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tv   Headliners  GB News  July 15, 2024 11:00pm-12:01am BST

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headliners for 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 quickly dismissed . but that quickly dismissed. but that decision is likely to be appealed . and earlier on today, appealed. and earlier on today, president joe biden appealed to the american public to lower the political temperature. speaking from the oval office, he called on everyone to take a step back. joe biden has faced some criticism for repeatedly claiming donald trump posed a threat to democracy. but now he's gone on record as saying it's he's gone on record as saying wsfime he's gone on 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 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 must never be a literal battlefield or, god forbid, a killing field . killing field. >> well, he news here in the uk, police are scouring a farm in hertfordshire for the remains of
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a woman who was murdered back in 1969. muriel mckay was kidnapped and held for ransom when she was mistaken for the then wife of the media mogul rupert murdoch. brothers arthur and nizamuddin hossain demanded £1 million for her release. they were later convicted of her kidnap and murder, but her body was never located. while new images released today show police officers who've been looking through the dirt inside a barn at the farm in question where miss mckay once lived . police miss mckay once lived. police have been clashing with anti—immigration protesters in dubun anti—immigration 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 workers and builders from entering the area. ireland's justice minister says she's appalled by the scenes of protest . and lastly, scenes of protest. and lastly, tonight, the england football squad arrived back at london's
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stansted airport this afternoon. they returned home, of course, following their two one euros final defeat to spain yesterday. the prince and princess of wales praised england's grit and determination in a personal message to the team and their manager, gareth southgate, who said his squad had given their all. >> our players have been incredible. >> they've given , everybody some >> they've given, everybody some incredible nights. >> they couldn't have given any more in terms of their effort , more in terms of their effort, their desire, their character , their desire, their character, tonight we fell short. 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. >> gareth southgate those are the latest gb news headlines. now time for headliners 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
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slash alerts . slash alerts. >> thank you paulie. >> thank you paulie. >> hello and welcome to headliners. your first look at tomorrow's newspapers with three comedians i'm leo kearse and tonight i'm joined by the exceptional wits of kerry marks and nick the big dog. dixon, how you both doing? i brought back your old nickname. >> thanks mate. yeah, i'm feeling good. >> feeling pumped like trump. >> feeling pumped like trump. >> i'm back. >> i'm back. >> well, yeah, we're going to be covering trump jd vance, his nomination as vice president in a in a moment. you excited about that kerry? >> where's my nickname? >> where's my nickname? >> do you want a nickname? yeah. >> do you want a nickname? yeah. >> my old one if you would. >> my old one if you would. >> well i did have one. that was the funniest surviving mark's brother. yeah, yeah. >> one we say about don't like it. >> too many words. which one? >> too many words. which one? >> the one we say about you when you're not here. >> i know the more they get back to me. >> nicknames are like pronouns, right? you get to choose your own. anyway, that's the chit chat. out of the way. let's have
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a look at tomorrow's front pages. the daily mail leads with now doctors are told to lecture us on climate change. the guardian has trump hits out at witch hunts despite pledge to unite nation. the times as trump races ahead in key states after shooting the express leads with body found in hunt for jay, who fell in accident. the i news has starmer and trump start building their special relationship. and finally, the daily star has a natter with my dearly departed dodi every day. dee dee and those were front pages . and those were front pages. and let's have a closer look at those front pages, starting with the times. and it looks like the shooting was good news in at least one way for trump. >> yep, trump races ahead in key states after shooting it actually tells us that since march, his polling has gone up in three of the seven swing states and michigan, pennsylvania and wisconsin. but the shooting was undoubtedly
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good for him. it turns out the pubuc good for him. it turns out the public loves someone who gets shot and survives, especially a good punch in the air. and that incredibly iconic photo that everyone loves of him. now, obviously , biden's increasing obviously, biden's increasing incoherence hasn't, turns out, done him many favours. people you know, they might find it sweet, but not the greatest thing in a president. and as for the shooting, i don't know. there might be a honeymoon penod there might be a honeymoon period for that. you know, the people get very popular after a thing like this, and it might last for a few months, really successful being shot in the ear. maybe if he gets shot in the other ear as well, he'll be the other ear as well, he'll be the world leader. >> yeah, well, i mean, i'm sure there will be other other attempts. as you know, things get more febrile before the election, but biden is really rocked. senior democrats off record have said that they basically almost given up. donors have pulled out of backing biden. they're already pulling out. you know, before i think $90 million was was withdrawn, i mean, biden's really going to have to do something radical, like release a sex tape. yeah he's also going to have to get nearly assassinated and put it even get
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both ears shot at. >> i don't know, i don't know. he's going to it's going to be something very special, to be honest. >> i think if you shot his ear, he probably would fall down dead. so that would, that would work. >> or just a gust of wind would probably take him down. probably shouldn't joke about that in the after go for the nose. it's a great i mean, it was a horrible thing. i was on air when it happened. it was a horrible moment. obviously i loved trump, but now it's a massive turnaround. it's been a great turnaround. it's been a great turnaround because he his case was dismissed by the judge. you know, he's winning in all these key states suddenly smashing it. life is a roller coaster as, as ronan keating once famously sang. and now he's got jd vance as a vp, which is a great pick, right? because very smart guy. and he's pretty he's pretty solid on the issues. some of the really further right people on onune really further right people on online not too thrilled, but most people are pretty thrilled that elon musk chuffed with it. peter thiel likes it, you know. and he's young as well. he's 39. so some people are seeing him as a kind of heir to trump. i even heard that he's a kind of assassination insurance. this is assassination insurance. this is a mad thing. the idea was if you get trump, you're just going to
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get trump, you're just going to get vance, who's just as much of a nightmare for the left. so don't even bother shooting trump was the idea. yeah. >> although it's interesting. >> although it's interesting. >> sorry, it doesn't sound that ideal as a candidate. i mean, he was previously really opposed to trump and described donald trump as a total fraud and a moral disaster. and then, you know, since, since trump's inevitability has become apparent, he's suddenly had a had a change of morals. >> yes. but trump explained that he said he he said some bad things about me. but then he met me and he fell in love. so. so there you go. that's what happened. >> that is so trump isn't it? >> that is so trump isn't it? >> he was never trump. now he's always trump. he was calling trump in love. >> but also he i mean he is a bit extreme. and he, he's into replacement theories and other strange ideas as well, the guardian describes is it a particularly strange, strange idea? >>i idea? >> i mean, we've seen you know, hundreds of thousands of migrants flooding across the southern border is that jews are behind it. >> yeah, but the thing that people add that on to the theory to discredit it, it's like you can discredit anything. that's what i heard. that's what the theory is. but maybe. maybe not. >> leo told me he thinks you're behind it. specifically one i am, you know, he gets described
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by by the guardian as a populist, right. >> but but then they to the guardian, everyone is populist, right? unless they're actually taking a dump on the union jacks, you can't really tell anymore. it's interesting to see who people choose. the running mate, you know, because often it's a bit like comedians choosing a support act. they usually choose someone who's not going to make them look good. you know, he's going to make them look good, and he's weaker than them. so it's an interesting choice for that, think. >> yeah, it's quite an aggressive choice because he could have gone with a softer choice. people are glad it's not nikki haley, which would have been awful. and one good thing about vance is he's he's quite antiwar because he was in the marines at post 911. he's like, right, i'm going to join up. then seeing what it was actually like. he's become quite antiwar. and i'm seeing that as quite a good thing. >> and keir starmer has started building his special relationship with trump already, apparently. carrie. >> yeah, yeah. >> yeah, yeah. >> yes yes he has. yes. >>— >> yes yes he has. yes. >> you're right. that's my story. you want me to do that story. you want me to do that story then? is that what you're trying to do? because i can do that. it's in the eye. >> oh, yeah. sorry. this is this is yours, nick. >> yeah, yeah. don't worry. we can just easily. >> you have this.
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>> you have this. >> i'll do this one tonight. thanks, carrie. so this is just starmer and trump start building their new special relationship. it's in the eye, which is sort of a paper. and i like this because keir starmer called trump immediately after the terrible incident. and i really like that that he called him. it shows a great it's just good instincts, especially because his aides were saying no, just send him a note. and he's like, no, no. i want to show that it's sincere. so i'll actually call andifs sincere. so i'll actually call and it's good. it's kind of it's also a kind of blairite pragmatism to say, you know, i can get on with people, even if it's trump and none of this silly stuff we saw from the lib dems back when cable was in charge, like, oh no, trump shouldn't have a state visit and all this kind of thing. it's like, no, no one, he's a person. two it's the special relationship. and three, it's the president of united states. you know, you should always build those relationships. he had the call with biden as well, but he's going to have the call with trump. and i really like that. and you know, trump this is going to go down so well with him because he loves people who are sort of personally nice to him, basically. so they had a ten minute, up to ten minute call. and the cool thing about trump is he's just been shot. he's still congratulated starmer on his victory as well, which i think is pretty classy because he's a classy guy, classy guy. >> but not everybody in labour
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is a is a fan of trump. i mean, david lammy has notoriously not everyone. >> yeah, yeah, i think quite lot. >> nobody would have said, oh, don't call him david lammy, who's the foreign secretary, has tweeted pretty abhorrent things at trump, calling him a snowflake and even calling him a snowflake and even calling him a snowflake for being worried about being assassinated, which turned out to be a terrible tweet, sure, but sure. however starmer feels about trump, this was just an adult thing to do , was just an adult thing to do, isn't it? i mean, you know, even if someone you don't like has just been shot and they survived, i think it's a nice thing. yeah. to ring them and ask, are you okay? how are you and so on. i don't think it's, you know, if he'd snubbed him, that would have been a story. i don't think this is much. this is just doing the right thing. and it's weird. if anything, that anyone is, is even questioning it. but i do find it a little bit tedious, though. the constant special relationship, special relationships, it's just a phrase we have to keep saying. and, well, i think there is that bit of the i love you. >> there's that shared history because we invented america, you know what i mean? america is what britain could be if we weren't so rubbish and communist. but, by the way , communist. but, by the way, kyrees talking about because it should be obvious which it should, but the only other world leader that spoke to him, apparently, was trudeau. >> so it wasn't a sort of
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standard thing to do. oh, right. so it was a good thing to do. but apparently the call ended with trump saying, you have to sack lammy, that total loser. really? no. and i've made that up. >> but it would be imagine what else could they talk about for ten minutes? yeah. total loser. first two is how that hurt. >> we've got lammy's tweet here. apparently we can we can put it up on screen. maybe we can't. >> that's useful i think. is that all right? >> okay. yeah. the, also trump's best, you know, closest ally in the uk parliament is now nigel farage. so it's interesting that the foreign secretary is making himself an enemy of trump. and if the uk wants to get america to do anything to persuade america to do anything, the diplomacy is best going through nigel farage, that's going to it's clear also everyone's positioning themselves for trump to be president. >> they all want to talk to him. they all want to accept that it's going to be the fact because it's going to happen anyway, >> moving on. we've got the daily mail. carrie, what have they got in the front cover? >> oh, let's do the daily mail. that's a good idea. yeah. doctors are being told to lecture us on climate change. says the daily mail and i. it's
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the royal college of physicians who guide telling medics to look out for eco distress and also talk to us more about, you know, because they, they, they mix with the public a lot more. so they're the ideal people to talk to us about climate change. so soon you'll be seeing a doctor and they'll tell you that you've got a fungal infection. and by the way, have you thought about separating your rubbish a bit better is the way we're going with this and don't use your feet. yeah. it calls them to reduce their carbon. tell people to reduce their carbon footprint and so on, which i think is going to be a little bit strange to come from your doctor when they don't normally have time to even hear what your symptoms are. but they're also told to look out for people suffering from eco distress. the name given to anxiety and depression caused by climate change. i accept that's the thing. yeah, i mean, i accept that that's a thing. >> people could have some weird paranoia driven by the left wing media over climate change paranoia, isn't it? >> but you should be talking to them about is but the. >> yeah, they should be talking to them about the paranoia. but this this idea that this ideology, this climate change ideology, this climate change ideology, this climate change ideology, this death cult should
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be propagated by civil servants and doctors. they're being told, i mean , the doctor should be i mean, the doctor should be completely impartial and shouldn't be teaching about the wonders of the kingdom of jehovah or any other weird ideology. not that you know. sorry if i've offended any jehovah's witnesses. i think you're much more sensible than climate change people. >> great point leo. we were a few days into a labour government and doctors are telling you about climate change. it's more dystopian than we could have predicted, right? they're also saying work from home, even though landlords say we don't want people working from home, so they need to work that out as well. imagine a doctor, you go to a doctor. have you thought about working from home? your carbon emissions are a bit high. like, what are you talking about? you know, fix my, fix my leg. yeah. >> and also, what if you go to the doctor and he says, have you thought about working from home and you're the receptionist so that doctor, what's he going to do then anyway? that's the front pages done. join us after the break. as immigration pushes britain's population to record levels. and was trump nearly killed because of diversity hires? plus, there's good news for trump as he dodges another bullet. this time it's a criminal case against him that's
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welcome back to headliners. your first look at tuesday's newspapers with me. leo kearse, joined by carrie marks and nick dixon . kicking this section off dixon. kicking this section off with the express and replacement theory is a far right myth that says that the west is importing millions of immigrants as native populations dwindle. it's completely false and racist. in completely false and racist. in completely unrelated news, britain's population has hit record levels because of immigration. carrie, >> yeah , they're saying >> yeah, they're saying immigration is to blame for the largest rise in 75 years. i didn't know the population can go didn't know the population can 9° up didn't know the population can 90 ”p by didn't know the population can go up by 75 years, but apparently it can. it is now 75 years higher than it was before. what's actually going on is that everything is going up, by the way, and they're saying that immigration is to blame. the birth rate is down by 21,900. the death rate is also down by 500. i mean, it's increased by less than 21. the death rate. i hope you understood. that is 598,400 new births. so in other
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words, it's definitely not anything to do with the difference between birth rates and death rates. that's causing causing this to go up. so when they're saying immigration is to blame, it's there's no discussion here unless there's a few thousand people who've been kept cryogenically frozen, but in a government lab and have just escaped. it's definitely immigration. yeah. well, yeah. >> and the terrifying thing is , >> and the terrifying thing is, i mean, the net migration figure is 622,000, which is a lot, but that's that's taking away the people who've left the country because obviously a lot of people are leaving as britain becomes. yeah a degenerate hellhole. and so we're looking at, you know, possibly another million, 1.2 million like it was last year. >> yeah. we don't we don't know we don't know the gross figure, but it's probably gross. that's all i'm going to say. that's a pun. yeah. yeah. it's absurd. i mean what we need to do is increase the birthrate , find increase the birthrate, find ways to incentivise that while reducing immigration. but easier said than done. no government's managed to do it. obviously, tories have been talking about it since at least 2010. yeah, never managed to do it. it went up. we need to pick people from countries that are compatible with with skills that are
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relevant. will labour do it? is my question, because blair showed that he was aware of the problem in his times piece, where he was advising keir starmer. he's aware of the threat of reform, but is that a very serious threat to labour? they've just won. they could win even bigger next time. i don't know if they really take it seriously. it's not in starmer's so—called five missions. yeah immigration isn't even in there. so you wonder, are labour the people to get this down? i mean, the tories didn't either, of course. >> well, most of the labour party is ideologically committed to critical race theory and other ideologies that say that they need we need to destroy western capitalism. and part of that is, you know, the importation of, you know, there are pro—immigration party and also, looking at it electorally, immigrants and the, the children of immigrants tend to vote for laboun of immigrants tend to vote for labour. so it greatly helps labour. so it greatly helps labour if they just open the borders and let and maybe, possibly even as many people as rishi sunak let in. >> is that definitely a thing? because people believe that for a long time. but in america it turned out quite opposite the immigrants. it's also and voted right not largely massive.
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right? they don't second and third generation, quite often vote vote right wing, >> i mean obviously you can see, you know , suella, is an example you know, suella, is an example of that. you know, east asian, sorry. i mean, there's a lot of people who don't want other people who don't want other people coming in from the countries that they came from because they remember what they ran away from. >> so that happens as well. so, yeah. >> yeah. but looking at it, i mean, there are that does happen with some people. but overall, like without without the sort of non native vote labour would have, would have really struggled in this election. so the incentive is there and labouris the incentive is there and labour is suggesting they'll be deporting us because that's what i'm hearing. >> although they're probably just be making us illegal and putting us in, >> it turns out that that support is a bit fragile. if they then don't go with the policies that the immigrants want them to go with, such as free palestine and so on. >> so absolutely. and we saw it. we saw that nearly unseat wes streeting and jess phillips. anyway, moving on. we've got the daily mail and david lammy isn't off to the best start as foreign secretary wants to fund a dodgy charity that apparently took part in a terrorist attack against israeli civilians, which
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raises the question was it a sponsored terror attack? nick, can you just do a park run? >> yeah, well, i can't comment on that, but it's david lammy. could restart uk funding for un aid body in gaza despite israeli claims it's been infiltrated by hamas and staff took part in october 7th atrocities. so now the question is there any evidence for this ? so there's evidence for this? so there's also there's been an independent review saying israel provided no evidence to back up its claims. it certainly doesn't sound good. it certainly doesn't sound good. i mean, as we already said, lammy was sending awful tweets to donald trump. he doesn't seem a great choice for foreign secretary, let's say. and so now, obviously , labour have this now, obviously, labour have this issue of trying to not seem anti—semitic at the same time, they have a strong pro—palestine vote, shall we say. and so they're calling it a diplomatic tightrope here because they've got they've got to placate their hostile back benches, i.e. the nutters in the party who starmer has to deal with. so it's a very tncky has to deal with. so it's a very tricky one. but if they did do this, it's appalling. if they really did have hamas infiltrate them. but the question is whether there's enough evidence of that. >> yes there is. okay well, there's the answer quite
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certainly the they're talking about one part here, which is typical, where they say israel hasn't presented enough evidence for that. the evidence against unrwa is huge. it has been for years. it is very well documented. one of the reasons the unrwa was against israel going into gaza is because so much evidence would come out involving, this ridiculous numbers of tunnels going into almost every school and hospital, weapons being hid in children's bedrooms in all these different places, a member of, of unrwa was, was hiding hostages and so on. and, you know , just recently, unrwa know, just recently, unrwa headquarters has been found to contain, weaponry that would feed a small army. you know, they'd be quite happy with that. so. yes. no it's if you look at the evidence, it is huge. and i think and also, they just shouldn't exist. they started off as a peacekeeping force. there was a peacekeeping force for the united nations and a separate one just for one group of people. and what it was supposed to do years ago was rehouse every refugee, 90 million refugees at the time who had to muslims go to muslim
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countries, hindus to hindus, countries, hindus to hindus, countries, jews to jews, jewish countries. it's the jewish country, etc, etc. and but this one group, they made their laws, well, it was supposed to be lebanon, wasn't it? they had their share of lebanon that they were supposed to have more share of, but that's all collapsed now and is now. no, it must, it must be much better now. >> lebanon must be much better because they got diversity. yeah, yeah. >> of course. that's really a strength . yeah, yeah. strength. yeah, yeah. >> i'm reliably informed. yes. anyway, moving on. we've got the telegraph now and the trump shooting is being blamed on the female secret service chief being a diversity hire . but is being a diversity hire. but is it worth having a few assassination attempts if it means girls have an inspirational female figure to look up to ? carrie, look up to? carrie, >> i don't care whether it's a female or a male, and i'm not. i'm not misogynistic. i just think the best man should get the job, but the look , i saw the job, but the look, i saw some of the tweets about this and some of them i think are a bit over the top, but nevertheless, it doesn't look good, does it? it doesn't look good, does it? it doesn't look good when you have security around a president who's actually shorter than the president, whilst people are shooting at him .
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shooting at him. >> these women are five foot five foot three, and they're protecting a man who's six foot two. >> well, it's also it was clowney. one of them can put her gun back in the holster. two of them bumped into each other, they were kind of running and looking all over the place. i think in a sense, i think trump wanted to get shot just so that three pretty girls would jump on top of him and drag him around with a big hug. >> so, colonel gaddafi, there are two. let's be honest, there are two. let's be honest, there are two. let's be honest, there are two things women shouldn't do. one is be pundits on male football and the other one is protect presidents . right and protect presidents. right and vote three things. there's three things women could do anything. >> and i'm not joining in with this. >> no i agree with you completely. that was pure satire. i was just it was leo texted it to me before the show. but the bomb with the bomb with die is when people can literally die is when people can literally die , right? this is the problem die, right? this is the problem we have here. this is taking diversity so far. i mean, she did have some background. she was at pepsi, but okay. before that she was a secret service agent. but it is madness , isn't agent. but it is madness, isn't it? it's the people making the decisions at the top, pushing the diversity, and it's the people on the ground who are too small. would you want to protect you? >> do you want a big guy? i'd
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pick leo. yeah, yeah, well, i would not take a bullet for both of us. >> well, you'd have to. you'd be so big. it'd just be. i just so big. it'd just be. ijust hide behind you. >> if somebody threw a marshmallow, i wouldn't take that for you. i'd like, get out the way so it hit you. but, i mean, i think the problem with die and you can see it on, on on things like marvel films, you can see that it just there's forced diversity takes away from all the other good things, the storylines, the strong characters and all the rest of it. and you just get these clunky lead and plot lines and dialogue that just exists to push, you know , this sort of push, you know, this sort of ideologically driven. >> those fictional women are really strong , aren't they? really strong, aren't they? i mean, they really set a good example, but when a reality but when that seem, you know, so it's ruined. >> it's ruined comedy, it's ruined marvel. it's ruined so many things. but that's fine, because nobody dies from watching a marvel film. but then when it translates into building aeroplanes or protecting presidents , people can die. presidents, people can die. >> certain kinds of diversity highs would actually work for this. if you had, like, seven foot basketball players who were like black guys or something and you're like, let's get all them in. but just not women, right? am i think that was probably racist and sexist. i think i
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probably cancelled, i think sorry, i think i think it got a bit sexist in places. >> one of the women defending him did say that it was horrible the way the women were being criticised, and she had. tracy's been through a very hard time recently and it's not right . i'm recently and it's not right. i'm sorry. i'm leaving now. >> anyway, we're staying strong for the next story. it's the times and it looks like trump just dodged another bullet. nick. >> yep. judge dismisses trump's classified documents case. and actually this was speaking of women. this was eileen cannon. and you don't always think that trump plays that well with women. but she's dismissed the case which is great. well i say it's great. but of course we'll have to provide balance and someone else will have to say it's bad. but this was the they argued that the special counsel, jack smith, was unlawfully appointed and his office was improperly funded by the justice department, and so it violated the appointments clause in the united states constitution. >> and this was relating to the criminal case around the trump having classified documents at his house in mar—a—lago. >> yeah, yeah. which which we all know he can do what he wants. he said, i have every right to have those boxes and he can do it. he was he was a
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president. so it's a great thing for the country. i think america, if, you know, trump's just survived this terrible assassination attempt, now he's surviving the lawfare because i think people are so sick of this kind of thing. and i think the assassination attempt sort of makes it even more sickening the way they've been attacking trump with things like lawfare. i think the average person will say, can we just put away this whole nonsense? >> yeah. and it makes it look more transparent. you know, all these cases are really trumped up to, you know, not to do a terrible pun. >> it makes him look strong. actually, the every attempt is happening, even though they're not responsible for the shooting that we know of anyway. but, but with the shooting with, with all these court cases going on, it looks like every attempt is happening to get him to stop him , happening to get him to stop him, except for the one and he's riding it. i read somewhere on twitter today saying that he got off on a technicality, which sounded like he has a technicality fetish, you know? oh god, i love technicality , but oh god, i love technicality, but what's going on is there's a load of cases happening . there's load of cases happening. there's four cases against him with results that depend on which state they're in, largely depending on which way that state tends to lean, i guess,
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and i imagine that on this one, the prosecution saw him come into the room and was really hoping by now he wasn't going to still be alive. but yeah, i'd like for them anyway. >> that's part two done. coming up. we've got jk rowling happy with labour's trans stance. the cenotaph vandalised by gaza protesters and the racist headune racist headline you'll see this week probably seen a
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welcome back to headliners. we've got the daily mail now. and a lefty journalist has claimed that trump will appear. appeal more to black voters now that he's been shot. i mean, that's pretty racist. even if it might be true. nick >> yes. i mean, i saw this at the time. it's forbes deletes article from die expert claiming trump will be more appealing to black voters after surviving shooting. i couldn't believe this when they posted it . i this when they posted it. i thought, is this the babylon bee? no, it's forbes , and it was bee? no, it's forbes, and it was absolutely. especially the timing. it was so soon after the
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assassination attempt and it was like, hey guys , we'll surviving like, hey guys, we'll surviving gunfire, be donald trump's next appeal to black voters. and as you satirically point out, though, leo, there have been very funny videos since there's been like black stand—up comedians and other guys saying like, hey, i now love trump . and like, hey, i now love trump. and there was 50 cent saying, oh, i know how you feel because he's been shot. and there was a guy in the hood saying, come to the hood and you wouldn't get shot at again, we will protect you and stuff like this. there's all these kind of videos. so there is a kind of meme about it and it is quite funny. but for forbes to post this so soon after, though, there is an argument if you want to go there, that when trump had the mug shot , the sort of the sort mug shot, the sort of the sort ofidea mug shot, the sort of the sort of idea was, oh yeah, this will appeal to black voters. but if you want to follow the left wing argument, they are saying that black people get unfairly chased down by police and so on. so there is a sort of left wing argument for saying, yeah, well, it would appeal to people. then you see what i mean? >> they can cover themselves. but this, this guy, he's as well as being a journalist who writes things about, you know, racist headunes things about, you know, racist headlines like this , although it headlines like this, although it could have been picked by a subedhon could have been picked by a subeditor. he also advises more than 400 organisations about their diversity policies . sure.
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their diversity policies. sure. >> and he's a professor, professor sean hubbard, do you remember when professors were people we admired? yeah. you know , a long time ago. turned know, a long time ago. turned insane, haven't they ? they go insane, haven't they? they go along with every. they're just people who pass on ideologies . people who pass on ideologies. trump's support has gone up with black americans more than doubled since the 2020 elections. so i don't think that's this is a perfect explanation. explanation. he says. hopefully, trump doesn't claim his raised fist was a homage to smith and carlos, two powerful black americans like, hopefully, trump doesn't claim that's the weirdest bit. >> that's insane. >> that's insane. >> i think that's properly many haven't even thought of claiming that. >> two people that trump hasn't heard of. >> yeah, the black power salute at the olympics is what he's talking about, right? yeah, that's an insane connection . that's an insane connection. yes. with the guy getting up and fist bump because he's nearly been shot. trump's going, you know what? you know what? this will play well amongst the black. the black demographic who remember the olympics. it'll be more of 1968. >> it'll be more trump style to say they were copying him even though they did it first. yeah, he wouldn't stop at that. >> i totally invented the fist pump. yeah i insane, but if that's what you got to do to
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attract black voters, that's what the thing is. >> this is racist. that view is racist. yeah. he's got a view of black people and how black people think that they need to have someone who's been shot to feel empathy with them. that's absolutely insane. >> yeah, well, moving on, we've got the daily mail now, and jk rowling has praised labour for continuing the tories puberty blocker ban, but is already threatening to tear labour apart. kiri. >> yeah. okay, so this is, jk rowling, who as we know is, one of this country's most successful fiction writers who's constantly arguing with amateur fiction writers and the fiction they're putting out, and, yes, wes streeting has just done a sensible thing, and it's refreshing in the sense that you do expect a new government gets in and they want to undo absolutely everything the last government said and did. but he's being absolutely right about it . and, and for now, he, about it. and, and for now, he, he hit he also hit out at highly irresponsible statements by critics. so some of the critics he's getting is accusing him of murdering people. he's evil.
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he's he's all the words that the same people would not say against hamas because they'd find that offensive. you know, so, yeah, i mean, it's nice to see a minister not taking the typical knee jerk reaction. i'd say . say. >> yeah, i mean, some of these people, like jolyon maugham is the i think he's the leader of the i think he's the leader of the good law project. i mean, these are ostensibly credible people who, you know, have quite, quite a sway and influence in society. and he's literally said that labour are killing trans children, which is wildly inflammatory language and completely wrong. >> it's extraordinary. yeah. there's a wing of the labour party as well that zarah sultana wing who say this is terrible. they say similar things, whereas the wes streeting side are more it's more the sensible side, isn't it? and blair's said, look, a man is a man, a woman is a woman. he still has a lot of influence in the party. starmer is obviously listened to that. he was a bit shaky on this issue before. so obviously the line in the party is right. we now we're ditching that nonsense. we're being strong on this puberty blockers issue. but you've got the left of the party who is still mental. so that's going to be the challenge for them. yes. >> yeah. no absolutely. although
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maybe we should just let you know kids transition because it's always the kids of these insufferable parents. and you know, i'd quite like, you know, the, the christmases they have in ten years. time to be really awkward because they railroaded their child into this ill advised transition. >> you're playing the long game, leo. yeah yeah. revenge is a dish. >> someone's got to make decisions now. >> you know, revenge is a dish best served cold at christmas in ten years. >> you're ruining leo's fun. >> you're ruining leo's fun. >> we got the express now, and anti—israel protesters have vandalised the cenotaph. in any other country, this would lead to a severe beating by police. but as it's britain, i assume they've already been appointed as advisers to the government. nick. >> well, they've actually been arrested , but i mean, you're arrested, but i mean, you're close. yeah. it's abhorrent. pro—palestine protesters blasted as they vandalised the cenotaph. and it is pretty appalling. of course, one of them is called olivier, and that's about the minimum level posh name you get. you know what i mean? it's normally even more ridiculous than that. >> oh, we've got footage here where they are spraying the cenotaph with their red paint. they put a they were near the
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cenotaph. yeah. and they've put a palestinian flag there as well. well i'm a moderate on this. >> i can sort of see both sides if you're a foreign national, you should be deported. if you're from here, you should be put in prison for life . i'm a put in prison for life. i'm a moderate on the deported. yes. so, like, i say, i'm a sort of sensible centrist on the cenotaph issue because like you say, this is such an important monument to us. it's desecrating it. even if you think you're making a point, which, of course, they do about genocide and so on, it's just inexcusable . and so on, it's just inexcusable. >> yeah, well, i mean, there's no there's no genocide there. and the people who, who died the cenotaph is commemorating actually fought to prevent genocide. >> yeah, i kind of agree with them, though , because i think it them, though, because i think it makes sense to hate our culture and government and support a terrorist government who brought their people into a ridiculous war that's getting them all killed and support a whole load of petro states and slave countries like qatar . yes. how countries like qatar. yes. how very good of them and how very thoughtful. they also don't care about genocide. there's four massive and unquestionable genocides going on at the moment, and they don't have a
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single word to say about any anything that's actually a genocide that doesn't suit them. they're also written down in the cenotaph , spraying 150,000 cenotaph, spraying 150,000 killed. this number is actually it's actually now that they've gone down a bit from the 186,000, which is doing the rounds at the moment. right and being published everywhere. and where that number comes from, it was was not a study, it was not any information other than a letter written to the lancet, which was non—peer reviewed, which was non—peer reviewed, which they shouldn't have published in the first place. yeah, it was just a letters page where someone took the upper figure. figure put out by hamas, which even then has been questioned by by the, certainly non israel supporting un. yeah. who brought down the numbers significantly. so he's taken this guy in his letter, took the upper figure and then multiplied it by a figure that made no sense. anyway and then added in what he thinks the future figures could be if the war carried on at the same rate it's going on. and he reached a figure of 186,000, and this is being published all over the place. this is we're seeing it now as as if it's the new fact. >> and that's that's ludicrous. and also the people who complain
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that, you know, there have been so many deaths in gaza and obviously it's, you know, it's tragic that civilians have died there. but we've got to remember that a huge portion of that figure is hamas fighters who are combatants, because, you know, that's not a tragedy. i mean, unless you're you really like hamas , which a lot of a lot of hamas, which a lot of a lot of people do to do. yeah. well, we've got the times now in putin is acting like a western leader and banning a tech platform. kerry. >> yes. he's, well, they're planning on banning, youtube because of course, that allows people in their country to hear things that they're supposed to be protected from. they're not planning on stopping tiktok's chinese owned of course, which tends to favour, news that that china likes. you know, there was a study done on that and it's extreme, so , you know, they made extreme, so, you know, they made it a crime punishable by up to 15 years in prison to distribute fake news. i think that's hilarious that russia has done that. russia is against fake news. of course. they put a lot of money and effort into it.
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they have their own channel. it's called rutube, which just isn't what you expect it to be. i think that's it turns out to be a hell of a letdown, actually. >> yeah. it's amazing to me that it wasn't already banned. i mean, youtube blocks, youtube, you know, i mean, they sort of censor people on their own platform. it's one of the most pro censorship platforms there is. but i'm surprised putin hadnt is. but i'm surprised putin hadn't got rid of i mean, russia banned facebook and called it extremist. i mean, when you're right, you're right. but i mean , right, you're right. but i mean, it's in a different way, as you said. but all i can say is it's a good thing they've got really good novelists in russia, because i'm not going to have anything to watch on the internet. but they've got luckily they've got war and peace to get through. they've got tolstoy, dostoyevsky, gogol, pushkin. they just read again. amazing. >> and though, yeah, they'll be smarter than us. yeah. >> when we're, they probably already are. but even smarter videos of people falling over and skateboards. >> but are you are you worried that the labour government are going to are going to clamp down on, online? i mean, they always say online misinformation and disinformation, but really what that means is dissenting voices. >> i am worried, i'm worried the only podcast that will be allowed will be alastair campbell's, because he has rory stewart on for massive amounts of balance, whereas everyone
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else is going to have to have an opposing view because ofcom is going to rule all podcasts. this is my dystopian vision. yeah, don't give them ideas. i know i'm worried about giving them ideas. >> we've got the times now before the break, with new mothers complaining that nhs midwives treated them with a lack of respect. so it's not just the receptionists. >> yeah, i might have ended on the funny one. this one is horrible. it's nhs staff treated birthing mothers with a lack of respect and it's some quite shocking things like if they want a caesarean they can't get one, or if they don't want one, they are sort of encouraged to have one and to sign for it when they're in no fit state to do so. and there's some really shocking stories. now, i do understand sometimes these things might be medically necessary, but there are horrible stories in here of, you know, people requesting caesareans being denied and then going through incredible trauma or they're sort of half passed out, covered in blood and then told to sign something. yeah. and i understand when like, i said, in rare cases this may be necessary, but it was kind of shocking to read and the kind of lack of care. you don't know who the nhs are hiring, of course, do you? and they may just be people who we hear about this with old age and care and things like that. they sort of lack of
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care for people. and that's what came across in this. >> i've got personal experience of this, my wife had a baby, a couple of years ago, and, they, they basically told us we're coming near the end of the shift, so we need to get this baby out. and so they were like, we need to do an episiotomy to get this baby out. and they were like, you know, suddenly did all the drugs and everything, like, whipped the baby out super quick. but it was it was strange because this isn't , you know, i because this isn't, you know, i hadnt because this isn't, you know, i hadn't taken out taken the iud in for a service. this was a human being, you know? >> yeah, yeah. and 16% of women said they were subjected to that procedure without being told at all. you just mentioned. wow. yes. >> and it's affected, half of women apparently. which the lower half, i assume . but, lower half, i assume. but, i mean, the point is, it's already it's already intrusive enough, isn't it? i'm sure there are times where an emergency procedure is, is necessary , but procedure is, is necessary, but we rarely hear a proper joke on we rarely hear a properjoke on this show. >> we worked with lewis schaffer, so it's amazing to hear what we need is a campaign for doctors to say to each other, may yeah, that's a great idea. with three a's in the middle. may. yeah yes. >> okay. well, it's just the final section to go and it's
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going to be a corker with elon musk's real iron man suit and on death row. >> see you in a couple
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welcome back to the final section of headliners. we've got the sun now, and elon musk is a typically outlandish solution to the threat of assassination . the threat of assassination. >> kyrie might be a bit over the top, really, isn't it? he's. he's talking about building an iron mask. an iron man, outfit. i should say not. i don't know why i said that. sometimes i just say things, you know, it happens. just say things, you know, it happens . but just say things, you know, it happens. but he's an iron man outfit for trump after the assassination attempt. if anyone doesn't know who iron man is, he's a superhero who, despite his name, is actually really bad at pressing shirts , now, this at pressing shirts, now, this isn't it's i mean, it's interesting they talk about this interesting they talk about this in a way of iron man with his superhuman strength and godly
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ability of flight. god doesn't fly. he's everywhere . he has no fly. he's everywhere. he has no need to fly whatsoever. and then the story is asking whether it's even possible to build a suit with that gives a metal suit that gives someone extra strength, speed, agility , strength, speed, agility, endurance, and the ability to fly. and of course, we already can do that. they're called cars and aeroplanes. oh yeah , so very and aeroplanes. oh yeah, so very cynical for a very long time. but i don't know, i think really we could start with just taller security guards. >> that's a good start . security guards. >> that's a good start. but security guards. >> that's a good start . but the >> that's a good start. but the fact that this comes after musk had two attempts on his own life in the past eight months, that's so shocking. i mean, elon musk, think about it. this is the pure politicisation of everything and the sort of hyped up political culture, because when he was the guy that made the cool cars and was going to space, no one was like, i'm going to kill that quy- like, i'm going to kill that guy. i don't want to go to space and have cool cars, right? so it's so obviously the minute he becomes political, it's like, right, we're going to we're just going to kill him. it's so appalling that that's the culture in america. so of course he needs the iron man suit. >> i'm not sure i could handle a flying armoured trump. >> that's what we need. mega trump. we've got the deal from trump. >> we've got the daily star now.
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and it sounds like men on death row are more optimistic about finding a woman than you are. nick >> that's actually technically correct. yes. death row inmates looking for love before last meal, including ku klux klan racist who apparently is still more eligible than me. incredibly. >> but yeah, it sounds a lot like you. >> yeah, well, hey, no, don't talk about those messages . the talk about those messages. the three men. so they've all set up dating profiles. these three men, they're talking about on this pen pal site called wire of hope. strangely named. and that's the whole electric chair vibe. they're going for their interesting name. one of them is known for being a ku klux klan racist. and it says , if that racist. and it says, if that wasn't a big enough red flag, he's also a murderer whose grisly story was told on netflix. i am a killer. in an episode episode called the bogeyman. but actually, that's where he's winning because women love that stuff. we all know they love a serial killer, don't you rather be alone with a bear in the woods than with, like, than with, like, bear grylls or a man who can, like, catch some food for them. look at ted bundy. he had, like, a loyal girlfriend. he had like, i think he's okay. what are you talking about? but women love it. >> yes, it's a strange
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phenomenon. and really, if you're on a dating site and you're on a dating site and you're a guy, change your profile. reading like reading. i like swimming and murder you know, like murdering people. >> he's so excited . >> he's so excited. >> he's so excited. >> yeah, absolutely. there's the psychology behind it. is that, so for some women, they see these murderers as strong, for some, it taps a female desire to change a man. you know, i can make him better. >> is that in the article? >> is that in the article? >> is that in the article? >> i read this in a site, but the idea is the psychology. belief is he is as bad as it gets. you can only make him better. you know, it's the most. >> it's the biggest project. yeah. the biggest possible project. >> you didn't murder today and that was me . that was me. >> you know, we've got the times now with an example of how women can get thousands of pounds by moaning about colleagues. maybe this is why there's a gender pay gap carried . gap carried. >> it's the most misogynist ipso we've ever done , but only in a we've ever done, but only in a fun way, right? >> we don't mean it. >> we don't mean it. >> guys, guys, where does recommend the material given to us rugby stars? >> father, this is, kevin davies andifs >> father, this is, kevin davies and it's relevant that he's a star of a father of a rugby player, obviously, because
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otherwise it wouldn't matter. but, so what it was was a woman who's suffering with psoriasis, arthritis, and, autoimmune. autoimmune condition. yeah. and he at the beginning of the pandemic, he coughed in her face. and as a result, now she's been given £26,000, and they managed to write this whole story without saying he had to cough up £26,000, which is pretty impressive in itself for, for the media. but then it is the time, so. >> well, let's let's just sneak in this last story. we've got the daily mail now with a guy who lets medical companies give him dangerous injections for money. sounds like the pandemic, except he's getting paid. >> nick. yes, i was injected with covid virus for £4,500, and so was this guy. with covid virus for £4,500, and so was this guy . weirdly, meet so was this guy. weirdly, meet the human guinea pigs deliberately infected with potentially fatal diseases . so, potentially fatal diseases. so, yeah, this was a guy. i mean, this is not really a new thing of course. is it? people doing medical tests? but in march 2021, this guy jacob hopkins
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became the first person to be given covid. you know, through his nose. funnily enough, he can contracted covid. it worked. and the idea is it said, but it made it made us learn things like people get symptoms within two days of contact, bannau, blah. so basically they're kind of idiot heroes that he's kind of taking one for the team on a massive scale. >> he's young and healthy, but he could have saved some vulnerable old people's lives, actually. >> so men who are desperate for money can't really sell their bodies in the same way as women can, because the way going round they do. this put a bit of disease in me, >> but the shore is nearly over. so let's take another quick look at tuesday's front pages. sorry to cut you off. you'll have to tweet it out after and i'll see what they said. we've got the daily mail leading with now . daily mail leading with now. doctors told to lecture us on climate change. the guardian has trump hits out at witch hunts despite pledge to unite nation. i don't know why that contradicts it, but the guardian think it does. the times says trump races ahead in key states after shooting. the express has body found in hunt for jay, who fell in accident. the news has starmer and trump start building
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their special relationship. and finally, the daily star has a natter with my dearly departed dodi every day and those front pages, and that's all we have time for. thank you to my guest, carrie and nick andrew doyle will be here tomorrow at 11 pm. with carrie and josh howie. and if you're watching at 5 am, stay tuned for breakfast. good night . night. >> 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 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
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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 areas of scotland again, some brightness dry for northern ireland, but this heavy rain will likely be affecting northern areas of england , north 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 northern england, to where there is a rain warning in force 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 . feeling too bad in the sunshine. temperatures in the high teens,
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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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gb. news >> hey. very good evening to you. and welcome to gbn. tonight with me. martin daubney. well, this was the moment that has shaken the world. >> take a look at what happened.
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>> take a look at what happened. >> astonishing scenes. and we'll get full reaction from america. on the fallout from president donald trump being shot as an assassination attempt narrowly went wrong. elsewhere, we'll discuss the record population increase, which has been blamed on mass immigration. and of course, we cannot discuss england's devastating euro 2024 loss to spain last night. we'll be joined by a former international and premier league footballer . footballer. and we'll also find out from a tech expert how ai could help tackle children's skipping school. what i reckon about that. we'll get in touch with your thoughts. the usual ways on tonight's topics by going to gbnews.com forward slash your save. but first here's your news headlines with polly middlehurst . polly middlehurst. >> and the top story tonight on
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gb news americans are gathering in wisconsin in the united states for the republican national convention, which kicks off tonight as donald trump is set to formally announce his intention to run for president. let's show you live pictures from outside that convention hall in milwaukee . in wisconsin, hall in milwaukee. in wisconsin, where we've also seen hundreds of anti—trump demonstrators gathering despite their assassination attempts on donald trump at the weekend. he is due to reveal inside the building his vice presidential running mate. and on thursday, we know he'll make a keynote speech earlier on, his majesty the king sent well wishes to donald trump as well. buckingham palace not giving us the details of the exact nature of that correspondence, but it is understood to have condemned the violence and wished the former president a speedy recovery inside the republican national convention centre tonight , convention centre tonight, 50,000 people are expected to

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