tv Mark Steyn GB News November 17, 2022 8:00pm-9:00pm GMT
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hey welcome along a busy day. westminster as the government tries figure out how many extra quid they can screw out of you for the wasteland they have made all around . i'm just trying to all around. i'm just trying to look on the bright side, but we're going to get into it with david. and if you're wondering, will that money goes well, you'll be relieved . hear.7 it's you'll be relieved. hear.7 it's not going to richard martin at the blazing don quixote . he'll the blazing don quixote. he'll tell us why all leaders are insane and dowding and ava for lighting a broke are both here . lighting a broke are both here. consider the implication of that and of course the most important part the show that is you do feel that tax burden upon you should even higher are anxious to give a more billions to walking around money . ukraine walking around money. ukraine should expedite the process and simply up every should expedite the process and simply up ever y £20 note in the simply up every £20 note in the country at say the former royal showgrounds at stoneleigh and have the kings set them alight .
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have the kings set them alight. you can email me ask me anything you'd like. jb views at gb news uk you can twitter me at gb news a full hour of news and analysis coming your way after tamsin roberts the latest headlines . roberts the latest headlines. mark, thank you and good from the gb newsroom. the chancellor's delivered his plans to get the economy back on track as he acknowledges the already in recession and as part of his autumn , jeremy hunt has rejig autumn, jeremy hunt has rejig the threshold for the higher rate of income tax from £150,000 to just over 125,000. the state benefits and tax credits will rise in line inflation by more than 10. millions of households will pay more in energy bills from april. the typical rising from april. the typical rising from two and a half thousand pounds to thousand as the government reduced the level of
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support and energy firms be hit with an expanded windfall tax 35, up from 5. the chancellor has vowed to protect the poorest and believes his plan will help rebuild the economy. what we do with our plan for stability and our plan for growth . the office our plan for growth. the office for budget responsibility, which is an independent organisation they say what we're doing will reduce the of that fall in living standards half next year. so are helping every bit as much as we can and also saying to people that as we do we're protecting the public services that really matter . nhs schools that really matter. nhs schools , the things that are going to help us get through to the other side and become a really strong dynamic economy, which is what we all want . well, following the we all want. well, following the statement shadow chancellor rachel accused the conservatives of failing to learn from decisions made over the past decade , this government has
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decade, this government has forced economy into a doom loop. when low growth leads , higher when low growth leads, higher taxes lower and squeezed wages with a running down of public , with a running down of public, all of which puts economic growth again . and instead of growth again. and instead of learning the mistakes of the last decade , they're simply last decade, they're simply repeating them . we need to break repeating them. we need to break free from this vicious cycle of stagnation with fairer choices and a plan for economic growth . and a plan for economic growth. household disposable incomes are heading for their biggest fall on record, according to the office for budget responsibility . the obr says that once prices are taken into account, people's incomes would drop 7% in the next two fiscal years. the government's forecaster also says living standards won't recover to last year's levels for another six years. royal mail postal workers have announced a further six strike dates the run up to christmas.
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the communication workers union says new walkouts will happen on the ninth, the 11th, 14th, 15th, 23rd and 24th of december. the industrial is in addition to three strikes later this month and the 1st of december. meanwhile, ground handlers at london's heathrow airport will begin a 72 hour strike from tomorrow in a dispute over pay. the unite union said the strike action is by workers at aviation firm menzies . it'll affect firm menzies. it'll affect a range of airlines and disrupt a number of flights from terminals to three and four. nancy pelosi has stepped down as speaker . the has stepped down as speaker. the us house of representatives . her us house of representatives. her announcement comes after the democrats lost the house republicans in the mid—term elections . the republicans will elections. the republicans will swear in the new speaker in january next year. nancy pelosi will stay in congress as a backbench lawmaker , tv, online
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backbench lawmaker, tv, online and radio. this is gb news now is back to mark. mark thank you, tamsin. as i remark this , the united kingdom of this, the united kingdom of britain and northern ireland and territories and possessions around globe is a great nation. it is the nation that more than any other can plausibly claim to be the nation that built the modern world. but it has screwed . most comprehend massively so that, according to the bank , that, according to the bank, england, for whatever that's worth , we're now facing the worth, we're now facing the longest since the 1920s. and if you think that it's just a question of taking the pain for another six months or so , well, another six months or so, well, by 2025, we will be the only developed nation whose a konami has not returned to pre—pandemic
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levels. right now have the sharpest decline in gdp in europe. let's take a look at that. oh us on the far left. appropriately enough where but subbasement nine and who's that over on the right into the stratosphere with point 2% growth. oh my . that's those growth. oh my. that's those twinkling irish charmers. if you're watching this in dublin no waterford dawson or dundalk and have an idea as why you've got 3.2% growth and your old tyrannous masters are down in the basement. do drop me an email gb news it gb news uk and tell me . because we'd really tell me. because we'd really like to know . tell me. because we'd really like to know. here's tell me. because we'd really like to know . here's another like to know. here's another graph from my old friends at the spectator disposable . income is spectator disposable. income is set to fall further than at any time in the last two thirds of a
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century and by a lot more. see deep red line over there that's you the economic context of today's audience autumn statement in political though this statement is what usually happens. this statement is what usually happens . a new government takes happens. a new government takes office and wishes to correct the mistakes of its , say, mrs. mistakes of its, say, mrs. thatcher's ministry did a few weeks in with sir geoffrey howe's budget of 1979, repudiating the failed labour government of the previous years. except course in this case, rishi sunak's ministry is endeavouring to correct all the mistake made by rishi sunak. it's very hard to bounce yourself as nelson mandela when you've hendrik vera baird for the entirety of your cabinet career. at any rate , you guys career. at any rate, you guys are poor up because of what he did 2020, which is apparently too far back for anyone to
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remember . and now he's proposing remember. and now he's proposing make you poorer still to carry it. what he did way back in 2020. you're paying the price for these guys a appalling screw up. we'll get into with david starkey. but in the sane world, nobody who had anything to do with the last three years, no body would eligible for further pubuc body would eligible for further public office and. unfortunately, that doesn't leave very many of our current political class . westminster was political class. westminster was divided . the lock down party and divided. the lock down party and the even more locked down party. and if you're in the devolved nations, it's the even more even more lockdown . but at the very more lockdown. but at the very least we should require of the who afflict us now public repudiation of what they've been doing instead the sick decadent waste struggles are continuing as before you now have to bear the highest burden since second world war. but that was because
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we just fought the second world war. so what's excuse this time? our prime minister then was winston churchill there . he is. winston churchill there. he is. you remember him? the bloke said, where is our fight on the beaches his grandson is chap called rupert. so who's the chief exec of serco and therefore has no desire to fight them on the beaches. instead he welcomes them to the beaches . a welcomes them to the beaches. a thousand a night through the border force rnli express check in which is pretty sweet for serco because they have the contract to provide accommodation for quote unquote asylum and that's just tough. me hate me snuff when it's a —, ,, ,,,,,,,, business that's a gang business model serco also cleaned on the covid because they had contract because they had the contract for the stupid waste of time contact tracing. so you can't say they're not a versatile company . covid is track and
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company. covid is track and trace open borders is . no track, trace open borders is. no track, no trace . we'll get into no trace. we'll get into a particularly shameful of that with leilani dowding , but from with leilani dowding, but from winston churchill to soames is , winston churchill to soames is, the history of britain in three generation sons of the same from we shall fight the beaches to we welcome them on the beaches and say come on down and then we'll stick the british with the tab. you paying more taxes ? so the you paying more taxes? so the winston churchill can pay winston churchill can pay winston grandson to put up every albanian male under three in a country hotel ? there's no point country hotel? there's no point you up with the worst inflation 40 years, the biggest drop in income in six and a half decades , and the highest tax burden in three quarters of a century. if this deranged government is just carrying on as usual so when granny's turning blue february
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and you've just noticed , hasn't and you've just noticed, hasn't moved in an hour and a quarter it's worth remembering cost of hmg is inability to the problems it's created. we'll get to it all tonight with david starkey of building a broke and leilani dowding . but we might as well dowding. but we might as well start with the one place your money being thrown away, and that would the blazing donkey hotel in ham , which is near a hotel in ham, which is near a sandwich . kent, the owner , has sandwich. kent, the owner, has just turned down an offer from home office of over a million quid to house a bunch of asylum seekers for the next year richard martin joins me from the blazing along with gaby news home and secure the editor mark white. mark you're to be doing more on this story tomorrow here at gb news. how how typical is the situation with richard
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martin to what's going on all the country . well it's the country. well it's interesting we'll we'll be going interesting we'll we'll be going in to find richard very soon. you're right. i think there are a few hoteliers and down the country now that are in a way fighting by deciding that they're not just going to give up their business in their hotel to what would be for their businesses. they see certain death because if it's turned over for asylum seekers for a yean over for asylum seekers for a year, they're going to lose a customer or base the hotel as they found out from others in they found out from others in the past going to be effectively trashed and they're going to lose all their employees as well. that's why richard martin didn't want to turn over the blazing donkey and i've been here throughout the day, mark and, it is a lovely hotel. i'm just going to take you inside . just going to take you inside. you can see for yourself. robert jenrick , our esteemed jenrick, our esteemed immigration minister, he said that he wanted asylum seekers stay in basic accommodation.
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well, if you've been here, this is not basic . first of all, just is not basic. first of all, just in through the door just on the there you can see the restaurant. it's now for business for this evening . but business for this evening. but does a roaring trade and it is an award winner the coveted rosetta award that it has picked up for the meals that they cooked up would to close down though because this is a basic contract that the office contractors were going to for the services of this hotel to house these asylum seekers so the staff here will be made redundant. i want to take you just further through you can see lovely , very nice and in here lovely, very nice and in here i have to say you can see the next to these two customers roaring, a fire that might actually be a comfort for many of the asylum seekers . comfort for many of the asylum seekers. remind comfort for many of the asylum seekers . remind them of the seekers. remind them of the blazing around the jungles in calais and in dunkirk. but this particular area up mark it close
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down as well because it wouldn't be of the enhanced service that the hotel is offering. the bar area would be closed down and all of the employees, a 25 here at the but in peak season are 50 employees. they would lose their job and the man himself richard martin the who's turned down this offer can speak to us tell us a quick pirouette you decided to turn this down us a quick pirouette you decided to turn this dow n £1.1 million. to turn this down £1.1 million. it was an obvious choice , to be it was an obvious choice, to be honest. the approach came and i it was 110 occupancy and we understand how they were going to do that. and then when we understood that involved closing the operation completely other than accommodation just couldn't work for us. we've got here , as work for us. we've got here, as you just mentioned, 25 staff and we have next year alone, 100 wedding couples planning day dreaming of a fantastic, fantastic day for themselves . fantastic day for themselves. beyond that, until 2025 loads of the things so if we entertain in
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something like this we'd have to just stop all of that and just look after asylum seekers look after the asylum seekers only that it's certainly going to be a one hit wonder where we've been there since two. so we've been there since two. so we want be here for another penod we want be here for another period of time. it's been a life's for our family as the blazing donkey. we're really proud of it . and if we were to proud of it. and if we were to dismantle what we've worked for now, going to be , you know, now, it's going to be, you know, sacrilege. would run sacrilege. so we would just run in hope we know that some in it. hope we know that some hoteliers have done the as you do you see yourself as taking a bit of a stand here and hope that maybe other hoteliers will be more about turning over the, in some cases, lives, business is for a quick buck that might actually hurt them in. the end it's going to depend on individual circumstance. if you were your uppers and you needed the money then the decision making process be harder for you. but for us , we're blessed you. but for us, we're blessed with having a solid that we've built. we have a lot of. yeah, so we don't have that problem.
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but always be think but advice would always be think beyond months. what's to beyond the 12 months. what's to happenin beyond the 12 months. what's to happen in two years? in five years. so we just want to be here doing what we're doing. yeah i know that mark steyn yeah no, i know that mark steyn would have a question would probably have a question or he wants to us as or two. he wants to ask us as well. one interesting thing i find out about the blazing donkey market is that it has been nominated or. recognised as one of the top glamping sites in the country as well. they've got glamping huts and tents out that are luxurious , that have copper are luxurious, that have copper baths and they're beautiful, but they would be over if they had taken up contract to the asylum seekers as well. it does seem incredible . well, could you ask incredible. well, could you ask which and maybe you the answer to this to mark, i it richard went into the business because he wanted be a hotelier running migrant hostel is a change is a change of profession for richard but it's also a change of use
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for the business does that have to be cleared through the council . richard to be cleared through the council. richard i'm unaware of the legalities of it, but it would strike as a change of use. the very notion of an asylum . in the very notion of an asylum. in a jacuzzi, hot soap in a luxurious safari tent , shepherds luxurious safari tent, shepherds or , one of our lovely rooms just or, one of our lovely rooms just beggars belief, or, one of our lovely rooms just beggars belief , just doesn't beggars belief, just doesn't work. it doesn't fit, doesn't sound, right. so it's just not. and you can't mix the two, you know, i think you're right about that. a beautiful looking hotel deal that. a beautiful looking hotel deal. why do you why would the staff wish to leave is it because it's not pleasant to southern be serving you know hundreds of so—called asylum seekers rather than guests who are going for a wedding or an anniversary , a break or whatever anniversary, a break or whatever 7 anniversary, a break or whatever
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? well, not much, but the contract that was presented to us was that they just required accommodation only . they have accommodation only. they have their own subcontractors for , their own subcontractors for, all the catering. so they only stalls. and in fact, they've also got this subcontractors , also got this subcontractors, the housekeeping side, too. so in effect, it's not a question of a choice of the staff. it would be an essential measure that we'd have to take all the government through agency were looking for was a roof over their heads of these asylum seekers, which i get. they need to put them somewhere, but it just wouldn't work here. the staff be required if it staff wouldn't be required if it was to take place. and it's interesting, i was speaking, mike, to a number of those members of staff today and they understand really they love it here. it's like a family run business and. some of the hotel staff actually on the premises. so they were saying , me, look, so they were saying, me, look, you know, i'm not going to lose my job. and the circumstances. i'm going to lose my place to live my home. so it has a much deeper than simply just having
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to look for another job. now know this this smells even more like a racket than in words they take your building and they and they move their staff to cater to these migrants. it's absolutely incredible . oh, god absolutely incredible. oh, god bless you, richard for turning these guys down . and i hope more these guys down. and i hope more hoteliers will have the courage to his majesty's government to stick it where the sun don't shine . thank you very much, shine. thank you very much, mark. mark white. we'll have more this story tomorrow on more on this story tomorrow on from onwards. but don't folks some other hotel will get that million quid plus it also sounds so boringly green eyeshade when they're talking about gdp and marginal tax but you're paying for madness and the madness is and those idiots set the dispatch box today happy to throw even more of your money away. we'll have more on that in away. we'll have more on that in a moment with dowding and still to come on yet another day when you've been screwed over by the
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gb news is the people's channel. so if not listening to the people, we're not doing right with britain facing the b is full and living standards on record. we wanted to know what you made of the government's over to a bill in pounds a year? i actually that's a bit of a lowball estimate then where it came from over 2 billion a year on hotels for illegal migrants and or asylum seekers. cash or katy at aei katy katy says, oh, there it is. blame the migrant card. listen ms. katty, katy , card. listen ms. katty, katy, i'm actually blaming i'm not blaming. i don't blame an
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albanian or a somali or sudanese for figuring that he'd rather live in the cotswolds , his live in the cotswolds, his nafive live in the cotswolds, his native land. i don't blame him for that at all. i blame lousy, stinking, rotten government and the stinking rotten party that and in fairness to the lousy , and in fairness to the lousy, rotten opposition party, at least their lefty progress . so least their lefty progress. so they've got a general priddis position toward open borders. what's conservatives excuse and by the way, on these this is why i don't blame the migrants and why i do blame and jeremy and the rest of these guys a thousand a night that's that's what they that they're bringing in on a good night now a thousand a night that adds up to about half of all the babies born in the united kingdom in a single day which is 2000 and
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change so you're basically increasing your popular growth by 50% just in the guys who are arriving at dover and nice try cathy not blaming the migrants i'm, blaming the government and i'm, blaming the government and i'm blaming people like cathy who think enough to go oh let's just blame the migrant card he's playing the migrant. i'm blaming you . katie, katty, katie here is you. katie, katty, katie here is miss layla . annie dowding. just miss layla. annie dowding. just one week ago . now, where we one week ago. now, where we that's leilani dowding right now looks like we pre take away well you can go but you here in the flesh i care in the flesh such good animatronic models now i can't tell anyway do we have the leilani clips from a week ago here come that was just a young boy raped in a migrant. here come that was just a young boy raped in a migrant . yeah. boy raped in a migrant. yeah. and diane abbott came out with
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insane tweet. yeah that it was solo's fault . yeah, but it was solo's fault. yeah, but it was sue ellis fault. and you. you shouldn't treat them like rapists. or they become rapists. well you know what? what planet we on what planet are we on indeed? well, you'll be thrilled to this is how you know , they to this is how you know, they say to you, oh, we've got to tax more. you're going to have the biggest fall living standards , biggest fall living standards, highest tax burden since end of the second world war. what do you get in? you will be thrilled to . you get in? you will be thrilled to. hear you get in? you will be thrilled to . hear that? that accused to. hear that? that accused rapist has gone missing when the 39 year old suspect was accused by the boy of rape . he was then by the boy of rape. he was then arrested . are you bonkers ? maybe arrested. are you bonkers? maybe if he'd miss gender trans outreach officer said the macarena routine a stinker. then he might have been arrested. no, the accused rapist is out on
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bail and was simply moved from the in waltham forest . red might the in waltham forest. red might be a little bit distressing for the boy to be around him. run into him in the corridor and over the coffee machine to another hotel in buckingham and he's now disappeared the home office say the police are responsible for escort ing office say the police are responsible for escorting him to his new hotel while the police say the home office is for transporting him to his accommodation . it doesn't accommodation. it doesn't matter. they're both crap . and matter. they're both crap. and as of today you're paying even for them. leilani dowding is here with me leilani. it beggars belief that that you can be credibly accused of rape and. you're now just roaming buckinghamshire and rape of a minor as well. buckinghamshire and rape of a minor as well . so how was this minor as well. so how was this person not in a secure facility? that's i want to know or why wouldn't they being transferred to a secure facility and why was no one there? you know, that could really take charge of escorting him and make sure got to the place. it just it belief
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it's just unbelievable this is happening and happening on time and on our watch and what's going on. well, the interesting thing is it doesn't even come up when these guys are budgeting that. but it's a huge amount of money . you just think about the money. you just think about the pay money. you just think about the pay just in the you know, you can't get anybody to come and respond you if you get burgled or even you get assaulted, these but at the same time, we're bringing in an extra thousand people all who are causing even more crime the police to not solve absolutely and you know you've just brought up serco as well and what's happening at the tory mp jonathan gillies from certain charlotte north actually him up in parliament and the immigration minister didn't seem to care what his suggestion was actually instead of them going these big hotels and taking over big towns his suggestion was they were going to disperse the more evenly put them into smaller towns maybe even little
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villages so you know , are we villages so you know, are we safe? absolutely not. that make anything better? no not this is not a solution . anything. and not a solution. anything. and again , serco is involved and again, serco is involved and like we've discussed before , and like we've discussed before, and not only are they taking over hotels , firing staff like that, hotels, firing staff like that, there was a young couple or show yesterday have been thrown out of the hotel that they looked after given 24 hours notice to move somewhere else with their three children. you have that on serco also you know saying to landlords we'll give you a five year contract with no breaks in it. so basically they'll take over your property for five years, do all the maintenance no management charges , no estate management charges, no estate agent charges , you know, just agent charges, you know, just kick out the brits. and if haven't put these in and there's just not the infrastructure but this is being done on the sly. rupert rupert soames i don't know anything about rupert soames. i think, i met his brother a couple of times over the years, but rupert's names like churchill's grandson , he's
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like churchill's grandson, he's plugged in. he's well connected. why hell should this company basically have had its economic fortunes? trans by what's supposed to be a humanitarian crisis ? either it's a crisis? either it's a humanitarian crisis or it's an opportunity for. well connected tories to get rich . but it tories to get rich. but it shouldn't actually be both . shouldn't actually be both. well, this is a 2.9 billion contract. i think they got so there's lot of money going around so how's these illegals and. there isn't the infrastructure not in our big cities, not in our small towns nor in our villages to be able to even look after our own people. never mind a thousand illegal immigrants coming in a night. but you know what? i think they're missing a trick, mark, because, you know, as you say they're mostly men. yeah. and but, you know, it's 20, 22. they could skew the data and just identify as women and skew all the data up. you know ? yeah. all the data up. you know? yeah. no, no, you're right. we would have they women swim if we could. but i i'm sure these are
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the kind of guys you can persuade to transition. i'm not sure given their confessional inclinations , whether they'd be inclinations, whether they'd be happy living in a town called ham got anything else ? and if ham got anything else? and if you then tell them that want them to transition so they get to be the northern irish ladies swimming team at the next commonwealth games. i don't think they're going to be happy about their slow lane again . about their slow lane again. this is what the autumn statement meant is funding accused rapist in hotels at your expense. accused rapist in hotels at your expense . and you're paying for expense. and you're paying for them and then the incompetent office and incompetent police lose track of them coming up. the autumn statement you're going to be paying for things david starkey . look at that david starkey. look at that straight ahead. and on. i don't know. no later on we have ava who's i can't tell it's coming next wave of a lot of going broke on g 20 theatrical and the
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the place with the script doesn't here's his majesty's two senior prime ministers speaking today to ukraine president, please go ahead. you on line 11, vladimir? it's rishi and justin. i wanted you to hear from us as friends . it's rishi. justin, i friends. it's rishi. justin, i really wanted you to hear from us as friends for a lot me has never met rishi and it would be unreasonable to expect to keep up with all those rotating pms who aren't there long enough to jet in to keep for a walk around so he could be forgiven for going rishi who ? and yet he and
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going rishi who? and yet he and rishi are good friends apparently already on a first name basis. isn't that sweet vladimir was friends with all his friends with boris and now friends with . they all hate each friends with. they all hate each other that in the zelenskyy rolodex , the enemy of my friend rolodex, the enemy of my friend is just my latest friend for the next month or so. it's almost as if it no different. who's prime minister of the united kingdom? my minister of the united kingdom? my next however , is a man who my next however, is a man who can ascend downing street staircase and know the difference between . the second difference between. the second earl of liverpool and the third duke of portland, without having peer at the portrait labels . peer at the portrait labels. there they are, by the way. i'm not going to tell you which one is the duke of portland and. which one is lord liverpool, by the way, of president? sir is tuned in and isn't with the second earl of liverpool and the third duke of portland. that would bullpen bill to you for lord to me they just want you to hear from them as friends david starkey me for the big picture on this autumn statement . what
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on this autumn statement. what doesit on this autumn statement. what does it say in 13th year of cancer that if government that this is we've come to it's extraordinary isn't it. we've invented a new tradition the great tradition of british government used be that it was the labour party that buggered the labour party that buggered the economy . now we have the the economy. now we have the conservatives doing it very effective. it's a bit like the world cup, a really good routine because . can i just remind because. can i just remind everybody we've been rachel reeves the chancellor saying it is again harold wilson tribute act , 12 years of tory misrule . act, 12 years of tory misrule. can i remind everybody how the last year of the government endedit last year of the government ended it ended with the then chief of the treasury to, gordon brown, the man who saved the world, liam byrne leaving little note for his tory successor , note for his tory successor, which said, i'm afraid there is no money left . what we're
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no money left. what we're reaping now isn't poverty. you were right. it's a of covid, but it's not a reward of covid. it's a reward of sustained policy mistakes that go right back to 1997, fundamentally we've had no the terrible thing you were saying. we've had all these prime more importantly we've had no change . of government. right. no change. of government. right. that the conservative government pseudo conservative governments that have came in after new labour simply adopted the same catastrophic policies as an overexpansion of the public sector that was not sustained by real growth. so i'm afraid we're stuffed. yeah i mean, quite simply. well, what i find what i find interesting about that is when these new guys came in, like david cameron 12 years ago, and they're at pains to be not to be the nasty oh oh we must have been nasty . as theresa may
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have been nasty. as theresa may said. yeah, we must be. can i say this ? so this is a really say this? so this is a really important point campaign passion is a private christian , right? is a private christian, right? it is not attribute of sound government. listen to what we've just done. we said we are going protect the pensioners and we're going to protect people on benefits . what that means is you benefits. what that means is you protect the economically in against like you, me and everybody else who pays tax who is active. could that a more stupid way of managing policy? well it's absolutely destructive i would have thought to the whole point i mean are people that seriously that business the nasty party and as know david cameron decided he didn't want anything to do with horrible social so he he was very modish he introduced to gay marriage. yes i did him and justin virtually expected them to walk up the aisle together. well the
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funny thing thing that just made me , you know, are sick of the me, you know, are sick of the sanctimony . he me, you know, are sick of the sanctimony. he is me, you know, are sick of the sanctimony . he is little prig. sanctimony. he is little prig. when he was asked why was he doing this? despite a conservative and he said it's not despite being a conservative it's because i'm a conservative it's because i'm a conservative it puts you does everybody to be able to get married. he said that just add but people assume they doing all that by their eyes that the fiscal okay he's getting rid of everything else but the fiscal conservatism will remain now that's gone completely but you see it is intrinsic to what happened if you simply follow on from blair what did bled he arbitrarily increased funding of the nhs at a single goal go to match the average . all that happens is you average. all that happens is you inflate salaries then you get the catastrophe that patricia hewitt and the reasoning ocean of the gp contract what does she do she values a gp's operating
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of hours in the evenings that weekend. do you know how much she was valued for that contract? she was valued for that contract ? £10,000. and it's contract? £10,000. and it's hardly cost of putting up one of your immigrants for a week in the semi luxurious hotel . the the semi luxurious hotel. the other was the collapse . the gp other was the collapse. the gp service goes back, died to that. but the bigger isn't it is a conserver autism that stopped being conservative. there's there is should be one single cent of conservatism which is the defence of property it is because of the defence of property that we've had prosperity the industrial revolution which to enjoy all these nice things. yeah and we've lost sight of that we imagine money sooner you water it you wharf it with the tears , it you wharf it with the tears, compassion and it sprouts. it doesn't work like well on property is undermined on every front now including not just in the personal sense . you can't the personal sense. you can't get the police to attend to
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burglary but the islands have become like a you know , become like a you know, semi—detached home that's just getting in broken into routine labour with expenses out of repair. i'm using property in a much wider sense, using it in the sense of the right to the fruit . your labour. this is the fruit. your labour. this is the central this is want to actually the world. it's why we an industrial revolution and remember industrial revolution itself is now a dirty word because dirtied the planet so we have a conservative party that devotes itself to this absurdity of net zero but you'll absolutely right talk about that because it's property right property rights in the functioning parts of the world whether you're talking about singapore hong kong or anywhere else ireland your remarks ireland were brilliant and why have you had in replies on that? i haven't looked . come on. what i haven't looked. come on. what can i give you the reply okay. ireland does have a welfare
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state. no, ireland neither has a welfare state, nor did it have a history of 19 century industrialised zation. and these are the two catastrophes. remember . are the two catastrophes. remember. the first time that the person on ordinary income pays income tax is not the second world war? it was 1945 with the introduction the welfare state. that's the that completely alters it church . you completely alters it church. you knew when he came to power in 51 that he should have tried to do something. the structure of the nhs, he chickened out in exactly same way that that david cameron chickened out of doing anything about new labour and the result is you just get a continuous ratchet of disastrous error after disastrous error after disastrous error and, you, me and everybody else is left picking up the price. yet that's very well put. and he answered our irish question to a very good point. i remember taking the night boat from dun
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laoghaire to holyhead with the people basically persons going to wales , see if they could to wales, see if they could benefit from the welfare state. sad and what one else has rishi doing? he's been at the g20 . i doing? he's been at the g20. i showed you him doing his elvis in person yesterday. we're going to get into that with aviva lighting a broke . and just lighting a broke. and just a moment .
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verification methods under the framework of the hr. 2005 to facilitate a seamless international travel, interoperable ality and recognising digital solutions and non digital solutions, including proof of vaccination and so seamless international travel, freedom of movement will depend on proof of vaccination. so rishi sunak even as he tries to back the ship of state off the iceberg, he steered us into a couple of years ago has already us up to the next iceberg. he is the indochinese asian health minister. mr. and if you have been vaccinated tested properly , then you can tested properly, then you can move around . so for the next move around. so for the next pandemic , instead of stopping pandemic, instead of stopping the movement of the people 100% with the economy , you know, you with the economy, you know, you can still provide some movement of the people. indonesia has achieved g20 country has agreed
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to this. a digital certificate using w.h.o. standard and we will supplement into the next the we'll assembly in geneva as the we'll assembly in geneva as the to international health . no the to international health. no you can move if you have a digital that's awfully generous of them available . adding of them available. adding a broker is with us got your digital certificate yet now i do not and i don't think i will. but looks like i will have a very upsetting future if i don't it's with this because it's ever obvious that they've taken whatever this virus was wherever it started, whatever it did , it started, whatever it did, they want to make the world they built in response to it permanent. yeah they're not going to let it go because that's it. it's just so noticeable now. any type of logic, it's out of the window. we had the head of the management department of pfizer admit the vaccine was never even
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tested . stop transmission. that tested. stop transmission. that was the whole idea behind this. this passport. was the whole idea behind this. this passport . drive the vaccine this passport. drive the vaccine passport that it would help that everything is out in the open now everybody knows it doesn't work yet the people in force they still they just go along with it again they just push it again it never. are you surprised that the way people think , you know, before the think, you know, before the first world war so going back 110 years most people didn't have and didn't need passports could move around europe openly. now we have situation where governments will be able to know everything about a person just. you mentioned that when you were at heathrow, you just you have to go buy a metrically through now. are you surprised at the way people accept all this so easily. yes i am i'm surprised that they do. but again, it is almost like everything that was once up is now down. and that's
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the type of rhetoric that they the type of rhetoric that they the same with this indonesian health minister the way they speak about it is they say we will movement. yes you know so it's the exact opposite of they actually do which is restrict movement. yeah. if you don't do exactly what they say and they paint it to be oh we'll do this in case, you know we have another pandemic apparently is also effect. yes. now it's just like, oh, we will have another pandemic. and then say and then this way you know we will have not everyone locked up, but just a certain few . well, what i a certain few. well, what i don't like that. is it implicit in it is that the state has right to decide whether you can move around . i accept that the move around. i accept that the right to the if i want to go to bali the government of indonesia has to give me permission to admit me when i get there. but when i'm talking about that they they the idiot health secretary is now on some stupid reality show matt hancock here he wanted
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these passports for moving around the united kingdom i mean so that if you you're in wales and you want to go northern ireland or in northern ireland want to go to northern england, you've to show papers. but this think is the fundamental question that should address here is that people have forgotten what the state is for and that the the citizen and that the serves the citizen , not the other way around. if have an entire population that apparently seems forget that they up probably half of they pay up probably half of their income in taxes yes. then and that there's a reason for that you do that so that the state supposedly would do things in your interest instead the state treats us as criminals you are treated as a criminal and have to give your fingerprints everywhere you go by your data. you ought to have a vaccine. passport everything goes by their standards and the presumption of innocence is flipped around. now every flipped around. now it's every citizen guilty , proven citizen is guilty, proven innocent, and do it with nice words. so this we can combat fraud this way we can. and money
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laundering of these things and people fall it because we don't understand the concept anymore that the state is here to us not the other way around. and what's interesting i think is if you said any this stuff about vaccine passport if he'd said basically three years ago oh wait a minute freedom of is not going to be a thing in the 2020s people would have thought you were bonkers the idea that you you required permission to get on a train or bus all kinds of things and it makes me wonder how fast this is going to accelerate . it's all happened . accelerate. it's all happened. the last two years have happened. extreme fast. yes. and they're still planning to intensify it. yes. i think that's something very dangerous in a human human mind or in the human . we've seen it also human. we've seen it also something . that's always something. that's always surprised me during the peak of the refugee crisis , for example, the refugee crisis, for example, in 2015 when we were having all of these islamic attacks. right. and you think a certain point,
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if you have those continues almost every month was, you know, another one that people would stand and say, can't would stand and say, we can't accept this and that they see, oh, it's the state who did this to us by letting all of these migrants in the first place. instead, only thing that instead, the only thing that happens people happens when people got more subdued , they got used to it and subdued, they got used to it and is something very dangerous subdued, they got used to it and is sonthe ng very dangerous subdued, they got used to it and is sonthe human dangerous subdued, they got used to it and is sonthe human condition.; subdued, they got used to it and is sonthe human condition. i about the human condition. i think what seeing play out think what we're seeing play out in well, in fact , in time here. well, in fact, gave to the state so gave more power to the state so that to these ancient that if you go to these ancient thousand year old christmas markets in french and german , markets in french and german, they now have these ugly bollards and concrete barriers everywhere. and, oh , good. yeah. everywhere. and, oh, good. yeah. now i need to i need to have security at my christmas market. what a nice benevolence . thank what a nice benevolence. thank you very much. thank very much, eva . i tell you what, i have two eva. i tell you what, i have two words for you. they're the most words for you. they're the most words in television . coming up words in television. coming up right now ? dan wootton, some right now? dan wootton, some people what you got down marks nothing is more exciting . you
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nothing is more exciting. you look, you obviously winston churchill earlier would you in in your style enlightened i think actually tonight the big question is what is the conservative party does it have a future . i'm angry today after a future. i'm angry today after the mini—budget so we've got a plethora guests on that mark. oh no one does plan for us like you dan and you should be angry at well these i can't believe this . well the conservative party been reduced to i would love to wake up and find the third marquess of salisbury was back in number ten and this had all been a bad that's all coming up with dan the break stay safe stay next thursday on gb news it's bev turner today from 10 am. we're going to be here for a.m. we're going to be here for you gb news family to keep you up to date but also make smile. the guy went from puberty adultery and i can't wait to a few of my own opinions. i have time for cultural totalitarian .
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and no spin, no bias, no censorship . dan wootton tonight the country and the tories have been into the ground after the globalist movement that seized control of the party headed by chancellor. a high tax clobbered hard working brits with £1,000,000,000,000 tax burden following a budget horror show for the ages . families for the ages. families pensioners, businesses , pensioners, businesses, teachers, nurses . many others teachers, nurses. many others are worried the future. so today we deliver a plan to tackle the
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