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tv   Headliners  GB News  June 5, 2024 2:00am-3:01am BST

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gb news. >> it's 11:00 here with jb news in a moment. headliners. but first, let's bring you the latest news headlines and the top story. tonight, the prime minister and the labour leader traded blows in the first tv debate of the of this general election campaign. going head to head rishi sunak claimed sir keir starmer would raid pension pots and hike taxes, telling voters you name it, labour will tax it. >> inflation is back to normal , >> inflation is back to normal, wages are growing, taxes are now being cut, costs would put all that progress at risk. he would put up everyone's taxes by £2,000, £2,000 in higher taxes for every working family in our country. after all the hard work and sacrifice we've been through, that's not the right course of action. i don't know why you want to put up people's taxes. >> well, the cost of living also came up in the debate, as did
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the nhs , which sir keir starmer the nhs, which sir keir starmer said is broken as he questioned the prime minister's maths around waiting lists. >> it's unforgivable what's happened to the nhs to and come into power for 14 years and leave the nhs in a worse state than when you found it, is unforgivable in politics. and rishi sunak stood 18 months ago, janet, and said that those waiting lists, which are now nearly 8 million, he said he'd get them down. he made a promise. he said he'd be held accountable. they were 7.2 million at the time. now they're 7.5 million. so they've gone up and that bears down on the nhs . and that bears down on the nhs. >> while dividing lines were also drawn when the debate moved on to immigration, with both leaders asked by the host to lower their voices. at one point rishi sunak insisting deportation flights would take off to rwanda. but he told the debate only if i'm your prime minister he also suggested he'd be willing to leave the european convention on human rights, while sir keir starmer said the
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uk risked becoming a pariah state if it left. however the labour leader went on to tell voters he supported processing migrant claims in third countries. if it's possible to do that in compliance with international law, well, that came as more than 200 migrants arrived in the uk on small boats this morning. four vessels made the trip from northern france after 63 people managed to cross yesterday. it takes the total number of illegal migrants who've arrived in the uk so far this year to more than 10,500. that's up 38% on last year. now, elsewhere on the election campaign trail today, both the conservative and labour parties condemned an incident involving reform's leader nigel farage, the new reform leader was leaving a pub in essex when he had a milkshake thrown at him. a 25 year old woman has been arrested on suspicion of assault. meanwhile, the lib dems were out campaigning as well today. their issue social care
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and the scottish national party condemned conservative plans to kerb visas for migrants. that's a round up of your latest news. for the latest stories, do sign up to gb news alerts, scan the qr code on your screen or go to gb news. com slash alerts time now for headliners . now for headliners. >> hello and welcome to headliners, your first look at wednesday's newspapers with me, simon evans. >> and on my comedian panel tonight representing the north london massive. we have josh howie and a man who's just massive leo kearse how are you. yeah. good. thanks. yeah feeling good and limber after last night's excursion . night's excursion. >> this was the live headliners comedy night last night. >> yeah we got to actually meet the people out there who watched the people out there who watched the show. >> i know dozens of them. amazing. yeah. >> no wonder they were so , like.
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>> no wonder they were so, like. >> no wonder they were so, like. >> they were so happy. >> they were so happy. >> it was lovely, wasn't it.7 >> it was lovely, wasn't it.7 >> it was lovely, wasn't it.7 >> it was. it was genuinely a good atmosphere. you kicked it off, didn't you.7 yeah, good atmosphere. you kicked it off, didn't you? yeah, yeah. >> and then you left and went and had a kebab. >> yeah. i was in east london. >> yeah. i was in east london. >> josh held the thing together. >> josh held the thing together. >> yeah, but you guys, you both smashed it. >> it was wonderful watching you both do your thing. >> it was tremendous, wasn't it? and andrew doyle was there in his own persona. >> yeah. fantastic >> yeah. fantastic >> it's a great night. it was fun. >> hopefully they're going to do more around the country or whatever. i don't know, i would hope so. >> maybe a tour of america, i think maybe texas or something like that could be. >> yeah, yeah, australia. >> yeah, yeah, australia. >> let's just do an international. >> really would like to roll out populist, right leaning tv channels in america. i think we should take them on, get into the college's first daily mail, kick us off with our headlines tonight . kick us off with our headlines tonight. fiery rishi comes out swinging and lands big blows. they got that down quickly . they got that down quickly. guardian leaders clash on migration , tax and nhs in ill migration, tax and nhs in ill tempered debate here once again, with the ill behaviour .
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with the ill behaviour. financial times they have an image . image. >> they apparently it says indian voters deliver shock to modi after ruling bjp fails to win majority. >> but i think the original image was punchier. mirror these are all good men , d—day, 80 are all good men, d—day, 80 years on. not many of them left. now, sadly . metro shaky start now, sadly. metro shaky start for sure. farage that's a clever pun on having a milkshake chucked in your face and finally, the daily star as bo aukus are just like kevin the teenagen aukus are just like kevin the teenager. i don't know if they were in clacton as well. anyway, those were your front pages . so those were your front pages. so kicking off our in—depth look is the daily mail here. the daily mail leads with the debate between starmer and rishi and they say fiery rishi comes out swinging and lands big blows, making it sound a bit more exciting than it actually was , exciting than it actually was, but like sexual swinging. >> yeah, and big blows.
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>> yeah, and big blows. >> yeah, and big blows. >> yeah, it could go either way anyway. >> but the pm has claimed that keir is plotting a £2,000 tax rise for every family in the uk, and he's hammered labour opposition, labour on opposition to rwanda. >> and instant polls showed, showed that voters judge sunak the winner. but it's interesting that, rishi says that tax rises were in labour's dna, which makes rishi a labour leader. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> assume absolute well against he's going gone against his nature. you could see it's actually he's worked hard against his own grain to introduce. actually i'm a little bit puzzled by this 2000. i'm all for a bit of propaganda , you all for a bit of propaganda, you know, and wild claims that can't be established or, you know, what's the word? verified, but £2,000 per family that just it's kind of i mean, it's meaningless , isn't it? obviously there's progressive tax rates. half of people in this country don't even pay tax at the moment, i think. yeah. well beneficiaries of the state. >> yeah i mean yeah. so start starmer should have hit back way, way harder on that. but it was just a badly formatted debate. yeah they weren't.
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neither of them were given enough time . and especially with enough time. and especially with sunak being kind of rude really and stepping in, i don't think people like to see that. yes, he won, but it was like 51% to 49 donald against hillary, though . donald against hillary, though. yeah, but then that's america in it and they're all scum. but over here i just don't know if that that kind of stuff works . that that kind of stuff works. and, and i think, starmer, he came back with a few good things, but i don't know if you ever really get enough time to get into it. >> this isn't going to make very much difference, is it, compared to having 14 years of tory rule to having 14 years of tory rule to judge them on? i mean, it's not. what you are basically seeing is a kind of charisma contest, very much like nixon, kennedy and all those famous ones where, you know, without the charisma. >> yeah, exactly. >> yeah, exactly. >> yeah. well, that's what did for nixon in those days, wasn't it? they said. but they're going to be a bbc one. is this one of a series? i haven't been paying attention because they did a gb news one before, didn't they? >> right. >> right. >> well, just that that was only i don't think that was both of them though, right. that was just, sort of, and no third party, obviously too late for farage to be invited on or. well, lib dems weren't, because we had that one with seven of
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them on last time, didn't we? yeah, that was the big one. yeah. but that was also the deputy leaders. didn't they also have some of that? yeah, i know this. i was more i was also interested in the set. it looked very much like tron. yeah. that was why i got lost in i was like, this is so sci fi, let's move on to the metro now. josh yeah, shaky start for farage. and this is, nigel farage getting a, milkshake thrown in his face and this is just a very sad state of affairs that this kind of stuff still goes on, that then people on the left, you have owen jones sort of celebrating it and tweeting out that it was art when owen jones himself was physically assaulted. yeah. and you know and that and people across the political spectrum, as annoying as he is condemned it rightly so. so the hypocrisy, of course there. and it's a shame that this is what replaces rhetoric . this is what replaces rhetoric. yeah. is, is this kind of it's an assault. he doesn't know what that could have been. that could
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have been acid. that could have been anything. >> this is the thing i think people do underestimate it. or do they all know and not care. but it would really accelerate your heart rate. you would feel a real cortisol spike. and, you know, there is a danger that, obviously that, you know, somebody will elevate the actual contents of that milkshake at some point. but absolutely, deeply unpleasant thing to happen. >> and if you look at the continent, well, and, and in this country as well, there's been some as well. >> there's been serious attacks on politicians on both sides in germany . i on politicians on both sides in germany. i mean, just, just the other day, a politician or a political activist was was stabbed at a at a rally. so you know, to sort of normalise attacking politicians is pretty, pretty bad . i think if anybody pretty bad. i think if anybody throws a milkshake at me, they're going to be drinking their next milkshake through a through a straw. >> that's a good threat. >> that's a good threat. >> i like that one. but do you think the fact, do you think she got through security because she was like young and pretty and blonde and they i mean, i do think seriously, i think he was trying to do a kind of man of the people thing, wasn't he? >> he's gone to clacton, which is obviously he feels he's like his, you know, a very safe space for him. but he's, you know, he's not going to be short of
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security if this if this carries on. well, i mean, i don't think he'll stop. i think he will create more of a kind of ring around. >> she's she's got an onlyfans apparently. >> so apparently this is just to sort of promote her onlyfans. >> it's obviously used to, you know, having , having liquids thrown. >> well , i thrown. >> well, i remember there was a fella who tried all over. >> it was a fella who tried to launch his old comedy career off, throwing a pie in rupert murdoch's face. oh, really? wasn't there? >> was that aaron barschak? >> was that aaron barschak? >> yeah, the comedy terrorist. >> yeah, the comedy terrorist. >> i'm going to launch a thing called only fathers. i dress, i dress up as these women's dads, and they pay me 7.99. and i tell them that i'm proud of them and their life choices. >> and they're not going out dressed like that . finally, the dressed like that. finally, the daily star. josh, yeah. >> asbo walkers are just like kevin the teenager supposedly in the mediterranean. there's been a spate of yachts being sunk by these walkers. and it turns out boffins, good old boffins , have boffins, good old boffins, have stepped in to tell us that it's basically because they're a bit bored. they're teenagers and they've got nothing else to do. so that is the kind of entertainment. so so that is the kind of entertainment . so they really entertainment. so they really they need to sort of build some
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youth clubs for, for aukus, not because they're all hanging out at the underground bus shelters under the sea. and now that's what they're getting up to. >> but it is i mean, they they are, you know, by some metrics, the most intelligent animals on the most intelligent animals on the planet, aren't they? but us. yeah. >> no, but we've got like, computers and stuff. >> we're like the species equivalent of the tory government. >> we've had we've had our 2 million years on earth and we're getting a massive down vote from the rest of the planet. >> i think they're going to put the killer whales in charge. they have quite sort of human like social organisation , don't like social organisation, don't they? which is clearly what they're going on by here. yeah, yeah. and they've attacked, migrant boats before. >> yeah, so, so yeah. >> well, i mean, i'm, i mean, that has got to be if anybody was drinking at home, that would be, that would just be like, that's just a shot. how can you how can you bring in migrant boats? it's a story about orcas because they're attacking people. >> can we get them migrant boats? adding it's adding to the dangen >> you got them into the minors. i mean , that is the perfect i mean, that is the perfect plausible deniability. >> think about seeing something like that. >> but it's the orcas that get
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cupped >> but it's the orcas that get clipped out and played in court. >> look at this despicable racist . i'm happy to see you >> look at this despicable racist. i'm happy to see you in there. >> we'd be really. we'd be delighted to welcome you into another nation. but the orcas ain't having it. >> i'm sorry , sir, that is the >> i'm sorry, sir, that is the front pages done. >> stay with us for part two, where we have the latest wild gambles in the vaccine. chickens coming home to roost. we'll see you
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and welcome back to headliners with me, simon evans. still here with me, simon evans. still here with leo kearse and josh howie telegraph. first leo, another tory policy shamelessly, shamelessly aimed at bringing the under 30s back into the fold. >> yes , the tories are to scrap >> yes, the tories are to scrap inheritance tax in a big throw of the dice, says osborne. >> george osborne, the former chancellor there is not really that big a throw of the dice. it's like something that's going to appeal to people who vote tories. >> yeah, and it's not going to
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change anyone's mind who's going against it, but it might get some people out of the armchair , some people out of the armchair, i guess. yeah, yeah. >> might get them down to the down to the polling station because yeah, it's exactly what tories want to hear and is a really unfair tax because people have already paid tax on that money. >> several times by the time they get to death, and they can't even give it to their kids. it's like, what are we, the soviet union? >> well, i totally agree. i don't think there should be any tax, obviously total libertarian, but these are slightly problematic argument there because you know, vat, you could say the same thing. you've already paid income tax on your money and then you pay further tax when you make a purchase. yeah. >> and then you pay this one as well. >> yeah. exactly. so these almost all taxes are a bit like that. i mean i do think it's wrong, although it doesn't kick in very low now does it. i think it's about was it 300,000. >> yeah. i mean the thing is i'm in two minds about this. one is it would cost a lot of money. we there's a lot of money that is made for inherited tax, rightly or wrongly. yeah. on the other hand, how how, good health are my parents in? yeah. obviously.
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so yeah. >> so you can't help thinking, well so really i would you know, you joked about it being for under 30s, but this is really to appeal to the kind of 40s 50s. >> no, no, i'm, i'm saying that. oh yeah, i was being. >> oh you mean it doesn't appeal to under 30 people. under 30? their parents aren't going to clock it. yeah. most people's parents die when they are in their 50s or 60s now. >> so that's do you think that. yeah. january that is probably who they're trying to look at, funnily enough, my good friend sam ashworth hayes, who i believe has appeared on the channel a couple of times, sort of economist with the daily telegraph, he has, written about this to some extent. it won't save the money. it will actually cost them money. it actually you want there to be low. i mean, it will, it will, it will encourage people to make good investment decisions, basically with lots of money. you want the wealthy people to invest in such a way that it benefits the economy, rather than just trying to protect ring fence. their their wealth and make sure it gets inherited. and so actually, by removing inheritance tax you
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tend actually to. >> yeah, yeah . >> yeah, yeah. >> yeah, yeah. >> that's interesting because rich people spend their money very wisely like you say. they invest and they invest in the in the companies that are going to do well. so, you know, creating jobs and creating wealth for the for the whole country . whereas for the whole country. whereas governments just take money and they might as well bury it in they might as well bury it in the ground . the amount of good the ground. the amount of good they do with it. >> absolutely. like, alzheimer's squirrels . squirrels. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> it should have been an easier way of saying that , way of saying that, unforgivably, i couldn't remember the word alzheimer's . remember the word alzheimer's. josh, the telegraph giveth the telegraph taketh away. after that story, we have bad news for the tories on the donor front. >> well, this mirrors what leo was saying. top tory donors withhold donations from party's election campaign. this is. three donors have given up to about 5 million in the past, with a possible fourth donor. now they paid £15,000 for a private polling , to kind of see private polling, to kind of see because they're tories are kind of being suggesting that there are polls that actually they're doing all right. maybe. and so these tory donors have banded together and said, you know
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what? let's just before we give the money, let's just test ourselves because they're successful business people and they've gone, oh, it's not looking good. we might as well just keep that behind because obviously they want to get a knighthood. yeah. and maybe their money might better be spent with labour. >> well, you've got to worry. you worry. you've got to wonder what the thinking is behind donors. i mean, do they do they donors. i mean, do they do they do it in the hope that they will move the dial or, you know, like move the dial or, you know, like move the dial or, you know, like move the needle, you know, encourage an election? or do they do it purely in hopes of preferment when and some of them do it for fun. >> i know one political donor who just wants to mess with the system. >> so who does he donate to me for a bit? >> yeah . >> yeah. >> yeah. >> was that invested? well, that money, i don't know. >> i mean, i think he i think he enjoyed it. okay. >> you know, there is that thing. what do they call it? altruistic. what's it called? rational altruism or something. basically like an organisation that will tell you where which charities you should spend your money on. you save the most lives or have the most effect. do they must have that equivalent thing for political donation donation as well? if, say, you have one particular
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thing you want to see legislation change on? yeah. you know, and we can all imagine uber less you know, there must be a way of doing it rather than just kind of go give money to the tories. >> that's what lobbying is, isn't it. yeah. in specialised form of that. yeah. but but it's insanely profitable lobbying like they say like an american. >> big american firms get something like over a 10,000% return on their lobbying fees. you know, like the amount of benefit. >> that's what we're seeing about rich people investing their money wisely. >> sunak really all he has to do is just ask his father in law. yeah, yeah. all right. i didn't get that 5 million. dad >> it's like. >> it's like. >> it's like that girl in common people, isn't he? yeah he just has to phone his dad. he'd make it all right. wrote he's climbing the wall. the independent leo the man, the reform phones. faiza shaheen has quit labour. where will she go? >> so blocked labour candidate faiza shaheen has quit labour and accuses it of a higher aki of racism. because of course everything is racist. these
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days, including the labour party now. so she'd been due to contest the chingford and woodford green seat held by iain duncan smith. but she was told on wednesday that the party was suspending her after she liked social media posts that criticised israel and its actions in gaza. so the move clears the path for her to potentially stand against labour as an independent, which, you know, it seems to be a bit of an issue for labour at this election. a lot of people are either because they're they're absolutely raving lunatic, woke , absolutely raving lunatic, woke, social justice warriors and, you know, think that they should campaign on the basis of gaza in this country for some reason , so this country for some reason, so they're leaving so they can, you know, be free to, you know, be as anti—semitic as they want. >> but it does work, doesn't it? i mean, that's how george galloway got his seat, wasn't it? you know, that was a single issue. that was obviously we've seen allahu akbar, break out as the new slogan for the green party. >> it's only it's only going to work to a certain extent. and in certain places. >> obviously, chingford used to be norman tebbit's constituency . be norman tebbit's constituency. that's obviously changed a bit. i think it was, wasn't it? >> yeah. i mean it has. i mean
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it is a tory vote. so iain duncan smith i think is. yeah. at the moment. but i mean when she says here says there's, there's a, she doesn't, she wants, she doesn't want to contribute to a party that seems to think so little of people like me. and i think there's an allusion there to ethnicity , but allusion there to ethnicity, but it's not about that, because of course, they've been ruthless. starmer's been ruthless against the cranks, including, lloyd russell—moyle . you know, he's russell—moyle. you know, he's a white ginger guy. he's a ginger. yeah. so it's not about ethnicity. it's about. >> right. >> right. >> yeah. well, no , it's about >> yeah. well, no, it's about corbynite cranks and i my personal theory was that starmer, like, when he came into power, people wanted him to be decisive like that. but actually, i think he did a clever thing where he let them be cranky. yeah, a lot of them kind of almost ruled themselves out and now it's got to the election. he's like, right now we have to just get rid of the and she's not even to be fair, she i mean she stood against iain duncan smith and lost. >> she's never been an mp right. she's just she was on the left. she's just she was on the left. she thought she'd be in with a shout anyway. josh forget stranger danger. it's men that are the danger. according to the met, these are horrible statistics. >> met chief says millions of men are danger to women and girls in england and wales. this
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is sir mark rowley. rowley, who? i'm not a massive fan of, and i'm not a massive fan of, and i'm not a fan of the way that he kind of brings us up, because there's a london policing board that's set up to determine how the met. there's been a bunch of scandals with met police officers in terms of attacks on women, and it seems like that's how this article reads. anyway he's bringing up these this report that hasn't come out yet, revealing the extent of violence, sexual violence and violence, sexual violence and violence towards women and most of it being carried out by men . of it being carried out by men. and it feels like he's saying, oh, well, yes, there's lots of this police stuff, but actually it's everywhere and we can't really deal with it because there's just so much of it and we need to think about preventative stuff, which is all true, but it feels like it's coming off him trying to kind of defend squid ink. >> i always call this squid ink. he's trying to create or like the diffuse camouflage of a zebra. so there is a problem. there's a whole flock of zebras. you're not going to be able to catch any one of them. >> there is a problem here, a massive problem that does need to be dealt with in our society. but there's also specifically within the police force has to be dealt with. it's absolutely.
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>> and it's always the tactic whenever they whenever somebody is coming, it's like very much like the, you know, bathroom row that's been going on for years. should trans women be allowed to use the ladies bathrooms? and they go, and it's not it's not. trans women are the issue. it's all all biological males go, well, yes, but you got to you can't just like do you know what i mean? like totally eradicate the particulars of a case and just kind of go, what are we going to do? what do you want to do? like, literally castrate the entire male population? >> oh, that is, that's the next step. we're talking about it. they're telling us we've got microplastics in our testicles and they need to come off. they're. they're talking to the guardian, published an article, i think it was yesterday saying you live longer if you have your testicles cut off. i did see that, though, which is going to be i mean, it's going to be difficult for them to find testicles on guardian readers. >> it's funny, three years ago i think it was. i got into an interesting row. it didn't last for very long with a guy called, adam, rutherford , who's a sort adam, rutherford, who's a sort of geneticist and has written books about how to argue with a racist and things like this, quite left wing ucl. and he was in a row with toby young about whether or not lockdown was good
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for us. and toby young had posted a picture of a lion in a cage kind of saying, you know, be careful, you know what happens. and rutherford was saying, actually, caged lions live longer . live longer. >> and i was like, you're literally saying what i think is he kind of made out like he was tongue in cheek, but there is this kind of, i don't know, i mean, like , this is obviously mean, like, this is obviously goes counter to the story, but we know that men's testosterone is roughly half what it was 50 years ago. >> yeah, right. and look at the state of society as a result. exactly. and i'm not saying obviously we need to get it back up because because men i mean, well, a lot of people would associate male violence with testosterone . but then another testosterone. but then another a lot of other people would say, when you have a society with strong men in it who are willing to take on the role of a patriarch who shows young men how to behave and so on, then that's a you know, you have a better chance of cheating men. but as i say, until you drill down into the statistics and the particularities of it, and the statistics are terrible in terms of 10% of 999 calls are for domestic abuse, 30. >> that's 30% of all violence
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houses. >> that's 30% of all violence houses . is that what it is? houses. is that what it is? yeah. and 50% of violence suffered, by women. total is all about domestic violence. so this has to be dealt with. >> but i suppose my point is, you know, there's always the 8020 thing, right? the pareto principle, 80% of the domestic violence will be 20, will be 20% of the men, you know, and so on. and you just want to know a little bit more detail rather than him just going, oh, it's men in it. what can you do? yeah, yeah. leo complex story here in the telegraph as well. lots of variables to unpick. but the bottom line we were lied to by the evil lizard. >> yeah, yeah. basically another another far right conspiracy theory comes true again. what is that? we're at about 290 now. yeah, but yeah. so covid vaccines may have helped fuel a rise in excess deaths . experts rise in excess deaths. experts call for more research into the side effects and possible links to mortality rates. this is researchers in the netherlands who analysed data from 47 western countries, which must be about all of them and discovered there are more than 3 million excess deaths. so that's deaths
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that wouldn't normally have occurred since 2020, with the trend continuing despite the rollout of vaccines and containment measures. so it's interesting, they say, and this is this is in the bmj public pubuc is this is in the bmj public public health. this isn't a proper peer reviewed medical journal . and you know better journal. and you know better than the lancet. it's not it's not cool signed by a chinese funden not cool signed by a chinese funder. but, but yeah , it says funder. but, but yeah, it says although covid 19 vaccines were provided to guard civilians from suffering morbidity and mortality by the covid 19 virus, suspected adverse events have been documented as well. i mean, anyone who said this two years ago would have their youtube channel taken down, you know, i mean, it was treated really seriously. so maybe we shouldn't censor people in the future. and also remember how anybody who had covid, if they then died, even if they were hit by a bus, it was recorded as a covid death with covid. we should do that with covid. we should do that with the vaccine. anybody who's been vaccinated that dies, they died with the vaccine. yeah. >> you know, this is, maybe slightly oblique to that, but my father in law died nine years ago. he had a couple of strokes. the first one put him in
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hospital, and then he sort of stabilised. and then he had a second one, and he died on his death certificate . it gave his death certificate. it gave his death certificate. it gave his death as prostate cancer, which he'd been living with for many years. i mean, it's not the same thing, but i don't know how important that is for statistics, but absolutely, he did not die of prostate cancer. it was nothing to do with his death. and we saw that. my wife saw it and was like, that's a bit odd. but yeah, whatever. you know, you do kind of wonder. i mean, that's just the one death certificate, but that's a very small sample size. but the interesting thing for me is that reading all the papers today, this is, as far as i can tell, this is, as far as i can tell, this was the only telegraph was the only paper who covered this story. >> yeah, this is a big deal. i had the, i took the vaccine even though i'd had at least twice. oh, really? so i feel stupid going along with it. but for me , going along with it. but for me, the main thing is here. let's follow the side is everyone's always going. follow the science. let's follow the science. let's follow the science. all right then. well, there does seem to be down that road. >> yeah, well, this is it. >> yeah, well, this is it. >> well, that's what i say. are we allowed, are we allowed to
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follow the science in this case. because let's get to the bottom. let's actually look into this. that's what they're saying. but as long as most of our media, institutions are unwilling to even sort of print an article like this, we're not going to get any answers. nothing in our lifetime. >> will. they sewed in, you know, created so many hostages to fortune on their own front pages. we have to go to the break now, but join us after the break now, but join us after the break for news of portable knife scanners. schools and gender neutral haircuts. what a world. we'll see you
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welcome back to headliners so, josh, the portable knife scanners are to be trialled by the met. and hopefully they have portable magnets as well. if they need to remove them. very good, police to trial . portable good, police to trial. portable knife scanners to, that detect weapons in close at a distance , weapons in close at a distance, like up to about ten feet. right. and they can sort of have this little scanner thing and you can, you can see if you've got a gun or a knife in you, and this is a really good opportunity for the police to be secretly racist . yeah. i think secretly racist. yeah. i think that, that that's because there's obviously a lot of issues with, stop and search. stop and search and the numbers constantly being on decline, but knife crime being going up. yeah, i wonder if there's a correlation there between the two of those. and so this way, everybody's happy. >> so they're just going to follow the scanner. >> just just following the scanner. i don't know, i'm not. i'm colour—blind i don't i'm not
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looking anywhere. oh, there's a beep beep. >> so we haven't seen a pitch yet have we. >> so we don't know whether it's kind of x ray vision where you can actually see the outline of the knife or whether it's just a presence of metal around. >> do you think, do you think the police have been reading the beano and seeing an advert in the back for x ray specs, and this is the answer to our dreams. we can just wear these at the tube station. yeah but yeah, apparently it's a handheld device just the size of a large mobile phone with a scanner and digital screen, which sounds sounds amazing . yeah. like josh sounds amazing. yeah. like josh says, it's going to like everybody's going to be happy apart from the people with knives. you will. >> i mean, they will have to it. maybe it's a smaller threshold, but they will have to eventually step up to the person who's just been surreptitiously scanned and then demand a check. yeah, yeah. >> i mean, the weird thing they did say something weird in this article. they said it's going to increase it from the current rate of 25% of positive stop. and searches to 30. and i'm sure they made a mistake there because that that seems like a very i was going to have a 5% increase. like, yeah, no, that doesn't make sense at all. but yeah. all right. good. >> it's all to do with bayes theorems , i believe. leo, the
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theorems, i believe. leo, the daily mail have a story about us school infrastructure that puts leaky roofs into perspective. yeah >> so american schools are being radically redesigned to prevent mass shootings and slow down gunman. if they do get inside the school . so the doors are the school. so the doors are going to be magnet locked with the push of a phone key. every window and door has a bullet resistant glass film and panic buttons are everywhere, and they're making the hallways curved so people can't shoot down them. they're also putting, sort of wing walls jutting out, like, you know, you get the buttress on a church for people to hide behind. it's crazy. the amount of work and the expense, like one school is being redesigned and it's costing $50 million. they make the walls thick so they can't be shot through because previous gunmen have just shot through the walls in the in the school. so yeah, i mean, it's kind of terrifying that i mean, america's obviously the best country in the world. and like, i'd love to live there except, you know, having kids. yeah, it does worry me that if statistically there's i mean, it is possible to exaggerate it. >> it's such a vivid image, a school shooting. it stays with
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you for months, doesn't it. and so, yeah , parents are terrified so, yeah, parents are terrified you. it does surprise me that this is the best way to spend the money, rather than on measures to prevent guns getting into the school in the first place. yeah, you would kind of think that would be you'd have a couple of pinch points with, you know. >> yeah, well, they built they built that into it as well. yeah. right. but, but yeah, it's, i just think it's just terrible that this is, this level of thought has to go into saving children's lives rather than, i don't know, outlawing guns are or whatever. yeah. >> if you outlaw guns , then, you >> if you outlaw guns, then, you know, you end up being ruled by a tyrannical government. well, the are they. >> arguably they already are. that's what they're worrying. >> that's what they say. they're worried about, isn't it? that they they want to get their guns back because then they have tyranny. i suspect it's because there are loads of criminals who've already got guns who won't give their guns back. yeah. you know, i think that's what they're more worried about. seriously? yeah. >> like banning guns here doesn't stop people getting shot. >> no, but there's no school shootings. >> what about the psychology of children? does it matter or will it? they would get used to it
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after a week. and just think it's funny. i yeah i don't know. >> i just think that they're already i think they're already being messed up to be honest. i mean, they have all these, not trials. what are they called? you know, the transitioning they have transitioning as well. and then they also have all these, you know, where they like fire alarms, but for gun shooting. oh, yeah. drills. drills? yes. drills. yeah >> this may be quite funny. it'll be like goudi esque corridors with the curves and stuff. yeah. make make it like willy wonka style, but it'll be an arms race. >> somebody will develop a bullet that could keen off the side of a curved corridor. daily mail. that's very sick. observation j, a bit of a sub. lineker apology action going on at the bbc. >> yeah. bbc pundit forced to apologise after posting image of rishi sunak. president biden and other world leaders with hitler moustaches that labelled them the kids killers union. this is a bbc pundit who is, mr sheikh, qasim sheikh. he is a former scottish international cricketer. he's about to do his
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first, term in jail. cricketer. he's about to do his first, term in jail . no, no, first, term in jail. no, no, he's fine, he's fine. he's a commentary on the bbc for cricket. and so these social media. >> so they get all the skeletons out. yeah. >> they feed out now. and he's, he said, oh i'm really sorry, but he's sort of he says a thing here like this is after october 7th saying that, you know, don't the palestinians have a right to defend themselves? it's like, mate, rape is not resistance . so mate, rape is not resistance. so this kind of, the bbc now have a thing where they go, where they go. >> you're going to be a commentator. can we have your twitter account? and then they just run it through a kind of automated. yeah, you know, offence check. and they go that one, that one and that one and that one. you're going to have to apologise for that. delete that, contextualise that one's 5050. that has got to go. >> i think in this case they were just checking the tweets the same kind of stuff as gary lineker. yeah. so he's all good. he's just yeah he's just perfect for the bbc. >> could you just use the term 30s rhetoric a bit more instead of hitler moustache? >> so i just want to say
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something in 2022. he's one of the cricketers who opened up about their experiences of racism . oh, really? and it's racism. oh, really? and it's just like the epoxy and one of the other cricketers as well, also then found out he'd been calling jewish people online cheap and all this other guy in yorkshire. no, i think there's a different guy, but this is one of the same. the same part. that's part of the same thing here. so it's just again, it's just the hypocrisy. and now what? i pay the tax, i pay my licence fee. some of that money is going to go to him. why do you is going to go to him. why do you pay is going to go to him. why do you pay a licence fee, because i'm a law abiding citizen . i'm a law abiding citizen. >> it's not against the law to not pay it. >> well, if i watch the bbc and laptop. well, i don't know. >> i watch the neighbours on the socials a few times last night. >> nice bit of vigilante justice in the sun. yeah, in the sun. in fact, in spain . right. so, yeah. fact, in spain. right. so, yeah. >> so this is the dramatic moment of furious dad punches a comedian on stage during show. we're making . we're making. >> we've got a clip. >> we've got a clip. >> oh, we've got a clip from making shock pedal comments. >> come on, let's have a look at it. it's a good calf cam. >> oh . >> oh. >> oh. >> paedophiles . hijo
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>> paedophiles. hijo >> paedophiles. hijo >> comentarios hijo de basura. >> comentarios hijo de basura. >> ahora a un hijo a comer contest. >> messi's a and we're back on air. >> we're all doing it. >> we're all doing it. >> didn't seem that funny. wasn't that funny to me? >> no, that was spanish comedian jaime caravaca, who's in the middle of his show in madrid on monday night when an enraged attacker interrupted his performance and punched him on the side of the head. they say it's a heavy blow here, but it clearly wasn't. it was a calf, wasn't it? yeah, yeah, it was a calf. calf. and you know, i'm not normally in favour of comedians getting punched in the head while on stage. but this guy, this fat, the fat guy who got punched, the comedian leg up, the one with his leg up, the one getting the one getting punched. he he posted some absolutely horrific, obscene , absolutely horrific, obscene, paedophilic comments about the guys ' paedophilic comments about the guys , the guy's baby and the guys, the guy's baby and the guy's, they call him a far right activist , which guy's, they call him a far right activist, which means he's a normal guy. probably, yeah, just a regular dad, you know what i mean? like, so he , he, you know,
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mean? like, so he, he, you know, posted a picture of his son saying how proud he was and stuff. and this horrible left wing comedian comes along and posts the paedophilia . i'm posts the paedophilia. i'm amazed that dad didn't kill him with a hammer. >> to be honest, this is the kind of thing i was talking about where you need a bit of testosterone so that men are men. you know, and defend their families. >> defend like i need some testosterone. then i'll stop being a i wonder if he'll do good for his career, because, of course, jim jefferies , that course, jim jefferies, that really that's what broke him. >> that's true. that whole cctv for the comedy store. yeah. yeah, that's what made him. >> and also paedophilia is very popular in the left these days. >> so let's not let's not imply that jim jefferies has anything like that. no, he was just punched. >> there was no there's no babies. >> he was just a bad joke. josh. gender neutral haircuts in the telegraph. and as long as the banter doesn't follow suit, i don't mind . oh, god, don't mind. oh, god, hairdressing chain, i mean. oh, god, not your link . more about god, not your link. more about this story. hairdressing chain. headmasters. i've never heard of makes, every day agenda neutral hair day. so the two elements to this, it feels like there is
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something here to be said. you know, men who have long hair, women have short hair. if they are, they should be charged accordingly. but whereas typically women, regardless of their hairstyle, are charged more. yeah. so it makes sense to make it fair in that way. more. yeah. so it makes sense to make it fair in that way . but to make it fair in that way. but to make it fair in that way. but to make it fair in that way. but to make it about this sort of gender identity rubbish is annoying. it's tiresome. >> and also, this is one of the few hairdressers, it's called headmasters or something, where they presumably do , they are they presumably do, they are open to both, but in reality men and women generally go to different establishments anyway, don't they? >> because it's too expensive in these places for many years it's been 20 years. it's £40 for a man's haircut in this place. and also they're just overcomplicating it. instead of saying men's and women's, they're saying like, you know, this is a cut and blow dry instead of a lady's cut and blow dry. it's like, i remember being at the adelaide comedy festival and they had on the toilets. they had, oh , this these are they had, oh, this these are gender neutral toilets, but this one contains tampons dispensers. oh, these are, this is a gender neutral toilet. but it contains urinals. it's like, do you see men and women? it's like, why are you making me read an essay before i go into the men's? or like, you know, every nose pan urinal?
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>> yeah , yeah, i'm going to >> yeah, yeah, i'm going to boycott them. >> good for you. that's boycott is a different thing. again, that's the end of part three. join us in the final section for space germ's no sex, please it's matchday and an that lets you speak to the dead. see
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and welcome back to the final section of headliners. leo, over to the mail. and the latest on the crucial decisions facing gareth southgate. in fact, come to think of it, a southgate would be a good name for a chastity belt. >> very good, very good. so this is the science of sex bands. it's why stopping wags that's wives and girlfriends from visiting the england team. really could help their euro 2024 chances. apparently a ban on having sex is traditionally been thought to improve players stamina and focus because they're not all relaxed from from orgasming. but they do studies here. they squads from,
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russia, bosnia—herzegovina , russia, bosnia—herzegovina, chile, mexico were all told to refrain, refrain from sex while other teams were allowed to have sex and it was the ones who had sex and it was the ones who had sex who took first place. and the rules for different countries are quite interesting. so not all night for the french and nothing acrobatic for the brazilians . and nothing acrobatic for the brazilians. this and nothing acrobatic for the brazilians . this is and nothing acrobatic for the brazilians. this is official advice they got from the managers and for the nigerian team. they were told only with wives, not with girlfriends . wives, not with girlfriends. >> well, i mean, i imagine these are all sort of culturally related, aren't they? i suppose the brazilian one, they just don't want to twist an ankle or something. but it there are just too many variables, aren't there for it? >> there are. but there was one study where they studied some israeli players, and it did prove that , over a season, their prove that, over a season, their speed, decreased by about five kilometres, 0.5km an hour on the pitch after having sex the night before. >> so if they if they were allowed to have sex, they became less less, less, less, less speedy, which is interesting. >> but there's all these
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different theories. well, they don't cover here is any gay sex, right? they don't also cover like women having women sex between two players, including that that could be a massive detrimental , impact. that that could be a massive detrimental, impact. but that that could be a massive detrimental , impact. but also detrimental, impact. but also they don't discuss women who've had sex before, their bags, performance, no bars, whatever . yeah. >> boyfriends and husbands. wives. yeah yeah. >> so, but the idea is. yeah. less testosterone. is it relaxed? but then some people say it relaxes you. does it? i like to have sex just before coming on. headliners and, that is why i'm so at ease here. >> that's why i'm chafed. >> that's why i'm chafed. >> horrible imagery there. the viral frontier. now, josh, with the telegraph getting antsy. i'm sure these used to be called spores. >> yeah . well, this. yeah. okay, >> yeah. well, this. yeah. okay, so the viral frontier. nasa told act now to tackle pathogens in space. the idea being, of course, that we may be eventually leaving our solar system , but actually the it's system, but actually the it's quite a big article . but what is quite a big article. but what is really interesting is out in space because there's more
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radiation than there's the opportunity for diseases to sort of mutate quicker. so if an astronaut goes up, they if they've got the cold or something and it mutates and then they bring it back down to earth, it's a super cold. hello new plot for a film. >> incredible hulk cold type thing. >> yeah. so that seems to be the real danger as opposed to pathogens from outer space, which wouldn't be used to this environment would probably die. >> although there are, there is a theory that we are all descended from a pathogen from outer space, right? that that's the origin of life rather than it being a spark in these descended from adam and eve, of course you are absolutely right. yes. you're going with a nigeria , an angle . do yes. you're going with a nigeria , an angle. do you yes. you're going with a nigeria , an angle . do you have a fear , an angle. do you have a fear of pathogens from space here? not really . not really. >> but it's interesting that pathogens, when they go into space, they mutate quicker because also time there's some sort of time dilation where, if you come back, everybody's old. oh yeah. like in planet of the apes. >> yeah. hundreds of years go by. yeah, yeah. on to an entirely new regime. yeah. >> and apparently, even when you travel in a plane like you get,
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there's a minute unnoticeable time dilation. yeah. >> but if you do it over a long enough period of time, like the stewardesses . right? yeah. stewardesses. right? yeah. >> is that why you look a bit older? >> support stockings . leo. >> support stockings. leo. independent. and the boffins have found another tiny little bird of happiness they can snip off. and funnily enough , a plane based. >> yeah. so there's calls for airlines to stop selling alcohol on flights. so airlines should consider restricting or stopping the access to alcohol and flights to protect the health of passengers . academics boring passengers. academics boring academics with nothing in their staff room have said. they say the combination appears to lower blood oxygen and increase heart rate, even amongst younger adults . and that's bad for you adults. and that's bad for you apparently. but yeah, it's bad for you. but it's fun. i love getting drunk on a plane. you getting drunk on a plane. you get drunk like straight away. it's like being 15 again. it's like one little, little sip of something. and you're exactly right. >> i can't. i mean, i think it is possible to get drunk more quickly than you intended to on planes. yeah, maybe there should be some little kind of , i don't be some little kind of, i don't know, like a little step that you have to kind of break. >> that's why i fly. i don't actually, i just get on the
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return flight and come back again. go there, get drunk. >> just for the elevated. >> just for the elevated. >> yeah. get there. come back. >> yeah. get there. come back. >> altitude training for an alcoholic. yeah no, it is, but it's so boring on planes, isn't it? without alcohol and so much fun with. >> yeah, insane academics, clothing news now in the mail. >> i imagine you're as passionate about dress sizes being as a bit more inclusive . being as a bit more inclusive. >> indeed. yeah, yeah. so rixo, which supposedly some quite successful clothing company is slammed by disappointed fans over a new collection that doesn't go above a uk size 14, are the founders previously pledged to be more inclusive? this is because in their normal range they go up to size 20. whatever. i don't really know 3030 really. >> so where it starts? super big fat? >> yeah, sort of baby reindeer size. and now they've done this collab like a collaboration with the famous . but those aren't the famous. but those aren't going up that high. and lots of, i guess fat women are complaining about it. but what's interesting is it's not inclusive. the prices are like up to like about £300. £203. yeah. that's not inclusive. number one. but number two is if
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it is like a difference between 14 and a 30 size 30, surely that's double the material. which means that they should be charging like double for a fat dress . dress. >> yeah. it's like the garrick club of couture, isn't it? it's like everyone's going to let women in, let men in. but it's, it's you're being priced out to begin with anyway. >> yeah. the whole point of fashion is like, it's not not everybody can afford it. not everybody can afford it. not everybody can afford it. not everybody can fit into it. so it's like, you know, demand adding that they make this dress, this stylish dress that you can fit into . it's like you can fit into. it's like demanding they make a ferrari. you can take a horse in. >> exactly. elitism is the feature, not the bug? the show is nearly over. we're all available. incidentally, if any designers want us to model their outfits, the show is nearly oven outfits, the show is nearly over. let's take another quick look at wednesday's front pages, the daily mail, fiery rishi comes out swinging and lands big blows. the guardian leaders clash on migration, tax and nhs in ill tempered debate. the financial times indian voters deliver shock to modi after ruling bjp fails to win
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majority. the mirror . these are majority. the mirror. these are all good men, our d—day veteran heroes. the metro shaky start for farage, a lot of people impressed by the photography. and finally the daily star as bo aukus are just like kevin the teenagen aukus are just like kevin the teenager. those were your front pages. that's all we have time for. thanks to my guest, leo and josh. andrew doyle is back tomorrow at 11 pm. with stephen allen and lewis schaefer. if you're watching at 5 am, stay tuned for breakfast. otherwise good night. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers sponsors of weather on gb news. >> hello. good evening. welcome to your latest gb news weather update. some rain to come for parts of the southeast and the far northwest, but otherwise clear skies will develop this evening and it's going to be a cold night. that's because this cold night. that's because this cold front is pushing south and eastwards through the rest of the evening, and behind it we've got much colder air arriving and
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clearer skies as well. so some rain for at first this evening across the southeast , but it across the southeast, but it will turn much drier through the night. and i think most of us will see a dry and clear night away from the far northwest, where frequent, quite heavy showers will continue to push in through the night. it's going to be a much fresher start to the day tomorrow. we could be down into the low single figures rurally and the higher single figures for many towns and cities, but there will be a fair amount of sunshine around, particularly across eastern areas. so eastern scotland could see a bright start to the day. but across the west there's a big difference. across scotland some frequent, very heavy, possibly thundery showers . possibly thundery showers. there's a risk of some hail, possibly some hill snow across scotland as well. showers will continue to push into parts of northwest england, north wales as well, but the further south and east you are , the more and east you are, the more likely you are to stay dry through wednesday and i think it will stay fairly bright, particularly across the south coast into eastern areas of england as well. through the day. there is a risk of the odd shower developing into more
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central areas of wales , parts of central areas of wales, parts of the midlands, possibly by the afternoon. but it's really northern areas that will see the most frequent showers through wednesday . but they for most of wednesday. but they for most of us it's going to be a much cooler day. temperatures only reaching 11 or 12 degrees across northern areas , 16 or 17 across northern areas, 16 or 17 across the south. it will still feel fairly pleasant in the sunshine across the south, but for many of us, a cold northwesterly breeze and that will continue as we head into thursday as well. another very similar day. a fresh start with showers moving in from the north and west. staying much drier though across the south and the east. still showers to come for northern areas on friday, but by saturday it looks much drier and brighter and a little bit warmer. >> a brighter outlook with boxt solar sponsors of weather on gb news
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gb news. >> hello and welcome to a very special patrick christie's tonight. >> it's cutting taxes, cutting migration , or cutting your migration, or cutting your energy bills. it's the conservatives in me that are going to deliver that. >> i'm looking forward to the opportunity to speak directly to voters through the debate to and put our case. >> it's the leaders debate . the >> it's the leaders debate. the verdict at 10 pm. we'll be going live to the spin room with our political editor,
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christopher hope. he's got tory minister johnny mercer and labour frontbenchers as well. there's plenty more to get stuck into today . into today. >> we will on july the 4th, win this seat . this seat. >> a huge crowd turns out for nigel farage in clacton and then . disgraceful scenes also tonight . rac kwasi not safe out tonight. rac kwasi not safe out there . it's labour versus the there. it's labour versus the tories on gender. who do you trust to keep women's spaces and kids safe? >> and just to see my beautiful, lovely, well—behaved five year old, change in a matter of weeks was devastating . was devastating. >> a single mum reveals the truth about labour's flagship education policy. it's all go tonight. the leaders debate the verdict. get ready britain, here
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