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tv   Patrick Christys Tonight  GB News  July 15, 2024 9:00pm-11:01pm BST

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>> take a look at what happened. >> take a look at what happened. >> trump survives an assassination attempt. but does foreign secretary david lammy have to resign or be sacked over his past remarks .7 his past remarks? >> also, when did you first contact sue gray about the possibility of becoming your chief of staff? >> well, nick, that's going to be laid out by sue. she's got to do that as part of a leaving procedure, but there's nothing improper at all. >> political bias exposed as the leftie civil service rejoices as a labour government. >> and do you condemn netanyahu? yes. or no? >> you say, i am not going to have these guys. >> i'm just a simple question. do you condemn netanyahu? >> hamas extremism and terror, these shocking allegations about what's really going on in grassroots politics? >> plus, lord president, wait, the lord justice clerk, white, every high court judge white, the lord advocate, white. >> did humza yousaf make a dodgy
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donation? he's being investigated over money for gaza . investigated over money for gaza. on my panel tonight it's express columnist carole malone. acts chairman of the tory party, sir jake berry, a former labour party adviser. stella shawn seesahal party adviser. stella shawn seesahai. oh yes. and now youth demand have targeted the cenotaph . stop obe to green cenotaph. stop obe to green party to free palestine . party to free palestine. absolutely disgraceful. get ready britain, here we go . ready britain, here we go. it's time to drain the left wing civil service swamp. next . civil service swamp. next. >> at just after 9:00, the top stories from the gb newsroom tonight. well, it's all about the united states. this evening, donald trump formally accepting the republican nomination for president ahead of the
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forthcoming us elections in november. at the same time tonight, he has chosen james vance as j.d. vance, a senator from ohio, as his running mate on the vice presidential ticket . on the vice presidential ticket. it's expected donald trump will be speaking soon. if you're watching on television, you can see live pictures coming to us from milwaukee in wisconsin, where 50,000 people have crammed into the convention centre there for the republican national convention. speakers are on the stage. we are, though, expecting, as i said, donald trump to take to the podium for the first time since an attempt was made on his life two days ago. within about an hour , well ago. within about an hour, well outside that convention hall in milwaukee , hundreds of both milwaukee, hundreds of both anti—trump and anti—biden demonstrators were gathering to protest against what they called racist trump and genocidal joe. meanwhile, donald trump secured something of a legal victory today when a florida judge threw out a high profile case against him following hundreds of classified files being located
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at his mar a lago estate in florida, found piled up in a bathroom. mr trump saying all other cases against him should now be quickly dismissed. but that decision is likely to be appealed . well, earlier on appealed. well, earlier on today, president joe biden appealed to americans to lower the political temperature. speaking from the oval office, he called on everyone to take a step back. joe biden's faced some criticism for repeatedly claiming trump posed a threat to democracy. now he's gone on record as saying it's time to coolit record as saying it's time to cool it down. >> there is no place in america for this kind of violence or for any violence ever. period. no exceptions . we can't allow this exceptions. we can't allow this violence to be normalised . you violence to be normalised. you know, the political record in this country has gotten very heated. it's time to cool it down. disagreement is inevitable in an american democracy. it's part of human nature . but part of human nature. but politics must never be a literal battlefield or, god forbid, a killing field .
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killing field. >> joe biden, now in news here at home, a body believed to be that of the missing british teenager jay slater has been found on the spanish island of tenerife. rescue teams made the discovery in the area where the 19 year old went missing last month, and where his phone was last traced to in a ravine in a remote national park. the body was found with clothes and possessions belonging to jay . was found with clothes and possessions belonging to jay. in a statement, the guardia civil said he may have died due to an accidental fall, but a post—mortem examination will be carried out to verify the exact cause of death . over a thousand cause of death. over a thousand migrants have crossed the engush migrants have crossed the english channel since labour came to power, gb news revealing today the total number to make the journey in small boats since the journey in small boats since the general election stands at 1128. it's understood a slight improvement in the weather saw almost 250 arrivals over the last four days. the arrivals take the number of migrants who
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have crossed the channel to 14,702 so far this year. and just lastly, a security scare dunng just lastly, a security scare during the king and queen's visit to jersey ended up being just a false alarm. today, the royals, who are on a two day visit to the channel islands, were pulled away quickly after a member of their contingent whispered into queen camilla's ear. they were taken to a nearby hotel, but a full background check was carried out and the program was resumed shortly afterwards. when nothing was found . those are the latest gb found. those are the latest gb news headlines for now . i'm news headlines for now. i'm polly middlehurst. i'm back in an hour. see you then . an hour. see you then. >> for the very latest gb news direct to your smartphone, sign up to news alerts by scanning the qr code or go to gbnews.com forward slash alerts . forward slash alerts. >> welcome along the civil service doesn't need to try to hide its throbbing left wing
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bias anymore. a new article by a civil servant in the guardian reads for the first time in my career, i feel like i can breathe a little and that i won't face each day wondering what nasty bit of policy will be told to enact. one civil servant even said, i've never been so glad to see the back of a government. i mean, this is hardly a shock, is it? sue gray went seamlessly from being totally impartial when it came totally impartial when it came to the old partygate report to working for the labour party. her son is now a labour mp as well. civil servants threaten to strike over being made to work in the office just two days a week. then they did go out on strike. >> i'm always worried that one crisis is just going to leave me homeless. i'm literally one paycheque away from homelessness. rishi sunak here are safe. >> we need you to raise our pay. >> we need you to raise our pay. >> we've had a civil servant out campaigning for george galloway over gaza . over gaza. >> stand for humanity, stand for palestine. >> stand for george galloway assistance. we can make history .
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assistance. we can make history. >> they've threatened to take the government to court over rwanda. in fact, the permanent under—secretary to the home office is also a civil service. diversity champion specialising in faith and belief. so it's no shock that we didn't deport anybody. is it really? the permanent secretary to the ministry of justice? is also the civil service's gender champion. the civil service threatened to strike a gain over supposedly anti—trans policies. we spent goodness knows how much taxpayers money on diversity , taxpayers money on diversity, inclusion and cultural courses and staff events like get this black history month. it's all about hair and incite to afro textured hair. everywhere you look in the civil service, there's wokery and left wing bias. they're probably having parties as we speak because sir keir starmer is letting them wear rainbow lanyards. again, you'll be able to tell how politicised the civil service is by how easy they make sir keir starmer's life. let's get the thoughts of my panel. i've got
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daily express columnist carole malone also joined by former chairman of the conservative party, sirjake berry . and as party, sirjake berry. and as well we've got a former labour party adviser, stella chan. caroline, i'll start with you. i mean, they don't even have to try to hide it anymore, do they? how rotten our left wing civil service are. >> i mean, you call them the woke civil service. they are. and they're frustrating democracy. and they did it all through the tories reign. you know, you talked about starmer . know, you talked about starmer. i think they'll be quite, good with him in the beginning because after all, he is one of he is one of them, you know, he's a he's a quango technocrat. you know, he's he behaves like they do. so they're going to like him for a while until he starts making demands of them. you know, we've seen what happens when ministers make demands and suddenly they're accused of bullying. suddenly they're out of it. we know two who were accused of bullying priti patel and dominic raab. they they lost their jobs. had to had to. well, no. priti patel did not though the government still got for her. but dominic raab certainly did. but you know they the real i was really, really interesting piece today
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by a very senior , civil servant by a very senior, civil servant and he said he's retired now and he said that he retired because he said that he retired because he saw parliament and its mps as just an elaborate charade. he says the real power is actually with the civil service. and he says he said the elected politicians don't have the power. they're just there to take the blame for the mistakes that the bureaucrats make. >> all right, jay, we've seen relentless threats of court action, relentless threats of strike action, some actual strike action, some actual strike action, some actual strike action as well. the civil service is just an extension of the labour party. >> well, i think the early days they actually came in to the offices when they were going out on strike so they could stand up waving their placards. i remember i walked down whitehall, it was amazed. there was civil servants everywhere, all over the street, holding placards, not in the office doing their work. i was a minister for several years. i had the privilege of working with some brilliant and bright civil servants, particularly in your private offices and minister. they really work for you and they're part of the team . you and they're part of the team. but, you know, we can't be surprised that they're delighted
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that sir keir starmer has come in. he's been a career civil servant his whole life. his chief of staff is a career civil servant. they are just part all part of the same problem. and what politicians should come in do is provide leadership. they should come in and say, look, we have a plan. the british public have a plan. the british public have sent us here to deliver this plan and the civil service, civil servants should implement that plan, not just be a sort of law unto themselves, which i think is what we've seen over the last few years. >> you know, that didn't happen with immigration. some of them were refusing to go into the office to work because they were saying it offended their sensibilities to actually impose immigration law. i mean, why were they allowed to stay in there? >> what we've got, what we've got to remember, though, is just on the point you made about the rainbow lanyards, the diversity, the hair celebration. yeah. parties, whatever it is. yeah is it is gb news viewers, taxpayers in this country, we are paying for all this nonsense. and that's what i think is absolutely outrageous about it. is they are there to do a job. they need to get back to bloody work, and we need to stop paying for this. okay, well, there we go.
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>> i mean, stella, look, we only think it's going to be different under keir starmer is that there will actually work for them. they'll highlight their own political bias and maybe make us all realise what's been going wrong for ages. it wasn't policy. it was the fact that people who were paid to enact it didn't bloody do it. >> okay, so humour me for humour for me for a second. patrick, civil servants are saying finally the tories are out and they can finally breathe. do you think there is any chance that they are saying the truth now that the conservatives in power, the job that they were. so do you think that a government that was throwing parties while the rest of the country was in lockdown, that was handing out contracts, that was handing out contracts, that was handing out contracts of millions and billions of pounds of taxpayer money to their friends. do you think there is any chance that the people who were asked to work with that government have a point? no. well, no. >> i mean, absolutely not. heaven forfend these poor people, they had people, government ministers saying ,
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government ministers saying, come in to work, do your job. people working in factories up and down the united kingdom. they can't continue to work from people who work in supermarkets and stacked shelves. they haven't got the choice of continuing to work from home. why? because these people are taxpayer funded. should we have a sort of invisible forcefield around the office that stops them going to work, i wonder? >> i wonder, i said, i'll get you on this, for i'll go back to carol, because i do wonder, though, it's all very well and good having, you know, a desire to hoist the progress flag above a building. it's all very well and good to think that, you know, you know, people shouldn't be kept in asylum seeker hotels and probably shouldn't have any borders at all. and all of that stuff, that's okay, but you have to leave that at the door. when you become a civil, they leave that at the door. >> there is no evidence. oh no, no, i'm sorry, there is no evidence of this. there is no evidence. stella, destroy evidence. stella, destroy evidence of it. >> they they refuse to pass certain sections of immigration law. >> they refuse. they refuse to break international law, which, believe me, is not what british people want. >> protection of international. >> protection of international. >> it's not. no, i'm sure the uk
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is a country that abides by international law. the uk is a country that abides by international law . the uk international law. the uk environmental minister. >> he tells extraordinary stories about the civil service obstruction. he said he tried to stop aj. right. >> so that's a different issue. that's a different issue. >> can i just finish the point? so he he tried to stop aid going to jihadis in syria. and he was told by senior civil servants, that's not within your power, matey. so cool , so cool cool matey. so cool, so cool cool cool. >> so that's a different issue. >> so that's a different issue. >> this civil servant has retired, says it's the civil servants who have the power. and the reason he is now retired is because he sees parliamentarians elected representatives of the people not doing not being able to. great. >> thank you. may i speak so there are two issues here. the one issue is that there are sclerotic elements in the british in the british state. we agree on that. and whichever whoever is in the government, whatever the colour, there are problems with the way the civil service and specifically the treasury works in obstructing policy. we agree there, carol, where i don't agree is that
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these are all labour party voting people who are all of them are . them are. >> so they're not necessarily that they're labour party campaigners represent i london. >> so if there are any problems , >> so if there are any problems, i want to hear jake >> so if there are any problems, i want to hearjake defend >> so if there are any problems, i want to hear jake defend the labour party. i want to hear the jake defend the labour party. then when, when, when, if the if the government comes out and says the civil service is not, you know, whatever, playing along, whatever. i want to see you defending keir starmer. >> stop now jake talk. >> stop now jake talk. >> well i think the problem i don't frankly care who they vote for, because they're all individuals. they can make their own decisions. there's two things about it though is the civil service in whitehall. it's a very big thing. there's lots of people working in job centres and towns and cities across this country who are fantastic, awesome people going into the office helping people every day, the civil service in whitehall. i'm sorry, has a sort of a hive mind, a unified consciousness. and it's about being in london, going to the royal opera house, you know , having these highly you know, having these highly paid civil service jobs and they
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cannot properly represent or help people outside the m25. and that's what people rail against. >> is it sue gray, the sue gray thing about, oh, don't be daft, there's no political bias there. wanders and fits straight into keir starmer's top team . the keir starmer's top team. the sun's a labour mp. >> so this a this this guy who's going who's spilling the beans. >> he just says he reckons wes streeting will be the first labour minister who resigns on bullying charges because he will be pushing them to get his nhs reforms through. and this guy saying they won't let him. >> let's look how did what did priti patel get accused of? why has she bullying civil servants? she came into the department and said, tell me everything i can do without passing legislation with my executive power as home secretary , what can i do to stop secretary, what can i do to stop the boats? what can i do to sort violent crime out on the streets? and the civil servant said, no, we won't give you that information. and she said, this isn't about race. i'm the home secretary and she was hauled up for bullying for saying, what can i do to serve me here? if
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you want to know that lolly, let's see what happens. >> now that we have a home secretary who comes in and quite possibly will just say, actually, i'm not that bothered about the cheering and whooping as she walked in. all right, still to come, the sun. >> for leicester south sarah carter arade dam molesting brother who was repeatedly met with the leader of hamas, and his campaign leaflet, which adam says is nothing to do with, is now under police investigation. >> i'll give you a full report very, very shortly. but up next, after david lammy called donald trump a woman hating, neo—nazi, sympathising sociopath , for a sympathising sociopath, for a joke he made about trump not having been assassinated. well, former aide to thatcher, nigel gardner goes head to head
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welcome back to patrick christys tonight. only on gb news coming up. was the law broken when a pro—palestine independent candidate beat jonathan ashworth in leicester south? crucially as well to the left, only care about this stuff. now it's affecting them. but first, should david lammy be sacked as foreign secretary? time now for the head to head. and speaking today, for the first time since the assassination attempt, donald trump has promised to bnng donald trump has promised to bring the whole world together, adding that he was supposed to be dead following saturday's attack. there's been calls now
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for politicians and the public to moderate and temper their language, with david lammy coming firmly under the microscope. in an article in time magazine in 2018, lammy wrote trump is not only a woman hating neo—nazi sympathising sociopath, he's also a profound threat to the international order that has been the foundation of western progress for so long. then, in 2019, trump tweeted, there has been no president in the history of our country who has been treated as badly as i have. to which are now foreign secretary responded, four us presidents have been assassinated. snowflake. so this morning the culture secretary, lisa nandy, was asked about lammy's choice of words. >> i think as a new government, we have a real responsibility to reset the rhetoric of the last decade and a half and to show that leadership, because if we don't model that behaviour, i don't model that behaviour, i don't know how we can expect the pubuc don't know how we can expect the public to do the same. it's something that i know. our new foreign secretary takes very seriously. i take very seriously. i take very seriously. the prime minister
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takes very seriously, and i think you'll see a very different tone. >> all right. so that's what he really meant. and he said it. but now there'll be a different tone in office. i'm not sure that's good enough. is it? should david lammy be sacked as foreign secretary? let me know your thoughts. gbnews.com/yoursay. tweet me @gbnews while you're there. go and vote in our poll. i'm joined now by the former aide to margaret thatcher, nile gardiner and author and broadcaster jenny and author and broadcasterjenny barnett. thank you very much. great to have you both on the show. nile. should lammy be sacked ? sacked? >> well, thanks for having me on the show today, patrick, and it's certainly my view i think it's certainly my view i think it was a huge mistake to appoint david lammy as, as foreign secretary in the first place, and i think it's a disastrous move by, by keir starmer . and i think it's a disastrous move by, by keir starmer. he's clearly unfit for the job. he's made a lot of appalling attacks on donald trump in the past. i multiple tweets, really nasty stuff. calling trump a neo nazi sympathiser. threat to the international order, etc, and i
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do not see how lammy in any way could be able to work with . a. could be able to work with. a. >> and i think that foreign secretary would be absolutely disastrous for the for the us. >> uk special relationship . >> uk special relationship. >> uk special relationship. >> okay. all right jenny i'll bnng >> okay. all right jenny i'll bring you in. do you think that there might be a direct correlation between the kind of rhetoric that david lammy and others have used in the past to talk about trump and that man's finger on the trigger on saturday, >> well, i think we have to look at what lammy actually said. lammy . tax cuts can further lammy. tax cuts can further some the more it hates those who speak it. now, to quote now you can blow your cheeks, young man,
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but if you go back two years and go back to the last century , go back to the last century, remember who was in a time of universal deceit . telling the universal deceit. telling the truth is a revolutionary act, and what you have is david lammy speaking the truth and nobody likes it. >> well, are you saying sympathising kkk member or sympathetic to the kkk or whatever? >> he said ? all right, look, >> he said? all right, look, i am very sorry about this as i'm sure everybody at home or listening on radio will be acutely aware. now we have got a couple of little issues that we are to get sorted. i am going to
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just i mean, there are. so where am i? and i'm on with, some back. okay. welcome back. take two at this debate. thank you for beanng this debate. thank you for bearing with everybody. i do. welcome back. now, gander and jenny barnett into the fray . we jenny barnett into the fray. we are having a discussion about whether or not david lammy should be sacked or resign in light of his previous comments about president trump. and of course, the assassination attempt. over the weekend, niall , attempt. over the weekend, niall, i mean, from what i could gather, jenny was saying there was that basically a david lammy is telling the truth and people don't like it. i mean, is that actually just quite dangerous? do you think it could lead to people doing things like this
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and also attacking some of our own politicians ? own politicians? >> yeah. i think, you know, if you look in detail at lammy's track record, attacks on trump, i mean, they're deeply unpleasant. they're very nasty . unpleasant. they're very nasty. i think they're unfit for a figure who today is the foreign secretary of the united kingdom. and i think that his comments will have serious consequences for the future of us uk relations. if there is a trump presidency once again. so i think comments really do matter. also, let's not forget lammy referred to brexiteers as nazis in the past. this is a political figure who has made atrocious, appalling hate filled comments. he should not be the foreign secretary of the united kingdom, keir starmer should remove him and replace him with somebody who's actually diplomatic. >> yeah, fine. all right. jenny. well, look, i put it to you that it's, you know, even if you think it's okay for david lammy to hold those views, even if you
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think those views are correct. he is in an absolutely appalling, untenable position to now be our foreign secretary. and is it time, for jenny, now be our foreign secretary. and is it time, forjenny, some and is it time, for jenny, some people on the left to wake up like your david aaronovitch or yourjoe browns of like your david aaronovitch or your joe browns of this world, and actually realise that the things that they've said have consequences and that they should apologise for those things , things, >> if you i mean, i don't want to do for tat, but if you have a man who's standing for the president talks about groping women's pussies, what do you say to that? do we think that he should stand down or tell the truth? that he did say that we are looking at a man who is untenable as a president. he is a deceitful human being and i, niall, i would like to ask you, what is it you've got to get against david lammy? that all of against david lammy? that all of a sudden we need to get this man out. he has already said today, as you've heard, nandy saying, that they are going to have to
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change the way they speak and so did biden, we have to lower the political temperature. the reason that the temperature biden was saying recently, we had to put a target on trump's back, i mean, it's all very well and good after the event going, oh , you know, the thing we need oh, you know, the thing we need to do really here is really regulate and monitor the way we talk to each other when previously he's been calling everyone nazis, including brexiteers. >> and people are sympathetic to the kkk. and then, you know, all of a sudden someone tries to shoot him and it's, oh, we've really got to watch out. we've got to hashtag be kind. >> listen , patrick trump himself >> listen, patrick trump himself is trying to in quote, unify. and he will for five minutes until he has to change and new what he's done. the fact. >> can i respond to patrick. >> can i respond to patrick. >> yeah. if i could respond to some of those atrocious attacks. >> donald trump has just faced an assassination attempt . an assassination attempt. someone tried to kill, donald trump. and this followed from many years of really hateful rhetoric coming from from the left, from the left on both
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sides of the atlantic, including from president biden, who called trump a threat to a democracy. so, words do have consequences, here, actually, and, and i have to say that, you know, the attacks on donald trump, even today, i mean, continuing right now after we face an assassination attempt have been very, i think, very appalling . very, i think, very appalling. let's see. david lammy apologise for all of his attacks in the past on donald trump. i've not heard him do so, but he should. he should apologise. retract those words. >> please let me interrupt you. let me just interrupt now, just for a second. you know, we are living through the emperor's new clothes. trump is running around naked, doing his stuff, and we can see it. and the ones that can't who are dressing him in ermines and furs don't like it when everybody else can see that sounds completely insane. >> i have to be completely insane. >> i don't know it. maybe you're saying it just sounds completely
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loopy. you don't think that the man has pulled the wool over a nation's eyes? and people who are. >> jenny. jenny with respect, jenny, with respect, you cannot simultaneously claim that this guy comes out with all this really horrible stuff that we can all see and hear, and isn't he awful? >> and then claim that he's pulling the wool over people's eyes and being deceitful? he's one or the other, right? he either says a load of stuff he says a load of stuff that you disagree with and you hate, you know, and that's fine. or, you know, and that's fine. or, you know, he's a completely different person in public than it is in private. and i don't really see that. jenny, can i ask, can i jenny, can i can i ask, can i jenny, can i can i ask you honestly, how did you feel when you found out that someone had tried to kill trump? >> i was intrigued that the young 20 year old on the roof was described as a democrat. when he's not, he's a card carrying republican. and when i heard the conspiracy theorists saying, how much was trump involved in this? my eyes opened involved in this? my eyes opened in a land where deceit is running . it's hard. you are.
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running. it's hard. you are. >> you are a card carrying conspiracy theorist when it comes to i'm not. >> i am an ordinary member of the public, and i'm confused. i do not think anybody should try and assassinate trump. i do think he himself is talking about toning down the rhetoric. but what i would say is that david lammy has held his position since 2018, and i think he's terrific. and nigel, how would you deal with david lammy? you'd sack him. >> yeah. go on now, a final word to you, actually. >> yeah. david david lammy should be out of the cabinet. he should be out of the cabinet. he should not be the foreign secretary. >> would you replace him with the united kingdom? >> actually, he should not be. but as for your comment saying you're intrigued about by the assassination of donald trump, i know those those are shocking words. what exactly do you mean by that? >> really disingenuous, appalling words, actually. >> why are you so disingenuous ? >> why are you so disingenuous? we know that kennedy was assassinated. >> this was an evil attempt to
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assassinate a former president. >> it'sjust assassinate a former president. >> it's just sheer evil. >> it's just sheer evil. >> this is the thing. >> this is the thing. >> yeah. look, look, this is this is the thing. and to be honest, you know, when we talk about toning down the rhetoric and all of that stuff, we're talking about this, you know, we just had someone on you know, from the left there who's backed upideas from the left there who's backed up ideas that donald trump is a threat to national security. and international security. yeah. is as an out and out racist all of this stuff. and then when i asked you about what you felt about his assassination attempt, you floated the idea that it might have been some kind of conspiracy theory. i mean, again, forgive me, forgive me here, but i it does play into the narrative that, you know, maybe sometimes some people on the left are a little bit away with the fairies, you know, and this is a problem. >> okay? if you think i'm away with the fairies, that's your problem. i think you're obsession with supporting a human being who is so disruptive. is also away with the goblins. >> all right . >> all right. >> all right. >> okay, so someone tried to. someone just tried to kill the
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former president of the united states of america. >> that's a very serious issue. >> that's a very serious issue. >> and i just find they shot him, and he's disgraceful and appalling. really really shocking and lacking in humanity. all right, we're gonna we're gonna we're gonna knock it on the head. >> now, guys, we're gonna have to move on. we're gonna have to move on. but thank you very much, both of you. all right, look, after david lammy called trump a woman hating, neo—nazi, sympathising sociopath. should he be sacked as foreign secretary down on x as lammy shouldn't have been appointed in the first place. he should have been more careful with his words and, says david lammy just told it as it is nothing wrong with that. cassandra says lammy is a disaster and an embarrassment. he lacks tact, diplomacy and an understanding of global political dynamics. write your verdict is in 92% of you think that david lammy should be sacked as foreign secretary. so there we go, right ? i sacked as foreign secretary. so there we go, right? i am going to go straight into our next topic actually, because we did lose a little bit of time with that unscheduled break earlier, didn't we? so the new independent mp shocker adams surprise defeat to labour
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heavyweight jonathan ashworth in the constituency of leicester south sent shock waves through the party, but it has since emerged that adams brother, ishmael patel, emerged that adams brother, ishmael patel , founded the ishmael patel, founded the radical pro—palestine group friends of al—aqsa. and in the immediate aftermath of hamas's october 7th attack, friends of alaska said on social media this catastrophic unfolding of events is the direct result of israeli occupation, the inhumane siege of gaza and israel's apartheid policies. well, patel has also repeatedly met the leader of hamas, ismail haniyeh , the hamas, ismail haniyeh, the brother as well. the new mp shocker adam appeared alongside him at a pro—palestine rally dunng him at a pro—palestine rally during election campaign in may. indeed, shocker out of himself was a former chair of leicester's branch of muslim engagement and development, a group which michael gove labelled as extreme and islamist. earlier this year. and there's more because police are now investigating election leaflets that branded jonathan ashworth a ceasefire , abstainer
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ashworth a ceasefire, abstainer over fears they may have broken electoral law because they didn't include details of who paid for them and the candidate that they intended to help. well, a source close to sheikh arade dam, the independent mp, told the sunday times that he was not responsible for the leaflets and does not know who produced them. which is very, very convenient, isn't it? i'm joined now by the former tory party chairman, sir jake berry. thank you very much. so the issue with a lot of these independent candidates, who i think many people would regard as being on the slightly radical fringes of politics in this country, is that it's much harder to regulate them, and it's much harder to keep a close eye on them, especially with the death, it appears, of local media, because everyone could see that these leaflets were going out. no one felt the need to report on it before the election. >> well, funny enough, the labour party were up to this trick as well, weren't they? so they had various support groups like hope not hate delivering leaflets targeting conservative party constituencies where we, most of them were subsequently lost, did a bit of a battering that we got in that election and also in my own constituency of rossendale and darwen that i used to represent. there was a
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newspaper purporting to be a local newspaper that went out just a few days before the election. guess what? supporting every single thing the labour party is going to do. these third party campaigns are not unusual, but they are tightly governed by electoral law. it may be that in this case, electoral law has been broken. we've got to look at the details. obviously, the police are investigating it, but the labour party does not come to this with clean hands. they have dipped their hands in the in blood all over the north of england , all over the country in england, all over the country in fact, with these third party campaigns. so they may be crying on because they lost, but they back themselves. >> this is my next question, which is that are they just crying about it now because it started to affect them ? started to affect them? >> yeah. and look, in terms of intimidation , obviously that's intimidation, obviously that's completely appalling. i know jonathan ashworth has spoken about the intimidation that took place , but, you know, this is place, but, you know, this is nothing new. in fact, in the five elections, i fought the worst in terms of intimidation was 2017. you had the hard left then supporting jeremy corbyn
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same time keir starmer was supporting, had harassing conservative mps, including me, following him around the streets, screaming at them, screaming at their children. they didn't throw their hands up in disgust . they didn't throw their hands up in disgust. then it seems to be. and i just thought the last interview was so fascinating, actually, about how the left really only cares about intimidation if it's if it's intimidating the left. they didn't have this huge concern about intimidation then. and they seem to have had a sort of damascene conversion to it. and you know, what is sauce for the goose should be sauce for the ganden goose should be sauce for the gander. i'd much prefer, though, to live in a world where we didn't see any of this type of intimidation of people who seek to get elected. >> this is this is something i mean, i know when i was doing local journalism and stuff like that, you know, there were a lot of tory candidates who would regularly have their offices spray painted or they would have their signs graffitied, and there would be a kind of local campaign in their area, usually set up by someone on twitter to spread a load of absolute filth
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about them. so that kind of stuff i saw happening for years, but now it appears to be really targeting the labour party, targeting the labour party, targeting them over palestine and gaza . and there seems to now and gaza. and there seems to now be a bit of a wake up there. >> the same people there, the same people who supported jeremy corbyn. this hard left militant element of the labour party. they've now turned their guns without mixing metaphors on the labour party and the labour party were complaining about it, as i say, they were not complaining about it. in 2017 or 2019, and also, you know, the labour party is now saying they want to reduce the heat in politics. you try being a jewish person in 2017 or 2019, when the labour party was anti—semitic, towards a large group of people living in in the uk, you try being my ex colleague chris clarkson, who angela rayner shouted tory scum at in the chamber of the house of commons. they've changed their mind now that they're in government, but when they're in opposition, they were encouraging in many ways
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this type of appalling behaviour and in a way they're reaping what they sowed themselves. >> yeah, i mean obviously labour will say, well, the fact that they're doing it to us now is a sign that we have got a changed labour party, isn't it? and, you know, people can make of that what they will. let's just try to come up with some form of solution. how do we actually stop this? because, you know, we've got a media that's more obsessed with going after some kind of fruity characters that may or may not have been hanging around reform in clacton. but all of this was happening during the election. all of these leaflets, all of this intimidation, all of it, in fact, a lot of it, they did the journalist job for them by posting it on social media. and it was not put out there. so how do we sort sort this out? how do we stop people like us getting involved in politics? well i mean, that's kind of what elections are about. >> they're to find these sort of people and obviously no one has to vote for anyone. just cast your mind back. so this was a very tightly fought, this constituency that jonathan ashworth lost. he lost by fewer than a thousand votes. i remember you were probably still
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at school. if i may, going back to full phil woolas in 2011, where the lib dems had the election overturned on the basis of these sorts in his case of illegal leaflets, these alleged illegal leaflets, these alleged illegal leaflets, these alleged illegal leaflets in this case, and the lib dems threw all their resources into it. i was in government at the time and the electorate in full. wallace's old seat. he couldn't be the candidate. he was banned by law from standing revoted for the labour party. so if the labour party is tempted to go down the road of saying this seat was robbed from us, careful what you wish for , because the electorate wish for, because the electorate doesn't like political parties saying you voted, you got it wrong. it's time you change your mind . so i don't think the way mind. so i don't think the way we fix this is through legal action is through more scrutiny, as you brilliantly say, through local journalism. and, and, you know, use of social media. >> yeah, absolutely. look, jake, thank you very, very much. to great have you back for back for more coming up though, as he reacted to the assassination attempt on donald trump's life over the weekend, is reform uk leader nigel farage right that it's now become acceptable to say violent things about right
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wing people? got a bit more of that for you at 10 pm. but next, the latest ons figures show and prepare yourselves for this because no one could have seen this coming. the largest annual population increase is at least 75 years. but will net migration figures now increase under labour? i'm joined live in the studio by the former editor of the sun. it's kelvin mackenzie , who also says that we mackenzie, who also says that we must learn from trump and make sure that nigel farage is better protected. so couple of big for you there. stay
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hello. welcome back to patrick christys tonight . excuse me. so, christys tonight. excuse me. so, still to come after donald trump's assassination attempt is nigel farage right? that it's become acceptable to say violent things about right wing figures? that's coming very shortly. but first, i'll welcome calvin mackenzie, the fleet street legend. now britain's population is booming with the year to mid
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2023 marking the largest annual population increase in at least 75 years. figures from the office for national statistics show that the population grew by almost 610,000 between 2022 and 2023, so the birth rate and the death rate are both remaining relatively similar. so the vast majority of this population growth has come from, you guessed it, mass migration. and guessed it, mass migration. and guess what? the latest net migration figures were 685,000. so this sharp population increase should not really come as a surprise. calvin. we are we are importing mass population growth aren't we. and we are not doing anything to accommodate that. >> no. and the other the other aspect that emerges out of this is which party political manifesto said that this was going to happen, that we were going to happen, that we were going to happen, that we were going to have 600,000 people. >> and look, with labour in right, who seem to have a much more generous attitude towards migration figures than we have seen previously, or i
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previously, a big number turned up under the tories, but at least they railed against it. >> i don't get the impression that the labour party intend to rail against it, and the lib dems certainly don't want to rail against it. so suppose we had 600,000 a year for the next. supposing labour were in for two terms, which is what people talk about. that would be ten years of six, 700,000 a year. that would increase our our population by 7 million in, in, in less than in less than a decade. so first of all, who said it? and the other thing that's happening, the number of births is actually down in that period, down 20 odd thousand, a number of people are dying and you can't blame them for this, right? it's actually gone up . so right? it's actually gone up. so actually the indigenous population is dying out, is actually going down, whereas people from other parts of the country are the parts of the world are going up. >> people might say, so then this is the thing, right? because i raise this a bit and i say, well, that that is for want of a better phrase, the changing face of britain. it is okay, people go, oh, well, why have you got a problem with that? you
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must be racist. you've got a problem with that. i thought, well, i'm not sure that's true, really, is it? i mean, you just kind of. is there a problem with that? i mean, the idea the country will culturally and racially change? well, look, i'm not against i'm not against it. >> if actually the population had voted in favour of it, if somebody had said, right, this is what it's in the manifesto, we intend to have because we need jobs filled or we need this field, or we need that field, right? we are going to increase our the numbers in our country by, you know, 600,000 or 1 million every year, then i'd say, fine , come from this part say, fine, come from this part of the world. yeah, yeah. and they're going to have the differences that we know about. then i'd say fine. but actually nobody knows this. and then all of a sudden you see this huge number and, and all the politicians go, oh dear, have you seen that number? and then you seen that number? and then you say, well, what are you going to do about it? well, you know what we'd like to do, but we can't do it. echr and by the way, we can't push the boats back and we can't do this and we can't do that. and so. so you say, well, what does that mean?
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i tell you what it means. it means we're going to have another 700,000 to 1 million people. and that is a lot of people. and that is a lot of people. and that is a lot of people. and we know that. why? because labour say that they want to build a load of houses. they're not going to even touch the sides. >> no they're not. well, from what migration milestone to another? because gb news exclusively revealed today that more than 1000 small boat migrants have now crossed the engush migrants have now crossed the english channel since labour came to power. ten days ago. >> congratulations. >> congratulations. >> well done everybody. it follows the arrival of a further 370 migrants who crossed on monday. that's today. until today, a total of 758 migrants had made their journey since keir starmer's government. but now, now we've hit the thousand, haven't we? so well done everybody. not a great start for starmer calvin. >> no and nor a surprise either. and that's and that's now i don't know whether you've been outside. it's actually bucketing with rain and has been rather nasty weather. wait until the sunshine comes. and so that number will be enormous. i am looking forward to nigel farage standing up at every question time and saying, this is how many people arrived yesterday. prime minister, what do you
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intend to do about it? if he did nothing else every day for the next five years, he would probably end up with about 60% of the of the vote, >> well, it's interesting because he started, didn't he? the first thing we'll do is scrap rwanda. one of the very first things, you know, initially a lot of that was like, it's a pointless policy and it'll save us some money. and then rwanda said, well, no, we're keeping the money as they should. we've defrauded ourselves. this is what it is. so. so we're not saving a single penny on rwanda, actually, and we've not got a deterrent in place because the woke bloke that he wanted to put in charge of border control there has decided he doesn't fancy the job. he just likes to carry on talking about other police forces, institutionally racist instead. and who can blame him? so now we've got no deterrent. but anyway, in the wake of the attempted assassination of donald trump over the weekend, calvin, you took to twitter posting, we must learn from trump and make sure that nigel farage is better protected. expand on that. go on. >> right. so this is prior to the trump attempted assassination. i was talking to nigel about security, and it's an issue , unbeknown to me, which
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an issue, unbeknown to me, which was enormous worry to him right to the point where when he goes into a restaurant that he doesn't know, he has to sit, he tells me this. he has to sit at a table facing the door just in case. right now, this is in our country and this was prior. prior to him even becoming an mp and honestly, being an mp in our country is very dangerous. don't take my word for it . take the take my word for it. take the labour cabinets, labour, the labour cabinets, labour, the labour mps and candidates who stood in predominantly islamic areas. that was a very difficult areas. that was a very difficult area for them. you know, the women, the women candidates, the women, the women candidates, the women mps, particularly took it badly. but not just the women, but shocking and they wouldn't actually use the use the n word in relation to it. so, so look, so nigel is a prominent political figure, probably the most powerful politician we have had literally in the last 10 to 15 years. right. he he will be
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looking at the trump assassination, attempted assassination, attempted assassination and also worry what does it mean for my family? what does it mean for, you know, my, my fellow mps and the like? i would be very, very concerned. and i think i think i remember nigel was saying this prior to any of this happening. so it's not as though he is coming at it. and the other thing i really object to, and i agree so much with the piece he wrote in the telegraph today, which was that having a milkshake thrown over you is not a piece of fun. the lefties think that is fun . that lefties think that is fun. that is not fun, right? you do that in your factory , you do that in in your factory, you do that in your office. the next thing that happens, you are fired on the spot. and i very much doubt you'll work again as well as appearing in court. these are dangerous acts and we should be acting on behalf of our parliamentarians and our prominent people and protecting them. and if it's going to cost a few bob, we know we've got that money. why? we've just given £278 million to rwanda. >> all right. kelvin mckenzie, thank you very, very much. the
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former editor at the sun . coming former editor at the sun. coming up, the snp's westminster leader , up, the snp's westminster leader, stephen flynn, publicly revels in england's defeat and mocks the three lions. well, i'm going to be joined by england legend peter shilton to get his unfiltered response, but next, reacting to that trump assassination attempt is reform uk leader nigel farage. right? that has become acceptable to say violent things about right wing people. i'm not sure the beacon brigade are actually that kind. stay tuned . kind. stay tuned. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers sponsors of weather on gb news. >> good evening. welcome to your latest gb news weather update brought to you from the met office. heavy rain will continue in central areas overnight with rain warnings in force. but for many of us, it is going to be a mild night. we've got southwesterly winds as low pressure has been approaching from the southwest and band of rain is pivoting around this area of low pressure, bringing some very heavy rain to central
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areas of england. parts of wales as well, where there's a rain warning in force until the early hours of tuesday, we could see some localised flooding by tomorrow morning. further north it will remain largely dry overnight. there's quite a lot of cloud around though, so temperatures holding up into the mid teens for most of us. so a fairly mild start to the day on tuesday, but a pretty damp one for some of us, particularly where this heavy rain lingers where this heavy rain lingers where that warning is still in force. however, for western areas of scotland it will likely be a bright start to the day away from the far northern isles, where some showers will move in and across southwestern areas of scotland. again, some brightness dry for northern ireland, but this heavy rain will likely be affecting northern areas of england, north wales and potentially into the midlands and the south west, as well . still quite a lot of cloud well. still quite a lot of cloud around across the southeast. two and that rain is going to continue to pivot around and slowly clear away to the north sea through tuesday morning. we're also going to see some heavy showers break out across central areas of scotland, northern england, to where there is a rain warning in force
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through much of tuesday. but from the west it will turn much dner from the west it will turn much drier and brighter as the day goes on on tuesday. so some brightness coming through . not brightness coming through. not feeling too bad in the sunshine. temperatures in the high teens, low 20s at best. and as we head into wednesday, that's more settled. weather becomes more widespread. so wednesday is looking like a fine day for many of us. we could see the odd shower breaking out here and there, but for most of us it should be dry and bright and actually also feeling quite a bit warmer . actually also feeling quite a bit warmer. highs of around 25 degrees are expected on wednesday across the south, potentially up to 26 degrees on thursday. have a good evening. bye bye . bye bye. >> looks like things are heating up . boxt boilers sponsors of up. boxt boilers sponsors of weather on gb news
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>> it's 10 pm. on patrick christys tonight. >> take a look at what happened .
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>> take a look at what happened. >> take a look at what happened. >> after trump gets shot . at. >> after trump gets shot. at. and nigel farage is attacked twice. is it any wonder when people at the bbc tweet things like that ? also tonight, shot by like that? also tonight, shot by ba.2 green party guy . youth ba.2 green party guy. youth demand , target the cenotaph. demand, target the cenotaph. what a bunch of classless losers . what a bunch of classless losers. and talking of classless losers, here's stephen flynn from the snp clearly supporting spain last night. >> but lord president, wait, the lord justice clerk white. every high court judge white the lord advocate white he also supported humza yousaf, who is now under investigation over funds for gaza. >> who could have seen that coming? can you also spot what's
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wrong with this tattoo ? yes. wrong with this tattoo? yes. there we go. on my panel tonight. it's express columnist carole malone, ex chairman of the tory party sir jake berry, and former labour party adviser stella kiddoo. and find out why it's all kicked off in ireland . it's all kicked off in ireland. black and tan, black and tan. >> modern day black and tans . >> modern day black and tans. >> modern day black and tans. >> get ready, britain. here we go . go. the left should hang its head in shame over trump's assassination attempt. next . attempt. next. >> just after 10:00, the main news tonight in the united states. donald trump has formally accepted the republican nomination for president. president ahead of the forthcoming us elections in
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november. and at the same time, he's chosen james vance from ohio as his running mate at the republican national convention in milwaukee . and you can see in milwaukee. and you can see live pictures that were running there from wisconsin tonight. we can we know that donald trump was confirmed as the party's former candidate ahead of the november 5th election, but outside that convention hall in milwaukee, hundreds of both anti—trump and anti—biden demonstrators were gathered to protest against what they called racist trump and genocidal joe. meanwhile, donald trump won a legal victory earlier on today when a florida judge threw out a high profile case against him following hundreds of classified files being located at his mar a lago estate, found piled up in a bathroom. mr trump says all the other cases against him should now be quickly dismissed. but the decision is likely to be appealed. well earlier on today, president joe biden appealed to
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americans to lower the political temperature. speaking in an address from the oval office, he called on everyone to take a step back. joe biden, of course, facing some criticism for repeatedly claiming trump posed a threat to democracy. but now he's gone on record as saying it isfime he's gone on record as saying it is time to cool down. >> there is no place in america for this kind of violence or for any violence ever. period. no exceptions. we can't allow this violence to be normalised. you know, the political record in this country has gotten very heated. it's time to cool it down. disagreement is inevitable in american democracy. it's part of human nature . but politics of human nature. but politics must never be a literal battlefield or, god forbid, a killing field . killing field. >> joe biden earlier on today. now news here in the uk, police have been scouring a farm in hertfordshire today for the remains of a woman who was murdered in 1969, muriel mckay was kidnapped and held for ransom when she was mistaken for
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the then wife of media mogul rupert murdoch. brothers arthur and nizamuddin hussain demanded £1 million for her release. they were later convicted of her kidnap and murder, but her body was never found. new images released show officers who have today been looking through the dirt inside a barn at stocking farm, where miss mckay was traced to, and police have been clashing with anti—immigration protesters in dublin today . a protesters in dublin today. a number of people were arrested after police and fire service personnel came under attack at a site that's due to be developed to house asylum seekers. a makeshift protest camp was set up several months ago to prevent builders from entering the area. ireland's justice minister says she's appalled by the scenes , she's appalled by the scenes, and while they've been celebrating in spain tonight, the england football squad has arrived at london stansted airport as they return home following their two ,1 final defeat to spain yesterday. the prince and princess of wales
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praised england's grit and determination in a personal message to the team, and manager gareth southgate, who said his squad had given their all our players have been incredible. >> they've given, everybody some incredible nights. they couldn't have given any more in terms of their effort, their desire, their effort, their desire, their character , tonight we fell short. >> we didn't keep the ball well enough, but , >> we didn't keep the ball well enough, but, you know, the players have pushed it till the 85th minute of the final game. they've been incredible, really. >> it'll come home one day. those are the latest gb news headlines. for now i'm polly middlehurst i'm back in an hour. see you then. >> for the very latest gb news direct to your smartphone, sign up to news alerts by scanning the qr code, or go to gbnews.com forward slash alerts .
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forward slash alerts. >> the assassination attempt against donald trump will go down as one of the most watched videos of all time. >> want to really see something that said, take a look at what happened ? wait wait wait wait happened? wait wait wait wait. >> but people shouldn't be surprised at this. our own foreign secretary has, in my view, incited others to think that trump is a kkk supporter. he's also called him a snowflake, made a joke about other presidents being assassinated. apparently the latest line from labour is that david lammy has now softened his views . views. >> he's never denied that he said it, but he has had a marked shift in tone since he's been appointed as shadow foreign secretary in recognition that britain's interests will always
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be in having a strong relationship with the united states. and he's been over in the united states in the last ten days, talking not to just democrats, but to republicans as well. we've >> well, the usual types in the bbc have whipped up hatred. david aaronovitch tweeted this. if i was biden, i'd hurry up and have trump murdered on the basis that he is a threat to america's security. now. aaronovitch wrote that on the day of the ruling by the supreme court on presidential immunity, he then had the audacity to claim that people sharing that tweet were endangenng people sharing that tweet were endangering his life. now i'm cw endangering his life. now i'm cry me a river, david. it's not happening, mate. all right, people here have threatened farage like the jo brand battery acid comments. and in the election campaign, these attacks happened. yeah. i mean, there are countless examples of things like that. but now the left care because it's happening to them.
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the pro—palestine brigade are aggressive. they turn up at mps homes, they use disgusting lies and violent tactics, and they're mostly targeting labour mps . mostly targeting labour mps. well, that's bad and it needs to stop. but the fact is, it's been acceptable to joke about bad things happening to right wingers for a very long time. and the truth is that the bekind bngade and the truth is that the bekind brigade just aren't very kind. let's get a thought to my panel this evening. i am joined by daily express columnist carole malone. i've got the former chairman of the tory party sir jake berry, and former labour party adviser stella shawn seesahal party adviser stella shawn seesahai. carol, i'll come to you first on all of this. i mean, do you think that actually the left have been inciting this kind of violence for quite a long time? or is that too far? >> no, i think they have been. yeah, i mean, do you remember when, when angela rayner made that that awful rant at the party conference? she called them scum and another hateful things, you know, words matter, you know, hateful, violent words make angry people do things they
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shouldn't. you know, they're already angry. and this kind of makes them do things. and i just think we can't be we can't be having this. we see mps now are are a lot of mps are terrified to say what they think about the pro—palestinian demos and about the israel—gaza situation, because maybe they're not so frightened for themselves, but they offer their families. and when these mobs turn up outside their home, so they're so it is actually interfering with our democracy now. and it's really important. and, you know, we have everyone stands by and does nothing. you know aaronovitch for instance, trying to make out that everyone who didn't get his quotes joke is thick. we're stupid. you know, it was he was talking in irony. we're not stupid. it'sjust talking in irony. we're not stupid. it's just not very smart to do stuff like that. lammy is now, you know, lisa nandy said there he had a change in tone. it doesn't mean he doesn't still think that . he absolutely thinks think that. he absolutely thinks that he's changed his tone because he's. he's now the foreign secretary. >> he's been caught out, hasn't he? and i think the very, very least we should accept from lammy is an apology with our relationship with america is one of the most important things for our security, here in the united kingdom, to have someone who is
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very likely going to be elected the next president of the united states, who are the british foreign secretary, which is a job he has has made such denigrating comments about, is completely unacceptable because it puts the british population at risk. i don't care about david lammy and his future and his career. he should at least apologise. so the country can move on. and just to pick up on this that the language of the left. there's two things, of course, you rightly talk about angela rayner's comments called the deputy prime minister calling people in the tory party tory scum. well, guess what? that's also calling a lot of people who voted conservative scum. because actually, if you believe that about the people they elect, you believe it about they elect, you believe it about the electorate as well. and also john mcdonnell, in relation to estimate vie the member of parliament for tatton, former cabinet minister, calling it a labour party recording a recording of a labour party meeting for her to be lynched. now what right wing politician could make that sort of comment about a woman on the left without being drummed out of their job, without being drummed out of theirjob, never to without being drummed out of their job, never to return? without being drummed out of theirjob, never to return? it's unacceptable for the left. it
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should. you know. it's completely wrong . completely wrong. >> the left needs to own up to the horrific and violent rhetoric now. >> no, patrick, violence and extremism does not have a political party. you will see it across ideological lines. it is not just one party that has a sole claim of people who are using inappropriate language and violent language. i completely object to saying that it's just the left, that there are just people on the left who are using violent or extremist language. are you trying to suggest that donald trump is being sensitive and careful with his words? and if you think there should be a there should be punishment for people on the left who are entering politics and are not using language we liked, then what about donald trump being elected as president of the united states after he had said that women will just let you grab them by the by the pussy if you are rich and famous and
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political statement. okay. but he had okay political statement let's say okay. very nice. not very nice language. so you accept it because you said okay. he said immigrants poisoning are poisoning. the blood of our country is this is this acceptable language for you? do you think that's okay? the president of the united states to saying immigrants are poisoning the blood of our country? should i, as an immigrant, feel comfortable with that? does that not incite violence against immigrants? >> people don't like what he says. >> people don't like what he says . they can not vote for him. says. they can not vote for him. >> can you not say the same about british politicians democratic election? >> they cannot vote for him. >> they cannot vote for him. >> okay, the same about british politicians. >> a rifle and trying to assassinate people. >> so why do you not? >> so why do you not? >> absolutely. right. so people do not have people do not have to vote for angela rayner then. right is the appalling murder. i was a member of parliament. i had someone sent to prison for trying to kill me. so this is across the political divide. >> the appalling taught us a bit about that. >> what happened? yeah. so, well, it was a constituent of mine who, became obsessed with me. i don't know, i don't know why particularly. and then he
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was eventually tracked down by the police, and he was put in custody for the actions that he wanted to take against me. i'm sorry to say that is part of normal political life here in britain. but where stella is absolutely right, the appalling murder of jo cox was a hard right extremist. so there is extremism on both sides of the political political divide. i think what i disagree with stella is the fact that particularly under the leadership of jeremy corbyn, supported by keir starmer and now prime minister, this was sort of given the green light within the labour party, tory mps and tory political activists were legitimate targets. so i think to some extent that's why we also given why we are given the green light by i would argue, some, some people at our state broadcaster, you've got david inaya there. >> you've had jo brand's comments. absolutely zero repercussions to any of that stuff. gary lineker was, although again, the other thing that really winds me up about this is the subsequent denials. oh well, actually, if you just thought but do you know if these people about what i really want.
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>> no. >> no. >> this actually calling them nazis. were you talking about 19305 nazis. were you talking about 1930s germany? >> these people are not following is that there's a new report out recently. >> it's called no place in politics, and it's talking about the abuse and the intimidation that that mps face. it doesn't mention the two worst kinds of hatred that are happening in this country, particularly with mps. one is islamist extremism and the other is people who speak up against the gender ideology. so it's the attacks from that, from the trans activists. no one is speaking about that. so how the hell is it ever going to get any better if no one's acknowledging it? this report talks about some demonstration in a street about a planning application like that's going to harm anybody. it doesn't. but but this sort of the rest of this stuff . but the rest of this stuff. but we're not acknowledging it because we don't want to offend people. >> i don't think that this this, what we're seeing, the political violence that we're seeing, which is random and we have we have to make it clear it's a tiny minority of people who will indulge in something like this. these are not people who are motivated by seeing a tweet by a bbc journalist. they are
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probably not even following david around. but but, but, but but let me finish. >> it's like it's over. >> it's like it's over. >> let me finish. no, let me finish. this is not the reason why this political violence is happening. this political violence is happening because people have no meaning in their lives. oh, and they don't have their needs covered. and they're being they all those people. they are not being driven to the extremes by a bbc journalist. they are not being can i please finish you have and let me finish. let me finish. >> quite a lot. it's not, it's not. >> i haven't said anything. we can challenge you on a point where you say something. >> they're doing it because they have nothing in their lives. that's patently tosh. so all these people, if someone. >> someone , someone who is >> someone, someone who is driven, someone who is driven to be violent against an mp, is not a person who is reading the tweets of a bbc journalist, this is a person who is being radicalised on dark, dark websites and going down dark,
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dark paths. this is not a person we subscribing to. david aaronovitch substance . aaronovitch substance. >> i'm sorry, but they might also think that actually they're ridding the world of someone who's a dangerous threat to national security. and if you have someone who is like the president of the united states currently now, who has apparently said, you know, we need to put a target on trump's back, and they say, well, that does resonate with the kind of person who is a lunatic, correct. >> and also the person it's part of this idea that we have now. people run away from political debates. so, you know, just stop oil completely legitimate argument about the future of oil and gas in, in our future or our country's economy and climate change. they don't stand for parliament. no, they stop people going to work. they disrupt offices. the guards are protesters. again, completely legitimate argument. don't go out and desecrate the cenotaph to make your point, stand for parliament. get involved in political debate. do not resort to violence and disruption, which is what people are doing. >> people have to retain the right to be able to have a go at
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their mps and their ministers if they don't agree with them. but there's a line that you can't cross, and that line is when you start abusing, threatening and threatening to kill people. >> yeah. can't happen. okay. all right. well, look, coming up, i've got all of tomorrow's newspaper front pages for you. plus, police have clashed with anti—immigration protesters in dublin. i'll bring you the very latest on what's going on there. but snp's westminster leader stephen flynn publicly revels in england's defeat, and he mocks the three lions. do the scottish nationalists need to put a sock in it? england legend peter shilton gives me his view and you don't want to miss that. stay
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welcome back to patrick christys tonight. still to come , i'll tonight. still to come, i'll bnng tonight. still to come, i'll bring you the very first of tomorrow's newspaper front pages. hot off the press. but first, we welcome england's most capped football player of all time. it's peter shilton. and after england, hearts were broken by a late defeat to spain in last night's euro final, the snp's westminster leader stephen flynn couldn't resist rubbing salt into the wounds he posted this celebratory image from the spanish dressing room on twitter, clearly mocking the english. just minutes after the full time whistle sounded. peter, thank you very much for coming on tonight. is it wrong for an mp elected to parliament, paid for all of us taxpayers to mock the english like this , mock the english like this, >> in a word , yes. i mean, it's >> in a word, yes. i mean, it's diabolical. really you know, there's always been a rivalry
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between england and scotland and the fans and a bit of, ribbon, you know, when things go wrong . you know, when things go wrong. and, of course, you know, we could say, well, scotland got knocked out without winning a game in the euros. you know, we've got to the final. but when you see a politician, you know, doing this sort of thing , it's, doing this sort of thing, it's, it's, it's really is in bad taste. you know, i think the snp, i think, you know , i've got snp, i think, you know, i've got enough problems at the moment without , trying to gain points without, trying to gain points on, on england's, you know, loss in a final . in a final. >> yeah. i mean, we all pay his wages. it's not like it's only the people of scotland that pay this guy's wages. it's the thing, you know, it's all of us. it's everyone in england. it's everyone in wales and in northern ireland as well. and yet he just sees fit to kind of stick the knife in really. now part of me just thinks, you know, is it really appropriate to kind of openly hate england as much as a lot of the scottish nationalists do the other way round, it'd probably be seen as a bit racist, >> well, i said at the
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beginning, no, i don't think it's right for a politician to, you know, to bring sport into, into the arena, you know, especially in the mickey taking sense, you know, i think it's in real bad taste. and i think you know, i say the snp, i think i've got enough problems without, you know, riling up all the english fans and, you know, and, the english public. >> well, they do, and i mean, actually, to be honest with you, if he doesn't support england, that's probably quite a good thing because i think he did support nicola sturgeon and we all know how that's going at the moment, don't we? and he did support humza yousaf and we all know how that's going. and in fact i'm going to be talking about that a little bit later on in the show. but now the culture secretary, lisa nandy, has said that labour's government must follow in the footsteps of england manager gareth southgate and unite the nation. we can have a little look and a listen to what he said, he told an inclusive story about the country that we can be at times with the politics that we've had. >> it's felt very difficult for people to feel part of our
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national story, and it's firmly my intention that this government will be different, will be far more. gareth southgate and far less michael gove. the era of division needs to end the analogy didn't really work there because michael gove has never managed england right. >> so you know, we'll leave that 1 to 1 side. >> so you know, we'll leave that 1to 1 side. but >> so you know, we'll leave that 1 to 1 side. but peter, >> so you know, we'll leave that 1to 1 side. but peter, i'm not sure what she really means by by being more gareth southgate would that mean actually a load of people calling for them to lose their job and not getting lose theirjob and not getting the best out of the talent that we've got? i mean, what do you think, >> it's a bit of a mystery. let's listening to it. to be fair, patrick, you know, i think, you know, she she's probably trying to sort of say we're going to be more tolerant and more, loving, i suppose, in and more, loving, i suppose, in a way. i mean , gareth has always a way. i mean, gareth has always been looked upon as like a father figure with the england players. he's very well respected , you know, he doesn't respected, you know, he doesn't shout and scream very much . i shout and scream very much. i suppose she may feel that that's, that's the way that the country is going to be run. but,
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i don't quite understand it. to be fair . be fair. >> know one thing that really wound me up? peter, i don't know how you feel about this, but, you know, people, people stick flags up for everything at the moment, whether or not it's, you know, pride month and all of that stuff. there's flags everywhere for all of that. we're allowed to have all of that everywhere over government buildings, everything. you know, england get to the final against spain . i was walking around spain. i was walking around london. you hardly see anything. you see normal people with them, you know, you see people walking around wearing england shirts and all that. that's fine, you know, ordering members of the public. but when it comes to like our politicians and our political buildings and everything, they don't seem particularly concerned by it or like they want to do it. and when you were a player, does that have any impact on you at all or do you just think, screw the lot of you. i'm just going to go out and play anyway, >> i think that's what players do. you know, they, they go out and, and do their best. they try and, and do their best. they try and the ambition, i think of every player is, you know, international level is to win something for their country, you know, to be held in, in higher
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esteem, right, the way, you know, through their life, through doing well for the country . but when i think country. but when i think politicians start getting involved in in success or whatever of a of a sporting team , whatever of a of a sporting team, trying to jump on the bandwagon, i think, you know, it's, it's going too far and, you know, definitely, you know, i think that's the case at the moment. >> yeah, absolutely. just one final one with you, peter, if that's all right. which is what should happen with gareth southgate, do you think do you think he should be allowed to, you know, carry on or. i mean the rumours are that it might have been his last game. there were certainly seem to be, the punst were certainly seem to be, the pundits seem to be saying it like it was a fait accompli last night that that was that. what do you reckon? >> well, i think gareth has done a terrific job for england. you know, he's got us to finals, the way he's conducted himself has been, you know. terrific. you know, he's set a great example. the players love him, i think the fa would probably want him
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to stay on. but as a manager, sometimes enough's enough. you know, the criticism, the knives that come out, you know he's the pressure is a lot. and i think sometimes when you stand back like gareth is quite rightly said and reflect on it, he may think, no, i'll give it another go. i want to win something, i know he was desperate to win this match, so, we're wait and see. but, you know, i think i think the players might want him to stay on, especially the young ones, because he's. he's such a good he's a good manager for them. >> so i was listening to harry kane last night actually, and a couple of the others as well. i mean, they do seem genuinely adamant that they that they love him and everything. but, you know, i suppose it's just about getting us over the line, isn't it? but look, peter, thank you very much. great to have you on the show, as always. you take care, mate. okay. all the best, mate. take care. coming up, we'll show you the scenes from dubun we'll show you the scenes from dublin where police have now clashed with anti—immigration protesters and youth demand target the cenotaph. stop obe to bnng target the cenotaph. stop obe to bring haaland down. but next
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i've got the very first of tomorrow's front pages and i'll run you through them
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okay. welcome back to patrick christys. tonight, i have got the very first of tomorrow's newspaper front pages. let's do it . all right, so i'm going to it. all right, so i'm going to start with the metro. fall was the likely cause. say police body found in hunt for missing jay slater. so there we go. let's go to the guardian now . let's go to the guardian now. trump hits out at witch hunts despite pledge to unite the nation. there we go. legal cases targeted by republican nominee after assassination bid. they've also got the uk faces a threat from a deadly quartette. britain is facing a threat from china, russia, iran and north korea. the guardian say. so there we go. let's go to the times . we've
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go. let's go to the times. we've got trump races ahead in key states after shooting times poll boost as republicans anoint nominee. and they've also got more nhs cash is not feasible. labour told. so pumping more money into the nhs is not feasible while it fails to improve productivity. labour's new health advisor has warned, as he's insisted gps and hospitals must be rewired to spend public money better. well, that's interesting because it ties into a story that we're going to be discussing in just a second. but before that, i'll go to the eye. starmer and trump start building their new special relationship. supposedly, keir starmer's advisers said, look, just send trump a message and instead sir keir starmer said no, i'll call him. so they did call him and they've had a chat and he's hoping that there can be a good relationship, as trump almost definitely gets into the white house again. but here we go. here's the daily mail's front page. and this is what i'm going to talk about with my panel going to talk about with my panel. doctors told to lecture us on climate change to the royal college of physicians. guide tells medics to look out
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for eco distress and promotes remote appointments to cut emissions. doctors should start warning patients about the dangers of climate change. apparently, and apparently they are trusted members of the community, so they should raise the topic in consultations and repeat it often. it also says it calls on them to reduce their own carbon footprint by working from home as much as possible. that's what you want from. that's what you want from. that's what you want from your doctor, isn't it? working from home more often. and they also told to look out for people suffering eco distress. so these include things like anxiety and depression caused by climate change. as you can hear, carol is raring to go on this. change. as you can hear, carol is raring to go on this . carol is raring to go on this. carol your views. >> it would be so much better if they looked out for signs of cancen they looked out for signs of cancer. you know, rather than eco gloom and distress. you know, this is just, you know, when you go to see a doctor, whether it be a gp or a hospital consultant or you have so little time in there to tell them what's wrong with you if they're going to start lecturing you about the blummin climate, or what are they going to talk about, what's actually wrong
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with you? and this just this just plays into my belief that doctors are very politically motivated these days. well, especially their union. the bma. you know, it is full of political activists. and this just kind of proves it to me. politics should have no place in the consulting room. when you're sick and you're frightened and you don't know what's wrong with you. >> i think this this climate anxiety is what i've spoken to quite a lot of the just stop oil crew. i'm sure many of us have over the course of our years in media, etc. and one thing that keeps coming up time and time again is, is that they don't want to bring children into this world. well, don't they don't want it, you know, and i think i hear them in the hysteria and i think, i think they are being mentally damaged by climate hysteria. and i wonder if this is the kind of thing that doctors, you know, instead of raising it a consultation rooms, maybe there should be a separate appointment for that. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> what about stick to your knitting, stick to your knitting. if i go and see the gp, i want him to diagnose my unmentionable disease. whatever it may be. sort of verruca, i could probably safely say, but stick to your knitting. why are doctors experts in the climate? i don't want my doctors to tell
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me that the climate is changing. i want them to say, look, if you are not well, this is the best treatment we can get you and look, they are the high priests of the national religion, which is nhs peace be upon it. they are now going to be the high priests and priestesses of the new national religion, which is climate change and woe betide anyone who disagrees with them. maybe will be refused a doctor's appointment if they disagree with it. so what happens if you do dispute what they say? >> are they going to treat you properly? no. that's it. >> any kind of, you know, they'll be sending them, sending them, sending you to a i doubt they would be doing that. >> i think you're going a bit you know, you know i doubt they would actually bring up climate change unless you actually mentioned it. okay guidance. what my problem with this story is my spectacles. my i read the story. my problem with this story. my problem with this story is it's not that that what it's saying what what i'm heanng it's saying what what i'm hearing here is, you know, in case someone does have climate anxiety and i hate the word, the word eco distress because i think i do think it's ridiculous. what my problem with
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this is, is that the royal college college of physicians is spending time in bureaucracy, in typing out that guidance, and then doctors are wasting time reading the guidance. >> can i just politely suggest that this is why, when you see things like, oh, we haven't got any more for money the nhs and people always go, well, the thing with the nhs is we just don't fund it properly, do we? well, you've got the time to be pumping out. >> i think there is too much information out there and today working from home, or maybe in this case working from home, they're going to sit there for years from home. >> if i've got an ear infection, i want someone to look in my ear. i don't want them to be remotely at home telling me that ineed remotely at home telling me that i need to put my recycling. >> okay, we're going to draw a line under this now, was it on? because not for the first time, police have clashed with anti—immigration protesters. i think it's really anti—illegal immigration protesters, as it should say in dublin. wahaca tam fry . fry. >> modern day black and tans.
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>> modern day black and tans. >> there we go. so a number of people were arrested after police and fire service personnel came under attack at a site that's due to be developed to house asylum seekers. a makeshift protest camp was set up several months ago to prevent workers from entering the area. it comes after similar protests swept across dublin months and months ago. so. so there you go. i mean, it is . yeah. i mean, the i mean, it is. yeah. i mean, the situation in ireland is actually pretty bleak. i mean, they've taken a higher proportion of illegal immigrants, i think, than we have. i mean, their population growth as well has been remarkable. and especially yeah, the numbers of people that have come since when the rwanda scheme , the bill and melinda scheme, the bill and melinda bill was passed, their number is doubled in the space of a year of people crossing the border. >> yes. mad from the mainland to dublin. so yeah. and if you remember all the pictures of people camping on the streets and immigrants camping on the streets. so yeah, people are rightly angry . rightly angry. >> it's been, it's been really forced upon them and just the geography of ireland as well. you know, it's bad enough in
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this country where you see communities where they're like, well, i didn't really want my local hotel and leisure club to suddenly become an asylum seeker hotel. you know, it's not a not ideal hotel. you know, it's not a not ideal. but in ireland, you know, there's a lot of very rural communities, you know, where actually if you do plonk 200 lads from afghanistan or somewhere in the middle of that, i mean, it changes it forever. >> and they will say what people say in this country. >> well, i've been knocking on loads of doors in the general elections. no one told us no one voted for this. you are transforming our community without our permission. just stop. and i think the dangerous thing is the conservative government didn't stop it in 14 years. i think the labour government is going to be worse. >> yeah, well, we'll have to see what happens there. i mean, stella, you know, the civil unrest that we're seeing in ireland. i mean, to be fair, we don't see that here, do we? we haven't seen, you know, setting fire to, as far as i'm aware, anyway, we haven't seen things like setting fire to migrant hotels. so for all of the strength of feeling here, we've not. and hopefully we never do. we've not we're not going to cross that rubicon. >> and i hope we don't see that. and i completely agree with you when it comes to immigration,
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you have to do it in a way that bnngs you have to do it in a way that brings the whole community together. you cannot just drop as you said, people from like hundreds of people from a completely different culture in a very small community that doesn't have time to assimilate people who perhaps don't speak the language because then they're not going to be accepted. they're not going to be given a fair opportunity to assimilate. and that's just not good for anyone. >> no, no good stuff. all right, guys, well, look, now, one slightly overconfident england supporter decided to tattoo himself a celebrating their euro victory. i don't know why people do this. why? before they eventually lost to spain in last night's final, 29 year old dan thomas from swindon insists he get this. he doesn't regret getting the permanent tattoo, saying if anything, i don't think it'd be hard to change the four into an eight. in four years time. i won't be covering it up. absolutely no regrets. i still love it. well, can i just say, look, i must admit i really admire your optimism. i like the
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way you go about things. i like the fact that there's no regrets. in fact, you've doubled down, you know? good for you , down, you know? good for you, some might argue that he was a bit silly. >> carol, do you know , i just it >> carol, do you know, i just it always amazes me how we get whipped up as a country before the euros or before a big tournament. >> we still have this vain belief, hope, whatever that we're going to win and we never do. it's 58 years since we won a major tournament and you know, and all this and i blame the media. it's our fault. >> it's completely the hope that kills you. >> carol. it's the hope. >> carol. it's the hope. >> no, there is. >> no, there is. >> there was absolutely no hope for england yesterday. no come on. >> no hope. there was hope. i know, i'll tell you what, what l, know, i'll tell you what, what i, what i, what annoys you. what annoys me is that my next door neighbours were obviously watching it on a different platform, so they were seconds behind me, which meant they had hope for 80s longer than i did, because that spain goal, you know, towards the end of it. i mean, you see people getting loads of tattoos like this. i
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think it's good. >> yeah. no, i mean, i love the way he said i can just change the date. most people, when they get something wrong, they have the name crossed out and put the name of their new other half. so he could have gone for the opfion he could have gone for the option of just crossing england out and having spain put above. but he stayed loyal to england. he said, no, no, i'm not going to change the name. i'll change the date. good for him. he's a super fan. he's a great english patriot. exactly. and we need more. >> we've also had cases of lads. getting sacked from their job. so they decided to just go to watch the euros final. they spent about ,1,000 each on a ticket and they, they just told their bosses that they weren't going to know how much steven finn paid for his ticket. >> i wonder if. oh, yeah, you know, he was there, i think, wasn't he? that was the picture in the dressing room. i don't know, but i wonder how he got his ticket. >> i don't know, i don't know whether or not that was that game spanish government or whether it was a, whether it was a pre because scotland did play, but they beat spain didn't they? scotland a while ago, a while
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ago. so i wonder if it might have been that. but, but yeah, i mean but actually stella greece have won the euros more recently than 2004 2005 best year of my life, patrick. >> we won the euros. we won the eurovision. it was amazing. the financial crisis hadn't happened yet. we all had money. it was wonderful. >> exactly. >> exactly. >> you weren't ripping money out of people's bank accounts and all that. no. remarkable. right. coming up, the crowning moment of the show where i decide today's greatest britain and union jackass. and i do have a few more front pages for you and humza yousaf faces a probe. over £250,000 of taxpayers money basically being sent to gaza, in what i'm sure you'll claim was just a massive coincidence. stay
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welcome back. lots more front pages for you. now let's do it. so it's the daily express to start us off. body found in hunt for jay, who quote, fell in
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accident. so there we go. there's a picture of the helicopter they're hoisting. what is possibly jay slater's body back up out of a ravine. we've got the daily mirrorjay body found after quotes . fall body found after quotes. fall family's worst nightmare mountain rescue teams grim discovery near location of lad's last call. we go to the daily telegraph now , trump's pick for telegraph now, trump's pick for vp is hillbilly senator. also quite a windswept picture of our king there as well, they've got armed forces facing a deadly quartette of north korea , china, quartette of north korea, china, iran and russia . starmer shells iran and russia. starmer shells legal restrictions on foreign workers as well. they said that labour has shelved a legal crackdown on foreign workers amid the biggest rise in population for at least 75 years. so there we go. that's good. there's 1.5 years. so there we go. that's good. there's1.5 million new homes that labour are planning on building and giving some to asylum seekers. they can probably just give the rest of the people they invite over here as well, can't they? but moving
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on now, former scottish first minister humza yousaf is facing a scottish government investigation after he overruled officials to give 250 grand to the united nations relief and works agency, which has been slammed for its links to hamas officials had recommended that a donation be given to unicef . but donation be given to unicef. but earlier this year yousaf overruled their advice and declared that the donation should go to unrwa instead .just should go to unrwa instead. just one day after the donation was announced, mr yousaf's mother in law and father in law were given safe passage out of gaza. the former snp leader , who resigned former snp leader, who resigned in april, has denied that the donation was in any way connected to the release of his family. he did, for what it's worth, also go on a family houday worth, also go on a family holiday to qatar, which happens to be where the hamas bosses live, and that's all there is to say about that. >> i'll do a collective for now. >> i'll do a collective for now. >> it just is going to be interesting, isn't it? to learn
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more about the stuff that humza yousuf totally denies now , not yousuf totally denies now, not content with taking a dump in rishi sunak's lake or planning to disrupt the state opening of parliament activists from youth demand visited the cenotaph earlier today. stop bombing israel . israel. >> free palestine, free palestine . palestine. >> hey, carol, have they got no respect for britain's war heroes? >> oh clearly not. i mean , >> oh clearly not. i mean, they're scrawling near the graves of people who died in the wars, and that's shocking. and it does make you wonder about what their knowledge is of history. do they know what happenedin history. do they know what happened in the first and second world wars? do they have any idea how many people died? how many young men died in those wars? and you can't deface the graves of them. to make your point about what's happening in gaza. >> okay, so you only care about people who who died, you know, many decades ago, many centuries
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ago. >> you never you don't care about you did not say i think they were perfectly respectful to the. i watched this video for the first time because they spray painted the road , the spray painted the road, the street, the asphalt. they didn't spray paint the actual monument. so i think they were perfectly they were perfectly respectful. >> laying a palestinian flag on the monument. i mean, it is it's sacrilege, isn't it? >> can you tell me what kind of protest would be acceptable to you ? you? >> well, not on the cenotaph. yes. there's no acceptable protest on the cenotaph. okay. it is on national memorial. >> is a symbolic. >> is a symbolic. >> it is on national memorial to the hundreds of thousands of young men from around the globe. but many, most of them from this country who laid down their life. so these snowflake children can go and protest without being arrested. imagine if those people hadn't died and hitler had won the war, and we lived in a nazi snowflake. >> children are the snowflake . >> children are the snowflake. children care about the people and the kids that are dying
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right now. >> public decency, it is a disgrace, is what they've been doing every weekend for god knows how many know you didn't accept that protest, carol. >> you thought that that protest was very bad and it should be banned. you didn't accept that they have had what you would call an acceptable are. so you don't actually have an acceptable protest. sorry, you don't have an acceptable. there is literally no no form of protest that you will allow. >> stop putting words into my mouth and saying what you what you want me to say. i haven't said any of those things. what i said any of those things. what i said was what they did was incredibly. >> i will ask again to our audience, what is a form of acceptable? >> well, hold on, on the other side of the coin, when, tommy robinson and his supporters wanted to protest at the armistice around the cenotaph, that was completely unacceptable. there is no acceptable protest on our national war memorial to our war dead end of. i don't care what you're protesting about, whatever side of the argument on it is wrong. >> these people just go for
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unbelievable degrees of shock value, right? and by doing something like the cenotaph, i mean they're not winning. the thing is, they're not winning anybody else over with this? they're just behaving like brats and you know. yeah. anyway, i can't really say why i really feel about them because i get sad. but anyway, times reveals those greatest britain's union jackass all right, so no, i will not say it right. okay, carol, who's your greatest briton? please? >> i never thought these words would come out of my mouth, but it's gary lineker, coupled with alan shearer feeling all right. and i know it's it took a lot to get it out there but but yeah, the thing is both lineker and shearer said what a lot of people were thinking about the way england had played over the past, couple of weeks, they said they weren't happy with it, whatever, that they weren't playing their best. and, and people like harry kane took his toys out the pram and said, you know, pundits should be more supportive. no pundits are there to assess the game and to assess the play and to and to tell the truth about it. and they did tell the truth. you know, this team had the nation behind it. they couldn't have had any more support than they had. and yet
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they're choosing to attack the punst they're choosing to attack the pundits who pointed out what they were doing wrong. >> rubbish. >> rubbish. >> great. you're a great person. >> great. you're a great person. >> please. i did say that. >> please. i did say that. >> so it's alfie hewett, obe, who won the, wheelchair tennis at wimbledon. so we had a fantastic british victory at wimbledon, but that wasn't enough for him. so he then went on, having won the singles later that afternoon to compete in the doubles and win that as well. and when he won the singles title, fantastic achievement , he title, fantastic achievement, he beat spain, england beating spain. just what we needed after the euros. >> the kind of stuff you can only dream of, isn't it? right. so, stella, who's your greatest britain, please? >> and ed miliband for taking on the nimbys in his first week in government, nonetheless put the ukulele down. >> he's left a wind farm. has he stopped thinking about different ways he can spend all of our money? and he's now taken on the nimbys. okay. all right. today's winner of the greatest britain isindeed winner of the greatest britain is indeed alfie hewett, who won not once but twice at wimbledon. well done alfie, who is your union jackass please, carol. >> i'm still on football. i
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can't believe it because i don't much like football. anyway, it's gareth southgate after last night's defeat. he just said, you know, that england had played fantastically well, were really in it until the 82nd minute. i don't know what he was watching, is the saying i don't know much about it, but i can say they were playing bad. you know, i think football is about winning another gareth southgate. they've not won anything. so i think that probably has to be his last tournament. you know, he said he was saying stuff i get that he wants to support his players. i get all of that. but you're not doing them any favours by telling them they're fantastic when they're not. >> yeah. i'm very i'm very conflicted about southgate. well, just purely because. well, because i think you know, he's a, he's a nice bloke, he's a bit dull and the football's been all bad, but then we have got to ,2 finals and you know, i'm like well and i can remember, i remember the tosh carroll i remember, you know capello and his drawing one all with flipping algeria or whoever it was that we did, you know all that. i mean that was that was horrific. >> you know, since we won a major tournament, gordo. >> so my union jack us is the
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labour supporting private school educated. cor blimey, guv'nor. mockney lily allen , who, decided mockney lily allen, who, decided i think just at the end of the euros match to tweet a picture which was viewed by 11.2 million people, allegedly taking the michael out of england supporters, it was ai generated. so what i'd say cor blimey, lily, you got the wrong flag for a start . yeah. and also, when a start. yeah. and also, when you feel like it, you want to burnish your working class credentials, people up and down. this nation took a few hours out, enjoyed the football . it's out, enjoyed the football. it's a bit like emily thornberry when she did the same. according to lily allen, they should be mocked. >> all right . okay. >> all right. okay. >> all right. okay. >> mark neeson would say guastella in the same spirit, my union jack, which is the spanish fans that i saw last night dancing and screaming through central london that disrespect. patrick, i will let you like a handful of immigrants that i will let you deport. it will be
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this one's just. this one's. i'm gonna let you have it. >> this is the closest you've ever come to winning on this. i must say . but ever come to winning on this. i must say. but i am going to go for lily allen. there we go . but for lily allen. there we go. but it was a close up. >> it's my first time on the show, and i got both. >> there you go. well, it was written into your contract, but no. there we go. all right, guys, thank you very much. really, really lovely show tonight. thank you to everybody else as well who's been watching, who's been listening, who's been tuning in. headliners are up next for a more detailed look at tomorrow's newspaper front pages. i'll see you again tomorrow at 9 pm. take care. >> a brighter outlook with boxt solar, sponsors of weather on gb news >> good evening. welcome to your latest gb news weather update brought to you from the met office. heavy rain will continue in central areas overnight with rain warnings in force. but for many of us it is going to be a mild night. we've got southwesterly winds as low pressure has been approaching from the southwest and band of rain is pivoting around this area of low pressure, bringing some very heavy rain to central
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areas of england, parts of wales as well, where there's a rain warning in force until the early hours of tuesday, we could see some localised flooding by tomorrow morning . further north tomorrow morning. further north it will remain largely dry overnight. there's quite a lot of cloud around though, so temperatures holding up into the mid teens for most of us. so a fairly mild start to the day on tuesday, but a pretty damp one for some of us, particularly where this heavy rain lingers where this heavy rain lingers where that warning is still in force. however, for western areas of scotland it will likely be a bright start to the day away from the far northern isles, where some showers will move in and across southwestern areas of scotland. again, some brightness dry for northern ireland, but this heavy rain will likely be affecting northern areas of england, north wales and potentially into the midlands and the south west as well. still quite a lot of cloud around across the southeast. two and that rain is going to continue to pivot around and slowly clear away to the north sea through tuesday morning. we're also going to see some heavy showers break out across central areas of scotland, northern england, to where there is a rain warning in force
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through much of tuesday. but from the west it will turn much dner from the west it will turn much drier and brighter as the day goes on on tuesday. so some brightness coming through, not feeling too bad in the sunshine. temperatures in the high teens, low 20s at best. and as we head into wednesday, that's more settled. weather becomes more
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>> are hoping. >> are hoping. >> holding some space. >> holding some space. >> and it's just coming up to 11:00 on gb news. and in a
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moment, we have headliners for you. but first, let's bring you the latest news headlines. and in the united states tonight, donald trump has formally accepted the republican nomination for president ahead of the forthcoming us elections in november. and at the same time, he's chosen tonight his running mate, james vance from ohio, known as jd vance. that is going to be the vice presidential nomination. well, tonight, james vance has walked into a standing ovation at the republican national convention in milwaukee. if you're watching on television, you can see him there with his wife. earlier, though, outside, hundreds of both anti—trump and anti—biden demonstrators were gathered to protest against what they called racist trump and genocidal joe. meanwhile donald trump won a legal victory earlier on today when a florida judge threw out a high profile case against him following hundreds of classical classified files being located at his mar a lago estate. mr trump says all other cases
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against him should now be

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