornberry's experience was, i believe , ten years ago. you believe, ten years ago. so you are together lots of are putting together lots of examples that have examples of things that have happened long period. >> you're right, i am a lot >> you're right, i am not. a lot of those things that have happened. >> yes, but over the last ten years, not things have years, not all things have happened week. years, not all things have ha|this ed week. years, not all things have ha|this is week. years, not all things have ha|this is not week. years, not all things have ha|this is not a week. years, not all things have ha|this is not a problem week. years, not all things have ha|this is not a problem thateek. so this is not a problem that suddenly started like this. the other we had other day. this we have had a growing sense that saint growing sense that the saint george's is perhaps george's flag is perhaps a symbol something that is not symbol of something that is not delightful and delicious, the union don't union flag. i don't think anybody has a problem with adam has in his twitter bio. i has it in his twitter bio. i don't that's problematic don't think that's problematic at think lovely. i'm at all. i think it's lovely. i'm proud saint george's cross proud the saint george's cross has co—opted proud the saint george's cross harsome co—opted proud the saint george's cross harsome very co—opted proud the saint george's cross harsome very unsavouryzo—opted proud the saint george's cross harsome very unsavoury people,i by some very unsavoury people, and that's why some people find
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it uncomfortable. >> i would argue maybe should be the actual church of england. mark. >> yeah, i mean, all of this is being co—opted, co—opted back . being co—opted, co—opted back. i'm old enough to remember when there was a concern that the union flag was associated with groups like the national front, for example, because they would plaster it everywhere. and we weren't typically using it in mainstream culture at all. if that's happening to the saint george flag, if you're worried about various different groups that do not allow that are using it, do not allow them have the full copyright them to have the full copyright and ownership of snatch and ownership of it. snatch it back. it's flag as an back. but it's a flag as an emblem the nation, not of a emblem of the nation, not of a political cause. >> think patrick hit the nail >> i think patrick hit the nail on the head over there when he said, do we? can you mosque in pakistan? remember, it's 98% muslim, the stars and stripes. yeah, perhaps they should. >> i think that would be lovely. >> i think that would be lovely. >> our union flag. >> our union flag. >> but maybe they should . but >> but maybe they should. but shouldn't we be better than anyone else? >> why do we do this virtual signalling nonsense? >> best country in >> if we are the best country in the we should be the world, we should be signalling virtues. and signalling our virtues. and one of virtues inclusivity of our virtues is inclusivity
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and tolerance. and the fact that we are not just one nation . we are not just one lone nation. we are of a united nation. we are part of a united nation. we are part of a united nation. we we part of multiple we are. we are part of multiple nafions we are. we are part of multiple nations ireland, nations england, ireland, scotland, the commonwealth. >> you know, and i think >> though you know, and i think that's very sad. >> we do. we're great, isn't it? >> we're doing this for nothing, aren't we. you can have it's not for nothing. special prayers. >> the commonwealth >> so the commonwealth means nothing think nothing to you. you think commonwealth is pointless. >> example commonwealth is pointless. >>of example commonwealth is pointless. >> of the example commonwealth is pointless. >>of the flag example commonwealth is pointless. >>of the flag beinglample commonwealth is pointless. >>of the flag being hoisted it, of the flag being hoisted the pakistani flag above westminster making westminster abbey and is making a of and a massive virtue of it. and oh, it all day, and it was fluttering all day, and it was fluttering all day, and it because the it was great because the tourists stopping and they tourists were stopping and they were bet they were. were looking. i bet they were. but wondering what the but they were wondering what the heck on? confused? heck is going on? confused? yeah. they go, yeah. and then they go, why would be confused? would you be confused? >> part of >> it's part of the commonwealth. >> i commonwealth. » n >> nothing, i bet, i do bet. honestly, whether honestly, i do wonder whether or not certain people not there are certain people actually who look at actually in pakistan who look at this and they are laughing at. >> but been happening this and they are laughing at. >> decades. been happening this and they are laughing at. >> decades. tis�*n happening this and they are laughing at. >> decades. bis notappening this and they are laughing at. >> decades. bis not apening this and they are laughing at. >> decades. bis not a new1g for decades. this is not a new thing. why problem for thing. why is it a problem for you today, when this happened last years and last year and ten years ago and 20 ago, why it 20 years ago, why is it a problem today? >> i've seen it today. >> because i've seen it today. yeah, right. >> and issue is that >> and that's the issue is that you're cross about you're just cross about it because feel it's new
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because you feel like it's new but it's new. but it's not new. >> rebecca, say that it sort >> rebecca, you say that it sort of isn't it great because we're such country that we such a great country that we should virtues, should signal our virtues, demonstrate our virtues? well, i actually practice our virtues. >> think do. ithink virtues. >> think do. i think we do. >> i think we do. i think we do. >> i think we do. i think we do. >> i think all do every >> i think we all do every single day. >> basically. i mean, an alternative to actually practising. of practising. i'm a big fan of the commonwealth, you're commonwealth, but if you're serious should be serious about it, we should be moving to, don't know, moving to, i don't know, a commonwealth free area. commonwealth free trade area. okay, will do an awful okay, so this will do an awful lot actually on lot to actually practice on a church, a church. >> church things >> so the church has things called sacraments. the definition is an definition of a sacrament is an outward an inward grace. outward sign of an inward grace. that virtue signalling by definition. >> wonder whether or if we >> i wonder whether or not if we had, the main thing had, that's not the main thing we do to hospital in we should do to that hospital in bromley. the idea that we were going spend bit money bromley. the idea that we were goinput spend bit money bromley. the idea that we were goinput speunioniit money bromley. the idea that we were goinput speunion flag,�*noney bromley. the idea that we were goinput speunion flag, orney bromley. the idea that we were goinput speunion flag, or the and put the union flag, or the saint cross wrapped saint george's cross wrapped around the side of one of their new there at the new bridges there at the hospital. would gone hospital. that would have gone down of coffee. down like a cup of coffee. >> so you're saying we had >> so you're saying when we had the okay. the olympics, that's okay. >> maybe on saint george's >> why, maybe on saint george's day, don't we have saint george's all our george's flags all over our police fire engines police cars, our fire engines and ambulances? police cars, our fire engines and coronationzs? police cars, our fire engines and coronation we did like we >> the coronation we did like we have rainbow flags and lgbt on the coronation we flags
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everywhere. >> pride month, have pride >> in pride month, we have pride flags coronation flags on the coronation >> had union england all year >> we had union england all year round. actually, there wasn't england . we are england, england day. we are england, there england day. there is england day. >> saint george's >> it's saint george's day. >> it's saint george's day. >> causes all year round. >> there is an england day at saint george's that's just saint george's day. that's just england you just said england 365. but you just said there isn't an england day and there isn't an england day and there isn't an england day and there is no. but that's been saint george's day. >> surely use the english >> surely only use the english national on saint george's. national flag on saint george's. >> no one using on one >> no one is only using on one day. but we do have hundred and 65 year, and we should be 65 days a year, and we should be on every year. >> and they are, unless you're like now and then, it's like every now and then, it's got be progressive flag. got to be a progressive flag. >> the idea that >> yeah, but look, the idea that nike some huge left lefty nike is some huge left lefty rainbow signalling rainbow virtue signalling organisation that is massive organisation that is a massive capitalist is capitalist conglomerate that is mostly staffed by white men, it is not a woke institution . there is not a woke institution. there is not a woke institution. there is nothing woke about nike. >> all right. dylan mulvaney says otherwise. >> yeah, yeah. okay. all right. well there we go. now it is time for our spring giveaway. yes. and it's the final week to see
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friday. full terms and privacy nofice friday. full terms and privacy notice at gbnews.com. forward slash win please check the closing time if watching or listening on demand. good luck. >> still to come, a 77 year old grandfather died after waiting almost 32 hours for an ambulance because paramedics were on strike. so will reform uk ban walkouts from health workers. in a moment, i will probe their new mp , lee anderson, for some mp, lee anderson, for some policy commitments. but up next, after it was revealed that sex offender abdul ezedi wasn't deported because of a known bogus christianity claim , do our bogus christianity claim, do our open doors pose a threat to women in britain? writer and broadcaster emma webb goes head to head with political commentatorjoana to head with political commentator joana jarjue, and thatis commentator joana jarjue, and that is .
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next. this is patrick christys. tonight we are on gb news. and
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it's tonight we are on gb news. and wsfime tonight we are on gb news. and it's time now for our head to head. so former tory deputy chairman turned reform mp lee anderson does take on james cleverly, dale vince and nhs strikers shortly. but first, do our open borders pose a threat to women in britain ? yes. well, to women in britain? yes. well, it's emerged that clapham chemical attacker and convicted sex offender abdul ezedi failed a christianity test during his third time. lucky asylum appeal the dangerous sex monster successfully convinced the immigration judge he was fit to walk our streets and terrorise women. despite lying about his religion, past and being religion, his past and being deemed such a sexual threat that he was subject to a special safeguarding contract order safeguarding contract in order for to attend his local for him to attend his local church and to round off this complete mockery of our pathetic system. it was revealed today that ezedi was given a muslim burial in west london. classic a serial sex offender being able to dupe the system before viciously attacking a woman and
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her two daughters with chemicals on the streets of britain, raises serious concerns about the dangers potentially being posed to women by the illegal migrant crisis. and as i revealed last night, migrant crisis. and as i revealed last night , there is an revealed last night, there is an unproven but apparent correlation between areas with a large influx of asylum seekers and an increase in sexual offences. we, of course, await the data from the ministry of justice to definitively prove that either way , so do our open that either way, so do our open borders pose a threat to the women of britain? let me know your thoughts. gb views or gb views. com tweet me at gb news. make sure you take part in our poll. the results will follow shortly. but battle shortly. but doing battle on this writer this now, a writer and broadcaster emma webb and political commentator joana jaflue political commentator joana jarjue you, thank you jarjue both of you, thank you very much. great to have you on the show. start with the show. emma. i'll start with you. illegal migrant you. does the illegal migrant crisis threat to women ? crisis pose a threat to women? >> well, firstly, i think it poses safety threat to all of poses a safety threat to all of us. but women in particular, the yazidis case is a perfect example of that. and i find it
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peculiar that this isn't something that bothers feminists more. we hear so much about things like rape culture and the patriarchy , but there doesn't patriarchy, but there doesn't seem to be any common sense when it comes to just flinging open the doors to who who, the doors to who knows who, because really don't know who because we really don't know who is coming and i say, is coming in. and like i say, that itself poses a safety risk. but we know that a lot of these are young men who are coming from should be from what feminists should be calling highly patriarchal cultures who don't necessarily, have much respect for women by western standards. so of course, this is going to pose a threat to women. and the challenge that i would put to anybody who doubts this, you know, ask any woman , you know, and if you are woman, you know, and if you are a woman, surely, particularly if you're living in one of the big cities like london, i know that i less than i used to i feel less safe, than i used to when i, when i'm in london, particularly at night, we're seeing rising crime levels, i'm not necessarily saying that that is directly correlated to mass migration, but the point is that this is a kind of entropy, a
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kind of chaos, that we are imposing on ourselves. because if you don't know who is coming into your country, then you simply cannot have security. and that affects of us, and it that affects all of us, and it affects women. >> yeah. joanna, i mean, when affects women. >> �*look joanna, i mean, when affects women. >> �*look atanna, i mean, when affects women. >> �*look at the a, i mean, when affects women. >> �*look at the small an, when affects women. >> �*look at the small boat/hen you look at the small boat crossings, for example, roughly speaking, about 85% of them are men. from men. they're coming from countries like iran, sudan, there's a whole host of other countries in that region, of course, as well egypt , for course, as well egypt, for example, as well. do you not think that maybe does pose a disproportionate risk to women, given the way that a lot of women treated in those women are treated in those countries? >> not necessarily . >> i mean, not necessarily. obviously, with this case, with the person that perpetrated this crime, it's very specific and obviously it's very extreme, but i think that it's complete rubbish and actually quite ludicrous to pretend as if people who come from a certain type of work, a certain part of the world, are more likely to commit this crime. clearly, you've said , patrick, that, you you've said, patrick, that, you know, the data hasn't come back yet. we haven't been able to
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verify that. but also it's completely discriminatory to pretend as if these people are more likely to commit these crimes. i'm more unsafe walking the streets of london equally, maybe because there's a bunch of people who are coming on boats who are predators equally. the same with the met police. we've seen with, sarah everard case, what happened and criminals can come in all shapes and sizes, whether they're white, black asylum seekers or with british, passports. so it's completely ridiculous to pretend as if something that's actually our international obligation, not an open border. and we're not the only country that's obliged to take in, asylum seekers that that all of a sudden just makes us more susceptible to crime. crime comes in all shapes and sizes . sizes. >> emma, do you want to come back to that? >> well, i just think it is, against common sense to suggest that culture doesn't have an impact on the way that people behave or the way that they see things. we know that, you know, the taliban have just announced
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that they're stoning that they're going to be stoning women death in public, you women to death in public, you know, we know that, that there are and i think actually that many, many western feminists find it very difficult to call these sorts of things out because they're frightened of being called emma. >> i'm sorry, but that's that's. >> i'm sorry, but that's that's. >> oh, sorry , john, i'll come to >> oh, sorry, john, i'll come to you. >> well, sent patiently and >> well, i sent patiently and waited while you your waited while you made your point. point is point. i'm just my point is simply that, you know, this is a risk to everybody, actually, not just women. and of course, this is might sex offences might pose a specific risk to women. but the reality is, if you don't have any control over your borders, you've got no idea who's coming into your country. that doesn't create a safer environment for anyone . environment for anyone. >> okay. go on. joanna. sorry you were itching to get involved there. you >> yeah. i mean, ijust there. you >> yeah. i mean, i just think it's absolutely ridiculous because just as many sexual predators or people were, predators or people who were, you know , perpetrate violence you know, perpetrate violence against women could have been coming places that we
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coming from places that we actually these resettlement actually have these resettlement schemes like ukraine, like hong kong. but the difference. >> can i just stop you there? but just purely, purely because it was women children it was it was women and children from ukraine. >> it is unlikely. >> so it is highly unlikely. >> so it is highly unlikely. >> well, it might be women and children ukraine, children from ukraine, predominantly, also predominantly, but there's also men coming. it's not men that are coming. it's not just children . but the just women and children. but the point country, can point is as a country, we can decide who we give these resettlement schemes to. and obviously we're very specific because there's this kind of thing against, you know, islamists, which rightfully so, if it is extreme . and for emma, if it is extreme. and for emma, for you to cite things like the taliban and equate that with genuine asylum seekers, which some these who come in some of these people who come in these in on these boats are actual genuine asylum seekers. and if there's anybody to blame, then the actual home then it's the actual home office. if they were actually processing people and going through procedures, through the right procedures, then wouldn't have these then we wouldn't have these problems. wouldn't problems. and you wouldn't have people would to game people who would be able to game the but like i said, the system. but like i said, and going back main point, going back to the main point, the is that criminals and the point is that criminals and people who perpetrate violence against women come in every
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single colour. and i'm just as unsafe potentially walking down the street and having somebody and being another, sarah everard and being another, sarah everard and having the police who i'm equally as terrified as an asylum seeker. so to pretend as if it's a problem because these people are coming from a certain type of the world, and then also using this kind of cheap shot about them . about them. >> okay, i think emma, with respect , is that >> okay, i think emma, with respect, is that perhaps the kind of maybe blind spot that you were talking about? >> i'm just having a look at some of the stats here. so between 2018 and 2023, according to migration watch uk, just under 16,000 thousand people came from afghanistan on small boats, 95% of them were male as well. if the societal norms in those countries or that country is that women are treated less than second class citizens, is it not reasonable to expect that they may have those views when they may have those views when they come here? >> i'm going to be charitable and assume that other guest
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and assume that your other guest isn't misrepresenting isn't wilfully misrepresenting my . but it's not to say my views. but it's not to say that every single person who comes here as an asylum seeker is going to be a sex offender, or anything like that would be an absurd thing to suggest . but an absurd thing to suggest. but what you are suggesting is that if don't know who's coming if you don't know who's coming in, then you don't know who might gaming the system. might be gaming the system. you're you're letting people into country way that into your country in a way that is, is obviously going to contribute to insecurity. like i say, because you don't know who they are and also what you do know is that they are coming from cultures where we know that women are treated badly. so there are two factors here, but your guest is misrepresents me. if she's suggesting that, i'm suggesting that all people are like , which is not what i have said. >> final word. joanna. joanna do you accept that potentially other parts of the world, like, dare i say it, middle east dare i say it, the middle east and north africa maybe do have slightly with slightly more of a problem with misogyny than have over here. misogyny than we have over here. >> course, you know, >> yeah, of course, you know, you that you know, you could think that based ask, you know, based on who you ask, you know, from different the
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from different parts of the world perception of world and our perception of something completely world and our perception of somethingbutcompletely world and our perception of somethingbut that'sately world and our perception of somethingbut that's also. and, different. but that's also. and, emma, the reason you think emma, the reason why you think that i'm misrepresenting your views is because you're citing things taliban and things like the taliban and you're citing things that are the extreme. so how can the most extreme. so how can i not, you know, view it as the way that you're actually presenting it? of you presenting it? of course, you know, about in know, talking about misogyny in terms women are treated terms of how women are treated is completely different from this which most this case, which is the most extreme. and when you cite things the taliban, which things like the taliban, which is extreme , then is the most extreme, then obviously something is the most extreme, then obvioupeople something is the most extreme, then obvioupeople more1ething is the most extreme, then obvioupeople more fearful where people are more fearful and you're actually scaremongering. and equally, we don't know the people who are coming from ukraine. we don't know the people who are coming from hong either. so it's from hong kong either. so it's the the difference is the same. but the difference is there is an actual door there is an actual open door policy. we, i mean, we, we policy. and we, i mean, we, we respect we do absolutely respect we do we do absolutely know people. know the people. >> not you know, >> it's not true. i you know, i do to that out. we do do have to point that out. we do absolutely who people do have to point that out. we do abs coming who people do have to point that out. we do abs coming from who people do have to point that out. we do abscoming from hong people do have to point that out. we do abscoming from hong kong,�*ple are coming from hong kong, that's fact. that's that's just a fact. because they arrived here, most of them planes with their of them on planes with their passports us. yeah, okay. >> w came @ came 011 planes, >> they came here on on planes, with but also with the passport, but also they've also got history,
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potentially. anybody potentially. and anybody can come record. and come with a clean record. and then the next day, create a crime a crime . so. crime and commit a crime. so. >> all right. yeah. fair enough. all right. look, both of you. thank you very, much. good thank you very, very much. good stuff. head to head. do stuff. good head to head. who do you do our open you agree with? do our open borders a threat to women borders pose a threat to women in on says in britain? ariana on x says everyone with an ounce of sense will chris says open will say yes. chris says open borders real threat to borders pose a real threat to everyone, women. yeah, everyone, not just women. yeah, and make your and nick says, oh, make your mind you're criticising mind up. you're criticising border last night for border force last night for detaining brothers ? detaining two arab brothers? israeli. fine. i'll take your point there. whilst they did checks. now our borders are too open for you. they can't win, can they? all right. your verdict is now in. 98% of you agree that our open borders pose agree that our open borders pose a threat to women in britain. 2% of you say they don't. coming up now, it's just been revealed that prince harry's failed legal bid to get special police protection cost the state £500,000. so is the runaway royal taking advantage of the british taxpayer? former bbc royal correspondent michael cole says the hour is very shortly .
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says the hour is very shortly. but speaking of straight talk as lee anderson, he joins me next. i'll ask him if the nhs needs to be privatised . are reform going be privatised. are reform going to ban health workers from going on strike? so that'll be interesting won't it. plus, which climate fanatic as he picked a fight with now we've got millom with this electric normal. >> he's got batteries on. lord look at that lee anderson that is roaring. is rip roaring. >> best next on
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welcome back to patrick
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christys. tonight coming up after his failed legal bid cost the taxpayer more than £500,000. should prince harry be made to pay should prince harry be made to pay the money back himself? but i'm joined now by the mp for reform uk is lee anderson. and pubuc reform uk is lee anderson. and public satisfaction with the nhs has hit an all time low as just 24% of people across britain say they are satisfied. i'm surprised it's that high. this figure is 29% lower than before the covid pandemic, and an enormous 46% lower than in 2010, and stories are now emerging about how the record breaking strike action by medics is having fatal consequences. just yesterday, an inquest heard how william guy, a 77 year old grandfather from anglesey, died after waiting almost 32 hours for an ambulance because paramedics were on strike. mr guy broke his hip after falling in the bathroom of his care home. without medical attention. he developed pneumonia and he tragically passed away. lee anderson joins me now. thank you
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very, very much. what should be done to stop something like this happening again, do you think? then late? well we already have an act of parliament, which was passed last year. >> patrick. the minimum service, agreement, seem agreement, but it doesn't seem to be working that good, because this is a this particular case is a shocker. now, i think a lot of this patrick, has to lay on the conscience of the of the people that's taking strike action. if you take strike action. if you take strike action and you're a doctor, a nurse, an ambulance driver, whatever, then will be put whatever, then lives will be put at risk . and i'm fairly sure, at risk. and i'm fairly sure, because i've spent time with some the ambulance staff in some of the ambulance staff in ashfield, spent a shift with them and going out to different calls, and the majority of them are , hard working people calls, and the majority of them are do , hard working people calls, and the majority of them are do the hard working people calls, and the majority of them are do the job'd working people calls, and the majority of them are do the job'd vllhe ng people calls, and the majority of them are do the job'd vllhe righteople who do the job for the right reasons . and they hate to see reasons. and they hate to see this sort of stuff happen, but you have to bear mind, you have to bear in mind, patrick, as well this, there patrick, as well as this, there are of people who are are lots of people who are calling ambulances on a daily bafis calling ambulances on a daily basis just time wasters. basis who are just time wasters. we one particular case where we had one particular case where one chap in in in ashfield, he called the ambulance 100 times
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in a month. and i think the worst thing he got wrong with him was an headache. now these sort of people , once they start, sort of people, once they start, you know, ringing the ambulance service on, on this sort of level be charged every level should be charged every single go some single time. that would go some way to helping. and also we've got backlog a&e and stuff got the backlog at a&e and stuff like which doesn't like this which, which doesn't help. if you're an help. but really if you're an ambulance driver and somebody dies on your watch it's dies on your watch because it's taken hours to get taken you 30 odd hours to get there, that's on their conscience. >> so, reform ban nhs >> so, so would reform ban nhs workers from going on strike, do you well it's very you think? well it's very interesting you say this about reform because i was speaking to my reform today my colleagues in reform today about very thing. about this very thing. >> serious >> we're having a serious discussion this topic next discussion on this topic next week meeting. so so, so week at our meeting. so so, so it's possible. >> it's possible you're going to have a talk about it. >> is possible, you know, >> and it is possible, you know, there's to consensus. there's got to be a consensus. >> but likes to see >> but nobody likes to see emergency on strike emergency workers on strike because consequences because the consequences patrick, as we've just learned on are on your programme, are devastating . devastating. >> well, what would your view on it lee? do do you do you it be, lee? do you do you do you think you should you should ban
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it. mean, will you be it. i mean, what will you be arguing that meeting? arguing in that meeting? >> personal that >> my personal view is that emergency not be emergency workers should not be going on that should be going on strike. that should be in contract. i mean, what in your contract. i mean, what would patrick, would happen, patrick, if, you know, officers know, if the police officers went went went on strike or army went on strike, you know, prison strike, you know, our prison officers went strike. the officers went on strike. the country to country would come to a standstill. to be a standstill. they has to be a moral from these, moral obligation from these, these sorts of workers to make sure times are sure that even when times are tough, your job. tough, you do your job. >> okay. right. well, look, >> okay. all right. well, look, regarding into regarding the inquest into william sonya william guy's death, sonya thompson assistant thompson is the assistant director for the director of operations for the welsh service trust, welsh ambulance service trust, said planned said that they had planned as much as practically possible to minimise patients on minimise the risk to patients on strike , saying that the strike days, saying that the unions opted only to attend immediately. threatening immediately. life threatening calls that some categories calls and that some categories were critical. so were deemed as critical. so obviously, you know, some people supped obviously, you know, some people slipped through the net. now, lee, just moving it josef lee, just moving it on, josef fritzl, the man who kept his daughter captive for 24 years, has said that he wants to emigrate to the uk and, quote, roam free on the highlands of scotland . well, the home scotland. well, the home secretary set about putting british minds at ease. james
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cleverly said this monster is never coming to our country in any attempt to travel to the uk will be refused, as it would for be any one convicted of a serious sex offence like this . serious sex offence like this. but lee, quick as a flash, he replied your colleague , replied to your old colleague, unless he on a small boat unless he jumps on a small boat in he'll in the ritz in which he'll be in the ritz carlton hotel by teatime, yeah . carlton hotel by teatime, yeah. i mean, look, to be fair, if the abdul ezedi case. lee, nothing would surprise you, would it? >> i mean, this this >> well, i mean, if this this josef wants to roam free josef fritzl wants to roam free in the highlands of scotland. i've news him . it's i've got good news for him. it's highly if jumps highly likely that if he jumps on in northern france, on a dinghy in northern france, he could be in northern scotland the afternoon. because the following afternoon. because you know, it's all right. the home secretary is saying this. i'm it's actually i'm surprised it's actually tweeted bearing tweeted this. patrick, bearing in mind we've had 120,000 plus come the channel small come over the channel in small boats over the past 3 or 4 years. some of these have been rapists , murderers, you know, rapists, murderers, you know, paedophiles. this fritzl chap , paedophiles. this fritzl chap, like i say, you can just jump on a dinghy and come. and the chances that if he gets into chances are that if he gets into difficulty in channel, he'll difficulty in the channel, he'll probably up by border
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probably get picked up by border force, ship to processing force, then ship to a processing centre, then put in a four star hotel where he can probably complain about the wi fi and then, you know, then he can operate scotland and if operate up to scotland and if you don't up there, you you don't like it up there, you can back, claim asylum can come back, claim asylum about or times. the good about 3 or 4 times. and the good news is that if he's scared to go back to his country, wherever he's , on a religious basis, he's from, on a religious basis, you into the local you can just pop into the local church, get baptised. bob's your uncle. british citizenship . it's uncle. british citizenship. it's nonsense. all right. did you ever like james cleverly? >> yes. i got really well with james, but i'm just surprised that home secretary after 120,000 people have come into the country. and we've only removed excluding albanians. we've only removed probably less than 1% of those. you can actually say that this person can't get into this country. we can't get into this country. we can't stop them. >> and what is it and what is what is reform's policy to stop this now then? so no one. >> you know what the reformed policy is, patrick? send them back. day. if the back. the same day. if the border can pick in border force can pick them up in the channel and bring over the channel and bring them over to border can
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to england, border force can pick in the channel and pick them up in the channel and take back to france. take them back to france. >> you would go french >> and you would go into french waters i would drive the waters and i would drive the boat myself. >> patrick. and if you want to come along, let's do it. >> well, so you you would you this is interesting. so, so if you if you do get re—elected. right. and well i mean if you reform won the election, i suppose it would take. so you know, with respect not the most likely thing in the world, although the way things are going in the polls, you never know really. you would, you would, you would be driving a boat towing them boat yourself and towing them back to france. >> what, there was plenty. >> boats went over in 1945. patrick, we can do it again right? >> finally, lee, at the weekend you doing you filmed yourself doing your bit for the environment and getting behind the drive getting right behind the drive for net zero. let's have a look. i've got me launched with this electric lawnmower. >> he's got batteries on. lord, look at that. that's net zero at its finest . trouble is, i've its finest. trouble is, i've charged this up early on today and probably electricity has come from ratcliffe power
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station. it's about ten miles down the road that runs on gas and sometimes coal. what a load of nonsense that is. net zero. >> well, that annoyed all the right people, lee. including the just stop oil and labour party donon just stop oil and labour party donor, dale vince, who said you have no idea what net zero means. your lawn mower is not an example that . britain's grid means. your lawn mower is not an exnearly that . britain's grid means. your lawn mower is not an exnearly 50% at . britain's grid means. your lawn mower is not an ex nearly 50% renewable 's grid means. your lawn mower is not an ex nearly 50% renewable now d is nearly 50% renewable now that's the better measure of what is powering your battery powered gift , even if you were powered gift, even if you were using power straight from ratcliffe , that's 3 to 4 times ratcliffe, that's 3 to 4 times more fuel efficient than a tiny lawnmower engine is. and there's no noise or air pollution for your other than you your neighbours. other than you spouting of course, lee, spouting off. of course, lee, you're going to come back to that. >> well, the only pollution here, patrick, is dale vince nonsense, which he spouts out on a daily basis as this, this eco loon. how much money he's made in the last 30 years from renewables . i in the last 30 years from renewables. i bet in the last 30 years from renewables . i bet he's in the last 30 years from renewables. i bet he's made absolutely millions of pounds. he's got. he's got a vested interest in this net zero nonsense. the people that i associate with patrick in
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ashfield, my constituents, my friends and family, they have to worry about paying their energy bills. this person doesn't have to doesn't have to worry about the thing. you know , he's got the thing. you know, he's got probably millions of pounds in the thing. you know, he's got proibank.�*nillions of pounds in the thing. you know, he's got proibank. itllions of pounds in the thing. you know, he's got proibank. it makes»f pounds in the thing. you know, he's got proibank. it makes apounds in the thing. you know, he's got proibank. it makes a fortunein the thing. you know, he's got proibank. it makes a fortune out the bank. it makes a fortune out of this net zero journey. it needs to shut up come up to needs to shut up or come up to ashfield. speak. i'll tell you what now, i'll invite on what now, i'll invite him on your show. patrick, up your show. now patrick, come up to the old to ashfield, to one of the old miners. welfares and speak to some real about their some real people about their energy some real people about their eneokay , just quickly then. so >> okay, just quickly then. so if put together a show that if i put together a show that involves you and dale vince in ashfield, you think you think you could make that work? yeah. >> let's have him up here and bnng >> let's have him up here and bring some vegans with you as well. >> right. okay, lee, thank you very, very much. that is lee anderson there. the reform uk mp for ashfield. coming up angela rayner thought her council house row was over. i'ow was over. >> row was over. >> those allegations were put to me. i got expert tax advice to make sure that i hadn't done anything wrong. >> but today it emerges police
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are reassessing claims that she broke the law. is this a major scandal getting ignored by the establishment media in this country ? but next is his failed country? but next is his failed bid for special security. the bid for a special security. the duke of sussex cost the british taxpayer . sue me seven one duke of sussex cost the british taxpayer. sue me seven one half £1 million in legal fees, apparently. harry, meanwhile, appears to be laughing all the way to the bank. so should he and meghan be made to pay the money back? former royal correspondent at the beeb, michael has fascinating michael cole, has fascinating insights this
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next. welcome back to patrick christys. tonight still to come after angela rayner's council house. chaos and starmer's alleged pressuring of lindsay hoyle are the establishment media now guilty of giving labour an easy ride? there have been some developments, and we'll bring them to you at ten. but first, time for the but first, it's time for the royal with former bbc royal dispatch with former bbc royal dispatch with former bbc royal correspondent michael cole . and it was revealed today that prince harry's failed legal bid to reinstate his taxpayer funded police protection in britain has ended up costing the british taxpayer more than half £1 million. a freedom of information request has unearthed the huge sum, which showed the total cost of the two separate judicial review claims lodged by the duke of sussex over two and a half years of legal proceedings brought against the home office. now the cost to public purse is
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cost to the public purse is raising questions as to raising awkward questions as to whether family member whether a royal family member should really be taking legal action against the british government. and then obviously we're paying for it by the looks of so michael joins of things. so michael cole joins me what do you think about me now. what do you think about all this 500, £500,000, the all of this 500, £500,000, the cost taxpayer of cost of the taxpayer of essentially fighting prince harry, he be paying us harry, should he be paying us this money himself? do you think ? >> 7- >> good ? >> good evening. 7 >> good evening. patrick, anywhere you will ever go in the world, there are two things that are never cheap lobsters and lawyers. >> and this bill of half £1 million is coming to us, the taxpayer, for a case that's dragged on over two and a half years. >> and the judge, mr justice lane, was very scathing about the case, that the prince and we see him coming out of the high court there brought he said it had nothing rational about it and it was not procedurally
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wrong . wrong. >> what it turns upon is the fact that the man we see there wants to have round the clock armed protection for himself and his family . armed protection for himself and his family. if they're armed protection for himself and his family . if they're with armed protection for himself and his family. if they're with him whenever he comes into this country . country. >> now, the absurdity of this case is this, that any time he deigns to honour us with his presence , he does get police presence, he does get police protection. you will remember when he came in for a 26 hour visit to his father, when the announcement of the king's cancer was made, he came and he was in two black range rovers with coppers , wall to wall with coppers, wall to wall inside it when he came and when he went . he has police he went. he has police protection, but what he wants and has demanded and has pursued and has demanded and has pursued a case is to have round the clock. >> yeah, absolutely. i'm sorry to interrupt you, michael. i that's that that is you're right. the core of it. but i mean, you know, this development today, the it costs us £500,000.
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just just us having to fight him. so, i mean, he could presumably continue gratuitously bnng presumably continue gratuitously bring cases. we would have to fight it and the taxpayer pays for it. i mean, look, maybe i'm naive about this and wrong. clearly, i assumed that if you lost a case, you paid, you tended to pay the legal costs for the other side of it. but not so. >> yeah, he's the prince of litigation these days. >> and that money, £180,000 of it went to outside barristers who are hired in by our government , and £220,000 went to government, and £220,000 went to the government's own legal department. >> that's the attorney general, the solicitor general and the treasury counsel. so that's £400,000. >> and then there are other odds and ends and odds and ends, which all add up. and of course , which all add up. and of course, lawyers love their fees if they happen to think about you as they're driving home, they, they, they are very certain to charge you and put it on the bill. >> so we are the mugs in all
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this, but what is the outcome ? this, but what is the outcome? i'm the prince now says that he's going to appeal against this case. although mr justice lane's judgement is pretty swingeing. and of course, i believe and i certainly hope, that he will need permission to take the case further. he has several cases going , some he several cases going, some he wins, some he loses. it said that this case against the home office, which we now know had no chance of success, has cost him £1 million. of course, this question of security is very expensive out in california . he expensive out in california. he has to pay for his own. and i imagine that three eight hour shifts of burly men, guarding their californian camelot, it costs quite a lot of money, but it hasn't deterred him from coming here. is it abuse of the system? well, i think that's something for his conscience and for somebody else to decide. but ihope for somebody else to decide. but i hope that he desists. i hope that common sense will dawn. but of course, we haven't seen much, sign or evidence of that so far.
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>> no, i find it astonishing you could turn your back on the taxpayer. you know, the people that absolutely loved him . and that absolutely loved him. and then all of a sudden, we get slapped with a £500,000 bill and the probably. and it the rest probably. and it doesn't appear to be a whisper of harry forking out for that . of harry forking out for that. michael, thank you very much. you're absolute you're always an absolute superstar. the former superstar. that is the former bbc royal correspondent michael cole i've got an cole coming up. i've got an exclusive involving more of your money and a french migrant fence. yeah, but next, angela rayner's council house row has reared its head again. so the development is this police are reassessing claims that she broke the law and keir starmer could face an investigation for allegedly coercing the speaker. that's come back around again. why won't the mainstream media talk more about this patrick christys tonight? gb news. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers sponsors of weather on . gb news.
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on. gb news. >> evening. welcome to your latest weather update from the met office for gb news. the weather continues to throw pretty much everything at us. further heavy downpours tomorrow. in places and tomorrow. snow in places and some gusty winds along the south coast. this area of coast. thanks to this area of low pressure, bands of showers have spreading across the have been spreading across the country throughout the past 24 hours or so, and another one spreading north. tonight will bnng spreading north. tonight will bring some wet weather across southern , wales southern england, south wales and develop snow. and that will develop some snow. perhaps over the west midlands, certainly parts of gloucestershire, herefordshire certainly parts of glotinto ershire, herefordshire certainly parts of glotinto the ire, herefordshire certainly parts of glotinto the centralafordshire certainly parts of glotinto the central and shire certainly parts of glotinto the central and then and into the central and then northern parts of wales, mostly over the hills . the snow, but over the hills. the snow, but there could some lower there could be some at lower levels. heavy for many levels. heavy rain for many elsewhere as the rain clears from scotland and northern ireland. frost ireland. some pockets of frost certainly likely and certainly likely here. and then we winds picking up we look at the winds picking up along the south very along the south coast, a very blustery tomorrow. blustery day to come tomorrow. met yellow warning in met office yellow warning in place the winds here and for place for the winds here and for the rain northern ireland. of the rain in northern ireland. of course some problems today with more snow here more rain and hill snow here tomorrow . again that could cause tomorrow. again that could cause further disruption. nowhere is immune from the downpours
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though. during thursday for and most of is going to feel pretty chilly as well. temperatures will struggling to get to double digits feeling colder with will struggling to get to double digiwind feeling colder with will struggling to get to double digiwind andeling colder with will struggling to get to double digiwind and the colder with will struggling to get to double digiwind and the rainier with will struggling to get to double digiwind and the rain as with will struggling to get to double digiwind and the rain as weh will struggling to get to double digiwind and the rain as we go the wind and the rain as we go through long weekend. signs through the long weekend. signs of the weather getting at least a drier. better chance of a little drier. better chance of seeing some sunshine good a little drier. better chance of seeing particularlyine good a little drier. better chance of seeing particularly over good friday, particularly over northern eastern northern england and eastern england the morning. showers england in the morning. showers will develop everywhere england in the morning. showers wilthe velop everywhere england in the morning. showers wilthe afternoon everywhere england in the morning. showers wilthe afternoon . everywhere england in the morning. showers wilthe afternoon . one erywhere england in the morning. showers wilthe afternoon . one fewerare by the afternoon. one fewer showers on saturday and easter day at this stage looking largely dry and signs of things at least turning just a little warmer . warmer. >> looks like things are heating up boxt boiler as sponsors of weather on
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gb news. >> it's 10 pm. i'm patrick christys tonight . manhunt after
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christys tonight. manhunt after a stabbing in broad daylight. why did nobody intervene? >> also, those allegations were put to me. i got expert tax advice to make sure that i hadnt advice to make sure that i hadn't done anything wrong. >> will the police reinvestigate angela rayner? i simply urged him to ensure that we have the broadest possible debate, and the labour leader is back in trouble . this is big news. yet trouble. this is big news. yet we're the only channel covering it and i volunteer with two local refugee charities . local refugee charities. >> i work for migrants rights organisation in cambridge , organisation in cambridge, classic bbc balance. >> they're also i'll tell you why this comedian's poster was banned on my panel tonight. it is the director of popular conservatives , mark littlewood. conservatives, mark littlewood. we've got activist adam brooks and author rebecca reid. oh, and i'll tell you what went wrong here. this is, the letter delivering to wes streeting. >> it appears that there's no police here this time . police here this time. >> get ready, britain, here we
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go. the net closes in on the labour leader and deputy leader. next . leader and deputy leader. next. >> good evening. the top story from the gb news room tonight. labour says it will ban the bonuses of water company bosses if britain's waterways are polluted on their watch. it's after new figures show raw sewage was dumped into england's rivers and seas for more than 3.6 million hours in 2023, and that's more than double the previous year and the highest level on record. sewage was also dumped in scottish rivers and lochs for more than an estimated 600 hours last year. the figures show . now, a teacher who lost show. now, a teacher who lost his job for what he said was his
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refusal to use a student's preferred pronoun has had his unfair dismissal claim rejected . unfair dismissal claim rejected. kevin lister taught maths for 18 years at new college in swindon before he was sacked for gross misconduct in the lead up to the heanng misconduct in the lead up to the hearing . he said it was not the hearing. he said it was not the role of a teacher to confirm the gender transition of a student. but carol kitching, who is the school's head at the time, said he wasn't dismissed for his beliefs but rather for the way he harassed and treated the student . a manhunt is underway student. a manhunt is underway tonight after a man armed with a zombie blade attacked another passenger on the train in broad daylight in front of other commuters. if you're watching on tv, a warning the footage we're about to show is somewhat distressing. the video circulating on social media appears to show a man wearing a face mask wielding a large blade. it's after a fight broke out between the two people south of the capital. police managed to stop the train and paramedics attended the scene, but the
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suspect got away. the victim has been taken to hospital with life threatening injuries to the united states. now where in the state of maryland? audio has emerged detailing the moment that emergency workers tried to evacuate the bridge there shortly before it collapsed. take a listen. >> there's a ship approaching and just lost their steering. so until they get that under control, we got to stop all traffic . 1013 dispatch. the traffic. 1013 dispatch. the whole bridge just fell out . whole bridge just fell out. start, start. whoever. everybody. the whole bridge just collapsed . collapsed. >> the whole bridge just collapsed. he says it comes after the search for survivors was suspended today , with six was suspended today, with six construction workers presumed dead.the construction workers presumed dead. the cargo ship crashed into the francis scott key bridge yesterday morning, causing it to fold into the water below in less than 10s. the city's port, one of the busiest in the eastern united states, is now closed indefinitely . here, a driver who indefinitely. here, a driver who led police on a reckless high speed chase reaching speeds of
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almost 140 miles an hour, has been jailed. munib mehran was caught speeding on the m4 when police officers asked him to pull over. instead of doing that, as dashcam footage shows he sped up. the 23 year old admitted charges including dangerous driving and the possession of cannabis, as well as driving without a license and driving without insurance. wiltshire police say it's fortunate no one was injured. he's been sentenced to 26 months in prison and disqualified from driving for 18 months. that's the news. for the latest stories, do you sign up to gb news alerts? scan the qr code on the screen right now or go to gb news. com slash alerts . news. com slash alerts. >> welcome along. the police are looking into the angela rayner case again and sir keir starmer could be investigated and suspended from parliament. but that's the labour leader and deputy leader currently swimming
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in boiling hot water. it should be huge news, but you might not have heard about this because of the astonishing bias in the media. the greater manchester police are re—examining case police are re—examining the case into whether or not angela rayner broke the the rayner broke the law. the controversy is this miss rayner registered her stockport house, which she bought under the right to buy scheme in two thousand and seven, as her main address on the electoral roll . as on the electoral roll. as a result, when she sold the property in 2015, making a profit of £48,000, she was not liable to pay capital gains tax on that money. but weeks after marrying mark rayner in 2010, she had reregistered the births of her two youngest children at his address just over a mile away. that raised questions over whether she moved in with her now estranged husband, but did not update her address on the electoral register. hmrc rules state that married couples or civil partners can only count one property as their primary residence. okay she obviously has denied any wrongdoing. her
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neighbours called her an effing liar. the police initially said nothing untoward had happened and angela rayner was able to go in front of the cameras and get away with just hiding behind an anonymous alleged accountant who conveniently completely exonerated her. >> since those allegations were put to me, i got expert advice because i had advised at the time, i don't i don't have an accountant. i was a home care worker. you know, i didn't have an accountant. i had, as most people would. put your house people would. you put your house on the market, you get a legal conveyancing solicitor you conveyancing solicitor and you get agent. since get an estate agent. but since those allegations were put to me, i got expert tax advice to make sure that i hadn't done anything wrong . anything wrong. >> oh, that's all right then, is it? well, then it was pointed out that greater manchester police apparently didn't speak to witnesses or people of to key witnesses or people of interest examine interest or examine key documents. now they're documents. so now they're looking into it again. now it's sir keir starmer's turn in february, there was his infamous gaza ceasefire vote, where the
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labour speaker, sir lindsay hoyle, inexplicably decided to break parliamentary convention after closed doors chat after a behind closed doors chat with the labour leader and made a decision that saved sir keir starmer from a massive backbench and possible frontbench rebellion that looked a bit rum, didn't it? the labour leader initially refused to answer a simple question about whether he had threatened commons speaker sir lindsay hoyle to make him break ancient commons rules in labour's favour. then the next day he admitted a conversation had taken place, but said he absolutely didn't threaten sir lindsay. there were calls for the privileges committee to investigate this, but starmer managed to avoid it because it was decided that conversations in the speaker's office should remain private . so then that remain private. so then that went away. but now it's back . 58 went away. but now it's back. 58 mps have signed an early day motion calling for a privileges committee investigation into whether undue pressure was placed on the speaker. now, if this happens and he's found
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guilty, then he can be suspended from parliament. so rishi sunak, by the way , appears to be so bad by the way, appears to be so bad at politics that despite being about 30 points behind in the polls, loads of his own mps wanting to replace him and his cabinet quitting all around him, he's not going after starmer or raynen he's not going after starmer or rayner. goodness me, there is a giant golden goose walking around in front of him , wearing around in front of him, wearing around in front of him, wearing a sign that says please, please, for the love of god, shoot me. he's holding a gun and he just can't bring himself to pull the trigger. you would have thought that that labour that the chance that labour could lose their leader and deputy leader might have a bit of media traction. it's not really anywhere on sky news on the bbc or itv. itv, of course, who led the way in the partygate investigation? they're conveniently obe by the time i came on air anyway. ignoring this, it would seem, it appears that when it comes to left wing politicians, you have to try to get the police to look into it
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twice before any action is taken. may i remind you that bofis taken. may i remind you that boris johnson was fined for a brief stand up meeting with sandwiches that he didn't organise ? and to find organise? and you have to find imaginative well to get imaginative ways as well to get parliament to investigate someone might driven someone who might have driven a coach and horses through the rule book. there is a shocking double standard here. let's get the thoughts of my panel this evening. we've got director at popular conservatives mark littlewood . i'm joined as well littlewood. i'm joined as well by businessman and activist adam brooks , an author and journalist brooks, an author and journalist rebecca reid. mark, i'll start with you. i mean, hey, look , it with you. i mean, hey, look, it does appear like if you are a left wing politician and you may have done something wrong, then everybody else needs to get all the authorities relevantly to look at twice. look at it twice. >> pretty shocking this. i agree with you, patrick. something's quite here. there are quite worrying here. there are three different things going on that are troublesome . that i think are troublesome. the first is it's not so much that the labor party is a left wing party, it's that a large number of the mainstream media expect them to win the next election. heard john curtice
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election. we heard john curtice earlier saying chance and earlier saying 99% chance and they want to have good relations with the potentially incoming prime minister and deputy prime minister. and in fact, a senior westminster editor. i'd describe him as confirmed that to me. just ten days ago, i was saying, why isn't this all over the newspapers? oh you know, newspapers? oh well, you know, you know, it's a bit tricky, so hang minute. you know, it's a bit tricky, so hang you ninute. you know, it's a bit tricky, so hang you ninuta senior >> you you had a senior westminster editor. yeah. >> no. >> i won't say no. >>— >> i won't say no. >> obviously not. obviously not appearing to say that. the reason why they're not going after starmer and rayner, because they want good relations with the incoming government, you know, thankfully you don't give . you don't give a monkey's give. you don't give a monkey's who you irritate patrick. so you so i think now i think it might be the same by the way, if we had a labour government and the conservatives were on the brink of power the our westminster of power the way our westminster journalism works, i'm afraid, has seek favours down has those will seek favours down the want the the line. you'll want to be the journalist who gets the first tip off about government policy and machinations. and government machinations. so that's problem. the that's the first problem. the second is that this is this is actually very complicated tax
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actually a very complicated tax issue about primary residence. you did good job of explaining you did a good job of explaining it, but was registered at it, but was she registered at the place? if she wasn't the right place? if she wasn't and it was her primary residence, she broken residence, has she broken electoral on the electoral law by being on the wrong address electoral wrong address on the electoral register on and so forth. register and so on and so forth. so quite technical and so it's quite technical and complicated. the third complicated. and the third problem the tory problem is that the tory campaign machine is useless. yeah, i mean, if a conservative was, considered to be potentially in breach of the law or tax , avoiding the labour or tax, avoiding the labour party machine would be all over him like a rash. it wasn't. it wasn't too long ago. nadhim zahawi , was forced to quit as zahawi, was forced to quit as the chairman of the tory party, wasn't it ? now, he couldn't just wasn't it? now, he couldn't just come out and say, well, you'd be pleased to know i've had some expert tax advice it's all expert tax advice and it's all fine. yeah, but she should fine. so yeah, but she should pubush fine. so yeah, but she should publish the tax advice in my view. but if , if the blues, if view. but if, if the blues, if the people in blue rosettes can't glove on the people can't lay a glove on the people in red rosettes, then the conservatives only really have themselves conservatives only really have the it's lves conservatives only really have the it's very difficult for rishi >> it's very difficult for rishi to anything tax, to do anything about tax, particularly tax or particularly tax dodges or tax
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advice, otherwise, advice, legal or otherwise, because wife legally, because his wife legally, legally, avoided an estimated £20 million. he could go. he could absolutely, very easily. there was always a reason when they don't. i just want to pick up on this idea that it's somehow not being reported because currently on the because it is currently on the guardian, telegraph, guardian, the telegraph, the bbc, the independent, bbc, sky news, the independent, itv, times, daily express, itv, the times, daily express, manchester at manchester evening news at the time. time wrote >> at the time i wrote that earlier was not earlier on it absolutely was not fine . okay, it was about hours fine. okay, it was about hours ago. this was out and about hours. >> very legally contentious issue and you have to get , you issue and you have to get, you know, that these things take time to get put up online. these most of these are a couple of hours old. >> they end up on the >> i doubt they end up on the headlines, though for tomorrow's papers front papers they will. but the front pages be. pages they won't be. >> see an hour. >> we'll see in an hour. >> we'll see in an hour. >> will. we will see you now. >> we will. we will see you now. absolutely, but at absolutely, absolutely. but at the that that was the time i wrote that that was absolutely case. and as absolutely the case. and as you've appeared you've just appeared to indicate, not that indicate, it is not long that they've gone online. my point is this they been this why have they not been hammering them? why was she allowed and say, allowed to just go on and say, hey, spoke an hey, look, i spoke to an accountant, an accountant says it's absolutely fine. keir starmer got with it
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starmer just got away with it all went quiet about it. all went very quiet about it. >> she tweeted when boris >> also, she tweeted when boris was trouble over the was in trouble over, over the parties or gatherings, she tweeted that boris is under investigation by the police. why can't he do the right thing and resign? she's now under investigation by the police. well, thinking about she also might she okay. she also tweeted bofis might she okay. she also tweeted boris johnson is under police investigation. how on earth can he think he can stay on as prime minister? so if she does end up being investigated? yeah. should she resign and it's a big her own standards, she should resign on her own standards. >> unambiguous. she would have to. >> but i think really i think i think that a mistake. think that was a mistake. realistically you should wait for investigation be for an investigation to be concluded resign, but concluded before you resign, but that should be that should be true. should be true it was true of anybody. but it was a stupid thing. it was a very stupid thing. it was a very stupid thing. it was a very stupid thing to tweet because twice should the privileges committee have at least have a look what keir starmer did, look into what keir starmer did, it's noting. it's worth noting. >> worth noting the >> it's worth noting the only reason didn't earlier reason they didn't earlier on was the clerks with the was because the clerks with the deputy sorry for the speaker said well, look, said that. oh, well, look, whatever behind
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whatever goes on behind closed doors be doors has to be kept confidential and that raised eyebrows itself. confidential and that raised eyeirows itself. confidential and that raised eyei have itself. confidential and that raised eyei have no tself. confidential and that raised eyei have no issue with >> i have no issue with them with the police investigating angela no issue angela rayner, i have no issue with committee of with the privileges committee of lindsay however, lindsay hall. however, i guarantee none of you will guarantee you none of you will feel about this if they feel happier about this if they do a privileges committee and they there was no they find that there was no error, all still sit error, you will all still sit here and no. case backed him here and say no. case backed him up. quite nice, i promise up. i be quite nice, i promise you wouldn't if privilege you i wouldn't if the privilege if privilege says if a privilege committee says no, no issue around the end of it. if you think but if you it. but if you think but if you think would cover for think lindsay would cover for keir time round, why keir first time round, why wouldn't time? this what i was just about >> this is what i was just about to say there's no they're to say then there's no they're not going to throw each other under yeah. under the bus. yeah. >> neither them going >> so neither of them are going to each other under the to throw each other under the bus. on. bus. well, well hang on. >> is a burden proof >> there is a burden of proof and evidence. rebecca, and evidence. and, rebecca, i don't you saying if don't appreciate you saying if the committee came the privilege committee came back can't stack the privilege committee came bac case can't stack the privilege committee came bac case up, can't stack the privilege committee came bac case up, i can't stack the privilege committee came bac case up, i wouldn't stack the privilege committee came bac case up, i wouldn't accept the case up, i wouldn't accept the case up, i wouldn't accept the result. >> i think adam saying he >> i think adam is saying he wouldn't because he thinks it would be untrue. >> idea that the >> but the idea that the privilege shouldn't privilege committee shouldn't investigate something because you've already prejudged what their conclusion would be. this is the thing. is exactly the sort of thing. no, i'm saying whatever the conclusion is, i don't think
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anybody satisfied. anybody would be satisfied. i just satisfied if just find i'll be satisfied if they resolve it, they say we can't resolve it, but our best but we've given it our best shot.i but we've given it our best shot. i don't an investigation. >> you very well. >> i don't know you very well. i'm on the. i'm on the bus stop. >> absolutely, massively >> you're absolutely, massively diverting away the fact diverting away from the fact that, currently stands, that, as it currently stands, both deputy of both the deputy leader of the labour leader of labour party and the leader of the party could the labour party could potentially to go. potentially be about to go. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> i mean, i'm not so >> i mean, i mean, i'm not so sure it will come to that for the i've already said. the reasons i've already said. i mean, can't mean, the conservatives can't seem them, so seem to lay a glove on them, so i it will come to i don't think it will come to that. i don't think it will come to that . and interesting thing that. and the interesting thing that. and the interesting thing that starmer and that i think keir starmer and angela who don't get angela rayner, who don't get on well, famously well, is famously reported starmer doesn't want rayner to go.can starmer doesn't want rayner to go. can you imagine if there was a labour deputy leadership election might emerge as the election who might emerge as the number two? >> nice to see two grown ups in politics towards politics behaving well towards each keeping their party. >> also say if the media stepped up, of pressure they up, the sort of pressure they put on those that put on boris on those two that labour would serious, labour would have serious, serious because people >> and that's because people don't >> and that's because people dont on >> and that's because people don't on the articles. don't click on the articles. it's just about journalism. honestly, is lack of honestly, that is a lack of pubuc honestly, that is a lack of public interest. >> i'm sorry, it is ridiculous. >> i'm sorry, it is ridiculous. >> do is write articles >> all we do is write articles that read. that's
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that people read. that's it. >> ridiculous. >> it's absolutely ridiculous. well then, lo and behold, sorry. woe betide the idea that somebody should just do their job. >> yeah, it's metrics oriented journalism. >> all right . a greater >> all right. a greater manchester spokesperson >> all right. a greater mancherhave spokesperson >> all right. a greater mancherhave received kesperson said we have received a complaint regarding our decision not to investigate allegation not to investigate an allegation and in the process of and are in the process of reassessing this decision. the complaint will be updated with the outcome of the reassessment in course. angela rayner in due course. angela rayner previously said being able to buy my council house back in two thousand and seven was a proud moment for i worked hard, moment for me. i worked hard, saved by the book. saved and bought it by the book. i'm but i angry i'm not ashamed, but i am angry that the tories since put that the tories have since put the a secure home out the dream of a secure home out of reach. so many others, right? coming are just coming up, posh kids are just stop oil, continue stooping to new lows . new lows. >> this is, the letter delivering to wes streeting . it delivering to wes streeting. it appears that there's no police here this time , greco. here this time, greco. >> when she goes home, she says letter anyway , find out what's letter anyway, find out what's going on there. when my panel and i run you through the very first of tomorrow's newspaper front pages and next, bring front pages and next, i bring you exclusive that
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you a gb news exclusive that shockingly exposes what the french government really french government are really spending. britain's small boat prevention money. that's your money, by the way, on. and it has nothing to do with britain. dame andrea jenkins reacts to that. that's .
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next. it's patrick christys tonight on
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gb news. look. still to come. tonight's panel are going to give you the very first of tomorrow's newspaper front pages. now , it's time pages. but right now, it's time for a gb news exclusive. the british taxpayer is having to fork out tens of thousands of pounds to build a fence in france. it's designed to stop migrants camping at a football stadium. yeah seriously. politicians in the town of sangatte, near calais, are using ,74,000. that is apparently the equivalent £63,000 of your equivalent of £63,000 of your money. british cash to install a rigid fence at the la porte du cap. i'm not fluent. stadium. this money is taken from a budget of millions that britain is sending to france to increase its border control and stop the small boats crisis, which is supposed to involve beefed up security, extra cctv and drone surveillance. instead, your money will help build a fence that only serves to prevent migrants breaking into a french amateur football stadium and leaving their litter in and
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around the area, which is understandably sparked fury. but it's not our problem, is it? tory mp nigel mills has blasted. he says this is disgraceful how on earth has this been allowed? this money is supposed to go on actually stopping the boats from crossing. french crossing. it sounds like french politicians spending our politicians are spending our money anything they want. money on anything they want. it's to the british it's insulting to the british taxpayer. so yeah, 63 grand of your money is going to stop migrants sleeping and amateur french football stadium. this comes as a record number of migrants crossed the channel in the first three months of this yean the first three months of this year, with 4644 making the journey between january and march. i'm delighted to welcome tory mp and former minister dame andrea jenkins. thank you very, very much. i'd quite like to have this money back . i don't have this money back. i don't know about you or france taking us to the cleaners here. >> i want a refund of all the millions that they've squandered , actually, because they've never stopped have never stopped the boats, have they, it's they, patrick? i mean, it's a disgrace. i mean, this is british taxpayers hard earned cash, and it's been squandered
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on a fence to protect a french football stadium. you just couldn't make it up, could you ? couldn't make it up, could you? >> no. and this isn't a fence, by the that's, you know, by the way. that's, you know, lining one the beaches to lining one of the beaches to stop them getting on. this isn't a really serving stop them getting on. this isn't a practical really serving stop them getting on. this isn't a practical purpose.erving any practical purpose. not stopping back any practical purpose. not st( lorries. back any practical purpose. not st(lorries. nothing. back any practical purpose. not st(lorries. nothing. this back any practical purpose. not st(lorries. nothing. this is,back any practical purpose. not st(lorries. nothing. this is, it ck of lorries. nothing. this is, it appears, purely to protect appears, just purely to protect an amateur french football club. i mean, it probably actually having the opposite effect of maybe just driving them onwards to beaches . to the beaches. >> i mean, can you believe we're even conversation, even having this conversation, patrick? mean i to see patrick? i mean, i want to see ministers questioning this ministers to be questioning this immediately and asking for a refund. i'll i'll write to the ministers myself and the prime minister because it's time to stop funding the french. it's time to stop spending taxpayers money on hotels for illegal migrants. and we've got to put the money back into british people. now, i'm like many people. now, i'm like many people. i've had enough of this. we've got to stop wasting money. it's not working. the french are not living up to their side of the bargain. so let's get these millions back. >> you think the british >> do you think the british taxpayer a receipt
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taxpayer is owed a full receipt of exactly where our millions of pounds to the french is going ? pounds to the french is going? >> i definitely think so, but. but let's not forget, actually, patrick, that france, and the eu, that's the way they operate, isn't it? look how they're closely aligned. macron is with the eu. how this is why we came out for brexit in the first place, because the eu didn't sign off their accounts as no transparency and let's not forget the secret meetings that starmer's had with macron, which is setting the stage for rejoining the eu. patrick. so i think we need the receipts exactly as you said, and we need our money back . our money back. >> can i can i put this home office statement to you and just see what you make of it? all right. so the home office responded to us, this was responded to us, and this was just as we went on air tonight. so i'm reading this for the just as we went on air tonight. so i'timeading this for the just as we went on air tonight. so i'timeading twithor the just as we went on air tonight. so i'timeading twithor th last first time along with you last yean first time along with you last year, joint with year, our joint working with france over of france saw over 26,000 of dangerous, and dangerous, illegal and unnecessary crossings attempts prevented landmark prevented since our landmark agreement with france, embedded observers have been deployed
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regularly on both sides of the channel. and in march we agreed to more than double the number of deployed in of personnel deployed in northern france. this partnership is just one part of the government's wider work to tackle illegal migration. what do of that , dame andrea? >> i mean, if it's only 26,000 and look at how many is coming across , patrick, how many, how across, patrick, how many, how much does that work out per illegal migrant coming across compared to, you know, using the money that, we've given to france, we've got to stop funding the french. i mean, i said this in a, in a statement pnor said this in a, in a statement prior to the budget that i want to see us stop funding the money to see us stop funding the money to france. not living up to france. they're not living up to france. they're not living up to of the bargain. to their side of the bargain. and it's our money. we want it back. >> all right, look, thank you very, very much. that is, of course, jenkyns course, dame andrea jenkyns there, that gb news there, wading into that gb news exclusive, which is at £63,000 of your money that we have given to the french to try to stop the migrant crisis, appears to have been spent literally ring fencing. a french amateur football stadium, instead coming up, that
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up, the upper class yobs that just stop oil well, they just never seem to learn, do they? this is, the letter delivering to wes streeting. >> appears that there's no >> it appears that there's no police here this time. >> should they be targeting mps homes? and actually, by the way, they weren't even successful in that one. i'll reveal all very, very soon. but we've also got the tomorrow's the first of tomorrow's newspaper pages for you. newspaper front pages for you. straight
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this -- this is patrick christys. tonight we're on gb news. and i have got all of tomorrow's newspaper front pages. and i think i'm right in saying before anyone else. so let's do it . anyone else. so let's do it. right. the metro totally failed . right. the metro totally failed. social workers put baby back in drug addicted parents care, then did not check on him amid a catalogue of disasters. it is a, as it says here, damning reports into the savage death of baby finley and absolutely disgraceful case. let's go to the independent by barred from
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europe, 2.4 million brits caught in brexit passport chaos. thousands faced easter getaway misery as eu refuses to recognise passports. over ten years old british travellers now categorised as third country nationals. again. i would just like to say, were they ever really, our friends go to the i labour attacked for feeble plan on britain's sewage crisis. labour accused of failing to set out a plan for effectively tackling the amount of sewage being pumped into our rivers. we will return to that. but here's a big one and it's on the front of the daily mail. are you ready? could rishi gamble on a summer election? well, apparently the speculation is now that we're going to get a june or july election. all right. so that is the latest noises. they've gone with it on the daily mail. there's a couple of other online outlets going with it as well. we've got the mirror now i believe. yes we do . mirror now i believe. yes we do. day i lost my paul husband speaks for the first time about the star's last moment as paul
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o'grady's husband. of course, the guardian outrage over record discharges of sewage into the rivers and seas. and also peter mandelson has dismissed the prospect of a labour government taking britain back into the eu, saying you've got to be joking. so there we go, right . saying you've got to be joking. so there we go, right. i'm focusing in first on the daily mail according to them, mail because according to them, we are quite possibly going to get a june or july election , and get a june or july election, and it's i think .actuallywe were it's i think .actually we were just chatting about this just in the advert break there. and rebecca, i actually do think that have got a good that you might have got a good idea this is. that you might have got a good ideiwell, this is. that you might have got a good ideiwell, i this is. that you might have got a good ideiwell, i hads is. that you might have got a good ideiwell, i had ais. that you might have got a good ideiwell, i had a good idea. >> well, i had a good idea. >> well, i had a good idea. >> were full of good ideas. >> you were full of good ideas. >> you were full of good ideas. >> occasionally. think is >> occasionally. i think it is a smart idea for him, because i think the liberal think that the liberal metropolitan are metropolitan elite like me are in and young people who in tuscany, and young people who don't tend to vote for the tories will be at festivals and travelling in a way, and younger people likely to take people are less likely to take the get a vote. the time to get a postal vote. so it might just cut out a swathe us the younger, be too swathe of us the younger, be too busy enjoying themselves at gloucester the gloucester or whatever, and the
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queen us be abroad queen worry of us will be abroad and will be, and the quinoa eating will be, yeah, be abroad. yeah, will be abroad. >> it's just the >> so essentially it's just the old tend to old biddies and they tend to vote the red wall. vote tory and the red wall. >> stay at home, of >> they all stay at home, of course. coui'se. >> f- course. >> old biddies? of >> so any old biddies? of course. big, big of the. course. so big, big fans of the. >> i am generalising, but i do think might. think it might. >> it might mark you shaking your yeah. your head. yeah. >> the conservative >> i mean, the conservative party in party are 20% behind in the polls. need an polls. you're going to need an awful lefties go awful lot of lefties to go to tuscany, and you're going to have glastonbury have to have a glastonbury festival bigger than festival 50 times bigger than it's ever been. but do you think it's ever been. but do you think it might? >> do wm- >> it might. do you think it might slither off might like carve a slither off the i might like carve a slither off thei reckon if you're 20% behind >> i reckon if you're 20% behind you just carry on and just for hope get better, which hope things to get better, which i will. you just i doubt they will. but you just carry hope you'd go carry on and hope you'd go winter you were a let me, let winter if you were a let me, let me, let me just read me, let me, let me just read another aspect of this. >> going to go to adam on >> i'm going to go to adam on this. but apparently one the this. but apparently one of the considerations of considerations is the amount of letters of confidence that letters of no confidence that have already received have already been received by graham have already been received by graithat could twist his arm. and that could twist his arm. >> trying time out any >> he's trying to time out any sort of leadership challenge. in my they are going to my opinion. they are going to get annihilated. it doesn't matter june, july, matter if it's in june, july,
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august, september, or august, september, october or november. finished. they november. they're finished. they might as well roll the dice. now. i can't say it enough times. roll the dice. go with a strong immigration leader and have a go. you are dying . the have a go. you are dying. the conservative party is dying. >> do you think another leadership election now or not? yes. >> get rid of rishi. he's possibly been the worst prime minister i've seen in decades. he's not done one thing. he said he would do. they are finished. >> let us know what you think at home on this gbviews@gbnews.com. it's on the front of the daily mail. could rishi gambled on a summer election? what does that mean for you? it could be june. it apparently. it could be july, apparently. apparently. is it. and apparently. so this is it. and there this that there are aspects of this that do make sense, as you were saying. maybe it would be saying. maybe, maybe it would be better for them to that, better for them to do that, because of potentially younger people being away, people or whoever being away, i suppose. obviously suppose. but it obviously comes on that were on the day that labour were given of forming given a 99% chance of forming the next government. i'm going to whizz us along now and just talk about this, sewage crisis that's been mentioned the that's been mentioned on the front i was not just
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front of the i was not just human waste and sanitary towels that the marine life of britain is being battered by. have a look at this . look at this. >> and in the marine life just beneath, beneath our feet, we're actually finding they're full of drugs. >> they're full of contraceptive pill antidepressants, anti—anxiety medication . every anti—anxiety medication. every single marine species that we've looked at so far is full of cocaine. >> every single species they look at is full of cocaine. right mark, what does this say about britain? that if you cut a fish open, it is apparently full of antidepressants , class a of antidepressants, class a drugs and morning after pills? >> well, they must be the people advising rishi sunak on how to when to call early election. when to call an early election. i would thought right, i would have thought right, pretty, desperate state pretty, pretty desperate state of is grim, right? of it. no, this is grim, right? this the whole water story. and i people say what a i know some people say what a failure of privatisation, but i actually we haven't got actually think we haven't got the right market pricing here. and are covering and the eye are covering labour's being branded as being feeble on the scale of the price
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crisis. and i rather agree, because labour's plan is to go after the chief executives and the fat cats. if this sewage continues, you're not going to be able to have a bonus. i would just charge the water companies huge fines if they and guess what? the shareholders will pretty quickly insist their chief executive ensures that they act in a tidier and better fashion. so we just don't have the right fines and price mechanisms in place. >> if you if you see the amount i >> if you if you see the amount l pay >> if you if you see the amount i pay at my pub, my water bills, it it would make you fall off the chair. it's a disgrace. not only am i paying obviously for water that comes in, i'm paying for the water that has to leave the as well. it's huge. the premises as well. it's huge. and are getting for and what are we getting for that? but one thing i will say, everyone blames the tories. walter, and attack walter, this and labour attack line on tories. alastair line on the tories. alastair campbell tweeted today he was fact check the last labour government was taken to the european court of justice for failing to stop thousands of tonnes of raw sewage pouring into the thames. they were taken to a european court. they were
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so bad. that was labour again with all sorts of policies. if the young generation think that labouris the young generation think that labour is the answer, they've got a rude awakening coming completely different . completely different. >> labour party led by different people, staffed by different people. people are people. very few people are still just look at still in the would just look at wow's, bad is. wow's, look how bad wow's is. >> according to the according to the arabica campaigners are warning find warning that proposals to find water bonuses are water bosses block bonuses are quote, feeble gestures are we are we looking at another issue here where labour actually just doesn't a plan? doesn't have a plan? >> think that they know that >> i think that they know that it's popular. everyone this it's popular. everyone in this country we like country agrees that we like clean trying clean water, so they're trying to points to score some points like everybody i completely everybody is. but i completely agree. them agree. i think finding them would more but also would make more sense. but also it's negligence. you it's criminal negligence. if you are people or fish, are poisoning people or fish, that negligence. that is still negligence. we should not in situation should not be in a situation where in london, where men are in london, apparently high oestrogen apparently have high oestrogen levels because you're levels because drink you're drinking got so drinking tap water that's got so much and drink tap water much of you and drink tap water that would rebecca? do in that would you rebecca? i do in london. really? london. oh really? >> time. wow. london. oh really? >> i time. wow. london. oh really? >> i mean, time. wow. london. oh really? >> i mean, there's time. wow. london. oh really? >> i mean, there's tinlittleyw. >> i mean, there's very little in water i don't put in that water that i don't put in that water that i don't put in body. i'm not worried. in my body. i'm not worried. >> sure going to start
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>> i'm sure i'm going to start drinking it now. understand? there be cocaine there might be cocaine in it. >> pretty wow now. wow. >> pretty cheap. wow now. wow. >> pretty cheap. wow now. wow. >> okay, we are totally against drugs on this show. >> that, on that bombshell. >> on that, on that bombshell. all right, so, look, just stop oil back to their old oil were back to their old tncks oil were back to their old tricks today as they filmed themselves delivering a letter to what they thought was labour mp wes streeting. his home address. let's see. >> this is, the letter delivering to wes streeting . it delivering to wes streeting. it appears that there's no police here this time . should i go hand here this time. should i go hand myself in for breaking bail? >> no, you're not, because you've not got around to an mp's house. you've just gone round to a total stranger's house and given them a letter. so despite breaking a bail conditions after being arrested for delivering letters phoebe letters twice before, phoebe doesn't seem to be very good at it. okay, so wes streeting responded , i don't know which responded, i don't know which poor sod got your letter, but that isn't my house. it isn't evenin that isn't my house. it isn't
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even in my borough , i mean even in my borough, i mean honestly, seriously, rebecca, despite that obvious failure, just just stop oil's intrusive tactic of exposing politicians home addresses or indeed, you know, quite possibly, sandra from number 42, do they need to stop? >> oh , we love phoebe. it's so >> oh, we love phoebe. it's so sweet. i think there's something so gloriously, cheerfully naive about that. and realistically , i about that. and realistically, i when people are when huge crowds are outside mps houses, they can stand. it's intimidating and the police intervene. but police should intervene. but nobody phoebe nobody is scared of phoebe putting letter through putting a letter through the doon putting a letter through the door. form of door. it's a gentle form of protest, probably should go protest, probably she should go to rather than to to his office rather than to his house, but fundamentally , adam, house, but fundamentally, adam, if to house, would if she came to your house, would you phoebe? you be scared of phoebe? >> wouldn't get past my gates. >> i've got big gates. >> i've got big gates. >> she wouldn't get past you. >> she wouldn't get past you. >> under your gate. is >> put it under your gate. is that all right? >> put it under your gate. is that alon. |ht? your on this? >> obviously, tarquin gave her the address, so, know, the wrong address, so, you know, let her down. i've. let her down. but no, i've. i don't want anyone coming to my house. i think wrong to house. i think it's wrong to target houses, family. target people's houses, family. their, scared. i'm their, kids could be scared. i'm not they'd be scared not saying they'd be scared of her, but she's and her, but once she's done it and put over internet,
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put it all over the internet, others to your others could then go to your houses. sets a bad precedent, houses. it sets a bad precedent, and think we to stay away and i think we need to stay away from houses, you know, and from mps houses, you know, and pubuc from mps houses, you know, and public houses. public figures houses. it's wrong . i don't know where this wrong. i don't know where this line's crossed. it's really line's been crossed. it's really got to stop. >> i think the issue is it feels that there fewer and fewer that there are fewer and fewer ways to ways that you're allowed to protest. okay protest. so houses not okay outside embassies outside certain embassies not okay. come will. this okay. oh come on the will. this is common sense. still taking wills building. wills memorial building. >> i would it's >> not okay i would say it's pubuc >> not okay i would say it's public space. but that's street. >> that is the public space. >> that is the public space. >> it's on his driveway . >> it's on his driveway. >> it's on his driveway. >> if she's on his street would you be okay with it. >> well starting to, >> well this is starting to, i think, intrude on people's think, to intrude on people's pubuc think, to intrude on people's public private space. mean, public or private space. i mean, you're right freedom of you're right to freedom of speech extend to your speech does not extend to your right through my right to scream through my letterbox someone's someone's going to come unstuck. >> someone >> because if someone aggressively came to my house and i had defend my and i felt i had to defend my family , i'll do but she's family, i'll do it. but she's not. so someone is going come not. so someone is going to come very unstuck. not. so someone is going to come venbeinchk. not. so someone is going to come verbeing aggressive is illegal >> being aggressive is illegal because incompetent , because she was so incompetent, she misidentified the address. >> get the sense >> yeah, but you get the sense that they're trying to. >> being a letter is not a legal , but they're definitely not. >> they tweeted they tweet the
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tweets are creepy. >> creepy was illegal. they'd have to shut down all of the dating apps. >> it's kind of stalking. >> it's a kind of stalking. >> it's a kind of stalking. >> it's a kind of stalking. >> i just politely suggest >> it's a kind of stalking. >> make politely suggest >> it's a kind of stalking. >> make you tely suggest >> it's a kind of stalking. >> make you wonder gest it does make you wonder what else might about? else they might be wrong about? you mean? they you know what i mean? they can't. they get an mps can't. they can't get an mps address. okay but they're address. right? okay but they're absolutely certain that they're facts crisis are facts on the climate crisis are spot just read out a spot on. can i just read out a couple of my emails here? thank you very much. i was asking you about this election. i'm about this at this election. i'm just do it very just going to do it very quickly, apparently the election, going be election, i mean, is going to be in june or july. right? so i was in june orjuly. right? so i was asking what think asking what you think about that. doesn't matter when they call david. call an election, says david. the finished. rishi the tories are finished. rishi is loads of is finished, yeah. loads of people getting in touch to say that, a lot of people that, yeah. and a lot of people as well agreeing with adam, which he just which is that he should just roll should just roll the dice, it should just roll the dice, it should just roll that seems be roll the dice. that seems to be the one. election now , the main one. election now, please. are please. the conservatives are completely useless, says matthew. , says matthew. rishi must go, says phil. a heck of a lot that. phil. a heck of a lot of that. also quite a bit of pushback to me using the phrase me accidentally using the phrase old i like to old biddies. now i would like to apologise of the apologise now to all of the older here, who are older ladies here, who are naming themselves in the inbox
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now, say they like the show, but they are deeply offended. i apologise, i apologise anyway, coming up, 275 migrants were granted visas for fictitious care homes. you really couldn't make this up. find out more as i crown tonight's greatest bristling union jackass. but next, shocking scenes of violence on britain's public . violence on britain's public. transport. are absolutely horrendous . we'll bring you more horrendous. we'll bring you more on that knife wielding nutter right after this break. stay tuned
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i yes. welcome back to patrick christys. tonight, a manhunt is currently on the way for a knife attacker. but before we talk about that, i've got the rest of tomorrow's front pages for you . tomorrow's front pages for you. start with the telegraph. the king the public for king thanks the public for extending the hand of friendship. this is the king's
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easter of care and easter message of care and service. will be played service. and it will be played at royal maundy gathering . at the royal maundy gathering. that's leading the telegraph with that picture. story there again the king calls with that picture. story there agemore the king calls with that picture. story there agemore kindness king calls with that picture. story there agemore kindness in king calls with that picture. story there agemore kindness in a ing calls with that picture. story there agemore kindness in a ing c.of; for more kindness in a time of need. charles reflects on the nation's support for himself and kate the cancer battles. we kate amid the cancer battles. we go to the sun tv star in tragic accident gogglebox george falls to gilbey 40, in to his death. gilbey 40, in plunge at warehouse. apparently this accident is being investigated. his family understandably , obviously are understandably, obviously are quote absolutely gutted at the times . jonathan. sorry sorry times. jonathan. sorry sorry sorry. johnson had right idea on levelling up, says keir starmer. labour to tackle alienation and powerlessness . all right. sounds powerlessness. all right. sounds a bit zen, doesn't it? sir keir starmer has praised boris johnson's mission to level up britain and accused rishi sunak of killing the policy. there we go of killing the policy. there we 9° ' of killing the policy. there we go , right? sunak tells us, go, right? sunak tells us, struggle to be a good father as well. so yes. all right, fair enough, look, i am going to, you know, go straight back in with my panel. now, as you know, i'm
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joined by the director of the popular conservatives, mark littlewood, businessman and activist brooks, author littlewood, businessman and actiyjournalist,5rooks, author littlewood, businessman and actiyjournalist, rebecca author and journalist, rebecca reid. but underway but look, a manhunt is underway after a knifeman armed with a zombie blade attacked a man on a train in front of passengers . train in front of passengers. footage on social media appears to show a man wearing a face mask and wielding a large blade. after fight broke out between after a fight broke out between two people at shortlands station in the south of the capital, the victim has been taken to hospital with life threatening injuries following a stabbing on a train. the metropolitan police intercepted the train at beckenham junction station. paramedics attended the scene. british transport has tweeted in the past few moments that officers are carrying out extensive enquiries to trace the suspect. now you will see an enhanced police presence apparently across the stations within the area. the force does not believe there is any wider rest of the public all right, but yeah. mean, adam, but. yeah. look, i mean, adam, i know that you've done a lot on knife crime and, all of these kind of things, you know, that
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is, you know, a massive knife in broad daylight on a packed train, stunned members of the pubuc train, stunned members of the public just going about horrific. >> look, i speak a lot about knife crime on many different platforms. i lost my father to knife crime. yeah, people saying that. people that they should have intervened there. you can't intervene with someone that's nearly a sword. >> the question can i just ask keep you on this? because there was lot of people around was a lot of people around going, of going, well, there were loads of men that train. men sat on that, on that train. they didn't anything. there's they didn't do anything. there's a be heard a woman that can be heard screaming, know, saying, screaming, you know, saying, stop, think she's the stop, stop. i think she's the one and calling one filming and calling the police so do you police as well. so what do you make that? there wasn't any intervention. >> would put myself as >> look, i would put myself as brave, know, couldn't brave, and, you know, i couldn't intervene was intervene there unless it was a child being attacked. i could not intervene there because one stab are stab with that knife and you are dead. a family to. you dead. i've got a family to. you can't intervene with something that is nearly a sword, that big that is nearly a sword, patrick. it is. and anyone would be crazy to try and intervene in that. >> that. >> that. >> but it's also. i mean, i'm just looking at this clips of footage. it's not really a pack train, is it ? footage. it's not really a pack train, is it? it's a footage. it's not really a pack
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train, is it ? it's a pretty train, is it? it's a pretty empty train. if you had 50 or 60 people there, you find people there, you might find some rushing him . but it some way of rushing him. but it looks there's 2 or other looks like there's 2 or 3 other passengers. your odds not passengers. your odds are not good intervene. good if you intervene. >> then, the brave thing to >> even then, the brave thing to do to back and do sometimes is to step back and not involved. it's not not get involved. it's not better insert yourself in better to insert yourself in a situation. have situation. all that would have meant people got hurt. >> doesn't this just show how absolutely is and how absolutely cheap life is and how commonplace this is? the individual who is injured? again, i'll just say again, you know, i'll just say at the time of us reporting this, the latest that we understand is that they are alive that the injuries are alive and that the injuries are life and no life threatening and that no arrests have been made. again, you how how have no you know, how how have no arrests been made we've got arrests been made yet? we've got phone it. you would phone footage of it. you would imagine cctv footage. imagine the cctv footage. >> did he get train? >> how did he get off the train? >> how did he get off the train? >> how did he get off the train? >> how he get off the train? >> how did he get off the train? >> how did he get off the train? >> find space. in what world are the incompetent the police? so incompetent that they can't handle that? >> remember, has all >> and remember, this has all happened the happened in apparently the safest world. safest city in the world. according to sadiq khan. >> i think it's the 14th safest city in world. city in the world. >> it's not that is >> it's not even that london is dangerous. someone you know, dangerous. ask someone you know, i know i grew up here, you grew
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up around here. >> it is dangerous. >> it is dangerous. it's >> it is dangerous. it's not a safe city. and things like this highlight it. patrick >> i'm going to >> so. well, i'm going to highlight here. >> so. well, i'm going to highi ght here. >> so. well, i'm going to highi think here. >> so. well, i'm going to highi think this here. >> so. well, i'm going to highi think this might here. >> so. well, i'm going to highi think this might bringre. and i think this might bring a smile to a few of your faces. so we all know the has we all know that the bbc has morphed from the national broadcaster , to a left wing broadcaster to, to a left wing propaganda machine. some people would say some people would say, but they're not even trying to hide it anymore . look at the hide it anymore. look at the state of audience. state of this audience. newsnight together in newsnight cobbled together in the blue wall seat of south cambridgeshire , where i recently cambridgeshire, where i recently graduated from university in media and environmental communication. >> so i learnt a lot about the climate crisis . climate crisis. >> good evening. my name is elizabeth. i live locally , i elizabeth. i live locally, i also volunteer with greenpeace long distance swimmer, both in rivers and in the sea. >> i volunteer with two local refugee charities and i live in south cambridgeshire. >> i work for migrants rights organisation in cambridge , and i organisation in cambridge, and i just wanted to echo some of the points we've heard tonight about the hostile immigration environment. >> there it is. i mean, there it
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is. okay. we didn't do that. they did that. oh wonder, would there be calls for anyone to look into that? i don't know, mark. >> pretty strange, isn't it? i was hoping next was just really hoping the next person say, you person was going to say, you know, and i'm a really know, i'm bill and i'm a really staunch fan. right. but staunch millwall fan. right. but no, you don't really get much of that, guys. >> instead, we had a load tar queens. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> when you have gb news live, how in audience how many people in the audience like, my like, hi, i'm cressida and my degree environmental degree is in environmental science. programmes science. certain programmes attack that's okay. >> that's the national broadcaster. >> but these people are the people who applied to go. >> so we're not the bbc and you know, they've got a duty there to provide. >> so why do you assume that the guy who likes is guy who likes swimming is a leftie? you assume the guy >> why do you assume the guy with a degree a leftie? why with a degree is a leftie? why do assume the bosnia do you assume the bosnia volunteers refugees degree? >> why do i assume, why do you, the who volunteers with the one who volunteers with refugees lefty? the one who volunteers with releeah, lefty? the one who volunteers with releeah, why?3fty? the one who volunteers with releeah, why? i'll? the one who volunteers with releeah, why? i'll leave that there. >> we reached that conclusion. i'd like to dignify that. >> is the a lefty? >> why is the swimmer a lefty? what's swimming? what's leftwing about swimming? >> think it was >> no, i just think it was interesting that they were obviously conversation obviously having a conversation there. other
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there. and every single other person openly. would person was quite openly. i would argue, working argue, quite left wing, working for i don't think that >> i don't think that volunteering inherently volunteering is an inherently left activity. i think left wing activity. i think plenty of wing with plenty of right wing no with refugees, plenty refugees, i think plenty of right wing people would would volunteer places volunteer in all kinds of places . you're saying right wing .you're saying right wing people volunteer people don't volunteer with ukrainian refugees? >> greenpeace , i do, but >> not for greenpeace, i do, but isuppose >> not for greenpeace, i do, but i suppose they might do. >> paints a picture, >> i think it paints a picture, though, doesn't it? >> that was a little >> i think that was a little mean the wing people. mean to the right wing people. i think they're also good volunteers. >> i think being >> i think you're being deliberately >> i think you're being delokay.3ly is is, to >> okay. which is which is, to be think would know i be fair, i think i would know i think would know a bit about, think i would know a bit about, but no, i mean, look, come on, do you think bbc maybe do you not think the bbc maybe have of a duty explain have a bit of a duty to explain themselves here? >> yeah. i newsnight >> yeah. look, i think newsnight is if i'm honest, that is a joke. if i'm honest, that is a joke. if i'm honest, that is not balanced. that's not a balanced any way. is not balanced. that's not a baleknow, any way. is not balanced. that's not a baleknow, you any way. is not balanced. that's not a baleknow, you said, ny way. is not balanced. that's not a baleknow, you said, there y. you know, as you said, there should different of should be different types of people, were same people, and they were the same type of people. >> and the supposedly blue >> yeah. and the supposedly blue walls, i mean, that's the other that's the other aspect of this, isn't which supposedly isn't it? which is supposedly it's a very a quote unquote tory area. and that's very refined, evidently area , evidently very refined area, refined area. >> lots, lots of swimming and
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greenpeace volunteering going on. >> how long have i got left on this? can i potentially play you that again? because that did crack me up first time crack me up the first time round. i got time to play round. have i got time to play that maybe hopefully. that again? maybe hopefully. let's that again? maybe hopefully. let'i recently graduated from >> i recently graduated from university in media and environmental communication, so i learnt lot the climate i learnt a lot about the climate crisis. good evening. >> my name is elizabeth. i live locally, i also volunteer with greenpeace distance swimmer. >> both in rivers and in the sea. >> i volunteer with two local refugee charities and i live in south cambridgeshire. >> i work for migrants rights organisation in cambridge , and i organisation in cambridge, and i just wanted to echo some of the points we've heard tonight about the hostile immigration environment. >> one. right, right. >> that one. right, right. >> that one. right, right. >> i'm going 95. >> i'm going solid 95. >> i'm going solid 95. >> i'll give you that last >> no, i'll give you that last one. but the rest of them, i think is a i think it's a disservice to right wing people to assume they wouldn't do volunteering with any organisation. >> to make some >> you are allowed to make some assumptions people, assumptions about people, though. know, though. people say, you know, i'm i'm a staunch football fan i'm a i'm a staunch football fan and i'm proud member and i'm a proud member of the royal probably assume they're >> you probably assume they're on i think could
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on the right. i think they could be a labour voter. >> they could be, but it's not likely could likely they could be. >> reveal >> right. it's time to reveal now tonight's greatest now with tonight's greatest president union jackass mark is your britain. are your greatest britain. are a pretty obvious one, really. >> i'm going for, the queen. camilla, done an absolutely fine job. we've seen the king himself on the front page of the daily telegraph. but under these circumstances , she has really circumstances, she has really stepped up to the plate. and if you think back ten, 20 years, she was not a popular personality or a royal at all, inch by inch and through great dignity and service, she hasn't just salvaged her reputation . just salvaged her reputation. it's gone absolutely booming. >> all right, go on. adam, mine is rachel mcclean, for being cleared apparent hate cleared of an apparent hate crime. and that crime was apparently to tell the greens that they don't know what a woman is. okay, all right, mine's gloria steinem, who is a pioneer, pioneering feminist who turned 90 this week. >> okay. all right. not really . >> okay. all right. not really. >> okay. all right. not really. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> yeah, she was the feminist. everyone liked because she was
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the hot one. there were others, but she is incredibly talented . but she is incredibly talented. >> she's 90 in that picture. thatis >> she's 90 in that picture. that is amazing. >> i mean, that might not be that might not from that might not be from this week, he week, but it's recent. but he does amazing. amazing, does look amazing. he's amazing, right. does look amazing. he's amazing, rigiokay. greatest briton >> okay. today's greatest briton is rachel mclean mp. there we go. right. okay, now time rattled through these, union jackass, york saint john university when i was at university. reservoir dogs came out that violent movie with a couple of trigger warnings, but we got through it as university undergraduates. york saint john university has now put white supremacy trigger warnings for its students on peter pan and alice in wonderland . alice in wonderland. >> come see me. right. okay. go on. >> mine is the home office. they've granted 275 migrants visas for a fictitious care home that did not exist. didn't exist 7 that did not exist. didn't exist ? they're not doing their job. >> okay. mine is doctor andrew kelso, who put out a warning this week advising british people you eat people that you can't eat a whole easter egg this weekend and need to ration it. and that you need to ration it. what silly thing say. it's what a silly thing to say. it's easter. eat your easter egg and
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enjoy easter. eat your easter egg and enijaster eggs okay, now i might >> easter eggs okay, now i might shock few people here, but shock a few people here, but tonight's union tonight's winner of the union jackass is indeed back. >> doctor andrew >> a suggestion of doctor andrew kelso , who advised us all not to kelso, who advised us all not to eat easter egg in one go. eat an easter egg in one go. just get out of our lives. all right, easter. thank you, right, happy easter. thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you to everybody watched. i to everybody who's watched. i will from 9 pm. will be live again from 9 pm. tomorrow. it is headliners next. see then. see you then. >> a brighter outlook with boxt solar sponsors of weather on . gb news. >> evening. welcome to your latest weather update from the met office for gb news. the weather continues to throw pretty much everything at for pretty much everything at us for the downpours for the heavy downpours for tomorrow, and tomorrow, snow in places and some along the south some gusty winds along the south coast. thanks to this area of low pressure bands of showers have been spreading across the country the past 24 country throughout the past 24 hours or so, and another one spreading north. tonight will bnng spreading north. tonight will bring some wet weather across southern england, south wales and that will develop some snow, perhaps the midlands. perhaps over the west midlands. certainly of certainly parts of
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gloucestershire , herefordshire gloucestershire, herefordshire and and then and into central and then northern of wales, mostly northern parts of wales, mostly over the hills. the snow. but there could be some at lower levels, heavy for many levels, heavy rain for many elsewhere clears elsewhere as the rain clears from and northern from scotland and northern ireland. frost ireland. some pockets of frost certainly then certainly likely here. and then we at the winds picking up we look at the winds picking up along south coast. very along the south coast. a very blustery come tomorrow . blustery day to come tomorrow. met warning in met office yellow warning in place winds here and for place for the winds here and for the rain in northern ireland. cause some today with cause some problems today with more and snow here more rain and hill snow here tomorrow that cause tomorrow again that could cause further disruption. nowhere immune from the downpours though. thursday and for though. during thursday and for most of us, going to feel pretty chilly as well. temperatures while struggling to get to double and feeling colder double digits and feeling colder with the wind and the rain as we go through weekend . go through the long weekend. signs of the weather getting at least little drier. better least a little drier. better chance seeing sunshine chance of seeing some sunshine on friday, particularly chance of seeing some sunshine on northerny, particularly chance of seeing some sunshine on northern england|larly chance of seeing some sunshine on northern england and' over northern england and eastern england. in the morning. showers almost showers will develop almost everywhere by the afternoon. fewer on saturday and fewer showers on saturday and easter day at this stage, looking largely dry and signs of things at least turning just a little warmer .
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little warmer. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers sponsors of weather on gb news
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news. >> good evening. in a moment. headliners first, let's bring you the latest developments from the united states and in the state of maryland. divers have now, we understand, recovered
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the remains of two construction workers from baltimore harbour after a cargo ship collided with after a cargo ship collided with a bridge, causing the entire structure to collapse. state police are saying the bodies of the two men were found trapped underwater in a truck near the midsection of the fallen key bridge. we understand that efforts to recover more bodies in baltimore are currently suspended because of dangerous conditions. the collapse of that bridge, a major highway across the harbour, has forced the port to close and could complicate traffic for months or even years to come. it is one of the busiest ports in the eastern united states . here at home, united states. here at home, labour says it will ban the bonuses of water company bosses who oversee the polluting of britain's waterways , as it's britain's waterways, as it's after new figures show raw sewage was dumped in england's rivers and seas for more than 3.6 million hours in 2023. that's more than double the previous year, and the highest level on record . the teacher who level on record. the teacher who lost his job for what he said
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