tv Martin Daubney GB News June 12, 2024 3:00pm-6:01pm BST
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a majority would put the uk in a dangerous place . is this the dangerous place. is this the most extraordinary act of political surrender in british history .7 12 political surrender in british history .712 year olds murdering history? 12 year olds murdering with machetes 46% of british teenagers terrified of knives, including 31% scared of blades inside their own schools throughout today's show , i'll throughout today's show, i'll ask some of the uk's foremost experts how do we stamp out the cancer of knife crime and an astonishing new political poll called damage politics has shown record low levels of trust in british politicians. incredibly a record 58% said they had almost never trusted any politicians of any political party. to tell the truth . when party. to tell the truth. when they win in a tight corner, i'll speak to the report's author, sir john curtice, and that's all coming up in your next hour.
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welcome to the show. so was the was today the day when the tories officially raised the white flag? the scenes have all been given up. and look at this picture. this is dame andrea jenkyns campaigning today. she's got a photograph on her campaign leaflet. who is it? is it rishi? is it boris? no, it's nigel farage on a conservative candidate. literature and no mention of the c word. is this the beginning of a political alignment , a the beginning of a political alignment, a non—aggression pact, the sort of deal those on the right would like to see happening? sensible or cynical? let me know what you think. get in touch. all the usual ways, gbnews.com/yoursay. but before all of that epic smorgasbord, your headlines with aaron armstrong . armstrong. >> good afternoon. it's 3:02.
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i'm aaron armstrong in the gb newsroom. rishi sunak insists he hasn't given up hope of winning the general election, but has warned voters not to give labour a blank check. the prime minister's campaigning at a school in north east lincolnshire today , as new lincolnshire today, as new figures show the economy stagnated in april with zero growth. it is a setback to his claim that the uk has turned a corner . well, the tories pointed corner. well, the tories pointed to figures that demonstrate the economy has in fact grown in the previous three months to april. but the lib dems say rishi sunak's utterly failed to deliver on its promises. sir keir starmer says labour's plan will renew the country . will renew the country. >> the one thing that everybody expected and needed from rishi sunak was stability after the disaster of liz truss. what he's now done is become the latest version of liz truss with unfunded commitments. and i think the public no voters know that there's a cost to that and they want an alternative. and
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that's why i'm really pleased that's why i'm really pleased that tomorrow in our manifesto, we will take a different approach. we will set out the case for growth , for rebuilding, case for growth, for rebuilding, for putting our nation first to go forward . go forward. >> the liberal democrats have outlined plans to end what they've described as a sewage scandal in england and wales. they've promised to transform water firms into public benefit companies. they've promised to ban bonuses for water bosses until the leaks stop, and also to replace the regulator, ofwat , to replace the regulator, ofwat, with a tougher governing body. the party says the clean water authority would be given new powers to reform the sector. nigel farage has been offered additional private security by the home office after objects were thrown towards him during campaigning. a man has been charged after a coffee cup and other items from a building site narrowly missed the reform uk leader on an open top bus in barnsley yesterday. 28 year old josh greely has been charged with using threatening, abusive or insulting words and behaviour
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with intent to cause fear or provoke unlawful violence. he's been released on bail and will appearin been released on bail and will appear in court later this month. a record number of people have lost faith in british politics, according to the electoral expert sir john curtice . sirjohn's analysis has curtice. sirjohn's analysis has found trust and confidence in politics, and the overall election system has never been lower. 45% of respondents almost never believe governments of any party are fully focused on the challenges facing the country, and a record 58% said they almost never trust politicians of any party to tell the truth. a 19 point increase from 2020. the french president is vowing to fight on even if his party suffers losses in a snap election. emmanuel macron says dissolving parliament was the only possible response to the far right's strong showing in last weekend's european elections . he last weekend's european elections. he insists last weekend's european elections . he insists the snap elections. he insists the snap elections. he insists the snap election will bring clarity ,
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election will bring clarity, although polls put the right wing leader, marine le pen, in first place, with macron trailing in third. the french president has urged has urged his political rivals to join him by forging a democratic alliance against le pen's national rally. the us secretary of state says some of the latest changes put forward by hamas to ceasefire proposals in gaza are unworkable, meaning the war will go on. anthony blinken has been studying the latest demands alongside mediators in qatar. it's understood hamas will only accept joe biden's deal if it gets written guarantees from the us over a permanent ceasefire and over the withdrawal of israeli forces from gaza. meanwhile, israel's military says around 160 rockets have been fired into the north of the country from lebanon. hezbollah has claimed responsibility . a has claimed responsibility. a second man has denied chopping down the sycamore gap tree. last yean down the sycamore gap tree. last year, 31 year old adam crothers
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is accused of causing £622,000 worth of damage to the tree. a second man, 38 year old daniel graham, was, according to his barrister , unavoidably detained barrister, unavoidably detained and did not appear in court today but has previously entered a not guilty plea. the tree was a not guilty plea. the tree was a popular attraction for visitors and stood by hadrian's wall in a dramatic dip in northumberland for more than two centuries until it was felled in september , sparking a national september, sparking a national outcry . co—op banks apologised outcry. co—op banks apologised after customers complained of a glitch that saw payments taken twice from some small business account holders. people took to social media to vent their frustration, with one claiming they were £5,000 out of pocket with no resolution in sight. another said their account had been an overdraft all day , but been an overdraft all day, but they hadn't had a notification from the bank. a spokesperson for co—op has apologised and says a correction is currently being processed and flights have been grounded in majorca as a result of heavy rain and
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flooding at spain's third busiest airport. you can see this video on social media shows water spilling into the parking area , as some cars outside the area, as some cars outside the terminal have been partially submerged. spain's weather agency has recorded between five and nine centimetres of rain per houn and nine centimetres of rain per hour. the mediterranean island, of course, famous for beaches and good weather. it's particularly popular for british tourists . more on all of particularly popular for british tourists. more on all of our stories by signing up to gb news alerts . the codes on stories by signing up to gb news alerts. the codes on your stories by signing up to gb news alerts . the codes on your screen alerts. the codes on your screen and the details are on our website, gb news. com now it's back to . martin. back to. martin. >> thank you aaron. now the big conversation today is this have the conservatives already thrown in the towel? well in a rather extraordinary circumstances defence secretary grant shapps has warned the electorate over handung has warned the electorate over handling starmers labour party a super majority at the general
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election, saying that it would put the uk in a dangerous place. and there he is in a front row seat at rishi sunak manifesto launch at just yesterday . is launch at just yesterday. is this the most extraordinary act of political surrender in british history? well, back on the campaign trail today, however, the prime minister insisted that he is absolutely not given up on winning the election . and let's speak now election. and let's speak now with gb news political editor chris hope, who has been with the prime minister today. chris, welcome to the show. an astonishing set of circumstances talking about supermajority , it talking about supermajority, it seems they've all but given up. now they're just trying to work out that it that the end game won't be quite as bad as they want. it seems like they've thrown the towel in. chris >> hi, martin. yeah, welcome to on the train. going back to london, having been with the prime minister in grimsby. the school. yeah, that's right. i actually asked him for gb news viewers off camera . have you viewers off camera. have you given up, to the prime minister given up, to the prime minister given those remarks from grant
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shapps overnight. and he said what you saw yesterday is we put out the manifesto forward, which has got a very clear set of tax cuts for the country, tax cuts at every stage of life. i think there was a degree of relief from the prime minister that they got this manifesto out the doon they got this manifesto out the door. it's out there. it proposes £18 billion worth of spending cuts on getting more money back in, in tax and tax avoidance, tax evasion and spending. spending cuts to welfare balanced by £17 billion worth of tax cuts. that's the offer. i think we've almost reached halfway point in this campaign. it's half time. the tory party is three nil down. they've got to try and win the game now and doing almost like a miracle of istanbul the liverpool did in the european cup back in the day. they've got to somehow pull out the bag and that's the challenge he's got. he's laid out his offer to the country now for the next three weeks, all about getting round the country and convincing people to give him a second chance on the issue of not giving labour a supermajority , giving labour a supermajority, he said that's not what i would say. but he did use the term
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blank check. he urged voters not to give labour a blank check. by that they mean means with a majority. so big, the party can do virtually anything and face no opposition in the house of commons. so he's a punchy prime minister today. he's always pumped, he told us. he's genuinely energised. he's fuelled, apparently on lots of sugan he fuelled, apparently on lots of sugar. he says haribos and twixes and he likes playing board games to relax. martin >> and they're seeming to talk about reform quite a lot today. chris, an astonishing revelation. you and i talked about before we came on air. andrea jenkyns campaigned as a conservative candidate. she hasn't got a picture of rishi sunak or boris johnson, or indeed any tories anywhere on there. in fact, there's no mention at all of the c—word in fact, behind a picture of nigel farage. chris, a lot of people are talking about this is this the flickerings of some kind of non—aggression pact, a coming together of the conservatives
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and reform ? and reform? >> well, not yet. martin. andrea jenkins was an mp in the last parliament and she, of course, was was the only one, i think, who publicly submitted a letter of no confidence in her leader, rishi sunak. she never withdrew that letter. someone must assume she has no confidence in him now as leading the party into this election on july the 4th, she has said. since that was posted that document, that lots of excitement over my leaflet today, she says all conservatives must be to prepared come together to prevent a socialist supermajority and the end of britain as we know it, about a hashtag country. first, she's clearly saying they're appealing to reform voters to come to me, i'm a tory, but i'm also kind of augned i'm a tory, but i'm also kind of aligned with farage. that's why the picture is there . but i'm a the picture is there. but i'm a conservative first and first and foremost. she's appealing for a reform voters not to give keir starmer that supermajority . and
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starmer that superm ajority. and we starmer that supermajority. and we are hoping that martin i think to get that andrea on, on on the show to explain to you what on earth she meant. >> yeah, that deal has been done. she's out campaigning today, but we will get her on the show tomorrow. chris but they there seems to be few crumbs of comfort for the conservatives. a poll out today, 46% of all voters think the tories deserve to lose every single seat. they've got an astonishingly, that includes 25% of all conservative voters in 2019. don't want to have a single seat left. chris >> yeah, there's a feeling of punishment, beatings for the tory party. and they get nothing. nothing. right. the water, the glass is always half empty, it seems, even if they go to silverstone , rather than to silverstone, rather than lapping the opposition yesterday when they unveiled their manifesto, they're stuck in a pit lane in second gear or reverse gear. and so it goes on the parties have dogged by by problems. the kind of downer on the party altogether across the
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country. and that's part of the problem. the challenge facing rishi sunak and his haribos. how to get some sugar into into the into the electoral diet . i was into the electoral diet. i was struck by the yougov poll last night that sky news did martin. they said there that labour's on 38 points, the tories 18 points and reform 17 points, one point behind. but if you combine reform and the tory party , reform and the tory party, novara, and that's why it's so important for the tory party to get to those dope nose and get to reform uk support base and say, don't give keir starmer the super majority . they look set to super majority. they look set to scoop up on july the 4th. >> chris hope get yourself safely back to london and when you get to the end of the line, a metaphor perhaps for the conservatives we hope to see you back in the studio here at 5:00, chris hope, thank you very much for that update. live from the campaign trail, i can now get the view of the chief political commentator at the independent, john rentoul, who joins me in the studio. john, it seems that
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the studio. john, it seems that the tories have simply thrown in the tories have simply thrown in the towel. >> well, it's not quite throwing in the towel, is it? it's a sort of. it's more to mix your sporting metaphors. >> it's more a sort of hail mary pass, like in american football, where it's a sort of desperate last throw when you're right up against it. >> you've been pushed all the way back and so you're sort of pulling out the stops and, and your last sort of break the glass moment. but it's i mean, it's extraordinary to be doing this at this stage of the campaign. >> i mean, we are at midnight tonight, i think is halfway through the election campaign. >> it's the sort of thing that you would expect a losing campaign to do in, in the final days to just try and rescue something from the wreckage and the fact that they're talking about the size of the defeat and what will be left is an incredible situation. and they're almost it's almost like they're almost it's almost like they're divorcing their wife and they're divorcing their wife and they're arguing over the goldfish . i mean, yeah, no, it's goldfish. i mean, yeah, no, it's it is extraordinary. >> i mean , and i know obviously, >> i mean, and i know obviously, you know, technically what grant
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shapps said and the prime minister says is that of course, they think they can still win which but , they think they can still win which but, but, but that they are talking about possible size of labour majorities suggests that, you know, they're in damage limitation mode. they're just trying to they're just trying to save what save what they can. >> what do you make of this skulduggery of andrea jenkyns featuring nigel farage on her literature? >> well, it's again , it's >> well, it's again, it's a survival instinct, isn't it? >> it's trying to rescue anything from the wreckage. i mean, she's she's got a seat with, with a notional majority of 16% vulnerable to a, to an 8% swing to the, to the labour party at the moment the opinion polls suggests that the swing is going to be much bigger than that. so she's just trying to do what she can to try and see off the reform challenge and to try and try and hold on to her seat. but i think it's a goner. >> and what do you make of these polls out today? 25% of all 2019
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conservatives want their party to lose every single seat. and then the sir john curtice to lose every single seat. and then the sirjohn curtice report then the sir john curtice report damaged politics. 58% of voters, a record number, said that they almost never trust politicians of any party to tell the truth. >> well, well, this is why trying to appeal to the voters not to give labour a huge majority seems to me a pretty doomed strategy, to be honest , doomed strategy, to be honest, because because people want to punish the conservatives they they actually think, you know, if the conservatives lose badly, that would be a good thing. i mean, you talk to reform voters, they're very hard to persuade to come back to the to the tory fold. i mean, half of them, you know , say that they will under know, say that they will under no circumstances vote tory. so, you know, saying trying to scare them with the prospect of a large labour labour victory isn't going to work because, i mean, they they just want the conservatives to be smashed . conservatives to be smashed. >> can i get one quick line out of you as well? in the same
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poll, 53% of voters said that the system should be changed proportional representation to allow smaller parties to get a fairer share. do you think that will ever happen? >> well, i mean, that's what people say in response to a to a superficial opinion poll. >> you put it to a referendum and they voted in 2011. they voted two thirds against. they wanted to keep the existing system. >> talking of referendums, john, in that poll, the most disaffected voters were those who voted for brexit. why do you think that is? well, because they wanted change. >> they voted for change and they ended up getting more of they ended up getting more of the same. and a chaotic a chaotic government. they didn't see the benefits that they were hoping for from brexit or perhaps they voted for brexit. >> and they watch the entire system try and frustrate their vote for four long years, but they eventually got what they wanted and they didn't like it. or did they? thank you very much for joining us, john rentoul, an forjoining us, john rentoul, an absolute pleasure to have you in the studio now , quick reminder the studio now, quick reminder here are the other candidates standing in the lead, south, west and morley constituency, the green party, chris bell ,
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the green party, chris bell, yorkshire party, howard graham, jews and liberal democrats, michael fox, conservative andrea jenkyns, the reform uk is james kendall, sdp nigel parry and labouris kendall, sdp nigel parry and labour is mark sewards . labour is mark sewards. meanwhile, there are question marks over whether we can expect tax rises in labour's manifesto to be announced tomorrow. and here's what labour leader sir keir starmer had to say when he was asked about this earlier today. >> all of our plans are fully costed , fully funded. there will costed, fully funded. there will be no increase in income tax in national insurance or vat and we'll launch our manifesto tomorrow. there'll be no tax surprises and none of our plans require tax rises over and above the rises that we've already set out. but what you will see tomorrow is a plan for the future of the country , a future of the country, a manifesto that sets out how we will rebuild and renew the country, and sets out the first steps that we will take in government on day one to set us down that path of renewal and
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rebuilding. so it'll be a very different manifesto to the one that the tories unveiled yesterday . yesterday. >> and the liberal democrat leader, sir ed davey, has also been out on the campaign trail today, and he was asked for his thoughts on the uk gdp figures, which came out earlier today. >> well, as the time ticks away from rishi sunak and his premiership as he has his last few days in office, i'm afraid the economy is petering to the conservatives promised to grow the economy to make it more prosperous, and they failed utterly and whether it's the cost of living which has hit people so hard with the energy bills, the rent, the mortgages, the food bills and the conservatives done nothing to help with that, or whether it's the economy not growing properly, the conservatives have so mismanaged our economy. from liz truss's appalling mini—budget to rishi sunak's failures, they should get out of the way and liberal democrats have some really attractive, positive ideas to rebuild our economy and help people with the cost of living . cost of living. >> i'll have lots more on the election coverage throughout the
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show. of course , and there's show. of course, and there's plenty of coverage on our website, gbnews.com. and you've helped to make it the fastest growing national news website in the country . so thank you very the country. so thank you very much. now it's time for the great british giveaway. now your chance to make this summer really special with over £16,000 worth of prizes to be won. and that's 15 grand tax free cash and a whole host of treats. now you've got to be in it to win it. and here's all the details that you need. >> it's our summer spectacular. three top prizes that have to be won. there's cash £15,000 in tax free cash to spend on anything you like this summer, plus a brand new iphone 15 with a set of apple airpods and if that wasn't enough, we'll also treat you to some fun in the sun with £500 to spend at your favourite uk attraction this summer for another chance to win the iphone treats. and £15,000 cash text win to 63232. text cost £2 plus
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one standard network rate message or post your name and number two gb zero six, p.o. message or post your name and number two gb zero six, po. box 8690. derby dh1 nine, double t, uk. only entrants must be 18 or oven uk. only entrants must be 18 or over. lines close at 5 pm. on the 28th of june. full terms and privacy notice at gbnews.com/win. please check the closing time if listening or watching on demand. good luck i watching on demand. good luck! >> coming up, we really need to talk about knife crime. following on from the shocking murder of shawn seesahai by 212 year old boys, which comes as a survey today claims that 46% of british teenagers are scared of knife crime , including 31% knife crime, including 31% inside their own schools. much discuss. i'll speak to a raft of experts on martin daubney on gb news, britain's news channel
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welcome back. it's 3:25. i'm martin daubney. this is gb news. now. we desperately need to talk about knife crime on monday, 212 year old boys were jailed for murdering shawn seesahai zahawi with a 16 inch machete, making them britain's youngest killers since the james bulger case today. two grim reports cast a further shadow over the land. first, the west midlands has become the knife crime capital of the uk. astonishingly, knife crime there is 8.3% higher even than in london. and next. the shocking bbc survey claimed that 46% of british teenagers are scared of knife crime, including 31% scared of knives inside their own schools. now many things have been blamed for this gang culture austerity , even gang culture austerity, even grime music. but today i want to ask some big questions. grime music. but today i want to ask some big questions . where ask some big questions. where are the parents? is it time to
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punish them? and in particular, what powers do the police need? let's start on that topic now. so i'm joined by the former metropolitan police officer, chris hobbs. chris, i know you care passionately about this topic. we've spoken about it endlessly. things does seem to be getting worse and worse and worse . tell me, what on earth worse. tell me, what on earth did the police need to do? what powers would you like to see? cops have ? cops have? >> i think basically what part of the thing we want to see is a change in attitude, in terms of stop and search. it's one tool and there's a lot behind knife crime . and stop and search isn't crime. and stop and search isn't the panacea, but it is a deterrent. and it does take in london something like 3 to 400 weapons off the streets every month . now, apparently we've month. now, apparently we've heard from the met that stop and search has been reduced or police officers are stepping away from stop and search because if a stop and search goes wrong, if the person being stop and search resists and it has to be done by force, then
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there's all hell to pay. in terms of, inquiries, investigue actions, the iopc and their jobs are on the line and maybe even imprisonment. so that's an issue in london. it's certainly an issue in the west midlands. it's also a massive issue across the country. we're seeing a frightening explosion in knife crime, and it's not just in the big cities , but of course the big cities, but of course the met before have previously launched campaigns against knife crime operation blunt. some years ago curbed it. now, of course, we've got the added problem. the massive problem of social media and the issues that causes linked to drill music. for example, the gang culture that we see in london and in the west midlands , the fact that a west midlands, the fact that a lot of these gang leaders, these drill music artists who also engagein drill music artists who also engage in violence, are seen as role models , as heroes. everyone role models, as heroes. everyone in a particular school for example. and you've just mentioned schools will know all
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about their local gangs. they will know who the gang leaders are. and some of those kids will worship those gang leaders. they're almost, in a perverse way, the wrong sort of role models. many of them are dead. a lot of them are in prison. but this issue around gang culture, really is spawning this massive increase that we're seeing at the moment. >> okay, chris, i want to put a picture on the screen now, and it's a picture of one of the 12 year old lads that killed shawn seesahal year old lads that killed shawn seesahai. can we get it on the screen, please? this is a picture. look, he's got a 16 inch machete. this is the boy that was guilty of that murder. a machete you can see strapped to his body. there it goes inside his jogging bottoms. it's right up. almost to his throat and machete. as long as his torso. this is a 12 year old chris, a 12 year old boy with a knife. that's a deadly weapon. it was used with such force , it it was used with such force, it almost went through the body of
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this poor, deceased 19 year old sean. what can we do about these kind of knives? this isn't like a pen, knife or a flick knife. this is a giant machete. chris hobbs. this is a giant machete. chris hobbs . yeah. hobbs. yeah. >> yes it is. it's absolutely horrendous, isn't it? and no matter what laws were introduced, if you want to get hold of one of these horrendous implements, you can it's not difficult to do online or you can basically go through someone who's a little bit older, a little bit wiser , a little bit little bit wiser, a little bit more savvy than you are. someone may be higher up. the gang hierarchy and you can get them what you need really is a deterrent to make sure that when people take these knives out onto the streets, then the odds are they are going to be stopped. now, at the moment, there's some talk, isn't there, about a new instrument that will be able to stop or spot knives underneath people's clothing before there's any stop and search? perhaps we do need to invest in new technology, but at the moment there are issues around parenting some of these estates where the gangs rule. let's make no mistake about it.
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you have got poverty and deprivation and that's what the gangs feed off. and that's where they get their recruits, and that's where they get the youngsters of 12, 11, ten who hero worship the gang leaders . hero worship the gang leaders. and they are not the sort of role models that we want to see. but the good role models, maybe, that used to exist in youth clubs when we had them, for example. all that has gone in the cuts , community policing has the cuts, community policing has massively suffered in the cuts and we're now hearing this ludicrous claim, aren't we? the extra police the government have found and are going to find , found and are going to find, they've in a way, they've presented the police with a poisoned chalice in the first place. but now it's a massive problem and it really needs everyone to start singing from the same hymn sheet. not activists who are saying police racist , police are bad, stop and racist, police are bad, stop and search is evil. scrap stop and search. god forbid if we scrap, stop and for search a month or six months and had a virtual moratorium on it, ask yourself
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or these activists should ask themselves , where would we be themselves, where would we be then, it's a huge problem . it then, it's a huge problem. it may only get worse, but we really need some initiatives. and as i say , there's some good and as i say, there's some good people out there doing some great work. but the police as chris, chris hobbs, we have to leave it there and we're going to speak to some of those people later in the show. >> in particular, i'm going to be asking them, how do we stop kids carrying knives in the first place? and is it time to start punishing the parents, the parents of that 12 year old boy apparently let him out to all hours. the police were always around the neighbours had to put barbed wire up. where were the parents in all of this? chris hobbs, former police officer thank you very much for joining us on today's show and giving us your illustrious expert opinion. now, there's lots more still to come between now and 4:00, and we'll be hearing about the green party's pledge to fund the nhs by £50 billion a year by introducing a wealth tax on the mega—rich . but first, it's your mega—rich. but first, it's your headunes mega—rich. but first, it's your headlines and it's aaron armstrong .
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armstrong. >> hi there. good afternoon. it's 332. i'm aaron armstrong. rishi sunak insists he hasn't given up hope of winning the general election, but he has warned voters not to give labour a blank check. the prime minister has been campaigning at a school in north east lincolnshire as new figures show the economy stagnated in april. zero growth. it's a setback to his claim the uk and the economy has turned a corner, and the tories pointed to figures, though, that demonstrate the economy had grown in the previous three months to april. but labour and the liberal democrats say the tories have failed to deliver on their promises . chronic numbers of promises. chronic numbers of potholes would be fixed under a new plan by the labour party, they say tory cuts have led to poorly maintained roads causing damage to cars and contributing to higher insurance premiums. the party's promising to direct special funding to councils to fix a million potholes a year, and says labour will turn the tide of neglect the french president is vowing to fight on, even if his party suffers losses
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in the snap general election . he in the snap general election. he called emmanuel macron, says dissolving parliament was the only response to the far right's strong showing in last weekend's european elections. he insists the vote will bring clarity . the vote will bring clarity. although polls put, the right wing leader , marine le pen, in wing leader, marine le pen, in first place, with macron trailing in third, he's urging political rivals to join him by forging a democratic alliance against le pen's national rally. and co—op bank has apologised after customers complained of a glitch that saw payments taken twice from some small business account holders. people took to social media to vent their annoyance, with one claiming they were £5,000 out of pocket with no resolution in sight. a spokesperson for co—op has apologised and says a correction is being processed and cctv footage has been released of a man caught stealing a victorian brass eagle lectern worth £6,000 from a church in edgbaston. if
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you're watching on tv, you can see he approaches the lectern, removes it from the column and covers it in a blanket before calmly strolling off. west midlands police are investigating the theft, which happenedin investigating the theft, which happened in just two minutes in broad daylight . get the latest broad daylight. get the latest by scanning for our gb news alerts the qr codes on your screen. the details are on our website. >> cheers! britannia wine club proudly sponsors the gb news financial report . financial report. >> yes, let's take a quick look at the markets the pound buys you $1.2828 ,1.1856. the price of gold is £1,811.13 per ounce. the ftse 100 is at 8216 points. >> cheers. britannia wine club proudly sponsors the gb news financial report .
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financial report. >> thank you aaron. now in a few minutes we'll be discussing record low voter confidence in the uk political system and who can blame them? but first, there's a new way to get in touch with us here @gbnews and here's bev turner with all of the details we are proud to be gb news the people's channel. >> and as you know, we always love to hear your views. now there's a new way of getting in touch with us at gbnews.com/yoursay or by commenting. you can be part of a live conversation and join our gb news community. you can even talk to me bev turner or any of the members of the gb news family. simply go to gbnews.com/yoursay
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important to hear all sides as you make your decision. >> in the run up to polling day, this is gb news the people's channel this is gb news the people's channel, britain's election . channel. >> welcome back. your time is 339. i'm martin daubney and this is gb news. now the green party has launched its election manifesto today with a promise to raise taxes for the wealthiest in society to and ensure that no one is scared to put the kettle on. they've also launched plans to boost health and social care spending by £50 billion per year. and here is their co—leader, adrian ramsay. speaking earlier today, where he promised that the green mps would pressure a labour government to be braver because with more green mps in parliament, we will push labour to stop backtracking on their promises . promises. >> we will be there to drive them to be braver , to be more
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them to be braver, to be more ambitious, not to take timid baby steps towards change, but to actually do what's necessary to actually do what's necessary to fix our country and get us back on track . back on track. >> well, join me now to discuss. this is gb news national reporter theo chikomba. theo, welcome to the show. so the greens only have one mp. they'd like to have more tellers. what's their plan to get more in? >> well, they've made some bold pledges today actually here, when they launched their manifesto in brighton and they are looking to spend an extra £50 billion on the nhs and social care. but of course, they mentioned a range of issues today during their manifesto from housing security , and much from housing security, and much more to see whether they can make a change. but interestingly, from the very beginning actually , as we've beginning actually, as we've just heard in that clip, they were quick to say we're not expecting to get into number 10, but what we are going to do is push labour to meet some of
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those pledges that they are making, but they have a number of issues. just first of all, in their own party. there are some reports at the moment that they've had to, look into and investigate some claims of anti—semitism within their party. we understand around 20 candidates are being looked into. although, adrian did confirm that around four of them had been fully investigated . but had been fully investigated. but those numbers, we're not quite sure how many, but it's reportedly around 20. and of course, in the last hour or so we've heard from the institute for fiscal studies who commented on their pledges that they've made in their manifesto. they're saying the green party are looking to nationalise some of these things, which we've seen in recent times, particularly, the, the, the state of public services, the struggles that people are having to get places, for example, in the dentists in
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their local areas. but they are saying it's unlikely that the measures, the tax measures they want to implement will meet some of these pledges that they've said , and they've said that said, and they've said that their claim, it's certainly not without real economic cost. and then just briefly , in terms of then just briefly, in terms of taxes, which has been an issue which has been raised over the last couple of weeks, they said they would raise national insurance to 8% to those who are earning just over £50,000. and then they would also introduce a 1% wealth tax on assets over £10 million and 2% on over £1 billion. and then we go on to the issue of housing. are they saying they want to build around 150,000 homes every single year, which is half of what the conservatives pledged in their 2019 manifesto. but interestingly , in the last interestingly, in the last couple of years, they haven't reached that target, which is just over 200,000 houses which have been built per year in the last couple of years. and then
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climate is another issue. they're saying they want to pump in £40 billion to shift the green economy, and they say they will drive fossil fuels out of our economy and raise investment for that green transition. but when we hear analysis from economists, they say, well, it is a good idea the way they would be able to fund this is certainly going to affect the pockets of people right across the country. now, of course , for the country. now, of course, for voters, they'll be hoping that things like getting access to the nhs, dental services and more, those key essential public services will be something they'll be looking to consider. whether or not the greens are actually serious about this and whether they can actually fund them . them. >> and theo chikomba, just to add to that, they also want £2.5 billion for walking and cycling . billion for walking and cycling. they want to ban petrol cars by 2035. and of course get rid of all nuclear weapons. theo chikomba thanks for joining all nuclear weapons. theo chikomba thanks forjoining us chikomba thanks for joining us live from hove. now we'll be discussing the analysis finding that we have now have record low
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welcome back. time is 347. i'm martin daubney. welcome back. time is 347. i'm martin daubney . this is 347. i'm martin daubney. this is 347. i'm martin daubney. this is gb news. now, throughout the election campaign, we'll be heanng election campaign, we'll be hearing from people across the united kingdom about what really matters to them . issues such as matters to them. issues such as nhs waiting lists, the impact of immigration, the cost of living crisis and crime and policing . crisis and crime and policing. our reporters have been to meet voters from all four nations and will be hearing from them regularly before polling day. and today, for the first time, we meet david lee from mansfield. >> i'm david lee, i'm 45, from mansfield. the biggest issue for me is basically putting money
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back into people's pockets . back into people's pockets. shops are closing, people are out of jobs and the regeneration of a place like this is really needed. i'm a business owner. i've got a small shoe repair shop. i've got to put my prices up because my costs everywhere have gone up. so to put money back into people's pockets, lower taxes and get more shops open, that's what i want to see in a place like this. i think people around here feel disillusioned with politics, with government . they talk about with government. they talk about all this money that this town's being given to level up, and our money is going to be given to the places in the north to level up. but what levelling up has happenedin up. but what levelling up has happened in mansfield , this happened in mansfield, this marketplace, it used to be full of stalls. now as you look at it, there's a handful of stalls. mansfield has always been laboun mansfield has always been labour. you put a red ribbon on a donkey round here and it would have got in, but then we come to 2017 and it switched allegiances
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and it went conservative. and i think a big reason for that was obviously brexit. in the past. i voted for labour, for conservative, even for ukip. but at the moment i'm on the fence of which way i'm going to vote and i'm not going to look at rishi sunak or keir starmer on which one of those i'm going to vote for, or even the other parties . i'm vote for, or even the other parties. i'm going to look at what the politicians say they're going to do for my town, mansfield . mansfield. >> well, this comes as analysis by the electoral expert, sir john curtice, has found that trust and confidence in the uk's politics and election system has never been worse, and his report found that a record numbers of voters said they almost never trust governments to put country before party or politicians to even tell the truth. and sir john curtice joins us now. sir john, it's always a delight to have you on the show . the title have you on the show. the title of your report, damaged politics, says it all. please tell us some of the shocking detail .
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detail. >> well, as you've already just outlined, martin, we've got record numbers of record levels of distrust in government and politicians and more people, at least as many people as ever, saying that they think our system of government should be reformed. so just to put a little bit of flesh on those bones , we now have 45% of people bones, we now have 45% of people saying they almost never trust government to put the interests of the country before those of their own party. that is a record high, it's well up on the 37, 38% or so back in 2019. we've got 58% of people saying that you can't trust politicians to tell the truth, whether they're in a tight corner. and that's close to being a record high. and we've got nearly 80% of people saying the system of government needs to reform . government needs to reform. there is one group in particular amongst whom things have changed, and this sense is a part of a wider story of the last parliament. so the delivery of brexit in the immediate wake of brexit in the immediate wake
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of the 2019 election saw those who voted leave in the 2016 referendum come up with much higher levels of trust and confidence. they'd previously had , there was a marked had, there was a marked increase. so, for example, before , the delivery of brexit, before, the delivery of brexit, only around 17% of them thought that, our system of government didn't need much improvement, that went up to 41% after the delivery of brexit. and it's similar for, attitudes towards levels of trust . but but but levels of trust. but but but many a leave voter , even if they many a leave voter, even if they still support brexit, are disappointed with the outcome, around 2 in 5 of them think that the economy is worse off as a result. nearly a half think that it's resulted in an increase in immigration. and those folk in particular have now reversed their attitude towards britain's system of government . they are system of government. they are the ones, above all, who have become, again, much more, distrust ful and much more thinking that we should be changing the system of government .
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government. >> and so, john, this plays out with a great fascination into the current general election , the current general election, because, of course, those people who voted to leave, they saw four years of politicians trying to frustrate. in fact, even to reverse their vote. and then when brexit got done, they saw immigration. all those things you mentioned actually get worse. these are the people, sir john, who are just simply switching off. these are the people like dave there from mansfield who just says, i've tried all the parties. none of them seem to do anything. what's them seem to do anything. what's the point? we've got a huge problem, haven't we, of trust that even engaging apathy being the massive enemy? >> well, whether or not this is apathy is perhaps another matter. i think i the way i would put it is that, you know, once you put it together with the fact that we're very concerned about the state of the health service, which again , is health service, which again, is one of the reasons why trust and confidence is low , why so many confidence is low, why so many people are struggling, are on low incomes, then, you know, and also, frankly, the political
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turmoil we've seen in the last 2 or 3 years, you put all this together. you certainly get a look of an electorate that is certainly concerned about the state of the country . and i just state of the country. and i just wondering, doubtful whether or not the politicians can turn it around, or at least they're necessarily being honest during this election campaign about what might be needed in order to turn things around, and to that extent at least, it does raise a question of credibility for all of our politicians as they're out there trying to campaign for a vote. so i'm not sure. in the end, politicians will stay away. but the message that they may, may want to be feeding back to their politicians may not be always one that they want to hean always one that they want to hear, okay, we have to leave it there. >> thank you very much. fascinating to damage policies report. sirjohn curtis fascinating to damage policies report. sir john curtis there its author. thank you very much for joining us. now don't go forjoining us. now don't go anywhere because in the next hour we'll be discussing whether the tories have accepted another electoral defeat. the supermajority from the labour party. seems they've all but thrown in the towel. is that what you believe? let us know.
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gb news. com forward slash your sleigh. i'm martin daubney on gb news. britain's news channel. but before all of that is your weather and it's alex deakin. >> with a brighter outlook, with boxt solar sponsors of weather on . gb news. on. gb news. >> afternoon. welcome along to your latest weather update from the met office here on gb news. it's not warm out there, but for most of us it's a fine day and the winds are a bit lighter than yesterday, so it feels at least a little bit warmer. the weather is on the change though. a couple of weather systems on their way in from the atlantic and that's for tomorrow. but as i say, for the rest of today, most places set fair. there are a few showers still across northeast scotland , 1 or northeast scotland, 1 or 2 across eastern england as well, but they're tending to fade away for many. it's a fine evening and we'll see the cloud melting away, so for quite a few of us it'll be a largely clear night. and that will allow it to don't quite chilly temperatures well
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down into single digits once more, to down 3 or 4 in many rural spots out west, though , rural spots out west, though, temperatures will actually start to rise later in the night as the cloud arrives from those weather systems, bringing outbreaks of rain into northern ireland. eventually, that rain will spread into scotland. but for much of tomorrow, northern scotland will stay dry and fine. still, 1 or 2 showers close by to shetland. here is that rain though , edging into northern though, edging into northern ireland for the morning rush houn ireland for the morning rush hour, so a soggy start here. getting quite windy too, especially on the east coast of northern ireland, the west coast of wales and the south—west of england will see the winds steadily picking up as well. many central and eastern parts having a dry fine, if somewhat chilly, start to the day. the cloud will increase over the midlands and then into eastern england as the rain spreads into wales southwest england by lunchtime, southwest scotland up towards the central belt by the end of the day, and also come the middle of the afternoon. some of that rain getting into the midlands. much of eastern england will stay dry until quite late on and same goes for northern scotland. but in the west getting very, very windy as
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well as wet. these western coast, particularly gusty for this time of year. temperatures again mid teens, but feeling cooler with the wind and the rain which will continue to spread into eastern england and eventually into northern scotland during the course of tomorrow evening. and the blustery and showery outlook will continue. some sunny spells, but lots of heavy showers through the weekend. temperatures a little higher but feeling cooler with the gusty winds that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers sponsors of weather on
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gb news. >> a very good afternoon to you. it's 4 pm. and welcome to the martin daubney show on gb news. we're broadcasting live from the heart of westminster all across the uk. today the tories appeared to all but throw in the towel when grant shapps warned the labour super majority would put the uk in a dangerous place.
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is this the most extraordinary act of political surrender in british history? i'll speak to a for minister his thoughts shortly . 12 year olds murdering shortly. 12 year olds murdering with machetes, 46% of british teens terrified of knives , teens terrified of knives, including 31% scared of blades inside their own schools throughout today's show , i'll throughout today's show, i'll ask some of the uk's foremost experts how do we stamp out the cancer of knife crime ? and an cancer of knife crime? and an astonishing new poll called damage politics has shown record low levels of trust in british politicians. incredibly, a record 58% said they almost never trust politicians of any party to tell the truth when they are in a tight corner. how on earth is politics become so broken? that's all coming up in your next hour .
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your next hour. once a show, always a delight to have your company. now, a short while ago ispoke company. now, a short while ago i spoke to sirjohn curtis, company. now, a short while ago i spoke to sir john curtis, the legendary political analyst who did that report damaged politics. the figures are simply eye—watering. 45% said they almost never trust a government to put the needs of the country first, leave voters being the most disillusioned. 48% of leave voters almost never trust politicians at all, and that's doubled since 2020. i want to hear from you today. did you vote for brexit and now have you lost all faith in politics and politicians to deliver on their promises? if so, why? i want to hear your stories. why have you completely lost faith in politics? get in touch gbnews.com/yoursay. but before all of that is your headlines with polly middlehurst .
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with polly middlehurst. >> martin, thanks very much indeed, and good afternoon to you. well, the top story from the gb newsroom is that rishi sunak insists he hasn't given up hope of winning the election, but he has warned voters not to give labour a blank check. the prime minister was campaigning in east lincolnshire today as new figures show the economy stagnated during april with zero growth. it's something of a setback for the prime minister and his recent claim that the uk economy had turned a corner. the tories pointed, though, to figures that demonstrated the economy had grown in the previous three months. but the liberal democrats say rishi sunak has utterly failed to deliver on his promises, while sir keir starmer says labour's plan will renew the country . plan will renew the country. >> the one thing that everybody expected and needed from rishi sunak was stability. after the disaster of liz truss. what he's now done is become the latest version of liz truss with unfunded commitments, and i
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think the public know voters know that there's a cost to that and they want an alternative. and that's why i'm really pleased that tomorrow in our manifesto, we will take a different approach . we will set different approach. we will set out the case for growth, for rebuilding , for putting our rebuilding, for putting our nafion rebuilding, for putting our nation first to go forward . nation first to go forward. >> sir keir starmer. >> sir keir starmer. >> now, as you've been hearing , >> now, as you've been hearing, a record number of people have lost faith in british politics. that's according to the electoral expert sir john curtice . the analysis found curtice. the analysis found trust and confidence in politics and the overall election system has never been lower. and the overall election system has never been lower . 45% of has never been lower. 45% of respondents almost never believe that governments of any party are fully focused on the challenges facing the country, and a record 58% said they almost never trust politicians of any party to tell the truth. that's a 19 point increase from 2020. meanwhile, the french president is vowing to fight on even if his party suffers losses in his snap election. emmanuel
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macron says dissolving parliament was the only possible response to the gains made by right wing parties in last weekend's european elections . he weekend's european elections. he insists the election will bring clarity, though polls put right wing leader marine le pen in first place, with macron trailing third. the french president has urged his political rivals to join him by forging a democratic alliance against le pen's national rally. the us secretary of state says some of the latest changes put forward by the terror group hamas for a ceasefire proposal in gaza are unworkable, meaning the war will continue. anthony blinken has been studying the latest demands alongside mediators in qatar. it's understood hamas will only accept president biden's deal if it gets written guarantees from the united states over a permanent ceasefire and withdrawal from israeli forces from gaza. meanwhile, israel's military now says around 160 rockets have been fired into the
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north of the country from lebanon. hezbollah has claimed responsibility for the attacks here in the uk. responsibility for the attacks here in the uk . two men have here in the uk. two men have denied chopping down the famous sycamore gap tree at hadrian's wall last year , 31 year old adam wall last year, 31 year old adam carruthers is accused of causing £622,000 worth of damage when the tree was felled. a second man, 38 year old daniel graham, was unavoidable . be detained and was unavoidable. be detained and did not appear in court today, but has previously entered a not guilty plea. the tree was a popular attraction for visitors and stood in a dramatic dip in northumberland for more than two centuries until it was cut down in september, sparking a national outcry by the co—op. bank has had to apologise to customers after they complained of a glitch that saw payments taken twice from some small business account holders . people business account holders. people took to social media to vent their frustration, with one claiming there were £5,000 out
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of pocket with no resolution in sight . another said their sight. another said their account had been in overdraft all day, but they hadn't had any notifications from the bank. a spokesperson for the co—operative apologised and said a correction is currently being processed . flights are grounded processed. flights are grounded in majorca today after heavy rain caused flooding at spain's third busiest airport. rain caused flooding at spain's third busiest airport . video third busiest airport. video posted to social media shows water spilling into a parking area. while some cars could be seen partially submerged outside the terminal, spain's weather agency has recorded five centimetres of rain an hour, with peaks of up to nine centimetres. the mediterranean island is famous for its picturesque beaches and sunny weather, and is particularly popular among british tourists and cctv footage has been released of a man caught stealing a victorian brass eagle lectern worth around £6,000 from a church in edgbaston. the
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lectern is thought to date back to 1868, which is when the church officially opened. if you're watching on tv , you can you're watching on tv, you can see the man approaching the lectern removing it from the column and then covering it in a blanket before calmly just making his way out of the church . west midlands police are investigating the theft, which happenedin investigating the theft, which happened in just two minutes in broad daylight . those are the broad daylight. those are the latest news headlines for the latest news headlines for the latest stories , do sign up to gb latest stories, do sign up to gb news alerts. scan the qr code on your screen or go to gb news. common shirts. >> thank you very much, polly. now there's still three weeks to go until the general election, but there's a huge question over the conservatives have they already thrown in the towel? well, it comes after the defence secretary warned the electorate over handing keir starmer a super majority, whatever that means . back
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super majority, whatever that means. back on super majority, whatever that means . back on the campaign means. back on the campaign trail, rishi sunak insisted that he had not given up on a conservative victory . and all conservative victory. and all this comes ahead of another clash tonight between rishi sunak and sir keir starmer, as they go head to head in their second tv debate. well, we can now speak with gb news political editor christopher hope, who has been with the prime minister on the campaign trail today. chris, you're coming back towards london on the train there. it's got to say it feels like the tory campaign in itself is hitting the end of the line, talking about a super majority . talking about a super majority. not if we're going to win. how bad the defeat is going to be. it's hardly inspiring stuff, is it ? it? >> no. and. hi. hi, martin. welcome. i'm good to be back on the show. yeah, i'm charging towards london. i'll be in the studio with you for five day. having been with the prime minister in north—east of england in grimsby, where he's facing an audience tonight in a tv event with sir .
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facing an audience tonight in a tv event with sir. sound warnings that labour would win a grant shapps. the defence secretary suggested as much. what that means, by the way, is a very big majority, maybe over three figures. one which will take the tories . take the tories. >> okay, think about chris. he's on a train there and if only we had decent wi—fi on trains , that had decent wi—fi on trains, that would be a surefire vote winner. i know for myself and it's impossible to get a signal through the most basic of things. we can put a man on the moon. we can't do a phone call on a train, but i was going to put it to chris hope there some extraordinary statistics out today. a poll shows that 25% of those who voted conservative in 2019, the get brexit done election , they think the election, they think the conservative party deserves to lose every single seat . a lose every single seat. a quarter of tory voters want the tories to get no mps. this is an
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astonishing situation, and 46% of all voters think the tories deserve , deserve to lose. every deserve, deserve to lose. every single seat. things have really, really changed since 2019, an election i took part in as a candidate. then it was we have to keep jeremy corbyn out of power. it seems now conservative voters, or at least a good rump of them, they actually want to punish the conservatives. they feel as if this is an election. they need to taste pain to reset . let the party. who would have thought we'd be in the situation after 2019? that's 80 seat majority. seems so long ago now . majority. seems so long ago now. chris hope is on his way back to london. he'll be in the studio. i'm hoping at the top of the next hour. we've been thwarted by the perils of poor wi—fi this houn by the perils of poor wi—fi this hour, but i'm now joined by the political commentator and the economic commentator jamie jenkins. jamie, welcome to the show. always a pleasure to have
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your company. you may have overheard overheard there some astonishing statistics . astonishing statistics. conservative voters themselves seem to be wishing pain upon their own party. grant shapps talking about the super majority of seeing candidates , of seeing candidates, conservative candidates today, campaigning not with pictures of bofis campaigning not with pictures of boris johnson or rishi sunak on their literature , but with their literature, but with pictures of nigel farage, jamie , pictures of nigel farage, jamie, doesit pictures of nigel farage, jamie, does it seem like the tories have just given up ? have just given up? >> yeah, i think it's coming back to 1997 and 2010 all over again. i think what you can see in the general election campaign so far, it's not a case of people are looking to the labour party to deliver something brand new for britain. it's pretty much what we got at the back end of the john major government and the gordon brown tony blair era, where the country's just exhausted with what we've seen over the last 14 years from the tories. and it's more a case of the country wants change. they don't want the conservatives, they want something different. whether keir starmer is going to
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offer a blueprint which is completely different is a separate question, but it's quite clear that the public have just lost complete faith in what we currently got. and the rishi sunak do you think, jamie? >> there's something else, and thatis >> there's something else, and that is the current political landscape seems to be so negative. if you think back to the 2019 general election, it was get brexit done it off. whether you agree with that or not, it offered a vision of optimism , of getting the country optimism, of getting the country moving again. the european election the previous summer. what i took part in that was about taking back control. britain, you know, striving towards a greater future. now, it seems all the two main parties are saying as well, if you think it's bad now, they're much worse under this other law. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> there's nothing really cutting through in terms of what people will do. because if you take the tory manifesto this week, they're saying you need to, you know, stick with us if you want to bring immigration down. and we've seen record levels of immigration, stick with us if you want taxes come down. we've seen record levels of taxation. so can you really trust the current government to
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kind of go back on some of the promises that they've made in the past? so that's difficult. and then what's the labour party offering there? you know, some offering there? you know, some of the fringe policies they're talking about in terms of putting vat on private schools. you know, they all talk, martin, about not putting up income tax, vat, national insurance and other tories have talked about cutting it. but what you've got to remember is the fiscal drag that we've seen over the last decade, which i'm sure will continue under the next government, where your wages go up . so you go over the kind of up. so you go over the kind of the tax threshold. so actually everybody's going to get a tax increase because of fiscal drag. nobody's promising to uprate the income tax threshold. and the national insurance threshold with wages. martin. so it's just going to get worse for people in terms of taxation. and there's nothing really positive coming through in the campaign so far. >> yeah, totally. no income tax, no vat, no money back. no guarantee. it's all going to feel like fools and horses. jamie jenkins but without the jokes. talking of which, this report out today, an astonishing report out today, an astonishing report from sir john curtice called damaged politics the lack
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of trust that voters have in politicians at a record low. some astonishing numbers. jamie, 45% almost never trust governments of any political stripe to put the needs of the country above the needs of their own party. the most cynical are leave voters. 48% of them almost never trust any of them to get anything done. all we had a point , jamie, where they none of point, jamie, where they none of the above party is simply the most attractive. now. we've had so many electoral cycles of broken promises, of a lack of competence, of squandered majorities , of broken promises, majorities, of broken promises, of failing to meet targets, people just now saying, i just don't believe any of you . don't believe any of you. >> yeah, i think there's, you know, there's an opportunity there. martin. if somebody did launch the none of the above party for any candidates and they might get a landslide when people turn up at the polling booth and it's not surprising that what you've talked about with what the voters think, because you know what? i live in
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wales, where welsh labour have been running the country for 25 years. last week, the first minister vaughan gething there was a vote of no confidence in him as first minister. he's come out over the weekend saying i want a fresh start. he's not looking at, you know, adhering to that vote. and all of that came off the back of receiving £200,000 donations for his political campaign to get elected from a convicted criminal or an environmental thing. so the public want him out. he doesn't want to go out. so no wonder the public generally across the rest of the uk, as in wales, is fed up with politicians and it'll be interesting to see what the turnout is like for the next election, i think. >> yeah. do you think that, brexit was a was a i've been asking people watching and listening today to get in touch with the moment they more or less gave up on politicians. i wonder if brexit was a tipping point , jamie, where we put our point, jamie, where we put our faith in in our elected individuals. okay like it olympic. we voted this way, get the job done. we had four years of watching them trying to overturn that vote, trying to have a second referendum, trying to crush it, and then did we get
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brexit done or have we failed to deliver on things like fishing, on border control, on taking back control of our money and sovereignty and has all of this, jamie precipitated this, this landscape of i just don't trust any of you anymore . any of you anymore. >> yeah, well, obviously, one of the key threads of the brexit vote was to kind of take back control of the borders. and since the brexit referendum and since the brexit referendum and since we've actually left the european union , we've seen this european union, we've seen this record level of immigration rishi sunak talks about stopping the boats. well, the numbers this year are higher than in any yeah this year are higher than in any year. and he's still failing to rule out perhaps coming out of the echr if that's going to be an impact on that. so the promises that were made over the brexit referendum haven't been put through, you know, by the politicians that are in charge. there's opportunities to do that, martin. but i think, yeah, there's many people who are fed up with politicians. what brexit did do is started engaging people who hadn't engaged with politics to come out and vote in the referendum . i think some of the referendum. i think some of them came out and voted in the european elections. after that,
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i think, for the brexit party. but ultimately, you know, we had this big majority for boris johnson. he got kicked out for rishi sunak hasn't really taken things forward. it's going to be concerning to see what happens over the next 4 or 5 years. if we do get a starmer government, but that's looking like where we're heading. >> yeah, i mean everyone , >> yeah, i mean everyone, sensible money thinks this election is all but over. looking ahead, one of the interesting things to come out of this, sir john interesting things to come out of this, sirjohn curtis interesting things to come out of this, sir john curtis report, damaged politics, jamie, is people think that the system itself simply doesn't allow parties to get a toehold. the first past the post means we swing between labour and the conservatives, whether we like it or not. smaller parties very much struggle . 53, when they much struggle. 53, when they were asked, said, it's time to change the system, to go to a more european style system. dare i say it's off proportional representation. those elections, of course, when the brexit party got 29 meps in, sounds great, but the big parties will never allow that. will they? like content continuity politics? >> yeah, i think the fairest
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system is to have proportional representation. and i think the green party if we put them in together because they've launched their manifesto today, they've got one mp, they'll probably get more than kind of a small percentage of the vote, but they won't get anywhere. probably where near reform is. but these smaller parties do actually have some leeway when you get proportional representation, because you don't get majority governments. but we could have a scenario where of the popular vote, the reform party take the polls of the current state. mining is exactly the same vote as the conservative party, but may have 1 or 2 mps, whereas the conservative party may be 50, 60, 70 mp5 conservative party may be 50, 60, 70 mps based on the current polling. so there's something not right, and that's what cuts through to the public when they think i live in a safe seat, there's no point in me going to vote because my vote won't matter. if you want to get people engaged with politics, every vote needs to count. so moving to that proportional representation system is the way to go. but you're right, the current two party state. will any of them ever want to change their gateway from that? i very much doubt it. >> well, jamie jenkins has 23 long days to go yet. thank you
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very much for help keeping me sane and helping me smile . thank sane and helping me smile. thank you very much for joining us sane and helping me smile. thank you very much forjoining us on you very much for joining us on the show. jamie jenkins, always a pleasure to have you. now, meanwhile, there are question marks over whether we can expect tax rises and labour's manifesto to be announced , of course, to be announced, of course, tomorrow. and here's what labour leader sir keir starmer had to say about that when he was asked about it earlier today . about it earlier today. >> all of our plans are fully costed, fully funded . there will costed, fully funded. there will be no increase in income tax in national insurance or vat, and we'll launch our manifesto tomorrow . there'll be no tax tomorrow. there'll be no tax surprises and none of our plans require tax rises over and above the rises that we've already set out. but what you will see tomorrow is a plan for the future of the country, a manifesto that sets out how we will rebuild and renew the country and sets out the first steps that we will take in government on day one to set us down that path of renewal and rebuilding. so it will be a very different manifesto to the one that the tories unveiled yesterday . yesterday. >> well, we are, of course, the
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people's channel and throughout the election campaign we'll be heanng the election campaign we'll be hearing from people across the united kingdom about what really matters to them. big issues such as nhs waiting lists, the impact of immigration, the cost of living crisis and crime and policing, while our reporters have been to meet voters from all four nations and will be heanng all four nations and will be hearing from them regularly before polling day and today, for the first time, we meet david lee from mansfield . david lee from mansfield. >> i'm david lee, i'm 45, from mansfield . the biggest issue for mansfield. the biggest issue for me is basically putting money back into people's pockets. shops are closing, people are out of jobs, and the regeneration of a place like this is really needed. i'm a business owner. i've got a small shoe repair shop. i've got to put my prices up because my costs everywhere have gone up. so to put money back into people's pockets, lower taxes and get more shops open, that's what i want to see in a place like this. i think people around here feel disillusioned with
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politics, with government. they talk about all this money that this town's being given to level up, and our money is going to be given to the places in the north to level up. but what levelling up has happened in mansfield , up has happened in mansfield, this marketplace, it used to be full of stalls. now as you look at it, there's a handful of stalls. mansfield has always been labour. you put a red fibbon been labour. you put a red ribbon on a donkey round here and it would have got in, but then we come to 2017 and it's switched allegiances and it went conservative. and i think a big reason for that was obviously brexit. in the past i voted for laboun brexit. in the past i voted for labour, for conservative, even for ukip. but at the moment i'm on the fence of which way i'm going to vote and i'm not going to look at rishi sunak or keir starmer on which one of those i'm going to vote for, or even the other parties . i'm going to the other parties. i'm going to look at what the politicians say they're going to do for my town, mansfield . mansfield. >> now, i've lost more on that
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story. of course, at 5:00, and there's plenty of coverage on our website, gb news. com you've helped to make it the fastest growing national news website in the country. so thank you very much . now time now for the great much. now time now for the great british giveaway and your chance to make this summer really special. with over £16,000 worth of prizes to won , be that's 15 of prizes to won, be that's 15 grand tax, free cash and a whole host of treats on top. now you've got to be in it to win it. and here's all the details that you need to enter. >> we're making this summer funner with three incredible pnzes funner with three incredible prizes to be won. first, a fantastic £15,000 in tax free cash that you can spend on anything you like. next, there's the latest iphone 15 with a brand new set of apple airpods and finally £500 to spend at the uk attraction of your choice. the summer fun could be on us for another chance to win the iphone treats and £15,000 cash text win to 63232. text cost £2
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plus one standard network rate message or post your name and number two gb zero six, po box 8690. derby de19, double t, uk only entrants must be 18 or oven only entrants must be 18 or over. lie—ins close at 5 pm. on the 28th of june. full terms and privacy notice at gbnews.com/win . please check the closing time if listening or watching on demand. good luck ! demand. good luck! >> great stuff. now don't go anywhere because soon i'll be speaking with a conservative minister, tom tugendhat, about his extraordinary comments from grant shapps about a super majority for sir keir starmer. have the tories simply given up? i'll put it to him next. i'm martin daubney on gb news, britain's news channel
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daubney on gb news now. sir. ed davey was back in the water again today to promote the lib dems tougher proposed water regulations . and the liberal regulations. and the liberal democrat leader, as you can see, plunged into a lake in warwickshire to promote his plans for a clean water authority to replace ofwat as a regulator of private water. there he goes . boof! chocks there he goes. boof! chocks away. you know, for a guy that worries a lot about sewage, you spend a lot of time on this campaign trail plopping into the water. now, this is just one of a series of stunts since he started campaigning, including, of course, paddle boarding on lake windermere, looking around for floating voters and visiting a slip and slide in somerset. in fact, i think he's about to try and do a gladiator leap. here he goes, clambering over a net, looking very much like one of the world's worst gladiators. here he goes. i think he's going to try and go on to the monkey fings to try and go on to the monkey rings. is he ? well, here we go. rings. is he? well, here we go. and another spectacular flop. at
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least that's a politician who's making something of a splash. seems to be working, though. he's having a merry time. it's like a big adventure to him and the liberal democrat leader was also asked for his thoughts on the uk gdp figures, which came out today , the time ticks away out today, the time ticks away from rishi sunak and his premiership as he has his last few days in office. i'm afraid the economy is petering to the conservatives promised to grow the economy to make it more prosperous, and they failed utterly and whether it's the cost of living which has hit people so hard with the energy bills, the rent, the mortgages, the food bills and the conservatives done nothing to help with that, or whether it's the economy not growing properly , the conservatives have so mismanaged our economy from liz truss's appalling mini—budget to rishi sunak's failures, they should get out of the way and liberal democrats have some really attractive, positive ideas to rebuild our economy and help people with the cost of
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living now. >> meanwhile, visiting an asda supermarket in edinburgh , snp supermarket in edinburgh, snp leader john swinney says supermarket in edinburgh, snp leaderjohn swinney says a poll leader john swinney says a poll which forecasts the snp on 27 seats at the general election is encouraging . encouraging. >> this visit to asda illustrates to me just the challenges that people are racing with about the cost of living and it's important to listen to the reflections of the staff and the work that they are doing to support people through really difficult times. >> and of course, that complements what the scottish government is doing, where we are taking a range of measures, whether it's about maintaining free prescriptions or about introducing free bus travel for under 22 seconds, or the scottish child payment, that's keeping 100,000 children out of poverty, which are measures which are designed to support families who are facing real challenges at this time. >> but what's important is that when i look at the performance of other small european countries, independent countries, independent countries, i see them delivering a stronger economic performance and stronger public finances than the united kingdom. the united kingdom model is broken . united kingdom model is broken. it is absolutely broken, and the
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false debate that we're having in this election campaign is demonstrating that the i'm trying to say in this election campaign that there's £18 billion worth of spending cuts that essentially are baked into the conservatives projections about the future of the economy. and the labour party accepts that. and the labour party accepts that . and we cannot bear any that. and we cannot bear any more austerity within scotland. but people need to know that if a labour government gets elected, they will be continuing the austerity of the tories . the austerity of the tories. when will we be? well, obviously the scottish government will set out its material in due course about a whole range of different questions. we can't do that dunng questions. we can't do that during a uk general election campaign because the guidance won't allow us to do it, but we will do that in due course to set out the strengths and the advantages of scotland being an independent country . the d—day independent country. the d—day commemorations in normandy will go down for me as one of the most significant days of my time as first minister for and everything that lasts, because you cannot observe the 80th anniversary of d—day and counter
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veterans and not be overwhelmed by the sacrifice that they made, and to be an observer of their was an extraordinary privilege. so every moment i spent there was absolutely precious and i would have spent even more time there if it was possible to do so, because the experience was utterly overwhelming and a huge privilege. and i'm a bit surprised that wasn't reflected in the prime minister's comments i >> -- >> that's imam >> that's john swinney in asda today. >> that's john swinney in asda today . now there's lots more today. now there's lots more still to come between now and 5:00, and we really do need to talk about knife crime. following on from the shocking murder of shawn seesahai cecaae by 212 year old boys, which comes as a survey today claims that 46% of british teens are scared of knife crime, including an astonishing 31% scared of blades in their own schools. much to discuss. i'm martin daubney on gb news, britain's news channel. but first, it's your news headlines with polly middlehurst .
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middlehurst. >> the top stories this hour on gb news rishi sunak has been insisting he hasn't given up hope of winning the election , hope of winning the election, but he has warned voters not to give labour a blank check . the give labour a blank check. the prime minister was campaigning at a school in north east lincolnshire as new figures showed the economy stagnated in april . that's showed the economy stagnated in april. that's something of a setback for the prime minister and his recent claim. the economy had turned a corner. but the tories have pointed to figures that demonstrate the economy had grown in the previous three months. the lib dems say rishi sunak has utterly failed to deliver on his promises . and sir keir starmer promises. and sir keir starmer says labour's plan will renew the country . chronic numbers of the country. chronic numbers of potholes would be fixed under a new plan by the labour party, they say tory cuts have led to poorly maintained roads causing damage to cars and contributing to higher insurance premiums. the party's promising to direct special funding to councils to fix a million potholes every yean fix a million potholes every year, and says labour will turn the tide of neglect . and as
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the tide of neglect. and as you've been hearing, scotland's first minister says there should be another referendum on scottish independence in the next five years, joining snp candidate joanna cherry on a visit to a supermarket in edinburgh. john swinney denied suggestions he'd been down, saying the referendum. in the election campaign, he said the issue of independence relates to the principle concerns of the scottish people, including the cost of living and the implications of brexit and the french president is vowing to fight on, even though his party suffered losses. even if his party suffer losses in a snap election. emmanuel macron says dissolving parliament was the only possible response to the gain made by right wing parties in last weekend's european elections . he in last weekend's european elections. he insisted in last weekend's european elections . he insisted the vote elections. he insisted the vote would bring clarity, though polls put right wing leader marine le pen in first place with centre left macron trailing in third. he's urging political rivals to join him by forging a
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democratic alliance against le pen's national rally party. those are the headlines for your latest top stories. sign up for gb news alerts. scan the qr code on the screen or go to gb news. com slash alerts . com slash alerts. >> thank you very much, polly. now, in a few minutes time, i'll be speaking with tory minister tom tugendhat. but first, there's a new way to get in touch with us here @gbnews. and here's bev turner with all of the details. >> we are proud to be gb news the people's channel. and as you know, we always love to hear your views. now there's a new way of getting in touch with us at gbnews.com/yoursay by commenting, you can be part of a live conversation and join our gb news community. you can even talk to me bev turner or any of the members of the news family. simply go gbnews.com/yoursay
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>> welcome back. your time is 438. i'm martin daubney. this is gb news. well, i'm delighted to announce i'm now joined by security minister tom tugendhat. tom, welcome to the show. we have to talk about this labour supermajority. it very much feels to people, tom, that grant shapps has sent up the white flag. it's not talking about if the tories have any chance of winning. it's now talking about how bad the defeat is going to be and seems to be a desperate plea to get people to still stick with the conservatives. so you don't get wiped out as a minister of state for security, this seems to be more now about job security. >> no, it's absolutely not about that. >> martin, look, it's lovely to see you again. as always , but see you again. as always, but you would not expect me to run up any white flags ever. >> and i'm not going to do it now. this is a fight to the line. it's a fight to the end.
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and we've got a hell of a lot of campaigning to go. >> we're about halfway through the campaign, so it's hardly surprising . surprising. >> there's some bumps and bruises. that's that's pretty much the nature of an election. for those of us who've been through 1 or 2 before. and you followed a few before. martin, i know that you know that. that's kind of how they work. >> and there's a hell of a lot of talking to do. >> one of the things i'll tell you that i find, and i've been lucky enough to be out and about in my own patch before i was forced back into order to come and talk to you this afternoon, i've been i've been meeting people here in the most beautiful constituency in the entire country, in west kent. and you know, there's a lot of people who are supportive. still, a lot of people are still very kind on the doorstep. and there's a lot of people who are undecided , and you can undecided, and you can understand why they're undecided. we've been in for 14 years. there's many challenges. a lot of the decisions that we've taken in recent years still have to play out. and, you know, we're seeing some of the advantages . you know, if you advantages. you know, if you look at brexit, one of the advantages is we've got i regulation very separate from the european union. but how long
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before you start to see the difference between i feeding through in our hospitals for example, different to germany or france? well it's going to take a little while. of course it's going to take a little while. these are decisions that we have ceded already that are going to take a little while to grow fruit. and i can understand why people are in doubt. but really, the question that people have got to ask themselves, and you've been asking this yourself, martin, i heard you. i think it was yesterday or the day before. the real choice is, frankly, do you want keir starmer in number 10? because this is a guy who has not only not offering a plan, but you can see from his ethos what he actually thinks about things. don't ask me, listen to what he said. ask ask yourself, do you want the guy who speaks about free movement of people to be the prime minister? do you want the prime minister? do you want the guy who isn't clear on whether terrorists should be able to come back to the uk to be in number 10? do you want the guy who has also been appointing people who voted against our nuclear deterrent to be the guy
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who's responsible for the ultimate protection of the british people? you know, whether it's shamima begum or or continuous at sea deterrent, these are real choices that we've got to ask ourselves. and so you'll forgive me, martin, i am not drawing up any white flags. i am fighting right up to the end, because this is far too important to concede on, and i will not give up. >> nevertheless, tom, there has been a perceptible change in mindset amongst conservative voters. i stood in the 2019 election. conservatives were begging the brexit party candidates to stand aside. don't let corbyn in. and yet today, some astonishing figures came out. 25% of conservative voters in 2019 now want the conservatives to lose every single seat. there seems to be an appetite. tom tugendhat, amongst your own voters to somehow reset the party. there's a feeling that europe divided the party. net zero divides the party. immigration divides the
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party. immigration divides the party. there's a feeling i hear every single day. the conservative voters simply want the conservatives to be conservative again. >> so i agree with you that the conservative party has a responsibility to be arguing passionately for those things that really make us a great country. now part of that is our borders and our security. and i've touched on that. but part of it is also the economy. now we have to get taxes down. and that's exactly what we are promising . that's exactly the promising. that's exactly the commitment we're making. but we can only make that commitment if we get over the line. now, you don't need me to tell you because you know it. what's margaret thatcher's great line? socialists eventually run out of other people's money, and that's exactly what keir starmer is proposing to do. he wants to spend your money. he wants to spend your money. he wants to spend at least £2,000 more of it. and we know those figures because those are the ones he's announced. and no doubt it's going to be more because he's going to be more because he's going to be more because he's going to find things that he wants to spend money on that he hasn't told us about yet. so
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these choices are absolutely fundamental. what are we going to do about keeping ourselves safer ? how are we going to make safer? how are we going to make the economy grow, and how are we going to make those arguments work? now martin, i've seen polls too, but you will forgive me . i saw quite a lot of polls me. i saw quite a lot of polls before 2016. that left quite a lot of people in the betting markets. worse off. and you got it right. i've seen quite a lot of polls in 2019 that told us a very different result. and again, you got it right. so look, i trust the british people to make the right decision. i trust democracy and i'm sure the british people will look at all the factors and weigh them up. >> but then you you use the spectre of socialism, tom. but a lot of people are saying we have socialism now. we've got the highest taxes since world war two. we have de facto open borders . borders. >> so we have got to bring down taxes.i >> so we have got to bring down taxes. i mean, there's not just me saying this. you can speak to anybody in the conservative party about that. the trouble we've had, and you need you don't need me to tell you about this either. frankly, you could
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you could do this interview yourself. martin. the reality is we have had to spend £400 billion on covid. you know this, andifs billion on covid. you know this, and it's been a complete nightmare. and we have got to pay nightmare. and we have got to pay it down. if we don't do it in a balanced way, all that we do is we force up people's interest rates because we mess around with the economy in a way that causes people to doubt our confidence in the future. now, that's not the way to do it. the way to do it is to bring down inflation. that's what we've just done , is to balance the just done, is to balance the books. that's what we're doing, and to make sure that we put out and to make sure that we put out a fully costed manifesto. and that's exactly what we've done . that's exactly what we've done. get all those right. you bring the economy back into order, you see growth, and you start to help people to have that opportunity in life that this country can offer and that very few others can. >> okay. tom tugendhat, security minister still bravely fighting on. thanks for joining minister still bravely fighting on. thanks forjoining us on the on. thanks for joining us on the show. always a pleasure to have your company. thanks. coming up, we'll be talking about britain's knife crime epidemic with an anti knife crime campaign . he's anti knife crime campaign. he's going to help you to help you keep your children safe. i'm
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welcome back. your time is 448. i'm martin daubney. back. your time is 448. i'm martin daubney . this is gb news. martin daubney. this is gb news. now. the trial of former nurse lucy letby has started at manchester crown court today. she's accused of attempting to murder a baby girl in february 2016. when working at the countess of chester hospital. the 34 year old, from hereford, was previously convicted of a number of murders and attempted murders. well, joining us now from manchester crown court is our north—west of england reporter. sophie reaper. sophie, welcome to the show. tell us more about this. this incredible case. >> well, this afternoon, martin, the prosecution continued their opening statements here at manchester crown court. nick
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johnson kc, telling jurors that at one point the nurse responsible for child care briefly left the unit to go and check on child k's mother. and they say it was then that lucy letby struck. he told the jury it's their case that at this point let be dislodged. child k's breathing tube, as well as disabling the alarms that should have notified those on the unit of k's declining health. he told the jury that at this point, another doctor on the ward, doctor ravi jayaram, entered to find letby. ignoring child k's declining health. they say in their words that jayaram caught her red handed. nick johnson later told the jury that child k then died three days later at arrowe park hospital in liverpool. he said we're not suggesting what lucy letby did caused her death, but we are suggesting that lucy letby attempted to kill child k. the defence also gave their opening statements here at manchester crown court this afternoon .
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crown court this afternoon. benjamin myers kc telling jurors you have each taken an oath to try miss letby and to give a true verdict according to the evidence, not a verdict based on sympathy or what you've read outside the courtroom. he set outside the courtroom. he set out their case, telling the jury that that they believe that letby did not dislodge child k's breathing tube , that she has breathing tube, that she has been wrongly accused of this, and that ultimately she is pleading not guilty. court has now concluded for the day and is scheduled to resume once again tomorrow morning here at manchester crown court . manchester crown court. >> thank you very much for joining us. sophie reaper from manchester crown court on the latest case of lucy letby . thank latest case of lucy letby. thank you very much. now, more than 100 cadets, veterans and serving on forces are marching in nottingham, my home city, in honour of britain's second world war heroes. a traditional drumhead service was held at the city's embankment war memorial as part of events commemorating d—day. now, 80 years ago, the
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battle of normandy was raging with thousands of troops landing in france every day. as will hollis reports, this . hollis reports, this. >> the men and women that served to protect britain in nottingham, they remember those who came before by the banks of the river trent. >> a service at the city's war memorial marking the anniversary of d—day . of d—day. >> colonel james gunn was training then. >> the 98 year old remembers the perilous position britain was in. >> the country was absolutely right up against it. we were a single country. we had no allies whatever, except the empire . whatever, except the empire. now, nowadays, nowadays are not allowed to talk nicely about the empire, but without that we would have been in real trouble . would have been in real trouble. >> james was lucky he was commissioned with the british indian army as the war ended. >> but so many never came home.
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by >> but so many never came home. by now, 80 years ago, the battle of normandy was raging with the number of brits killed growing . number of brits killed growing. >> frederick william clark, army , who, faced with a roll of honoun , who, faced with a roll of honour, the men from nottinghamshire who died on d—day, the average age was 23. >> more than 20,000 allies under british command were killed in normandy. >> decades later, their sacrifice honoured not just by the armed forces but the public too. a lot of people , men laid too. a lot of people, men laid down, women laid down their lives for how we could live today. >> we lived in peace and we owe it to our armed forces. >> i just get really upset and my daughters, lord lieutenant cadet and i want my children to remember the lord lieutenant of nottinghamshire, veronica pickering, says community should connect with the armed forces. >> this is a way of building bndges >> this is a way of building bridges and building up family and community strength.
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>> for 18 year old cadet daniel hanlon, the parade is a privilege. >> it's certainly an honour to have been selected and, for this position and as such, i get to come out here and do things like this, which are always fun and important for showing remembrance for the people who've come before us, the people we've lost . people we've lost. >> today they shall not grow old as we that are left grow old. we will remember them. will hollis gb news in nottingham . gb news in nottingham. >> that's a beautiful package. it's hard not to be moved by that. that's my home city. and everywhere you go , in every everywhere you go, in every small village, you see the war memorials, you see the names of those who fell. and so often, so many brothers, so many villages just lost all of their boys. it's so, so important that we remember them. it's difficult. you get choked up even now watching that excellent stuff . watching that excellent stuff. now don't go anywhere, because
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the next hour we'll be discussing whether the tories have accepted defeat already. have they thrown in the towel? i'm martin daubney on britain's news channel gb news. but first your weather. alex deakin . your weather. alex deakin. >> a brighter outlook with boxt solar sponsors of weather on . gb news. >> afternoon. welcome along to your latest weather update from the met office here on gb news. it's not warm out there, but for most of us it's a fine day and the winds are a bit lighter than yesterday, so it feels at least a little bit warmer. the weather is on the change though. a couple of weather systems on their way in from the atlantic. that's for tomorrow. but as i say for the rest of today, most places set fair. there are a few showers still across northeast scotland. 1 or 2 across eastern england as well, but they're tending to fade away for many. it's a fine evening and we'll see the cloud melting away, so for quite a few of us it'll be a largely clear night. and that
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will allow it to don't quite chilly temperatures well down into single digits once more, to down 3 or 4 in many rural spots out west, though , temperatures out west, though, temperatures will actually start to rise later in the night as the cloud arrives from those weather systems, bringing outbreaks of rain into northern ireland. eventually, that rain will spread into scotland, but for much of tomorrow, northern scotland will stay dry and fine. still 1 or 2 showers close by to shetland. here is that rain though , edging into northern though, edging into northern ireland for the morning rush houn ireland for the morning rush hour, so a soggy start here. getting quite windy too, especially on the east coast of northern ireland. the west coast of wales and the south—west of england will see the winds steadily picking up as well. many central and eastern parts having a dry fine, if somewhat chilly, start to the day . the chilly, start to the day. the cloud will increase over the midlands and then into eastern england as the rain spreads into wales, southwest england. by lunchtime , southwest scotland up lunchtime, southwest scotland up towards the central belt. by the end of the day and also come the middle of the afternoon, some of that rain getting into the midlands . much of eastern midlands. much of eastern england will stay dry until quite late on and same goes for northern scotland, but in the west getting very , very windy as
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west getting very, very windy as well as wet. these western coast, particularly gusty for this time of year. temperatures again mid teens, but feeling cooler with the wind and the rain which will continue to spread into eastern england and eventually into northern scotland during the course of tomorrow evening. and the blustery and showery outlook will continue . some sunny spells will continue. some sunny spells but lots of heavy showers through the weekend. temperatures a little higher but feeling cooler with the gusty winds . winds. >> looks like things are heating up. boxt boilers. sponsors of weather on gb news as
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labour super majority had put the uk in a dangerous place. is. labour super majority had put the uk in a dangerous place. is . ext the uk in a dangerous place. is. ext of a minister for their thoughts? 12 year olds murdering with machetes 46% of british teens terrified of knives, including 31% scared of blades including 31% scared of blades in their own schools . throughout in their own schools. throughout today's show, i've been asking some of the uk's foremost experts how do we stamp out the cancer of knife crime and have you switched your heating back on like me? slippers, onesies , on like me? slippers, onesies, fleecy under sheets, out of the wardrobe and back into commission? well, later this hour i'll be joined by the formidable weatherman john kettley to ask him. it's june . kettley to ask him. it's june. why on earth is it so ruddy well cold. that's all coming up in your next hour . once a show.
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your next hour. once a show. always a delight to have your company. chris hope has just hoved into view. he's been out on the tory campaign trail today, been asking the question all day. have they simply given up? they're shutting up shop. they're raising the white flag. they're raising the white flag. they're talking about supermajorities. the more is pleading with people not to vote for rival parties like reform to try and keep their jobs. i find try and keep theirjobs. i find it astonishing we're only halfway through the campaign , halfway through the campaign, and yet it feels like we're approaching the end game . let me approaching the end game. let me know what you think about that. all the tories simply giving up and do you blame them a lot of you out there saying you want the conservatives to feel some pain, get in touch. gbnews.com/yoursay i'll say. but before we get into the final hounis before we get into the final hour, is your news headlines with polly middlehurst . with polly middlehurst. >> martin, thank you and good evening to you. well, rishi sunak insists he hasn't given up
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hope of winning the general election , but he has warned election, but he has warned voters not to give labour a blank check . the prime minister blank check. the prime minister was campaigning at a school in nonh was campaigning at a school in north east lincolnshire this afternoon, as new figures showed the economy recorded no growth in april. that's something of a setback for his recent claim that britain had turned a corner in terms of its economy. the tories pointed to figures that showed there was growth in the months before april, but the lib dems said rishi sunak has utterly failed to deliver on his promises. and sir keir starmer says labour's plan will renew the country. >> the one thing that everybody expected and needed from rishi sunak was stability. after the disaster of liz truss. what he's now done is become the latest version of liz trust with unfunded commitments. and i think the public know voters know that there's a cost to that and they want an alternative. and that's why i'm really pleased that tomorrow in our manifesto, we will take a different approach. we will set out the case for growth, for
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rebuilding, for putting our nafion rebuilding, for putting our nation first to go forward . nation first to go forward. >> well, a record number of people have lost faith in british politics as according to electoral expert sir john curtice, the analysis found trust and confidence in politics and the overall election system has never been lower. 45% of respondents almost never believe that governments of any party are fully focused on the challenges facing the country . a challenges facing the country. a record 58% said they almost never trust politicians of any party. to tell the truth. that's a 19 point increase on 2020. scotland's first minister says there should be another referendum on scottish independence in the next five years, joining snp candidate joanna cherry on the campaign trail in edinburgh, john swinney denied suggestions he'd been downplaying the referendum in the election. he said the issue of independence relates to the principal concerns of the
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scottish people , including the scottish people, including the cost of living. >> what's important is that when i look at the performance of other small european countries , other small european countries, independent countries, i see them delivering a stronger economic performance and stronger public finances than the united kingdom. the united kingdom model is broken. it is absolutely broken . and the false absolutely broken. and the false debate that we're having in this election campaign is demonstrating that the amte power trying to say in this election campaign that there's £18 billion worth of spending cuts, that essentially are baked into the conservatives projections about the future of the economy. and the labour party accepts that . and we party accepts that. and we cannot be at any more austerity within scotland . within scotland. >> john swinney, now turning our attentions to france, where the president there is vowing to fight on even if his party suffers losses. in a snap election that he's called. emmanuel macron says dissolving parliament was the only possible response to the gains made by right wing parties in last week's european elections. he
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says the vote will bring clarity for the french people, though polls put the right wing leader, marine le pen, in first place, with macron trailing in third. he's urged political rivals to join him now by forging a democratic alliance against le pen's national rally party. the us secretary of state says some of the latest changes put forward by the terror group hamas for a ceasefire in gaza are unworkable, meaning the war will go on. anthony blinken has been studying the latest demands alongside mediators in qatar. it's understood hamas will only accept president biden's deal if it gets written guarantees from the united states over a permanent ceasefire and the withdrawal of israeli forces from gaza. meanwhile israel's military says around 160 rockets have been fired into the north of the country from lebanon. hezbollah has claimed responsibility for those attacks here in the uk.
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responsibility for those attacks here in the uk . the co—op bank here in the uk. the co—op bank has apologised after customers complained of a glitch that saw payments taken twice from some small business account holders. people took to social media to vent their frustration, with one claiming they were £5,000 out of pocket with no resolution in sight. another said their account had been in overdraft all day, but they hadn't had any notification from the bank. a spokesperson for co—op apologised and said a correction is currently being processed. and just lastly, cctv footage has been released of a man caught stealing a victorian brass eagle lectern worth £6,000 from a church near birmingham. the lectern is thought to date back to 1868, which is when the edgbaston church officially opened. if you're watching on tv, you can see the thief approaching the altar, then the lectern , removing it from the lectern, removing it from the column, covering it with a blanket, and then calmly walking out. west midlands police are investigating the theft , which
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investigating the theft, which happenedin investigating the theft, which happened in just two minutes in broad, broad daylight. that's the latest news. do sign up for gb news alerts, scan the qr code on your screen or go to gb news. common alerts . common alerts. >> thank you polly. now we're expecting another huge clash tonight between rishi sunak and sir keir starmer as they go head to head again in their second tv debate. now the leaders will face heavy questioning on key battlegrounds like the economy and immigration. plus, they'll both have to defend themselves amid a range of accusations. keir starmer will be quizzed on labour's plans for taxation and the prime minister on whether he's detached from voters after admitting that the hardship that he went without sky tv due to parental sacrifices. let's cross live now to gb news political correspondent katherine forster, who is in grimsby, the seat of tonight's debate. what was the
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show, catherine? so tell us, what can we expect tonight ? what can we expect tonight? slightly different format. they're not going head to head. tell us what can we expect . tell us what can we expect. >> yes. good afternoon martin from grimsby . quite different from grimsby. quite different from grimsby. quite different from the last leaders debate. just a week ago in that they will have two, 1 to 1 interviews. keir starmer first for 20 minutes, then prime minister rishi sunak for 20 minutes and then a 25 minute q&a with the audience. so the last leaders debate, it was quite staccato, wasn't it? they only had 45 seconds to answer questions. there was a lot of interrupting. and rishi sunak just banged that message. labour are going to put up your taxes over and over again. sir keir starmer tried to put across some sort of more nuanced arguments, but those got a little bit lost. so there's going to be more time in this debate tonight to drill down into the policies. of course , the conservative course, the conservative manifesto announced yesterday ,
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manifesto announced yesterday, lots and lots of policies announced. and sir keir starmer , announced. and sir keir starmer, laboun announced. and sir keir starmer, labour, their policy manifesto document , not out until document, not out until tomorrow, of course, but we're not expecting many surprises. i think it's worth saying why it's chosen. grimsby why we're here in grimsby, particularly for this debate, because this is one of those classic red wall seats where voters lent their votes to the conservatives back in 2019, and there's been some boundary changes here. but basically, this seat prior to that had been labour since 1935. the conservatives got a 7000 majority here. labour would certainly expect to be taking that back, assuming there's no huge change in the polls. of course, rishi sunak is desperate for something to change. he needs a moment for the polls to start to shift and shift
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dramatically. sir keir starmer very much a safety first approach. they simply want to be careful, want to be cautious, want to do nothing wrong to jeopardise that poll lead. but it's going to be a fascinating couple of hours later. this evening. >> thank you. katherine forster live from grimsby , of course. live from grimsby, of course. totemic once in britain's fishing industry , now a part of fishing industry, now a part of forgotten coastal britain. all eyes on grimsby tonight. katherine forster zones update. thank you very much. now let's zoom back to the studio. i'm delighted to be joined by chris hope. chris, you've been out on the campaign trail today with the campaign trail today with the conservatives. we started the conservatives. we started the day with the extraordinary message from grant shapps talking about a labour supermajority leading many to conclude they've simply thrown in the towel, warning against it. >> i asked that very question. have you given up, prime minister, on his battlebus as it went towards grimsby? he said no , absolutely not. and he then talked about his manifesto. what you saw yesterday , he told me, you saw yesterday, he told me, is we have put the manifesto first and it's got very clear
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set of tax cuts for the country, tax cut at every stage of life. and tonight he'll be emphasising those tax cuts for old people, for families , for those in work, for families, for those in work, for families, for those in work, for self—employed and the rest he's trying to show that we are the tax cutting party, the tory party against the one that they would say. though labour is spending heavily , of course, all spending heavily, of course, all hinges on this. this costings document still being debated. 18 billion of savings from closing that tax gap, getting more of us to pay our taxes are correctly and also cutting back on welfare spending. that's 18 billion of savings by the end of the parliament. and that's mirrored, mirrored off by 17.2 billion of tax cuts. so that's the sum that they want us to talk about in gb news and to voters to present themselves with. but no question, he's still miles behind . and that remark there behind. and that remark there from grant shapps this warning of a supermajority . he didn't of a supermajority. he didn't want to use that term. he called it a blank check for labour. but the meaning is the same. basically, the bigger the majority , over 100 seat majority majority, over 100 seat majority in house of commons, labour can do basically what they like and
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no opposition party can stop them. >> and chris, an astonishing sea change. i believe in the mindset of conservative voters. in 2019 it was abc. anyone but corbyn. brexit party stand aside. we have to get a big tory majority. figures out today saying 25% of those same conservative voters from 2019 now want the conservatives to lose every single seat. this is feels like end of days territory here. >> i mean, i mean, that sounded like the government. that is one poll and it sounds quite extreme. i think what's interesting, there's a yougov poll yesterday i thought for sky news, they've got labour on 38 points and the tories on 18 points and the tories on 18 points reform uk on 17 points. now if they can just combine those two numbers 17 and 18 points, you're near, you're in a hung parliament territory. that to me is a challenge for for, sunak. how do you neutralise the threat of nigel farage and recognise and ensure that voters recognise and ensure that voters recognise that votes for reform will make mean a bigger majority
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for keir starmer? as for rishi sunak, who has with with earlier over lunchtime today in grimsby, he is saying he's always pumped, he's saying he's genuinely energised. he sees yesterday as an inflection point in a campaign where three weeks in, three weeks ago, 22 days to go, we've now got the policy platform . it's about selling platform. it's about selling that document. no more speculation about this or that policy. we know what is the this party will offer this country for the next five years. let's sell it to the country . that's sell it to the country. that's where he comes from. the problem is he's being asked why he's so far behind . no one is listening. far behind. no one is listening. >> the polls have been flat as a pancake since the election was announced in the drizzle, 23 wasn't drizzle, it was pouring with rain. >> i was in it. yeah what i'm saying is it's still feels like a damp squib. >> yesterday . silverstone. any >> yesterday. silverstone. any signs at all this has revved up the electorate ? the electorate? >> no, not yet. and indeed, to me it felt flat in the room. there wasn't a kind of cheering. he wasn't glimpsing the sunny uplands. he wasn't showing us the ambition of what five years
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of sunak could give. it felt it felt a bit weary, frankly, and the offer was quite limited. what they've done, as i said yesterday, is they've tried to get these different policies out in the first three weeks nothing has worked. so in the end of the day, when we saw the manifesto, the main thing in there was a cut for self—employed on fewer than £50,000 a year. quite a limited cut. give a given the scale of the offer for the next five years, as you always say, rishi sunak as an individual, full of beans, full of vim, full of confidence , full of haribos. of confidence, full of haribos. by of confidence, full of haribos. by the way, in twixes that's what he lives on. >> not the best advert. maybe the labour party might try and get his teeth inspected . on the get his teeth inspected. on the serious point behind the scenes within the party, away from the cameras. does it feel more now, like damage limitation ? like damage limitation? >> i would say to viewers, look at where he's campaigning. he's mainly campaigning in safe seats, in safe seats. he's campaigning in. i won't see him in windsor and windsor is not a seat which the tory prime minister should be anywhere nean he minister should be anywhere near. he should be out battling
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in the red wall, battling in the south—west, where they were in 2015 and surprising us all. with that surprise, tory majority by killing off the liberal democrats. he's not doing this. he is . he is democrats. he's not doing this. he is. he is running democrats. he's not doing this. he is . he is running a democrats. he's not doing this. he is. he is running a safe campaign. he's not out there taking the risks i think he needs to make. and he's not like we saw nigel farage being pelted on a bus. we saw him get milkshaked last week . and you milkshaked last week. and you know, he's saying he won't be silenced. he's using the opposition to him to fuel the voter to get out and back nigel farage and reform uk. i don't see that passion out there in terms of what he's doing. yes, he's passionate when you meet him and you'll see it on tv tonight and we'll have katherine forster in the spin room, do come back to gb news if you're watching it, because he'll be out there getting all the best reaction for gb news viewers . reaction for gb news viewers. but i don't see the passion and the need to get out there and do take risks. the risks i would take, just finally, is when is when is battle bus pulls into a pulls in, get on board rishi and then jump off it and have a random half an hour with voters that no one's expecting you can
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get away with. the security won't be a problem because no one knows he's there and it'll be great. >> tv well, midnight tonight is the exact halfway mark of this election campaign , and nothing election campaign, and nothing has happened in the polls. >> no, that's the problem. >> no, that's the problem. >> that's the. that's the point. doesit >> that's the. that's the point. does it feel like it's already approaching five minutes to midnight for the conservatives >> it's past that. maybe. you reckon maybe one minute to midnight. i think it's looking very, very difficult to pull it back. if they do, it will be a lot of humble pie eaten by pollsters. >> so brace up there, chris. thank you very much for motoring back to join us in the studio for the 5:00. been out and about with the prime minister all day chris hope, thank you very much. always a delight. now moving on. we desperately, desperately need to talk about spiralling knife crime. on monday, 212 year old boys were jailed for murdering sean c sahai with a 16 inch machete, making them britain's youngest killers since the case of james bulger. and today, two grim reports cast a further dark shadow across britain. first,
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the west midlands has now become the west midlands has now become the knife crime capital of the uk. astonishingly, knife crime there is 8.3% higher even than in london. next, the shocking bbc survey claimed that 46% of british teenagers are now scared of knife crime, including a staggering 31% who are scared of knives within their own schools. now many things have been blamed for this gang culture austerity , for this gang culture austerity, even grime music. but today i want to ask the question where are the parents and is it time to punish them? well, joining me now is ken haynes. he's the former chair of the haringey independent stop and search monitoring group can welcome to the show. it's always a delight to talk to you. it's a shame it's under such sad circumstances . can you and it's under such sad circumstances. can you and i have had this debate now endlessly. you've made this your life's work to campaign on this, and i know that you've spoken to me before. common sense about this issue , beginning with
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this issue, beginning with parental control in the case we've seen of these 212 year olds came, we saw, i think we can get a picture on screen now. a 12 year old lad with a 16 inch machete down his trousers , machete down his trousers, strapped to his chest. that's the boy there, a 12 year old kid who was one of the two boys who murdered sean, his neighbours reporting today. this child was out of control. they put barbed wire on their own perimeter to keep this child away. can i'm saying to you now , where on saying to you now, where on earth are the parents? >> look, martin. thank you. first of all, thank you very much for inviting me onto onto this platform, but my deepest, condolences and, and my heartfelt sadness goes out to the parents who, whose son was murdered in this situation. but when we when we go back and look and see, the situation, this situation, sadly , it is nothing situation, sadly, it is nothing
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new. and unless we do something drastically, we're going to have more of the same happening down the line. now, we've got to look and see what's going on. you mentioned about the parents now . mentioned about the parents now. now, i don't know much about the parents background in this situation, but what i can say from dealing with other parents that gets me involved when they're, reached their wits end, it both, i'll talk about both parents. both fathers and mothers calling me in to help with their with their , with with their with their, with their children simply . what what their children simply. what what what i'm seeing is that there asking for help. sometimes they even reach out to the statutory agency. and the statutory agency don't seem to, in some cases, doesn't seem to be able to do much about what's going on. the police , again, they reach out, police, again, they reach out, don't seem to be able to do much unless it's a crime has been committed. so what happens is
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something has to happen drastically before the police step in or the social service step in or the social service step in. we also got to look about the schools because this this child here would have exhibiting that kind of behaviour not just overnight but over some substantial time. what about the school involvement? have they seen something, have the . parents gone to the gp and the. parents gone to the gp and maybe reported that they've having a challenging, time with their son and, and how to support that? and the other thing, the social media influence. look what he posted out there, how he's there with the knives and stuff and my thing is simply there's a lot of things that we're unpacking here, but the other thing i would just be a warning to other parents, not just to take the word of your child because your child has a home face and he has a street face. the home face will disarm you. the street face could get him into serious problem, and that could be brought back into the home. my thing is simply this you need to
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go into their bedroom and satisfy yourself that there's nothing there that they should nothing there that they should not have. and some. don't. get me wrong, some parents are complicit because they accept whatever the child brings in. if it's helping pay the electric or gas, or putting some food on the table, some parents will just accept it and don't ask question. but they need to because it escalates from there. and my thing is, is that what kind of society are we that give children so much rights , their children so much rights, their rights, but don't give them or teach them responsibility or hold them to account when they don't do things right. >> and i think that can can what do we do ? i mean, i mean, i mean do we do? i mean, i mean, i mean loads of great ideas there. what do we do? i mean, a 16 inch machete on a 12 year old boy. thatis machete on a 12 year old boy. that is extraordinary . vie what that is extraordinary. vie what do we do to straight to jail? >> not jail may not work in many
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cases, but what i sometimes believe that needs to be done with a lot of these first time offenders, no matter how young they are. a boot camp, boot camp style , incarceration where the style, incarceration where the for six eight weeks where they're brought in they're drill they're brought in they're drill they're given discipline . and they're given discipline. and most importantly you also have to work on growing their emotional intelligence because a lot of these youngsters says, i'm afraid, you know, and i've got and i and when they see pictures of the sort of knives and machetes and things that, that the police take, that takes off for people , they're off for people, they're thinking, well, look, i've got to step my game up because look what's out there. and so and what's out there. and so and what like , like what you're what like, like what you're showing here really these sort of thing in boldons these young people to really step their game up . back in my days, we'd be up. back in my days, we'd be walking with a lock knife or flick knife. right. that's going
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back some 30 years ago now . back some 30 years ago now. something's gone very wrong. if young people think that they can walk with these implements without disregard to anybody, they're not. i'm be saying things. but what about stop and search? my thing is, unless you got the intelligence that target these people because it doesn't backit these people because it doesn't back it up in a stop and search figures, we are going. it's a fishing expedition that the police are not very good at getting these knives off the street. people like ourselves, street. people like ourselves, street fathers , the street street fathers, the street fathers, we get called in by the parents and we take knives and we take our weapons from their home. can we can. >> i'm afraid we have to leave it there. you're a font of knowledge. it's always a delight to talk to you. and i hope next time when we talk. there hasn't been another tragic murder. thank you very much for joining us, ken hines. now coming up, we'll be discussing how city law firms have been urged to stop hosting work, social events at the pub over fears they may exclude muslim members of staff. i'm martin daubney on gb news,
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welcome back. it's 527 now. city law firms have been urged to stop hosting work. social events at the pub over fears that they exclude muslim staff. a report suggests that the legal profession's big drinking culture is unfair to those who abstain from alcohol. instead, they suggested that law firms introduce more cooking, painting or pottery classes to boost team bonding . well, joining me now to bonding. well, joining me now to discuss this is social policy analyst raqeeb hassan raqib, 5:00 on a friday. let's go and have a pottery lesson. said no b'rit ever. >> well, i think that looking at this particular report, which was published by a uk graduate recruitment company called rare , recruitment company called rare, which specialises in diversity,
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i think one thing that we have to realise is that if the telegraph's coverage of this report is correct, it's based on ten muslim interviewees , just ten muslim interviewees, just ten. so it's not the most comprehensive sample. >> and i'd make this point that i've done plenty of research. >> martin, as you know, on british muslim attitudes and the vast majority of british muslims think that britain is a very good place to live, actually, when it comes to making headway and excelling in life . and if and excelling in life. and if you compare to other european countries such as france , countries such as france, germany and the netherlands, the uk fares very well when it comes to religious accommodation. >> so i think it's all about give and take here. >> and the reality is in certain sectors there is an established drinking culture. >> i don't see the problem with really going to a pub and a bar. >> there's plenty of non—alcoholic beverages , non—alcoholic beverages, available. i know that better than most because i don't drink . than most because i don't drink. i'm a practising muslim, but i've plenty of very good client meetings, in such establishments i >> -- >> and so the people responding to this survey raki by saying this is another example of the
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tail wagging the dog, you know, we are britain . this is our we are britain. this is our culture. one of the respondents here, hamzah , said it feels here, hamzah, said it feels dishonourable in terms of religious beliefs going into a pub, because that's a place we don't really like to associate ourselves with. well, simple answer to that is don't go well. >> absolutely. and i'd make the point that if it leads to family related or community related disapproval, if you go to a pub and or a bar but you don't drink there, then i think, to be honest, i think there needs to be discussions to be had within that particular family and indeed within that particular local community, because i don't really see the issue going to a pub or a bar for a work related event. but if you don't drink there, then i'm struggling to see what the issue is. >> but it is important to highlight these things and to push back because we all know raqib one complaint, one wrong foot people run scared and entire cultures are changed. we don't highlight this. how long before it is mandated ? no
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before it is mandated? no drinking after work in case it offends people of a particular religious belief. well integrate. this is british culture. this is the way we do things like it. olympic >> well, i think that, as i said, previously, it's all about give and take and it's all about mutual compromise as well. but i think to the point where you completely shun, alcohol related events. the idea that you could introduce alcohol free events in a wholesale manner, especially in the legal sector, the idea is for the birds , to be absolutely for the birds, to be absolutely honest, i always think there's opportunity to integrate diverse workplaces , but that can't be at workplaces, but that can't be at the expense of doing away with established , workplace cultures, established, workplace cultures, which have been here for decades , if not centuries. >> yeah, i know a few lawyers and the concept that at 5:00 on and the concept that at 5:00 on a friday they'll all go to a pottery wheel. raqeeb is utter fantasy. but look, thanks for joining us on the show. always a delight to have your company. there's lots more still to come .
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there's lots more still to come. between now and 6:00. i'll be speaking with the shadow minister shortly about whether her party is going complete. complete after grant shapps supermajority comment earlier today, and also what we can expect in the labour manifesto . expect in the labour manifesto. looking ahead to that. and of course it is released tomorrow, but first, it's your news headunes but first, it's your news headlines with polly middlehurst i >> -- >> the top stories this hour from the gp newsroom. rishi sunak insists he hasn't given up hope of winning the general election, but he has warned voters not to give labour a blank check. the prime minister was campaigning at a school in nonh was campaigning at a school in north east lincolnshire this afternoon, as new figures show the economy recorded no growth in april. it's something of a setback after his recent claim that britain's economy had turned a corner . the tories, turned a corner. the tories, though, point to figures that show there was growth in the months before april. the lib dems say rishi sunak has utterly failed to deliver on his promises, while sir keir starmer
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says labour's plan will renew the country . meanwhile, chronic the country. meanwhile, chronic numbers of potholes in roads would be fixed under a new plan by the labour party. they say tory cuts have led to poorly maintained roads, causing damage to cars and contributing to higher insurance premiums. the party is promising to direct special funding to councils to fix a million potholes every yean fix a million potholes every year, and, says labour will turn the tide of neglect . scotland's the tide of neglect. scotland's first minister says there should be another referendum on scottish independence within the next five years, joining snp candidate joanna cherry on the election trail today in edinburgh. john swinney denied suggestions he'd been downplaying the referendum question in the election. he said the issue of independence relates to the principal concerns of the scottish people , concerns of the scottish people, and the french president is vowing to fight on even if his party suffers losses in a snap
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election . emmanuel macron says election. emmanuel macron says dissolving parliament was the only response possible to the gain made by right wing parties in last weekend's european elections . he in last weekend's european elections. he insists in last weekend's european elections . he insists the vote elections. he insists the vote will bring clarity, though polls put the right wing leader, marine le pen, in first place with centre left macron trailing third. he's urging political rivals to join him, forging a democratic alliance against le pen's national rally party. those are the headlines. for the latest stories, do sign up to gb news alerts, scan the qr code on the screen or go to gbnews.com/alerts. judith raanan i >> cheers! >> cheers! >> britannia wine club proudly sponsors the gb news financial report. >> now here's a quick snapshot of today's markets and the pound buying you $1.2846 and ,1.1845. the price of gold is £1,818.63
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an ounce, and the ftse 100 has closed for the day today at 8215 points. >> cheers, britannia wine club proudly sponsors the gb news financial report . financial report. >> thank you pauline, i've had hundreds of comments on your say today. we spoke with sir john curtis earlier on today about shattered trust in british politics. you really have poured your heart out about that. here's what richard had to say. i'm afraid i don't believe any politicians anymore, especially when it's election time. they tell things we want to hear. but when elected , nothing ever when elected, nothing ever happens. i'm afraid they all live in la la land. well, richard, straight to the point there somebody else is. straight to the point is michelle dewberry . up next dewbs& co 6 or dewberry. up next dewbs& co 6 or 7. michelle. my favourite part of the show. what's on your menu? >> well, i wondered how he's
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going to end your sentence there because you said that richard's saying people lives in la la land. saying people lives in la la land . and then you said. and land. and then you said. and someone else. i thought he was going to say someone else that lives in la la land. >> anyway, look, that's an interesting topic there about that whole lack of trust in politicians. >> and tonight i've got not one but two lords alongside me. i've got danny finkelstein and maurice glassman . so i want to maurice glassman. so i want to put to them this whole notion then about reform . is this one then about reform. is this one of the ways that we engage people and get more trust into politics? do we need to reform the house of lords? do we need to reform the political system, move to pr, for example? so i want to explore that. i also want to explore that. i also want to explore that. i also want to ask as well, why do we keep trying to shame people for being successful, for having wealth in this country? this whole notion of rishi sunak being pushed and pushed and pushed to say that he didn't have sky when he was a kid, i mean, it's just absolutely ridiculous, isn't it? and i think it's going to actually put off successful people from even wanting to get involved in politics in the first place. there'll be there'll be mixed opinions on that one, i can tell you. and i also want to ask, do
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you. and i also want to ask, do you think that we need to bring back uk industry to this country, and if so, what would that look like ? that look like? >> superb. aslef well michelle dewberry, i didn't have sky news when i was a kid. i hadn't even been invented michelle dewberry six till seven dewbs& co looks superb , thank you very much now. superb, thank you very much now. thanks everyone who's got in touch with gbnews.com forward slash yours. i'll in some more of those
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welcome back. it's 539. i'm martin dalby. this is gb news. now let's get back now to the general election campaign. and labour has been accused of not being transparent over its taxation plans. well, i can now speak to labour's shadow transport secretary, louise hague. louise, welcome to the show. i'll see you up there at grimsby waiting for the big event tonight. let's talk about tax , the rumours have been tax, the rumours have been flying around. first of all, it's going to cost £2,000 more under the labour party. rachel
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reeves said. it's going to cost almost £5,000 more under the conservatives. we're all getting a bit bludgeoned to death by statistics . looking ahead to statistics. looking ahead to tomorrow, can we expect any nasty tax rises in the labour manifesto because people are saying we're out of money, there's only one way to get it and to print it or to put up taxes. are you going to become a socialist party of high tax, as the tories have been saying today ? today? >> well, look, labour have been very clear where we're going to set out our tax rises. >> we have been for several months ahead of the manifesto. and yes, the manifesto is going to be published tomorrow. no, but you will not see any other tax rises than those we've already set out. and those include abolishing the non—dom tax rates. they include abolishing the relief on vat on private school fees. they include expanding the windfall tax on the obscene profits of oil and gas giants because of the war in ukraine, and they involve a taxing private equity interest carry over. so we have
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set out limited tax rises on the broader shoulders in order to inject much needed funds in pubuc inject much needed funds in public services. the conservatives, by contrast , in conservatives, by contrast, in their manifesto yesterday promised billions and billions of pounds in unfunded spending commitments. clearly not learning any lessons from their disastrous mini—budget under liz truss less than two years ago, which working people are still paying which working people are still paying the price for with higher mortgages ? mortgages? >> louise a lot of people were astonished yesterday when sir keir starmer said that the tory manifesto give away felt like a jeremy corbyn style giveaway, which is a bit ironic because sir keir starmer backed two of those manifestos in 2017 and 2019. is it really the best idea to bring up the spectre of jeremy corbyn? >> sorry, there was just a dog running by my foot. he might give me a shock, what keir was saying yesterday was that the tories, as i say, have clearly not learned any lessons from the liz truss mini—budget. in 2019, the electorate roundly rejected
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our manifesto in the 2019 general election and we have learnt lessons from then , we learnt lessons from then, we have learnt lessons, we've listened to the public and we've responded and that's why tomorrow you'll see us publish a manifesto that is completely funded , completely costed, in funded, completely costed, in stark contrast to what the tories published yesterday, which, as we have set out, would increase interest rates, just as the liz truss mini—budget did when she attempted unfunded tax cuts for the very richest. and that will have a knock on impact on people's mortgages as we've already experiencing after the consequences of liz truss . the consequences of liz truss. the manifesto yesterday was liz truss on steroids . it will have truss on steroids. it will have profound consequences for people through their mortgage payments and through prices in the shops. >> a lot of people are getting confused . was it liz truss? was confused. was it liz truss? was it jeremy corbyn? i mean, you know, these metaphors are thrown around. let's get back to one of your taxation policies, which caused a lot of chagrin amongst hard working, working class and middle class people . we want to
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middle class people. we want to get the kids into private school, emily thornberry admitted . that's guaranteed to admitted. that's guaranteed to increase the size of classrooms increase the size of classrooms in the state sector. that will force hard working people out of state school areas with the best schools. it will push the poorest into the sink estates, into the worst schools . is this into the worst schools. is this really a party that backs working class aspiration ? working class aspiration? >> well, we don't accept any kind of figures about pupils moving from private into state schools. and emily thornberry misspoke when she acknowledged that the other day . bridget that the other day. bridget phillipson, as shadow education secretary, has since corrected it . private school fees have it. private school fees have risen far faster than inflation over the last few years, and that has not had a downward pressure on the number of children attending private schools. and i think what's important to recognise is that this is a tax on the schools themselves, not on parents, and they will be able to claim vat back on their own spending. so it's up to them how they want to pass the vat on, and we don't anticipate that there will be a significant number of children or really any, any significant
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number of children moving into state school . what that money state school. what that money will go on is investing in breakfast, breakfast clubs for every primary school in in maintained schools across britain and in academies and driving up standards in, in in maintained schools and academies right across the country so that every child can get the best quality access to education. and that's the kind of ambition and aspiration that we want for every child, no matter where they grow up in this country. >> and louise, finally, grant shapps may day extraordinary comment. he said that we're heading for a labour supermajority . do you feel that supermajority. do you feel that the conservatives have almost given up on this general election campaign ? election campaign? >> well, not a single vote has been cast yet, and it would be an extraordinary outcome if labour achieved a majority, really, of any kind. the challenge that we have to achieve a majority of even one, would be akin to the election win that tony blair managed in 1997. so we know every vote is
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still to play for. and i think what grant shapps was attempting to do this morning was distract from their disastrous performance. after disastrous performance. after disastrous performance in this election campaign, whether it be returning from d—day far too early for the prime minister, or acknowledging that he wasn't as rich as he might be because he didn't have sky when he was a child. i think he is proving time and time again how out of touch he is with ordinary people in britain. and this was grant shapps last ditch attempt to distract people from that. okay >> labour's shadow transport secretary, louise haigh, thank you very much and well done for putting up there with a mid—interview pitch invasion from a dog. thank you very much for joining us live from wigan . forjoining us live from wigan. thank you. now have you switched your heating back on like me slippers, onesies fleecy under sheets? are they out of the wardrobe and back into commission? well, in just a moment i'll be joined by the formidable weatherman john kettley himself a comfort blanket from the past, and ask him. it'sjune. blanket from the past, and ask him. it's june . why is it so him. it's june. why is it so ruddy well cold? i'm martin
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welcome back. it's 549. on the final furlong, i martin daubney. this is gb news now. last year marked the uk's hottest june on record, but unfortunately, the same cannot be said for this month, can it? with brits fighting cold winds and frequent rain . temperatures and frequent rain. temperatures have averaged 3 to 5 degrees below normal this time of year. but is this simply a typical british summer ? and can we british summer? and can we expect any sunshine at all in the coming months? well, let's now find out by speaking to an expert. of course, it's the meteorologist john cantlie. the legend , the mustachioed goliath, legend, the mustachioed goliath, the weather man. i grew up with. john, you're like a comfort blanket from the past, isn't
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that ironic? because i've got my blankets back out the flaming wardrobe . john, what's going on? wardrobe. john, what's going on? >> yes. good afternoon. good afternoon to you. >> i should say, martin. well, even at the time i was doing television on a regular basis. we were getting rubbish dunes just like this one. >> you know , and i'm still >> you know, and i'm still broadcasting on a daily basis. >> i have to say , to this day. >> i have to say, to this day. so i'm keeping going. i'm still trying to get it right . trying to get it right. basically, we've had some terrible dunes in the past. you know, i've been looking through the records since i knew that we were going to be speaking this afternoon, and 1991 was an awful june. that was the year that mount pinatubo went up over in the philippines. and a lot of people said it was because of that, all that rubbish and sulphates and aerosols that were up in the atmosphere were causing it to cool it did cool the world and we certainly had a very, very bad june in 1991, but more recently as well , 2011 1213 more recently as well, 2011 1213 all very poor dunes indeed. >> 2012, if you remember, was when we had the olympics , the when we had the olympics, the london olympics in 2012. >> slightly later, it gets more for july. but that month was
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absolutely awful . june really, absolutely awful. june really, really wet. and something like the wettest since 90 or the coolest since 1991. the dullest since 1987, and some places had four times their normal rainfall and apparently there were hailstones falling in leicestershire and lincolnshire. the size of cricket balls. well, i've enjoyed my cricket over the years, but i wouldn't have fancied that, i can tell you. >> so what's going on this year , >> so what's going on this year, john? i mean, is it climate change we're going to guarantee to hear . change we're going to guarantee to hear. that's the change we're going to guarantee to hear . that's the excuse? to hear. that's the excuse? >> oh no doubt. absolutely no doubt. i can hear it now, martin, i'm not going along that line at all. >> it is our british weather. you've mentioned already, of course, that last year was an exceptional june. >> really unusual to get a good june. >> our best summer months are nearly always july or august. and last june was exceptional . and last june was exceptional. you know, there's been a long standing fact that ever since 1860, when long standing records go back, temperature wise, day by day, the 13th of june, which is tomorrow . of course, we'd is tomorrow. of course, we'd never seen a temperature of 30
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degrees reached until last year. that was the only day of the three months of summer that we'd never seen 30 degrees. and last year we broke that record at long last. well, this year we won't . definitely won't. won't. definitely won't. tomorrow 18, perhaps we're going to get and at the moment there's no sign of a big change. of course, we've got royal ascot coming up next week. it would be nice to have some warmer weather for that. i think that's on the cusp at the moment, but i will put my money down. i will say that at some point this month we are going to get temperatures up around 27. it may be the last four days, but not in the next four days, but not in the next four days. >> well, thank you for giving us some crumbs of comfort there. john kettley is a weatherman legend . thanks for being on the legend. thanks for being on the show. it's always a delight to have your company. i got a quick couple of emails you all say before we finish the show. on trust in politics, lesley says this i don't believe one word that starmer or sunak say fits as this. i can't watch this general election at all anymore. it's making me so angry and bad tempered. john adds this is there any point in the leaders
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debate tonight, as starmer would just answer every question by saying that the answer is in the manifesto , which is launched manifesto, which is launched tomorrow, and he doesn't want to pre—empt any of that. lynne says this rishi sunak should not throw the towel in. he called the general election so he should fight tooth and nail to turn things around. and finally, on the green party michael says this their party's pledge to ban all diesel and petrol cars from the uk roads in 2035 shows they might eat muesli, but actually they're all fruitcakes. michael, i like what you did there. superb stuff. now keep those comments coming in, that's it from me now for today. dewbs & co from me now for today. dewbs& co of course is up next. six. still seven. don't forget to join from 6 am. tomorrow. it's breakfast with stephen and ellie, followed by britain's newsroom at 9:30 am. with andrew and bev, and then , of course, it's tom and then, of course, it's tom and emily with good afternoon britain from midday. then it's my ugly mish back at three till six. i'm martin daubney. this
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has been gb news. stay tuned for dewbs& co. but before all of that it's your weather with alex deakin. have a fantastic evening! >> a brighter outlook with boxt solar sponsors of weather on . gb news. >> afternoon. welcome along to your latest weather update from the met office here on gb news. it's not warm out there, but for most of us it's a fine day and the winds are a bit lighter than yesterday, so it feels at least a little bit warmer. the weather is on the change though. a couple of weather systems on their way in from the atlantic. that's for tomorrow . but as that's for tomorrow. but as i say for the rest of today, most places set fair. there are a few showers still across northeast scotland, 1 or 2 across eastern england as well, but they're tending to fade away for many. it's a fine evening and we'll see the cloud melting away, so for quite a few of us it'll be a largely clear night, and that will allow it to turn quite
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chilly. temperatures. well down into single digits once more, down to 3 or 4 in many rural spots out west, though, temperatures will actually start to rise later in the night as the cloud arrives from those weather systems, bringing outbreaks of rain into northern ireland. eventually, that rain will spread into scotland. but for much of tomorrow, northern scotland will stay dry and fine. still, 1 or 2 showers close by to shetland. here is that rain though , edging into northern though, edging into northern ireland for the morning rush houn ireland for the morning rush hour, so a soggy start here. getting quite windy too, especially on the east coast of northern ireland. the west coast of wales and the southwest of england will see the winds steadily picking up as well. many central and eastern parts having a dry fine, if somewhat chilly, start to the day . the chilly, start to the day. the cloud will increase over the midlands and then into eastern england as the rain spreads into wales, southwest england. by lunchtime , southwest scotland up lunchtime, southwest scotland up towards the central belt by the end of the day and also come the middle of the afternoon, some of that rain getting into the midlands. much of eastern england will stay dry until quite late on and same goes for northern scotland, but in the west getting very , very windy as
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west getting very, very windy as well as wet. these western coast, particularly gus 80 for this time of year. temperatures again mid teens, but feeling cooler with the wind and the rain which will continue to spread into eastern england and eventually into northern scotland during the course of tomorrow evening. and the blustery and showery outlook will continue. some sunny spells, but lots of heavy showers through the weekend . showers through the weekend. temperatures a little higher but feeling cooler with the gusty winds . winds. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers. sponsors of weather on
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didn't have sky news as a child. i mean, apparently that is deeply offensive for people that are absolutely gone without . can are absolutely gone without. can i just say give me a break? really? is this what we're now doing in society? shaming anyone that apparently is succeeded and created wealth for themselves ? created wealth for themselves? do we really need to have to have a prime minister who's been on the breadline before they can rule us? give me your thoughts on that. also, i want to talk to you about political reform in this country. so many of us now saying that that is what we need. do we and what would it look like? and get this, i've got not just one but two lords on my program tonight. so it's only fair as well that we debate reforming the house of lords. is that what we need? also speaking of smaller parties, the sdp have revealed their manifesto and among it they say it's time for uk industry to return . is it? uk industry to return. is it? and if so, what would that look like? i've got it all to come
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