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tv   Headliners  GB News  June 9, 2024 2:00am-3:01am BST

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reform the benefits system if to reform the benefits system if they win the general election , they win the general election, to halt the rising cost of welfare. they say the offer would help save around £12 billion a year by the end of the next parliament, by ensuring more working age people currently claiming benefits have a job. the number of out of the number out of work has risen sharply since the covid pandemic , driven by early retirement and long term health conditions . long term health conditions. meanwhile, labour has criticised the prime minister for dodging media questions on today's campaign trail as the fallout continued over his early return from d—day events in normandy . from d—day events in normandy. labour has set out plans to relieve pressure on prisons by unblocking the planning process and boosting the prison building programme. the party said. the prison estate is bursting at the seams due to inaction and mismanagement, they say, by the conservative party. earlier this yean conservative party. earlier this year, chief constables were urged to take fewer suspects into custody amid overcrowding .
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into custody amid overcrowding. this followed plans to expand the early release scheme and let some inmates out of jail up to 70 days early to free up cells. the conservatives say the last labour government let 80,000 criminals out early and failed to build the prisons. they promised , and the liberal promised, and the liberal democrats have unveiled a plan to fix ambulance wait times through an extra 1000 staffed hospital beds . this, of course, hospital beds. this, of course, coming ahead of the party's manifesto launch next week. the party says the plan would help end excessive handover delays and patients having to wait in corridors to be treated. they say the proposals will be funded through an upfront capital investment of £280 million to expand urgent treatment centres and a&e wards, and an additional 400 million per year to add those extra beds. liberal democrats leader sir ed davey says in some parts of the country it's been a crisis seen in some parts of the country , in some parts of the country, people's loved ones dying before the ambulance has arrived. >> we've seen queues at hospitals as ambulances waiting
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to hand over their patients and something has to be done. we've got a comprehensive package to turn around this mess. the conservatives made of ambulance services, and that starts with extra beds, extra thousand beds in our hospitals. but it also links up to our care policies so people can come out of hospitals more quickly when they're ready to . to. >> for the latest stories, sign up to gb news alerts by scanning the qr code on your screen, or go to gb news. com slash alerts. now it's time for headliners . now it's time for headliners. >> hello and welcome to headliners, the show that gives you a first look at the next day's papers with three comedians. i'm stephen allen, joined tonight by salt of the earth leo kearse and salt of the flat earth, louis shaffer . how flat earth, louis shaffer. how are you both doing? you had a good time. what were you doing
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before the show ? before the show? >> i was doing another show. >> i was doing another show. >> oh, that's not bad, is it? yeah. the saturday night showdown. it's a great show. you should tune in next saturday. >> that is a win. that's definitely a win. lewis, what were you doing before the show? >> i was locked in the basement . >> i was locked in the basement. oh, were you really playing? and i was. i was thinking how long am i going to have to stay down? >> oh, look. there you go. we've got you trapped behind you. put your head through the railings. did you hear i broke? >> i had to break one of the alarms, but i didn't break the alarm. i it was it was travesty. >> did you have to break the glass when the fire alarm? >> yes. you know, when you say press here. yeah. i didn't realise how that worked. did it break? it broke. but it's not like it wasn't , like shattering like it wasn't, like shattering and i didn't. don't worry about it. but i appreciate you caring the people out. >> you set off an alarm so that we had to come and get you. >> because i had to, we would have been fine. >> i don't you didn't need to worry. mark dolan could have done it. >> that's what i was worried about because i left my phone upstairs. i could have called somebody with my phone and says. and all my one of those ones with you hold this bit and then you hold the other bit. >> right? hold two, five, one five. >> i thought to myself, there's
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the people are going to forget about. you're going to forget you. would you have forgotten about me? >> hey, no one came to find you. you had to press the button. there's a lesson in there somewhere, right? let's start with a quick look at sunday's front pages. the mail on sunday goes with a diver's hunt for missing doctor mosley in cave called the abyss. the front page of the sunday telegraph says starmer's net zero plans. the observer . starmer's net zero plans. the observer. labour pledges 80 starmer's net zero plans. the observer . labour pledges 80 new observer. labour pledges 80 new rape courts to tackle backlog crisis. the sunday times starmer's triple lock pledge on not hiking tax . the sunday not hiking tax. the sunday express farage. we're now real opposition and the daily star. sunday i call my son lucifer about our little lads, not little devil. and those are the front pages. let's make some sense of this all then, to the express. what have they gone with leah? >> so they've gone with farage. we are now the real opposition in. so he says there's apparently rumours he's in a
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tory hostile takeover plot. and he's got a six year master plan to realign uk politics. and he says that only he can hold labour to account is what nigel farage claims. i mean, the way things are looking for rishi sunak, they're not, they're not looking good. and he keeps making these sort of needless gaffes so we could almost see, you know, how labour became the sort of dominant party on the left when they overtook the liberals and i think was the 1920s, which isn't, you know, i mean, all right, 100 years ago, but, you know, sometimes, sometimes big political parties, we see this in the continent a lot big political parties like the socialists in france just crumble and implode. and i think we're seeing that with the tories because they they haven't been a conservative party. so reform now have the actual conservative values and people might be looking to them instead. well, they are i agree with that. >> i mean it's, i mean, but who gets the tory stuff? there's lots of stuff. they got all these buildings and conservative clubs all over the place. there's a lot of stuff that they have and changed the badge. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> so i mean, i think, i think
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farage, i think people are going to wake up and they're going to say, you know what, i don't think i don't think rishi sunak is going to is going to win it for us. yeah. and so we might as well go on the other side and see what they're going to do, which may which it could be the end, the end of. but but they asked for it themselves at the tories i would assume. yeah. i mean what did they do that was so wrong. they didn't they didn't. >> well they got rid of boris . didn't. >> well they got rid of boris. i mean, i think, you know, getting rid of boris might have appealed to rishi sunak at the time because he gets to be the top boss and run things. but you know now that now that in fact, they got rid of boris and then truss was in and then rishi was in. but i think if they'd held on to boris, one thing that bofis on to boris, one thing that boris does is wins elections with huge majorities. so they kind of need that, right? >> how many times did he win elections with huge majorities? >> well , i'm elections with huge majorities? >> well, i'm going back to the most recent one. yeah, but it's only the 1% in the most recent one. >> if you only look at 2019. but i mean look i know david cameron's back but he actually has a better track record. but again a lot of that was just
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people got tired of labour. i mean even with i mean, i suppose even with gordon brown calling people bigoted and having no charisma, not that you need charisma, not that you need charisma to win anything these daysis charisma to win anything these days is what we've learned. but you get you get bored of them, don't you? a nation starts to think what you're promising doesn't mean anything because you've had a decade or so to deliver on it. you've not done so. let's try something else. and that's what happened in 2010. yeah. and then, you know, 14 years later, swinging the other way. >> and the trouble is like now both of the main parties just offer the same thing of like a gradual, you know, increasing size and power of the state. so, you know, we're just sort of sleep sleepwalking into soft communism with both of them. so i mean, at least reform offers something different. i mean, i was reading today about, about the tories are looking at hiking tax hikers pay enough tax already. >> the shoes alone. can i just i don't want to spend ages on this, but everyone else is pronouncing reform like the noun. but you're saying reform like the verb reform. >> i say that with it. i called burke, hampstead. burke, hampstead ? hampstead? >> yeah. so as in, like, put it back together. reform, reform .
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back together. reform, reform. >> no. just talk. >> no. just talk. >> no. just talk. >> no. because i'd , i presumed >> no. because i'd, i presumed it was a party all about changing things . but maybe it's changing things. but maybe it's just about putting stuff back together. >> yeah, maybe it is . >> yeah, maybe it is. >> yeah, maybe it is. >> oh. >> oh. >> plot twist. oh. very good. yeah.i >> plot twist. oh. very good. yeah. i hadn't thought about that. yeah. i hadn't thought about that . they had thought about it, that. they had thought about it, but i didn't say anything about it. >> and for balance, because i know there's no other story that we're covering tonight that talks about lib dems. can we just mention how they're having a great time? because ed davey he's been off playing golf, he's probably been scuba diving. you know, he's going to get a job, but he's had a lovely little trip and he's had a great day out. >> and it is basically worked for him. yeah. because because people now thinking about him i think what is he trying to be like super healthy looking. is that what that is, that he's able to fall into the water and just like a make a wish thing, he's just going to all the day trips he's wanted to do for ages. >> this is brilliant. all right, moving on to the observer lewis. what have they got? >> well, this definitely is this is not good news. it's not good news. israel celebrates rescue of four hostages as airstrikes and raids i made. i said that as and raids i made. i said that as a joke. it's not. it is. i guess it's good news for them. and as raids kill 93 palestinians, they
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have to put that in there. they have to put that in there. they have to put that in there. they have to put that in there. these are people they. the raids killed 93 palestinians because they were defending these four people. they were trying to hold on to the four hostages. and theyi on to the four hostages. and they i mean, they they looked pretty. they looked like they were pretty healthy before hostages , but look much hostages, but look much healthier than when, you know, when ukrainian prisoners of war come back from russia. >> yeah. they're all, like, emaciated and they've been tortured and starved. >> oh, you want to get to the russian situation ? no. russian situation? no. >> i'm just i'm just saying, you know, they've, they've been looked after . obviously, some looked after. obviously, some aid is getting through. well, maybe. >> maybe they were happy to have guests or something. the palestinians are a lovely people. not in this, not in this situation . but they'll they'll situation. but they'll they'll have one of my closer friends closest friends. closest friends is a palestinian, person who is totally behind what palestine is doing. and they're in a jam. i'm going to say something nice about the palestinians, and they're in a jam. you feel for them? they'd be. i don't know if they'd be kicked off their land, but they've been they moved off their land or they , they feel
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their land or they, they feel that they've been they feel that way . way. >> even though if you go back to judea, you know. >> yeah. which, where who who owned the country in the beginning . owned the country in the beginning. but owned the country in the beginning . but they feel that it beginning. but they feel that it was their land and that they lost it. so you can see the pain that they've been through. but this is this it just i think it reminds people that, that something horrible was happening there. yeah >> and hamas have, have, have said that the rescue of four hostages after eight months is a sign of failure, not achievement, because, you know, they've still got 120 hostages, which is actually, i mean , which is actually, i mean, that's true. and i think, you know, netanyahu and the whole , know, netanyahu and the whole, israeli military mission has i mean, it's failed to bring all the hostages back. it's failed to destroy hamas . i know it's an to destroy hamas. i know it's an impossible mission, really, but, i think they're going to be forced into a corner where they have to look at something other than military action, and they have to look at, you know, how the how gaza is going to be governed after , after the
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governed after, after the military occupation, i see leo, i would agree with you . i would agree with you. >> i would agree with you. but the results have come in where they actually polled the people of gaza, the certain number of them, and they found that . do them, and they found that. do you think that the military intervention of october 7th was a military, that what they did? yeah terrorists was a good a good idea. and it's gone down since this has happened. oh really? where is in the west bank where they're similar palestine . lie—ins i guess it palestine. lie—ins i guess it it's it stayed the same. >> so if you bomb people enough, you can eventually . yeah. you can eventually. yeah. >> right. yeah. >> right. yeah. >> let's take a quick hit of the, the mail on sunday because we're running out of time. so let's do a quick one on this one. leah. what they got? >> so the mail on sunday have, the missing, mail columnist michael mosley. so divers are hunting for him in a cave called the abyss, which doesn't sound . the abyss, which doesn't sound. that's great. i'd much rather be, you know, lost in a cave called the easy to get out of or the ibis. yeah the ibis, not the isis. that would be worse. but, yeah, i mean , things are looking
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yeah, i mean, things are looking grim, but, you know, it's when you when you're on holiday and you, you know, you walk along the cliffs and stuff. i'm always like, walking along thinking, man, this is dangerous. if i, if i just stepped over there, it would be, you know, a terrible thing. so, you know, i don't know if he's had a medical incident himself or if he's, if he's got lost or if or what's happened. but, i mean, it's not looking too hopeful. >> yeah. i was hoping it'd be fine because he's one of the people that especially loads of blokes who read that book who, you know, you need to slim down for something. you do the five two. he's he's kind of a leader of people who have a certain diet. and this is this hurts us. >> he is better than some, but worse than others. his diet five two diet is basically, let's trick you into losing weight. it doesn't, you know, it's i as long as it works . i mean, we long as it works. i mean, we want him back, but. but yeah. >> so if you don't eat on two days, like, obviously, obviously you're going to lose weight. you're not eating on two days, right? >> so you're saying that's not diet, that's just not eating. >> don't spoil the end of the book for the people who've not ready yet. that's yeah, right. that's the front pages dealt with. but coming up, rishi sunak's french exit and tax doesn't have to be taxing. but the next election it will
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be get
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next. welcome back to headliners. i'm stephen allen, still joined by leo kearse. and a man. i tried to lock in a room earlier on, but it didn't work. louis schaefer, was it you? >> was it you? >> was it you? >> i do love the picture of. look behind you. >> you've, looking at the screen, it's like jeff, jeffrey epstein getting laid away . epstein getting laid away. that's that's the old louis schaefer that was actually the fat louis schaefer . oh, yeah. fat louis schaefer. oh, yeah. >> well, no wonder you were stuck in the bars. that's why you lost weight. is it because you lost weight. is it because you had to try and get out there? >> the hair is. this is ten. that's ten years ago. probably. >> well, let's crack into the papers. and louis, the sunday telegraph, a tory supporting newspaper, attacks labour by pointing out that they'll do exactly what the tories will do . exactly what the tories will do. >> yeah. this is i don't really understand this. basically it says labour will press ahead with tory stealth taxes, says shadow minister. so the shadow minister, this guy named i don't pay minister, this guy named i don't pay attention to these people because they're all appointed
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jonathan reynolds, he says. he says we're just going to keep in place with the tories were doing which and the tories were about to raise taxes . so don't get mad to raise taxes. so don't get mad at us for raising taxes. but the truth is, they would have raised taxes anyway because that's what the that's what labour does . the that's what labour does. they raise taxes. yeah. >> as as i that's what all governments do. >> that's what all especially team world governments and that's what labour was and that's what labour was and that's what labour was and that's what the thing is. and like i always say the labour steals money. but the tories waste. >> so the other way round . >> so the other way round. >> so the other way round. >> no. well maybe they're both waste anyway. yeah maybe waste is not the right word. sorry. >> didn't mean to make it awkward. >> yeah, you did make it awkward because it was fun watching the wheels come off. >> it was. we had some great momentum there for a second. >> yeah, because i want to say the right thing. anyway anyway, this is the taxes are. they're unbelievable . and they're going unbelievable. and they're going to they're going to get worse. yeah. the country is getting poorer and i'm going back to america. >> and the trouble is we've got an ageing population, so by 2035 we won't be able to service our
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pensions . that's one of the pensions. that's one of the biggest chunks of spending. and i don't know who thought, you know, back in whenever pensions were invented like the 1960s or whatever, you know, why did they start doing that? don't tell people they get free money when they're old. just don't ever do it. and then, like, we could have kept all that money, could have kept all that money, could have just not paid as much tax. all people would, wouldn't know. they'd be fine because it had always been like that. it's like, you know, save up some money yourself or like and now, now the people have been paying into the system all their lives, like me, basically aren't going to get a pension. yeah. which i knew. so, you know, it's not like i was depending on that state pension. >> i mean, we kind of presumed for, for us like generation x, you knew there'd be no future. but people above generation x still have this sense of i paid into the pot. yeah. where's my money? i know your money was spent on the people who had a pension when you were paying in. there is no pot. >> they used that money when you gave it to them. yeah and now they don't have the money. >> and now it's triple locked . >> and now it's triple locked. so they can't they can't reduce it. they got to keep on this trip a lot . do you understand trip a lot. do you understand the triple lock thing.
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>> it's it is ridiculous because it locks in the worst of any of the mathematical errors . yeah. the mathematical errors. yeah. so if you've got two perfectly normal figures and one of them some outlier , that one's not some outlier, that one's not only locked in that year, but then gets added to on for the rest of it. it's ridiculous. >> and you know who's getting money in this country from from these people who you blue with schaefer because you're pensioner. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> because i'm, i look amazing. but i'm a pensioner i look no one's shocked. >> but it's weird , isn't it? you >> but it's weird, isn't it? you can't can't hear any shock at that moment. >> so basically it's labour's laboun >> so basically it's labour's labour. it's labour is going to spend more money to. >> let's go to the sunday telegraph . the bbc platformed telegraph. the bbc platformed a general who called hamas's attack a victory, but they also employed savile, so probably doesn't even hit their top ten. >> yeah, i mean, this is this is nuts. the bbc has defended giving airtime to a retired egyptian army general who hailed the october the 7th hamas attacks on israel as a month of victory. i mean, that's a that's an interesting way to look at you know, the sort of slaughter and rape of civilians and
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children. but this is samir ragheb, who's been interviewed by bbc news arabic nine times since the war in gaza began , since the war in gaza began, despite sharing anti—semitic material and pro—palestinian posts online, so his posts include mocking israeli civilians for seeking shelter dunng civilians for seeking shelter during hamas rocket attacks and claiming that sinai, returning to egypt in 1982, was an act of purifying it from the jews. filth bear in mind the bbc, you know, bbc broadcasters would undoubtedly call me, you know, a far right extremist bigot. but they're happy to platform somebody who says that the return of sinai to egypt is purifying it from the jews filth. it just shows the absolute two tier system we've got in the west. it's absolutely nuts . and also, sinai was nuts. and also, sinai was returned to egypt because, you know, part of it was, you know, to keep peace and good, good relations . well, not good relations. well, not good relations. well, not good relations. they didn't have good relations. they didn't have good relations with, with egypt at the time, but to because israel didn't want to be responsible for those people and have them included in its in its country. but the, the bbc are saying bbc news arabic is committed to
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heanng news arabic is committed to hearing from a range of contributors to offer a variety of views and perspectives across our output. it's like so that's diversity, having somebody who absolutely hates jews and says the most horrific things about them is diversity. >> i you know what? i disagree with you. i think it's good you have should have them on the air. this this whole thing against israel is it's basically anti—semitism . there's hundreds anti—semitism. there's hundreds of thousands that are killed in syria and there's wars going on in iran and everything. and they're not mentioning why are they're not mentioning why are they so focused on israel that has to do with it's a lot of it is it's there's a lot of wars going on at the present moment. but but the truth is, is the religion that a lot of these people believe in is a religion of hating people who don't ascribe to their religion . and ascribe to their religion. and especially the jews who were the original martyrs of this religion. probably if you go back genetically, they're probably a lot of them are jews genetically. yeah. >> i would possibly say it's pushed back a little i suppose, which is my job when i'm sat
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over here is, the we i, i've not watched bbc news arabic so i don't actually know the conversations that were had. and they, they make the point that you get the guest on and you can you get the guest on and you can you can push back, you can counter actually , the people counter actually, the people who've analysed this have just simply look that this person was on a show and then looked at some of their social media and said, they've said this, how dare you platform them at all? and i suppose the same if some if the same thing happened to someone here, if they just looked through your social media and went like, oh, it's all food, it's what they'd say to you. but if they just said, how dare you platform this person? here's a tweet that i disagree with. you might miss a clip where actually they've been taken to town on it. yeah i don't think that's happening. >> but i've said i'm having a bad day and i regret saying that. right. >> i just think this is complete double standards and the stuff that people on the left are people that, you know, progressive progressives think is right, you know, so , you is right, you know, so, you know, slaughtering civilians in israel is seen as decolonialism , israel is seen as decolonialism, andifs israel is seen as decolonialism, and it's woke and it's good. i just think it's such double standards, considering, you know, so many people are slandered as nazis by by the same people.
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>> well, we'll move on. i think we might need to skip over the next one because we've already covered that one. so leo, the sunday telegraph upset as a university debate chamber was nearly used to hold a debate. >> yeah, it doesn't happen . oh, >> yeah, it doesn't happen. oh, is that me? >> that's well, it's got my name in it. so and he just said my name because we the next one we're going to do would have ended up being we. >> we also could just to give just a show behind the curtain. we took the wrong one out. we could double back and do the rishi sunak one if you need it. >> just saying no. so so yeah. >> just saying no. so so yeah. >> so durham university is cancelled. the debate about the israeli palestinian conflict after a mob of pro—palestine protesters locked students inside, according to participants. so the debate was titled this house believes palestinian leadership is the biggest barrier to peace. it was scheduled for friday night, but was called off at the last minute by the university. so, i mean, for a start, palestinian leadership is arguably the biggest barrier to peace. they've had so many offers of, you know, palestinian statehood and they've rejected them because they don't want statehood. they want to keep fighting because then they get money and they get glory, and they get to kill jews, which is
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what they want. they don't they don't want peace, so that was what they want at the time . and what they want at the time. and now they'll kill christians, too. oh, they'll kill and they'll kill each other. >> when look at lebanon, look at lebanon with the christians have been slaughtered . been slaughtered. >> so i don't know why people in the west are so into went on, you know, ensuring that we go down the same path as lebanon. but yeah, protesters at this university or some of the, you know, idiots who are who are insisting that we, we, we balkanise our lebanese ize ourselves. we're seeing banging on the windows and doors of the chamber while chanting from the river to the sea after forming a human centre lipide to recycle their dinner. no. after forming a human chain to prevent students students leaving. so one of the one of the people in the debate, said that, you know, they've caved to a fascist mob. and that's basically where we are. the woke progressives , are. the woke progressives, because they've got this righteousness and because they're completely you know, misinformed and idiotic and beholden to a lot of them do believe in it because it says and the person who cancelled the debate afterwards is doctor shahid mahmood. >> mahmood mohammed, doctor
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shahid, you know, so he and he's the pro vice chancellor of equality, diversity of inclusion at ucd. so this is the person who's saying maybe we shouldn't have this debate . he's the he's have this debate. he's the he's he's on there on that horrible. yeah team. >> to be inclusive. >> to be inclusive. >> we need to exclude these ideas and these people to be to be diverse. we need to slaughter people based on, you know, whatever their ethnic or religious background is. >> so police the police should have been called and they should have been called and they should have been called and they should have been kicked out of the country. the people who were, whatever they were, they they contacted the police but didn't give them the mandate to do anything about it. >> that's why nothing happened. yeah. >> what? the university didn't give him the mandate? yeah. this is happening in america too. and the difference? the difference in this country is there's a lot of people here who believe in this stuff. >> and what stuff? >> and what stuff? >> in the stuff let's, you know , >> in the stuff let's, you know, we don't want to see anyone. what can you agree with us? i don't want to say it. >> what do you believes in? what
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stuff? you know , like the pro stuff? you know, like the pro the anti—israel stuff? yes. right. did you say that i don't i don't feel like it's a real word for that. >> a shorter word that you use a lot. >> no, it's anti. it's anti jew. jewish. >> i'm sure there's a word for that somewhere. that's it for part two. but coming up people are writing to ofcom but not about us this time. and are you ready get nuked. get when the wind blows. ready to play. we'll
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welcome back to headliners. leo to the mail on sunday. more evidence that rishi sunak wants to lose the election . we've put to lose the election. we've put off the young voters with this national service thing, but the older voters still like you. don't worry. there's a d—day you can skip. >> yeah. so rishi sunak has apologised to disgusted veterans in his constituency , which in his constituency, which contains britain's largest army garrison , because he left a garrison, because he left a d—day anniversary early , and now d—day anniversary early, and now he's being accused of dodging the media, which i probably
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would do if i was rishi sunak right now. yeah, i don't understand. he left this d—day, you know, anniversary event early . that's you know, anniversary event early. that's a you know, anniversary event early . that's a that's you know, anniversary event early. that's a that's an easy gaffe to not make you just stay. don't be the don't be the first person to leave. just wait until like, joe biden's left and then leave, you know, and then and it played into america's hands because then they could be like, yeah, it's just us who did d—day. we saved europe, like in all the films there, too . all the films there, too. >> he was there to that horrible guy who runs canada. yeah, true. joe trudeau. yeah. i don't know why this is news because he left . he'd just say i left. i had other things to do. >> well, he it is news because he had to apologise. it's upset loads of people and there are still there are questions. there are mysteries here that he insists that this was a diary booking that was put in ages ago , before it even called the election. yeah, but he left to go and do an interview with itv about the election. >> yeah, but this is what he's supposed to do. he's supposed to be on tv. i'm surprised he doesn't think like hanging out with the president of the united states. and, you know, even if it is joe biden. yeah. or all those other guys. macron isn't
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prestigious , isn't more. and prestigious, isn't more. and it's going to be on tv two. they're going to show pictures of it. it's going to be on tvs forever. so he loses because he's an idiot. >> yeah, it doesn't make any sense. and also itv's always going to be there. how often are you going to get to like hang out with real presidents and things? >> well, not only that, itv were also at the d—day commemoration. surely yeah, they'd send people oven surely yeah, they'd send people over. they would have a correspondent and a camera nearby filming it. just use that. but i mean, i'm not in charge of this, but then again, you shouldn't have to worry about pleasing some old people who are going to die or military people. >> they should be. they should be team tory and they're not. which just shows the guy i feel bad for the guy. it reminds me of a councilman in my hometown of, of southwark. you know, council. he's. that's what he seems like. yeah. i mean, he's got a rich wife. i would look great if i had a rich wife . you great if i had a rich wife. you know, everybody looks great when they've got a rich wife, let's move on to the, louis, it's the sunday telegraph and putin's in the news. he's not team world,
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so he must love him. >> no. well, there's the thing i love the. i love the way he treats his country, which is he's fighting for his country. he doesn't care how many people he dies to protect his country. and that's what this story is. europe. it's not that story, but europe. it's not that story, but europe is defenceless and unprepared for nuclear war, warns putin. and he says , warns putin. and he says, basically, but basically, no one's prepared for nuclear war. but he's mentioning nuclear war. why is he mentioning it? because he wants to tell us british people and americans that he'll mess with us if he continues. >> he's been saying this since he invaded ukraine. i mean, it's he invaded ukraine. i mean, it's he invaded ukraine saying it was going to take three days and the russian flag would be flying over kyiv. and that didn't work. and ever since then he's been like, i'm going to, i'm going to nuke the west. or if you give him any more tanks or if you give them artillery, if you give them atacms or whatever. yeah, i'm atacms i'm going to, i'm going to nuke. and he hasn't so far because he knows it would be a death sentence for him and it wouldn't now it would be. >> but if they destroy the ports , the ports at saint petersburg, if they're a good idea.
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>> yeah. i mean, ukraine has developed long distance drones , developed long distance drones, so, you know, it can hit these things without even using western weapons . but putin western weapons. but putin knows. putin knows he's lost in the summer offensive. there's supposed to be a summer offensive at kharkiv. and like, you know, he's been bombing like sending rockets to bomb, you know, like diy centres, like shopping centres and kharkiv's. so it's not it's not like he's fighting a fair war. >> so and ukraine war is a fair war is when the military fights each other, is not when you know, putin goes in and bombs like all the residents of mariupol or whatever. >> it's disgusting. it's not. >> it's disgusting. it's not. >> and what do you think ? >> and what do you think? >> and what do you think? >> it's not english in ukraine. >> it's not english in ukraine. >> it's not british. is that british? well, that's and britain is britain or even america winning. no war. >> absolutely. the west is winning. the west won . on day winning. the west won. on day four, when putin hadn't achieved his objectives, the russia russia now has a completely winnowed down military. the only thing that has got is it now it's on. now putin has to continue the to war continue his position. he's got a war economy, so he's starting to churn out tanks and things like that. so we really need to like help ukraine, like ukraine is
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doing all the work. we're just providing like money and weapons . so to help ukraine to finish putin, get him deposed in a coup, show to other world leaders like xi jinping who might try sabre, he might try and invade taiwan . this is what and invade taiwan. this is what happens. you end up hanging from piano wire. no no, no, what we need to do is we need to say to russia , you can have the bits russia, you can have the bits with the russians are there, and you could you could maintain your position. >> i don't like the russians ehheni >> i don't like the russians either. i think they're horrible . but you can't have this kind of thing which is going to lead to the destruction of the world as a compromise. >> why don't we put the why don't we put gaza there? >> they could have gas. >> they could have gas. >> that would change the situation . situation. >> all right. listen to the sunday telegraph. the eu could have a bonfire of all of those green policies. oh, that's going to release a fair bit of carbon. >> yeah. so the rise of the right threatens eu net zero ambitions. so surging hard right parties are plotting to dismantle eu net zero laws after the european elections on sunday. green politicians have said so. nationalist forces will
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overturn the bloc's ambition to hit the 2050 zero carbon target in the same way they hardened european migration policy by dragging it to the right, according to green, politicians . according to green, politicians. yeah, that's democracy. so people voted, they got sort of drunk on greta thunberg about five years ago, and in the european elections they voted for all these all these green parties and the european party, european parliament had greens as the fourth largest bloc in the parliament. but then everybody's realised that, you know, all this green stuff, it just increases state size and power. it's just this sort of soft communism . and it's not soft communism. and it's not even about carbon reduction. if they wanted to reduce carbon, they'd want hard borders. they want they want to not allow in, immigrants from, from the third world because their carbon footprint will rise exponentially once they, once they arrive in europe. >> but you make a really good point that this is democracy. an actual vote happened. and if these policies come in from the vote, just deal with it. but that's also true of five years ago when the green policies came in because of democracy .
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in because of democracy. >> yeah. no, i think people were people were deluded then . and people were deluded then. and also, you know, things can be things can be overturned. and also the way the greens, say you never see somebody on the, on the right saying, oh, it's anti—democratic that you won those votes. the greens literally say, and left wing politicians across europe say , politicians across europe say, oh, the afd people voting for them is anti—democratic . it's them is anti—democratic. it's like, no, that is how democracy works. >> i agree with you. but like you said, it's calling a soft communism. it's real. i think it's real communism and america, we weren't allowed to use the word communist. if you said that's a communist, reminded of something from the 1950s and richard nixon. so you weren't allowed to say it. but that's true. the green, the green. it's the war that i've spoken about. it's the it's the left versus the right. it's nation state versus team world. and while this war is happening between us and them up from the bottom , and and them up from the bottom, and from russia and from china, too , from russia and from china, too, is coming other threats to us. so we need to get along also, we
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need to get along with these people. yeah, louis, the sunday express people are upset that not all views in a seven way debate were the ones they agreed with. >> yes , i didn't see this, but >> yes, i didn't see this, but it looked like a really good debate. they got they got everybody who has is anybody in this country seven different voices. >> some of them are nobodies as well. >> yes. the bbc slammed for disgraceful tv election debate as viewers threatened to complain to ofcom . what were complain to ofcom. what were they complaining to ofcom about? is that somebody said something bad about brexit and the audience applauded, which told everybody that the audience was in, was a left wing audience. but it is the bbc and it probably is. and this is what happens when you're supposedly neutral, but you're run by the state and people pay 160 something pounds a year for it. of course, they're going to care . if you don't want people to care, bbc, then don't take our money. i didn't say it. i didn't say it , money. i didn't say it. i didn't say it, didn't say it. >> this story is one that mathematically just sits weird with me. so if you if you'd have done the same thing in 2016, we know that 48% of the audience
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would have cheered . so even even would have cheered. so even even at the height of the actual referendum, you would have had that surveys that have been done on this channel have now said that more people say they would vote differently. so if you take a sample of the population, you get people cheering and then there was someone tweeted saying randomly selected audience , randomly selected audience, yeah, right. no one said it was a randomly selected audience. at the start of the debate, they say that the bbc didn't select the audience. they got a polling company that got them that represent the parties on stage. and guess what? not all of those parties love brexit. so you're going to get some people cheering. none of it should be surprising until you just hear a thing you don't like and then complain to ofcom. >> but the biggest thing is it's bbc, which which is which is horrible. >> but the story is about someone said something bad about brexit and there was a cheer. why is that surprising? yeah, because the bbc should have shouldn't have a partisan audience because , as lewis says, audience because, as lewis says, you know, they fund it with a tax on people, although you don't need to actually pay that tax. >> i haven't paid the bbc licence fee in ages, so the bbc didn't select that audience. >> they got the audience that represents the people on stage. so you had to have like samples
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of seven different political viewpoints. yeah >> but i just mean, like, i don't believe that. i don't believe that for a second. there's no way this is like all through the bbc. the bbc is, is fairly captured. my cousin works for the bbc and, they're they're pretty captured . you don't pretty captured. you don't really get people, you know, somebody with my opinions would be, would be, would be turfed out, and also it's interesting that, you know, you say it's a left wing idea, this sort of anti—brexit thing. and by the way, i didn't vote for brexit. i voted remain , but, the old left, voted remain, but, the old left, like jeremy corbyn and the unions, they hated the idea of a, you know, a big european bloc because they, they didn't want the free flow of people coming over to the uk and lowering why they hated it. >> they hated it. i think , i >> they hated it. i think, i think is because it came from a kind of a french , german big kind of a french, german big state thing which was controlling the worker controlling. that's when that's when the left believed in workers. >> they don't believe in workers undercutting the worker as well , undercutting the worker as well, undercutting the worker as well, undercutting the worker as well, undercutting the workers. >> that's why that's why jeremy corbyn was against it. they
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wanted they wanted to become a socialist country first. >> and i voted remain because i wanted to undercut the workers . wanted to undercut the workers. >> yeah, leo, the sunday telegraph, the bbc was discriminating against white men on its training course. finally admitting that, yes, we already know everything. >> so white men have the least chance of getting on a bbc trainee scheme. so non—white applicants to the bbc's flagship journalism training scheme were almost two and a half times more likely to get in than their white counterparts . so this is white counterparts. so this is i mean, this is this is disgusting. this is open racism. it's open, probably classism as well, but it's actually, it's sort of condemning these bame people, these people of colour, to a career that isn't well paid anymore. the white people who didn't get in, they'll go and get productive jobs doing something useful. these these people are going to have to be journalists. >> can you let the people know you're making a joke? but it's not a joke? >> no, i'm making a joke. and
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the you know, it's horrible that white people, white men, are being excluded from from the bbc because it should be representative. it should, you know , it should reflect who pays know, it should reflect who pays the licence fee. and it shows that the bbc isn't a meritocracy, and there's going to be a decline in standards, because whenever you select on anything other than meritocracy, then there's obviously going to be a decline in standards. and also like how can they justify the licence fee if they're saying, oh, give us, give us your money, but what? we're not hiring anybody looks like you. >> but you're making it seem like it's far worse than it is. the numbers the numbers show that 75% of the applicants. but 59% of the participants who are white. so it's whatever it is, it's two. is that 260% 60 whatever, something two thirds? no i'm literally just rambling numbers. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> whatever. it's still much higher than i thought. i thought it was going to be like 20% white people and 80% black people. but britain still britain still has sort of what is it, 85% white. that's the problem , people. we hate those problem, people. we hate those people who run the bbc. they're part of team world and they hate the idea. they hate white people
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and they hate britain. and they don't want they want to be lovey dovey to everybody. and that's why the bbc, unless they give me a job, has, has no, has no. and i will easily go pro bbc if i don't think you need to worry about that . to be fair, i would about that. to be fair, i would stress yourself out 24 years they've done nothing . they've done nothing. >> that's it for part three. but coming up in the final section , coming up in the final section, speed cameras that make you go faster. and david cameron fell a hoax. i'm guessing fake pig's a hoax. i'm guessing fake pig's head. we'll find out
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welcome back to headliners. leo, the observer david cameron fell for the biggest prank since someone told him. have a brexit vote. it'll be fine. >> so, yeah, the uk foreign secretary, david cameron, has been a victim of a hoax video call with someone claiming to be petro poroshenko, the former president of ukraine, so a number of text messages were exchanged, followed by a brief video call , between lord cameron
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video call, between lord cameron and someone pretending to be poroshenko, which you probably noficed poroshenko, which you probably noticed because i think poroshenko wasn't the one who he was poisoned. and then he got the. or is that viktor yanukovych? oh, yes , so, yeah, yanukovych? oh, yes, so, yeah, maybe. i mean, it's hard to keep tabs on, east european leaders, so maybe they'd get fooled because and maybe it was a, maybe it was just a 2g and, you know, couldn't get the, the clear. it was like looking at in a game boy, but yeah, we're seeing i think there's going to be a lot of hoaxes and things because you can now clone somebody's voice , right? somebody's voice, right? >> yeah. >> yeah. >> lewis didn't actually say that. that was a that was a small computer in the back. >> he said that it'll be an improvement. >> but how is this news? this has been going on like forever. so he took a phone call from somebody. he didn't give away any secrets. and who the hell is david cameron anyway? he's not been elected. he's like, he when the tories are down and he's going to take over the tories , going to take over the tories, he's going to be the ed davey of the tory party because the tory party is may not exist after this point . this point. >> you get lots of trips out to do crazy golf. >> yeah . he'll, he'll, yeah. and
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>> yeah. he'll, he'll, yeah. and fall into the river. it's david cameron. he's getting a bit full of himself. i think i don't, i like the guy. i mean, i think he would have been better to me had i didn't realise he was. >> he was tall until i saw him at the d—day celebrations next. unless everybody else is tiny. >> i think they are, aren't they?i >> i think they are, aren't they? i mean, so i bumped into keir starmer in edinburgh last in 2019 when i was up there. no, not the 2019 show, and he's small as well . i not the 2019 show, and he's small as well. i think he's smaller than his partner. yeah. which is like the that's the no go zone. oh yeah. yeah, yeah. but no one ever does jokes about him being small and yet rishi sunak because he's got his trousers that look like he's been pre wedged. that's why he looks worse. >> but it looks tiny. >> but it looks tiny. >> i've met rishi sunak and he really is a small i mean he's a lovely guy but he really is a small proper ronnie corbett style. >> yeah. okay. well the lewis were on to the sunday telegraph, call off the strikes. we found a new way for doctors to earn money. >> i don't think it's such a new way, but it's a new way because they're not admitting it. this is celebrity and celebrity doctors promoted covid vaccine without declaring payments. and it's all coming out right now
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because everything is coming out about the covid vaccine, which is it's a killer. they shouldn't have been given to anybody. i mean, i didn't i didn't take the vaccine because i had covid before and i thought, i don't need to take it. and by the time ithey need to take it. and by the time i they give us the story, the story is who he is. all these doctors have been on tv telling us to take the thing they've all been given, not all. probably some of them, maybe haven't, but they've all been given money. but. and they're given money by the nhs, which is promoting the thing . so you can't say anything thing. so you can't say anything bad about the nhs number one. and number two, they've been giving money by astra, astrazeneca, zeneca researched it well. this range . doctor ranj it well. this range. doctor ranj singh and doctor filippa k getting ten 12,520 2000. >> do we know what they were giving the money for. >> does it matter. >> does it matter. >> well no i mean the headline kind of implies they were given money to promote this, which they weren't. the payments were so far apart time wise. but i'd like to know what they got the money for. we never found out. >> i think, pharmaceutical companies just like to give
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doctors money because they like doctors, because doctors prescribe the things that they sell. it's like taking your top sales team to crazy golf. >> so that's not what, like the lib dems. crazy at golf is a bit. i knew they were there for a reason. >> celebrity doctors are a lot like the lib dems, so it's got a bit of a stink to it, but not necessarily the stink they're implying. >> oh man no, this is, i mean, and it should have been declared if they'd have said, oh, by the way, this this vaccine i'm pushing, this product that i'm pushing, this product that i'm pushing, i received money from the manufacturer. >> and, you know, it wouldn't have been allowed on this show. you can't be on this show. they wouldn't have put him on the show. >> i got to push back just in case. matthew sweet is still watching. yeah, i don't think covid vaccines. i think, you know, obviously there's some harm in some cases. and stuff, and they probably, you know, i think that was covered up to a certain extent. but i think they did probably save some people's lives as well. >> so this harm in every single vaccine as well. you know what the problem with no vaccine, thatis the problem with no vaccine, that is 100% harm free, and the billions of people who took this and this wasn't the vaccine ehhen >> it was it's not a vaccine. it was an mri. no, it wasn't a vaccine. a vaccine is where they whatever it's to prepare your immune system for the thing it's going to get.
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>> i'll tell you what the anti—vax people are now. so annoying. i'm going to get vaccinated. i'm going to get all my vaccines, all my boosters. i'm going to have all i'm going to have my moderna, pfizer, astrazeneca. i'm going to have some new ones that i invent . and some new ones that i invent. and making a spoon. it's going to be fantastic. >> they're tasty . we'll try and >> they're tasty. we'll try and fit this one in leo. the sunday times. some speed cameras make people drive faster. can we have some installed on the m25, please ? please? >> so basically, you know, the speed cameras where it tells you your speed and it tells you it gives a smiley face if you're doing under the speed limit and a grumpy face if you're going oven a grumpy face if you're going over. apparently some people, quite a lot of people, it makes them speed up because they want to get they want to see how fast they can go. so it's got the opposite effect of what it's intended, which is government policy. in a nutshell . anything policy. in a nutshell. anything the government does backfires horrifically. and they probably got money from astrazeneca. >> i disagree with that. i don't know why, but i'm going to disagree. >> but they did a thing where now they've got the same speed cameras that if you go more than three miles an hour above the speed limit, they don't show you your speed. yeah. as if that's going to. and apparently it does make people not do it as much. but isn't it like a secondary win? >> no, it makes it. it makes it
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worse because it caps it at like 26 or whatever. so you're thinking, oh my god, my car is broken. you got to try and like, like back to the future. just you know, blazed through. >> why don't they put in the car kind of like a thing which tells you how fast you're going. but they wouldn't have to tell you. it's crazy. >> that's you'll never catch on. but if they do, put me down for a slice of that. yeah. all right. well, the show is nearly oven right. well, the show is nearly over. let's finish by taking another look at, sunday's front pages. the mail on sunday says divers hunt for missing doctor mosley in cave called the abyss. sunday telegraph . starmer's net sunday telegraph. starmer's net zero plans risk blackouts. the observer. labour pledges 80 new rape courts to tackle backlog crisis. the sunday times says . crisis. the sunday times says. starmer's triple lock pledge on not hiking tax . the sunday not hiking tax. the sunday express farage says now we're the real opposition and the daily star sunday we didn't get round to this one, but i called my son lucifer. but our lad's not little devil . those are your not little devil. those are your front pages. that's all we've got time for. thank you to my guests, leo kearse and louis
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schaefer will be back tomorrow with josh howie and paul cox . if with josh howie and paul cox. if you're watching at 5 am, stay tuned for breakfast. have yourself a good one. until the next time, enjoy yourself. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers sponsors of weather on . gb news. on. gb news. >> hello! here's your latest weather update from the met office for gb news. the weather stays rather mixed across the uk over the next few days. a mixture of sunshine and showers and staying quite chilly for the time of year two. the cool conditions are all down to a northerly airstream low pressure anchored towards the north—east of the uk, high pressure out towards the west and that's generating that northerly flow across all parts. so looking at things in more detail for this evening and through the overnight period, we'll see showers towards the north and northwest of the uk, quite blustery winds. so many of those showers rattling through quite quickly, the rain giving way to more persistent outbreaks as we head into the early hours of sunday, particularly across northern ireland and the southwest of scotland. whereas across england and wales the cloud tends to melt away, so it will turn quite chilly here by
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sunday morning. in fact, in rural spots we could see temperatures into low single figures giving a touch of grass frost in 1 or 2 places. pretty unusual for this time of the yean unusual for this time of the year. looking at things in more detail for early on sunday and towards the north—east of scotland, we'll see a mixture of sunshine and showers, quite a brisk north westerly winds. then we run into an area of more persistent rain across northern ireland, southwest scotland parts of north—west england, whereas elsewhere across england and wales it's set fair. whereas elsewhere across england and wales it's set fair . quite a and wales it's set fair. quite a chilly start, but there'll be plenty of sunshine around and we'll hold on to some sunshine here, certainly through the morning on sunday, before cloud starts to increase from the north, whereas across northern ireland we hold to on outbreaks of rain on and off through the day, and that rain slipping its way southeastward across southwest scotland into northern england and eventually parts of north wales to further north. it's a case of sunshine and showers towards the far north—east of the uk and staying chilly here with quite a brisk northerly breeze. temperatures generally no better than 12 to 14 celsius up to 20, though in london that's 68 in fahrenheit. as for monday, we'll see an unsettled picture across england and wales, certainly through the morning. outbreaks of rain
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gradually clearing away to the south and east, giving way to a mixture of sunshine and showers across all parts of the remainder of the day . and with remainder of the day. and with that northerly breeze still in place, it's staying quite chilly for the time of year two. we hold on to a showery picture into the middle part of the covid week, and temperatures stay quite disappointing for the early part of june as well . early part of june as well. >> looks like things are heating up . boxt boilers sponsors of weather
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gb news. way . way. >> good evening. happy saturday, one and all. it's 9:00 on television, on radio and online. in the united kingdom and across the world. this is mark dolan tonight, your perfect saturday night in. in my big opinion, enoughis night in. in my big opinion, enough is enough. joe biden must be impeached on the grounds of poor health. the safety of
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america and the free world depends on it. in the big story, what has happened to missing bbc star and tv doctor michael mosley ? can he be rescued? what mosley? can he be rescued? what are the chances of good news? i'll be asking one of the country's leading former top detectives and should nigel farage throw the cat among the pigeons and do an 11th hour deal with rishi sunak before polling day, i'll be asking the co—founder of vote leave and the country's only ever ukip mp, douglas carswell . and in my take douglas carswell. and in my take at ten, i'll be dealing with the arrogance and double standards of showbiz luvvie stephen fry and i won't be pulling my punches. mark dolan tonight your perfect saturday night in. we've got a golden rule on this show. we don't do boring. not on my watch . i just won't have it. watch. i just won't have it. lots to get through. joe biden
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after the news headlines with tatiana sanchez . tatiana sanchez. >> mark. thank you. the top stories this hour, the new cctv footage has now been released, showing tv doctor michael mosley before he went missing on the greek island of symi. the 67 year old was seen in cctv footage in the village of petty on wednesday . and now this newly on wednesday. and now this newly released footage shows him walking by himself on symi marina . on the 5th of june, an marina. on the 5th of june, an emergency helicopter arrived on the greek island today as efforts focused on the mountainous terrain where he's believed to have been walking amid very high temperatures. believed to have been walking amid very high temperatures . as amid very high temperatures. as michael mosley's wife says his family will not lose hope as the search continues , rishi sunak search continues, rishi sunak says it's a huge relief to see the return of some hostages who were kidnapped in hamas attack in israel on the 7th of october. noah argaman almog, meir jahn,
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andrey kozlov and shlomi ziv were recovered by the idf . the were recovered by the idf. the prime minister has posted on x saying it's heartwarming to see the pictures of them being reunited with their families , reunited with their families, and this is the moment that some of the hostages disembarked a helicopter. as a part of that rescue mission , they were rescue mission, they were welcomed by cheering crowds and that rescue operation took place in central gaza's al nusrat , in in central gaza's al nusrat, in the heart of a residential neighbourhood . israel's prime neighbourhood. israel's prime minister benjamin netanyahu visited the hostages and their families in hospital. he says his country will not give in to terrorism, and that he remains committed to bringing all of the hostages home. labour has criticised the prime minister for, quote , dodging media for, quote, dodging media questions on today's campaign trail, as the fallout continues over his early return from d—day events in normandy , an events in normandy, an opportunity for reporters to quiz the prime minister did not take place as was originally planned. rishi sunak did receive
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a warm welcome, though, as he visited the gardens

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