tv Dan Wootton Tonight GB News November 17, 2022 9:00pm-11:01pm GMT
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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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cost of living crisis and rebuild our economy in my digest i'll be asking whether the tories are finished as a low tax party and a rishi sunak's lockdown splurge urging has come back to bite him . then at 920, back to bite him. then at 920, i'll get your reaction to today's devastating autumn statement. as former tory mp gerry hayes, political commentator suzanne evans and former ukip leader henry bolton , fight it out in the clash trust the nomics visionary patrick and boris ally, lord moylan , weigh in later as one as moylan, weigh in later as one as furious brits themselves on the front line . the migrant crisis front line. the migrant crisis and they did not get out was going to be responsible to pull out of you all any of you at all actually . so why are the actually. so why are the concerns under siege communities from skegness to torbay being ignored? that's how big debate at 10 pm. with tonight's superstar panel. dominic samuels, shaun bailey and you mean a cap ? should meghan be
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mean a cap? should meghan be woke as some kind badge of honour? now look by definition means alert in in society , means alert in in society, especially racism . now what's especially racism. now what's loaded or wrong with that royal mastermind campbell of phil dampier? right down and out of wild wait for the monarchy at 935 plus has angela rayner's frank boob job confession the reputation of female politicians will and kim says we've fallen far from the glory days of thatcher or we throw that in castle let loose at 950 tomorrow's newspaper front page hot off the press and the final greatest in uni and jackass of the week . on the way to this is the week. on the way to this is dan tonight let's go . dan tonight let's go. but you know we do the news
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first here on tv news so let's get the 9:00 headlines with tamsin roberts . dan, thank you tamsin roberts. dan, thank you and good evening from the gb newsroom. the chancellor's delivered his plans to get the economy back track as he acknowledges uk's already in recession as part of his autumn statement jeremy hunt has renewed the threshold for the higher rate income tax from £150,000 to just over 125,000. the state pension benefits and tax credits will rise line with inflation by more 10. millions of households will pay in energy bills from april, a typical bill rising from two and a half thousand pounds to . 3000 as the thousand pounds to. 3000 as the government . the level of support government. the level of support and energy firms will be hit with an expanded windfall tax of 35, up from 25. the chancellor
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has vowed protect the poorest and believes his plan will help rebuild the economy . what can we rebuild the economy. what can we do with plan for stability in our plan for growth? well the office for budget responsibility is an independent organisation . is an independent organisation. they say that what we're doing reduce the impact of that fall in living standards by half next yeah in living standards by half next year. so we are helping every bit as much as we can. year. so we are helping every bit as much as we can . and we're bit as much as we can. and we're also saying to people that as we do that we're protecting the pubuc do that we're protecting the public services that really matter . the public services that really matter. the nhs, public services that really matter . the nhs, schools , the matter. the 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 want . well, following the want. well, following the statement earlier , shadow statement earlier, shadow chancellor rachel reeves , the chancellor rachel reeves, the conservatives of failing learn from decisions made over past decade. this government has forced our economy into a doom loop where. low growth leads to higher , lower investment and
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higher, lower investment and squeezed wages with running down of public services , all of which of public services, all of which puts growth again . and instead puts growth again. and instead of learning from the mistakes of the last decade, they're simply them. we need break free from this vicious of stagnation with , fairer choices, and a proper plan for economic growth . plan for economic growth. household disposable incomes are heading for their biggest fall record, according to the office for budget responsibility . the for budget responsibility. the obama says that once rising pfices obama says that once rising prices are taken into account, people's incomes would drop by 7% in the next two fiscal years. the 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 in december , strike dates in december, including christmas eve . the including christmas eve. the communication workers union says the new walkouts are over a pay
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dispute . the industrial action dispute. the industrial action is in addition to three strikes later this month and one on the 1st of december. meanwhile ground handlers at london's heathrow will begin a 72 hour strike from tomorrow in a dispute over pay . the unite dispute over pay. the unite union said strike action is by workers aviation services firm menzies . it'll affect a range of menzies. it'll affect a range of airlines and disrupt a number of flights from terminals two, three and four. nancy pelosi has stepped as speaker of the us house of representatives. her announcement comes after the democrats lost house to the republicans in the mid—term elections. the republicans swear in the new speaker in january yeah in the new speaker in january year. nancy pelosi will stay in congress as a lawmaker. tv, onune congress as a lawmaker. tv, online and dab plus . this is gb online and dab plus. this is gb news. it's back to dan .
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news. it's back to dan. unless less than one half hour today. the unelected globalist chancellor of this country . today. the unelected globalist chancellor of this country. high tax hunt. widely rejected by his party ago. took a wrecking ball to the future growth and ambition of our country. to the future growth and ambition of our country . and the ambition of our country. and the unelected globalist prime minister sitting behind him fishy rishi took ball to the reputation the conservatives the world's ever political force. but now no longer a low tax small state party. today was a victory for the anti growth coalition who lizz truss warned us about. it was a victory for treasury orthodoxy. the power of the markets over people and a disturbing social democratic economic coalition and proving there is now no fundamental difference between the tory and
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the labour party . but let me the labour party. but let me tell you something, you won't anywhere else in the mainstream media. it was a victory for lockdown sceptics to throughout 2020 and 2021. our class conspired with the msm to pretend that the unprecedented shattering our economy and the collateral damage followed was inevitable and necessary , as if inevitable and necessary, as if there wasn't a political choice that was described as sunak frittered away that was described as sunak frittered awa y £410 billion of frittered away £410 billion of our money while locking in our homes and refusing to allow so many of us to earn a living for with 99.8% survival rate folk me warned publicly of financial catastrophe for generations to come . we were derided. we were come. we were derided. we were dismissed as irresponsible killers. even excess deaths are higher than during the pandemic itself . right now , poverty and
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itself. right now, poverty and locking human beings inside causes death. you see all today in what i believe is a rewriting of history hunt made out as if the public always made aware that we'd have to pay back our huge covid debts, including . that we'd have to pay back our huge covid debts, including . £30 huge covid debts, including. £30 billion on a white elephant test and trace scheme, an d £15 and trace scheme, and £15 billion on covid fraud . the billion on covid fraud. the furlough scheme , vaccine rollout furlough scheme, vaccine rollout and the response of the nhs did our country . and the response of the nhs did our country. but and the response of the nhs did our country . but they all have our country. but they all have to be paid for the lasting impact on supply chains has goods more expensive and fuelled inflation . as conservatives, we inflation. as conservatives, we do not our debts to the next generation generation . that's generation generation. that's certainly not sunak was telling us at the time as he continued with his extortion it furlough scheme even into year when most us had already had covid. look, i know this seems mad now , but
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i know this seems mad now, but cast your mind back. remember this time last year , the this time last year, the scientific scaremongers in covid wits. it's like sajid javid and gove wanted to cancel christmas again because the ford motor omicron variant. i never gave a about the economic repercussions while shame on them shame on them because the result of that irresponsibility is the biggest tax burden on all of us in history. real disposable income will fall by percent over the next two years, while our economy will decline by 1.4% next year. more any other european nation, anyone on a salary of more than european nation, anyone on a salary of more tha n £50,000 will salary of more than £50,000 will end up paying salary of more than £50,000 will end up payin g £6,570 in taxes end up paying £6,570 in taxes over the next six years, thanks to the devasted 18 threshhold freezes, to not the capital gains allowance being slashed from . gains allowance being slashed from . £12500 t o £3000. council
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from. £12500 to £3000. council tax rises and the top tax rate of 45 ppi. that is labour rate kicking in for anyone who earns ove r £125,000 and didn't the over £125,000 and didn't the balls to announce this in the house today. wait for it fuel duty will increase . by 23% in duty will increase. by 23% in march, according to the obiang . march, according to the obiang. there is a bump though. don't tell me the labour party would have done any better if slippery starmer been in charge. we would already in a depression because if it is his desire and, this was a real desire. remember, for harder and longer chinese lockdowns. today the shadow chancellor robotic rachel reeves tried to treat us like we are complete by claiming the situation is all down to the least dross. mini budget . least dross. mini budget. chancellor should have come here today to ask for forgiveness . at today to ask for forgiveness. at the very least , he could have the very least, he could have offered an apology , but no.
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offered an apology, but no. instead he says that his predecessor was correct in his analysis of the mini budget. the budget that put our economy into freefall all the country got today was an invoice for. the economic carnage that this government has created. never again can the conservatives be seen as the party economic competence . look again, this competence. look again, this isn't . you will hear anywhere. isn't. you will hear anywhere. but i'm going defend liz truss today. but i'm going defend liz truss today . i missed liz truss. look, today. i missed liz truss. look, charles might not have got the implementation right, but her laser focus on growth via low taxes was right for this country . i have no doubt about that . i . i have no doubt about that. i also have no doubt today the anti—growth . has one. it doesn't anti—growth. has one. it doesn't matter . who anti—growth. has one. it doesn't matter. who wins anti—growth. has one. it doesn't matter . who wins the next matter. who wins the next election ? a generation high election? a generation high taxes and even bigger government spending is now locked in to
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respond. now superstar panel, the commentator dominique samuels , the former conservative samuels, the former conservative london mayoral candidate shaun bailey, and the author and broadcaster amy nicholl. now, dominique, i remember speaking to you throughout 2020 and 2021. we warned on regular basis that economic catastrophe was coming. if these devastating and by the way completely unnecessary lockdown measures like the furlough scheme into 2021 continued. we were called killers. we were dismissed we were dismissed by economists . we were dismissed by economists. we were dismissed by economists. we were dismissed by the mainstream media. we were dismissed by politicians across political spectrum. well, look where we are today . anyone that wasn't are today. anyone that wasn't brainwashed by the media scaremongering understood that the level of public that this government committing itself to dufing government committing itself to during the covid pandemic would ultimately have to be paid back and ultimately cause a recession , just not only recession, but the worst sorts of recession. we've seen in over a hundred
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years. and that's the reality and i think i from reports the budget that these we going to see the highest taxes since because of lots of government. and it made me think the sort of thatcherite neil consensus died with lizz truss premiership . and with lizz truss premiership. and what we're seeing now is a committed to low growth low wage growth , extremely sluggish growth, extremely sluggish productivity t and a country that will ultimately be on its knees because . what will we be knees because. what will we be paying knees because. what will we be paying higher taxes for crumbling public services? a striking public sector open . and striking public sector open. and net zero is not what people voted and they will see people out the streets if they continue on this trajectory, which is even worse than that, leigh, isn't it? i mean this is the biggest tax burden of all time even biggest tax burden of all time ever. i mean , you must feel ever. i mean, you must feel despairing as a conservative party member today. i feel slightly despairing because the
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tax burden is no whittling away it. it's absolutely huge. and i think when people about think when people talk about cost of living, this will be the final straw. this is where people will feel an issue people really will feel an issue very the income . you very high up the income. you feel it? it's feel this, isn't it? it's squeezed that when people say squeezed me that when people say middle, like people middle, it feels like people ultimately squeezed ultimately know it's squeezed middle. to middle. that's really going to get raised with £40,000, middle. that's really going to get raised with £40,000 , £50,000 get raised with £40,000, £50,000 salary, especially , by the way, salary, especially, by the way, in their thirties and. they feel. exactly. and it feels like lot of money when you think about but combined about £50,000. but as a combined household income, it's that's actually not lot of money. but actually not a lot of money. but the here, i thought the key thing here, i thought listening the labour shadow listening to the labour shadow chancellor charlatan chancellor is what a charlatan she wants people to she is. if she wants people to believe that truss is mini believe that liz truss is mini budget, what led to this? she's a absolute lying. she lying and let's be clear. let's be clear. my let's be clear. let's be clear. my auntie norma would tell you this. don't borrow money because you're going to have to give it back and no way we went through the with all that money the pandemic with all that money being we're being borrowed and we're going have back. but have to pay it back. but importantly, we've had importantly, well, we've had massive easing along massive amounts of easing along along the way. we've had what's
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going ukraine, what it's going on in ukraine, what it's done, our fuel duty prices. but here's the key thing, the labour party have supported almost every single step that . the every single step that. the conservative party , they took 44 conservative party, they took 44 days of office that being the fall of the screws. yeah, because i mean the issue is on side of politics throughout the lockdown. i remember you a constant rally and consistently press during the conservative government to go further to do on the furlough scheme to pay more people government money pay more people government money pay more people government money pay more people sick pay you wanted even bigger spending in th e £410 even bigger spending in the £410 million. so if you think that what rachel reeves said is a simplification saying, it's all down to trust your duty. actually the same yourself by saying all down covid. it's saying all down to covid. it's not down budget and it's not solely to covid. it's an absolute company of things and i think of it is done when compare a to your aunt enormous not the so my auntie knows is by no means thing i think it used to
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say how people if you borrow a huge sum of money you will have pay huge sum of money you will have pay it back and it's going to expensive that right now i think that's an absolute difference actually not everyone agrees that you do to do it right now when you think about why do we do it now? so at the moment we trust what they have to saying, like audit , trust what they have to saying, like audit, let's trust what they have to saying, like audit , let's lower taxes like audit, let's lower taxes and focus growth. whereas rishi sunak's on demand under labour. now either treat it like a war debt like the world war two debt that we didn't pay off for decades. and you know what? that would have been brave . it would would have been brave. it would have gone against treasury orthodoxy. look, i think the mistake she she mistake trost made, she she didn't link cuts. she communiquer did it very badly. she didn't she didn't lay the groundwork properly for the philosophy . groundwork properly for the philosophy. but the point here for a political you have a for me is a political you have a labour party who are in opposition who are who are opposition and who are who are opportunist. they opportunist. i it but what they do rewrite history very well. do is rewrite history very well. there's no that the labour party
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were fully in support of all of the measures except the 45 p no. that that is a very good point actually . they were and they actually. they were and they were also in lock step overall of the ideology but actually they wanted to go about it. they to do more they want to do earlier longer and harder and that's fine but tell the truth. that's a key thing. they didn't they didn't tell the truth today . robotic really as the next . and robotic really as the next chancers obviously . a very scary chancers obviously. a very scary prospect. however fortunately , prospect. however fortunately, this is on the tories, but you're not telling the either by completely brexit every time have this conversation is a mistruth to put this completely at the door of covid is okay. james o'brien well, would you agree that covid has to do with most of what is the single biggest ? we can we can down biggest? we can we can down crisis . so this biggest? we can we can down crisis. so thi s £110 million we crisis. so this £110 million we shut down economy we locked people in our homes, we
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destroyed international and we had a brexit happen just brexit the election not have brexit did not have like the financial penalty for our economy that that people want this unfortunately we've got to talk about timing with this brexit was delivered in january there huge potential opportunities so what happens by march we're in total lockdown the international supply chains are destroyed this was down to lockdown not down to brexit. i mean how sean bailey dominates having explosive stuff handled. they were with me all night but coming should meghan markle wear woke as a badge of our royal mastermind? sadly, colin campbell and phil dampier give expert takes on that bombshell on the new sussex reality show that's at 935. but first, do you support jeremy hunfs first, do you support jeremy hunt's plans to raise taxes and slash spending let me know what you think he might be down to at gb news. how poll running near to the results. plus former tory mp jerry hayes , commentator
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next time off. the clash clash , time off. the clash clash, britons face their highest burden since the second world war, but it has all new socialist government done the right thing in the face of economic peril. the wealthy and middle classes have been clobbered by. high tax hunts, autumn while 3.6 million people will start paying tax for the first time. britain's total tax burden now sits at a staggering £1 trillion. so what do you think ? do you support jeremy think? do you support jeremy hunfs think? do you support jeremy hunt's plans to raise taxes , hunt's plans to raise taxes, slash spending in autumn budget? want to know your thoughts down at gbnews.uk. tweet me at gb news. our poll running there, too, but getting there out for
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bastille tonight is commentator susanna evans. the criminal barrister and former tory mp gerry hayes and the former ukip leader henry bolton. so gerry hayes , i've said i think this is hayes, i've said i think this is catastrophic budget. i it shows that your party is now full of tin owes in name only. that your party is now full of tin owes in name only . why am tin owes in name only. why am i wrong ? oh, because you're wrong wrong? oh, because you're wrong on about everything, dan. but this in particular you are particularly wrong because this is a thatcherite budget. she plays some of us with our matey , some of us used to adviser and some of us used to support it to. beat inflation. in 1981, she raise taxes, she cut public expenditure . now we've done it expenditure. now we've done it in way unlike the appallingly truss who wrecked the economy. she hardly, hardly oh, this is a lie, gerry this is a lie. you
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know what? really th e £410 know what? really the £410 billion we spend locking down. liz truss as many budget did not destroy the economy. you have been intellectually dishonest. gerry but i'll tell you that we lost gerry but i'll tell you that we los t £30 gerry but i'll tell you that we lost £30 billion and that's independ research, which that look at the market just mortgage it went up the cost of borrowing went up. however what have we got now ? we've actually got got now? we've actually got a sensible budget, a plan for growth it's compassionate. we're going to help on the health service. we're going to help people with their bills . but people with their bills. but there's a sensible decent plan that's . sure believed in sound that's. sure believed in sound money. she didn't borrow money to cut taxes ? no, i didn't to cut taxes? no, i didn't disagree . with a word of the disagree. with a word of the trust budget . but he was wrong trust budget. but he was wrong at the time and it was wholly it responsible. how can you have unfair funded tax? now? well, i didn't agree with i didn't agree with that. i think she needed to
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connect the mini budget to. to spending cuts. but the problem is we've now gone totally the other way. henry bolton. how do you respond to gerry? oh, well, look, i mean, you know, the conservative party and particularly sunak particularly people sunak have presented as fiscal presented themselves as fiscal conservatives, low taxation, low expenditure . and what have we expenditure. and what have we got? we've got massive taxation here. absolutely massive, crippling and. jerry, you can't say this is a budget for growth . we've got corporation tax going . we've got the top rate of going. we've got the top rate of income tax threshold going down . so it brings a far more far more people into . it so that more people into. it so that provides a sort of glass ceiling, if you like, for entrepreneur ers and small businessmen who who aren't to build their businesses because they're going to incur additional taxation . we've got additional taxation. we've got you know, we're hitting the ordinary people well, because a lot of these cuts that the government's going to impose, they're trying to pass the responsible on to local government by removing cap on council tax. there is nothing in
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this budget that is conservative, in my mind the way the conservative party has presented . now, if the presented. now, if the conservative party wants to have a discussion and a debate within itself as to what conservatism conservatism actually means and what they are, then i think that's a very good idea because very highly need to start having that debate now because at moment you've got members pitching in their thousands to go and join reform . no, no. go and join reform. no, no. they're the people who came over from ukip and all these other. oh, so you don't need brexiteers 7 oh, so you don't need brexiteers ? i know this getting rid of the council is beginning to look gone back to reality . we've gone gone back to reality. we've gone back to reality . the grown ups back to reality. the grown ups are in charge now. the silly people . quick question. i mean, people. quick question. i mean, you know , we've got jeremy hunt you know, we've got jeremy hunt saying that the is on reducing inflation . how does increasing inflation. how does increasing fuel costs by pencil litre seats to do in march how does that reduce in flight. very good
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point doesn't , which is point doesn't, which is struggling to get gerri back. so while we do that, let me bring in susanna evans. suzanne, were you fan of this autumn today ? you fan of this autumn today? and i couldn't believe it. dan i had heard rumours that there were lots of leaks from the treasury. is how bad it was going to be on the basis of then when we heard it wouldn't be quite that bad at all. actually it was the opposite, wasn't it i think it was far worse and never dreamt anticipate it would be dreamt or anticipate it would be and i think henry and panellists earlier made some very good points just to why it's so bad. but i must take issue also with something gerry said. he talked about lizz truss is unfunded tax cuts . now that to me is a cuts. now that to me is a fundable mental flaw. and what were talking about that the conservative party's tory anymore don't need to fund tax cuts . you need to fund spending cuts. you need to fund spending and then you tax accordingly . and then you tax accordingly. and what's really shocked me about this budget in particular is that there was talk spending cuts and that was one thing that i might have welcomed. big
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government actually made a government was actually made a bit smaller, but there are no spending cuts in terms until the next commons today. spending cuts in terms until the next commons today . and he said next commons today. and he said , we're not going to cut spending. we're going to the budget as it is. and in fact, there's 6.6 billion for the nhs over the next couple of years, the same for social care as well. not there are no spending cuts. the government's keeping keeping spending. i think that's a good point. gerry a really good point. gerry hayes, you to respond to hayes, i want you to respond to it. suzanne's just made a really good point there. he claims he's cutting of government cutting the size of government he's there's so much he's not really there's so much low hanging fruit. he's not going for any of it. he's not going for any of it. he's not going to privatise channels for his he's he's going to turn the bbc into a smokescreen . no, but bbc into a smokescreen. no, but he's a principle. gerry a principle about whether the conservative party your government believes in a smaller state and you don't seem to believe in a small state any . believe in a small state any. give me some more low hanging . give me some more low hanging. complete and branch reform of the nhs rather than two point
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sorry. the nhs rather than two point sorry . £3.3 billion. every extra sorry. £3.3 billion. every extra into a service that is fundamentally flawed and fundamentally flawed and fundamentally not delivering. i'd stop there. he was a managerial reorganisation in the middle . a crisis for the nhs middle. a crisis for the nhs with absolutely . it's more than with absolutely. it's more than a managerial reorganisation . i'm a managerial reorganisation. i'm suggesting a route rather easy easy, a low hanging fruit. you could score. i mean, esther mcvey i think made very good point when she stood up. and she said if the government enough money for hs2, it's got money not to raise taxes. if it has so little money it has to raise taxes. doesn't have enough to pay taxes. doesn't have enough to pay 100 right there . gerry pay 100 right there. gerry hundred billion pounds if you scratch just was the scratch just what was the reaction of the markets today compared to the mini budget. i were in charge of sudan chop. oh no they have always been in charge get real the magic it's in but gerry but gerry look shouldn't we be pushing back
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against it just if you're a true conservative are you going to let the market simply manage it or do believe in low taxation? you know, you've got some choices to make and you say, look, you know, these are managerial. yes. because if you're throwing money at a decision organisation, you will fund monopoly failing in good governance, surely and, you know, some low hanging . you know, some low hanging. you know, some low hanging. you know, there are being many really wealthy through advocates for reform of the business rates but we're addressing that ehhen but we're addressing that either. there are all sorts of opportunities here that simply the government is not. this was an attack on small business today as well. fascinating debate. thank you for having it. former ukip henry bolton, the criminal barrister , former tory criminal barrister, former tory mp gerry hayes and commentator susanna evans. so mp gerry hayes and commentator susanna evans . so who do you susanna evans. so who do you agree with? do you support high tax hunt's plan to raise taxes and slash spending in the autumn budget ? and and slash spending in the autumn budget? and nick on and slash spending in the autumn budget ? and nick on twitter, budget? and nick on twitter, let's go straight to him. no, i don't support . it's nonsense
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don't support. it's nonsense that we're of cash when they have money to send to ukraine and pakistan. this is optional austerity and they've chosen to go down this path for matt on twitter. if he hadn't done this exactly what other plan would there have been? maybe is the best we've got under the circumstances and from jake utterly ridiculous tax rises were unnecessary . we could have were unnecessary. we could have easily filled the black hole elsewhere. we will look back in ten years time and realise liz truss was right. to be honest, i'm looking back in ten days time, saying liz truss was right , but your verdict is now in just 17% of you do support. jeremy hunt's plans to taxes and slash spending . 83% of you slash spending. 83% of you giving a big thumbs down to the autumn statement . fascinating autumn statement. fascinating stuff. now up has angela rayner's frank boob job confession undermined the reputation of female politicians
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7 reputation of female politicians ? that's the typically forthright view of . ann forthright view of. ann widdecombe tonight's outsider at 950. but next, why meghan? proud of being woke and does the prince of wales know which of the home nations he's supporting in the qatar world cup? our royal masterminds, lady colin campbell and phil dampier break down now the wild week for down the now the wild week for the monarchy that lives straight after the break.
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now another week enlightening lesson words. where are we using wrong ? that self—appointed wrong? that self—appointed policewoman of the english language? meghan and the latest instalment of in april gave in podcast archetype tips which actually means stereotypes meghan the way that you're using the word the montecito homeowner unpacks the stigma around women in activism and suggests that if we call someone woke as a slur
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we're just massive racists. listen i got a lot about words that unnecessarily charged as it to women like feminism , for to women like feminism, for example, often treated as taboo is the f word or the word woke. i know. i'm saying woke. i fully realise i am spoon feeding the clickbait. here's why . because clickbait. here's why. because woke by definition means alert to injustice in society especially . now what's loaded or especially. now what's loaded or wrong with that. and when you layer woman into that seemingly anodyne definition, it becomes for many almost disgusting disgusting . oh let's get the disgusting. oh let's get the thoughts in my masterminds as steve royle authors build and fire and lady colin campbell. i mean, lady c, if that's the case , then why does she get so annoyed when folk like describe
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her as the duchess of woke. well would imagine that she'd be very of being called woke . but of of being called woke. but of course she understands we all do that the reality of woke is that they are elitist. are doctrinaire. they like civil liberties . they speak about liberties. they speak about communal unity. when really it's verging on communism . you know, verging on communism. you know, meghan's to forget that the nash vanilli, the national social party of germany , was a party of germany, was a socialist that ended up being discredited because had a stranglehold on. the communications industry , as well communications industry, as well as on people's. it's more popularly, popularly known the party . and i mean americans party. and i mean americans believe . these are discomfort believe. these are discomfort seemingly similar to only stalinism , leninism, but. i mean
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stalinism, leninism, but. i mean so she's right to actually say that people disparage this, but she is woke because she is dangerous. she doesn't seem understand that woke is good. woke destructive . phil do you woke destructive. phil do you think lady c's gone too far with that comparison or do you agree 7 that comparison or do you agree ? i wouldn't use the word for to make . to be fair, lady c, but make. to be fair, lady c, but lady c has her own colourful language that you always use to make your point and i admire for it. but this is the other day she was talking about a prominent friend asked to her keep making sure that she was an when she joined the royal family. and to me an activist is somebody who is passionate about something done. something and gets things done. the that she could have the irony is that she could have got so more done had she got so much more done had she stayed the royal family. the stayed in the royal family. the queen and meghan queen wanted harry and meghan to go commonwealth have go out the commonwealth and have a there. they would a major role there. they would have going to have to spend have been going to have to spend a on all sorts of things to a lot on all sorts of things to
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help in this country and help people in this country and abroad which, all abroad and instead of which, all we're really now hot we're getting really now is hot air from them in mansion in china. and they could have actually had they actually a lot more had they stayed royal and actually stayed in the royal and actually been active. after been active. soon after the queen died, could have queen died, they could have started own causes, started out their own causes, their charities and really started out their own causes, theia charities and really started out their own causes, theia lot charities and really started out their own causes, theia lot done.ties and really started out their own causes, theia lot done. so and really started out their own causes, theia lot done. so i|nd really started out their own causes, theia lot done. so i thinkally started out their own causes, theia lot done. so i think was got a lot done. so i think was a missed opportunity there. but it just makes you realise that to be honest, was all about making money really wanted money and i never really wanted to royal family to stay in the royal family anyway. yeah, well where i do agree the word was agree is that the word was absolutely censorship . it absolutely for censorship. it stands for intolerance and it stands for intolerance and it stands for intolerance and it stands for to cancel anyone who doesn't agree with you and they are intolerant . now, look, let's are intolerant. now, look, let's on to another big story this week insiders have told us media that despite facing furious backlash , its royal hit piece, backlash, its royal hit piece, the crown on the streaming giant is ploughing with the release of the sussexes is ploughing with the release of the sussexe s £88 million fly on the sussexes £88 million fly on the sussexes £88 million fly on the wall reality show next as
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kardashian style series. sure to be a devastating blow in this ongoing netflix smash campaign against royal family. phil, what do you make it? well there's no doubt that is out of control. i think it's running away from them. they tried to get it pushed back to next year. now seems it might well be shown next next month. similarly book they were trying to get that put back and slightly watered down. i think obviously the people who were paying these sums of were paying them these sums of money their pound flesh. money want their pound flesh. they want the controversy . they want the controversy. meghan's trying to say that she can blame it on the producer and it's not exactly what the programme would have been had she a in interviews and she had a hand in interviews and it's to the producer, it's down to the producer, director i don't think that's going all a bit going to wash. it's all a bit too for really, isn't too late for that really, isn't it? they they they it? you know, they they they took the money and, they got involved in it and it's just too late to of distance late to sort of distance themselves indeed, themselves from. well, indeed, lady actually angry lady c, i'm actually so angry about spent of the about this. i spent much of the weekend binge watching the i
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felt it was my responsibility to do so because we had robert lacey , who's the historical lacey, who's the historical advisor for show on this advisor for the show on this week. i wanted to sure that i week. so i wanted to sure that i wasn't just reading reports. i wanted to know that i'd seen it all and see that show has all myself and see that show has gone down the drain it is an all out assault . the current king out assault. the current king the queen consort , princess the queen consort, princess diana herself, but also the queen consort, princess diana herself , but also the late diana herself, but also the late elizabeth, the second and the late prince philip. i mean how harry can look himself in the mirror in the morning knowing that he is in business with this law netflix it's beyond me me . law netflix it's beyond me me. well, of course it's about money and.he well, of course it's about money and. he doesn't have any loyalty . had he had lawyers he what about to his grand mother he have thrown back the money that the shekels that they have given
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him and he would have said sorry, i cannot to betray my family you know, but i've i've some of the things series and i'm actually speaking to lawyers about suing them for this suggestions they have made about me my integrity the role i played in first day of the book and so they lady c explain that to me explain that to me. so what exactly they claimed and what exactly they claimed and what are you going to sue them for? well they have they have conversations between more and diana and more and o. conversations between more and diana and more and 0. james coat first. oh and they have completely misrepresented the role the then prince of wales the knight position they have questioned integrity. oh they have actually made all sorts of
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assertions that are completely untrue and i'm speaking to lawyers both here and in america i won't bother with doing anything here you get i won't bother with doing anything here you ge t £150,000 anything here you get £150,000 damages if you waste your time doing anything here , i'll go to doing anything here, i'll go to america where i maybe get 50 million or $100 million , but the million or $100 million, but the big revelation that with everybody in big revelation that lady colin considering suing netflix over the fact that she feels her book on, princess diana, which of course contained huge revelations at the time, which hadn't been reported anywhere had was presented really . look, i want to move on. really. look, i want to move on. prince william, who has once found himself in the crosshairs of welsh nationalists, actor michael sheen . so he basically michael sheen. so he basically this was william he placed his support for both england and wales in the world cup sheen was
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unhappy about it. remember, he hates the royals, doesn't he? he returned obe due to his failings on the british and he tweeted he can of support whoever he likes and as president off can of support whoever he likes and as president of f k, his role makes the visit understandable. but surely he sees holding the title prince of wales at the same time is entirely inappropriate , not a entirely inappropriate, not a shred of embarrassment or sensitive , which is the problem sensitive, which is the problem here. william to then set record straight on a visit to cardiff until he runs over games and somebody yeah and so it work for me and that's my kind of way of thinking as i have this all well you know everything in the weapons i've i've got to be able to play too i mean i carry my affiliations because i want to otherwise buy something, drop prints for weapons. if i was in the white was i mean lady c i think michael sheen is a complete woke topiary and he's really nasty at the same time have to be honest. prince
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william wasn't exactly a convincing argument, was it? well no, but prince william's caught between two stones. i mean, the fact of the matter is prince william is the prince of wales, but he is also the prince of the united kingdom , of which of the united kingdom, of which is england has he doesn't really have this divided loyalty as he has dual loyalties. have this divided loyalty as he has dual loyalties . and i think has dual loyalties. and i think he should have focussed on that fact , you know, but i get where fact, you know, but i get where he is when he you sometimes when he is when he you sometimes when he gets caught the headlights, it's sort of stunned and doesn't quite lead the it should but i think you know it's about michael sheen michael sheen know his name is just an idiot he should remember there's a reason i actually don't write you know and there's the reason why they
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actually have yeah they get popular by mouthing everybody else's words because usually they don't have the breaks to do they don't have the breaks to do the routine themselves. you know, if a good if you're a good don't try to be the brain just the mouse who c advice to vanquish eight out of a few dead but i think lady c a point though i think william and this is actually down to his courtiers he needed to have a better argument in place where said look i support teams. i love both teams . i do agree. i love both teams. i do agree. i think it exactly . he wasn't think it exactly. he wasn't really given the base notes . i really given the base notes. i mean, michael, a brilliant actor, isn't he? but he's a bit actor, isn't he? but he's a bit a lefty lover. and, you know , a lefty lover. and, you know, saying this is an insult to his own to i mean, i thought he was a right back for swansea in the seventies, but apparently rose up against the english in 1400. i don't why he's going on about
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this now. i think it's perfectly reasonable for william to support both james. he is english, he's president, the fia and also prince wales. and he's also the prince wales. and what's wrong with supporting say lose my royal say he can't lose my royal masterminds on fire is ever up here lady colin campbell we will speak week thank you both . but speak week thank you both. but coming up as furious brits from skegness to torbay find themselves on the front line of themselves on the front line of the migrant crisis. why the the migrant crisis. why are the concerns of siege commune concerns of under siege commune cities ignored by cities being ignored by superstorms how do we turn to write in the media? write that in the media? buzz after but next does angela after ten but next does angela rayner's boob job revelation undermine mps and whittaker am asks what thatcher would think the political firebrand coming up next .
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spoken boob jobs on this show remember back in the nineties and sort of big gossip about you know who's had one but these days it's not really something that tends to make headlines so when deputy leader angela rayner revealed the weekend that she went under the knife for, the cosmetic op 12 years ago, not many people bat an eyelid. and i. candid interview with the financial times discussed how she borrowed financial times discussed how she borrowe d £5,600 from a bank she borrowed £5,600 from a bank for the procedure, saying , i had for the procedure, saying, i had my boob job on my 30th birthday. i'd lost six stone. thanks my personal trainer, but my boobs just look . two boiled eggs in just look. two boiled eggs in socks , you know, like basset socks, you know, like basset hound ears. you can't be 30 and have a chest like an 84 year old granny. i had about 14 months losing my baby weight. i was stone after i had children . now stone after i had children. now lots of people just shrug this off. of course but i mean i quite derogatory comments some ways and one of our most famous
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female politicians the former tory minister and daily express columnist ann widdecombe , thinks columnist ann widdecombe, thinks commission could actually prove quite damaging. she believes rob reiner's busty revelations undermines formidable female politicians . the past, like politicians. the past, like thatcher , barbara castle and thatcher, barbara castle and shirley williams by making the green benches a mere fashion parade . so and joins me now . parade. so and joins me now. look don't you talk about boob jobs on the show i'm blaming you for that but you this was inappropriate from reiner as the woman who to become our next deputy minister. woman who to become our next deputy minister . yes. i mean, deputy minister. yes. i mean, the comparison i made was that i like everybody else i watched the remembrance service at the weekend and dame janet folks, who is a former deputy speaker of the house of commons at the age of is walk at the head of the war widows association . she the war widows association. she walked far away from focus wear at the cenotaph and had been standing around for a long time before that and just did and got
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on with it even at that age and look at the stature of the politicians in the past. and i look at the trivia that they now and i think it represents a huge diminution quality. there were only 41 women mps in the whole house of commons when i got in in 87. but they were very, very high quality. they haven't been any positive discrimination . any positive discrimination. they got that because they had to be men on entirely level playing . there were no sexual playing. there were no sexual allowances for them and they were formed all people. and don't forget you listed some don't forget you listed some don't forget you listed some don't forget betty boothroyd , don't forget betty boothroyd, they were formidable women and i feel that the huge emphasis was being on getting women into the house of commons. being on getting women into the house of commons . all costs has house of commons. all costs has actually led to a huge diminution in quality . and as diminution in quality. and as i put it now, full of mini skirted wonders . oh put it now, full of mini skirted wonders. oh yeah. and she's talking about, you wonders. oh yeah. and she's
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talking about , you know, wonders. oh yeah. and she's talking about, you know, having a chase like an eight four year old granny. i mean, can just be honest and say that this is a really tacky , you know, it's really tacky, you know, it's a woman who refers to all tories as scum. i mean, i, ijust feel like we can't accept that sort of language is normal from a politician. it's tacky, isn't it? she's tacky . tawdry she's it? she's tacky. tawdry she's coarse. i that's what it comes down to. she very coarse of speech. down to. she very coarse of speech . and as i say, i think it speech. and as i say, i think it it goes against what should be a very dignified approach . what very dignified approach. what about the counterargument and though that it connects with voters . well i'm sure that it voters. well i'm sure that it may connect with ordinary voters if you put it in a slightly different way and don't make quite such thing of it but when you actually i mean i think ordinary voters would use that sort of language for a start. i don't think most ordinary voters
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want to know the details of what she looked like or what think she looked like or what think she looks like and in a way , i she looks like and in a way, i think it's a wrong priority. i mean, there are many things that people should be focusing on rather than simply looks and appearance. and you know, what happens? you've lost a lot of weight . no, happens? you've lost a lot of weight. no, indeed. well and with it can be you always have the breast analysis. sorry. i mean, based . i'm blaming my team mean, based. i'm blaming my team for that and i'm flying my team for that and i'm flying my team for responsible for the incredible below you which i didn't know was going to happen we person who blames their underlings for what they've done a very weak president is like mp. i wish i was that clever and i wish i was clever to come up with that . brilliant, it's fat. with that. brilliant, it's fat. we chortle throughout the interview, but i'm serious point and i it and we will speak next week thank so much whitty. coming up after hunt's catastrophic mini budget, coming up after hunt's catastrophic mini budget , should catastrophic mini budget, should we have paid more attention to
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liz truss's warnings of the anti growth coalition trust that omics patrick gives omics visionary patrick gives his expert analysis of 1020. but first, as furious brits find on the front line of the migrant crisis, why are the concerns of under siege communities from skegness to torbay being ignored. we'll have that plus a first look at what the newspapers make of the autumn statement in the media about straight after .
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ten it's 10 pm. i'm dan wootton tonight he's the man the tories desperately to keep from power . desperately to keep from power. but thanks to a globalist coup, jeremy hunt has been able to unleash jeremy hunt has been able to unleas h £1,000,000,000,000 tax unleash £1,000,000,000,000 tax hit that threatens plunge the country into despair and his party into oblivion. families pensioners . businesses. teachers pensioners. businesses. teachers and many others are worried
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about the future . so today we about the future. so today we deliver plan to tackle the cost of living, crisis and rebuild our economy and so with this horror show of an autumn statement , have the anti—growth statement, have the anti—growth coalition so feared rishi sunak's predecessor, liz truss. finally, one top economist, patrick min phd, explores that and whether we should have stuck with trust the nomics the bold but maligned policy. he inspired. that's at 1020. plus would boris have saved us from austerity and the tory party from itself will his close ally lord moylan reveals what the ousted pm would have done differently. he's done it 1045. from skegness to torbay communities overrun by migrants , sick and tired of bearing the brunt of the crisis and that compassion on their own . got a compassion on their own. got a big response. walking around, giving already of jim crow andrew . it's extraordinary andrew. it's extraordinary moment, actually, which shows
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feelings up and down the country. so why is the wellbeing of illegal arrivals being prioritised over the concerns of ordinary ? i'll debate that next ordinary? i'll debate that next with my superstar dominique samuels. sean bailey and amy nicole as g20 leaders plot worldwide a vaccine, passports are in city as global elites , are in city as global elites, trying to take our freedoms away . plus, would you take this phone call . oh, vladimir, it's phone call. oh, vladimir, it's rishi and justin, i really you to hear from us as we absolutely know how difficult yesterday was it was for you and your country and we have it out i'll expose the latest from the back slapping barley in the media us at 1030 will also discover how tomorrow's newspaper front pages react to the autumn statement . react to the autumn statement. the final crisis. britain you need jackass of the wheat crowd 1050 so need jackass of the wheat crowd 1050 so do start with us tonight . but before that, the news headunes . but before that, the news headlines at ten with tamsin
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roberts roberts . dan, thank you roberts roberts. dan, thank you and good evening . the gb and good evening. the gb newsroom. the chancellor's delivered his plans to. get the economy back on track as he acknowledges the uk's already in recession as . part of acknowledges the uk's already in recession as. part of his autumn statement, jeremy has reduced the threshold for the higher rate of income tax from the threshold for the higher rate of income tax fro m £150,000 rate of income tax from £150,000 to just over 125,000. the state pension benefits and credits will rise line with inflation by more than percent. millions households will pay more energy bills from april, households will pay more energy bills from april , the typical bills from april, the typical bills from april, the typical bill rising from and a half thousand pounds to 3000 as the government reduces the level of support , energy firms will be support, energy firms will be hit . an expanded windfall tax of hit. an expanded windfall tax of 5, up from 25. the chancellor has vowed to protect poorest and
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believes his plan help rebuild the economy . what can we do with the economy. what can we do with our plan for stability and our plan for growth? well the office for budget responsibility is an independent organisation . they independent organisation. they say that what we're doing will reduce the impact of that fall in living standards by half yeah in living standards by half year. so we are every bit as much as we can. year. so we are every bit as much as we can . and we're also much as we can. and we're also saying to people that as we do that we protect the public services that really matter the nhs schools , the things that are nhs schools, the things that are going to help us through to the other side and become a really strong , dynamic economy, which strong, dynamic economy, which is what we all want want. following the statement, shadow chancellor reeves accused the conservative of failing to learn from decisions made over the past decade , this government has past 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
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services, all of which puts economic growth again . and economic growth again. and instead of learning the mistakes of the last decade , they're of the last decade, they're simply repeating them . we need simply repeating them. we need to break free from this vicious cycle of stagnation with fairer choices and proper plan for economic growth growth . economic growth growth. household dispose of all incomes are heading for that big fall on record, according to the office for budget responsibility . the for budget responsibility. the obama says that once rising pfices obama says that once rising prices are taken into account people's incomes would drop by 7% in the next two. fiscal years. the government is forecast to also says that living standards won't recover to last year's for another six years. we're royal mail postal workers have a further six strike dates in, including christmas eve the communication workers union says the new walkouts are over pay dispute. the industrial is in addition to three strikes later this month
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and one on 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 says the strike is by workers at aviation services firm menzies . it'll services firm menzies. it'll affect a range of airlines and disrupt a number of flights from terminals two, three and four. nancy has stepped down as speaker . the us nancy has stepped down as speaker. the us house of representatives . her representatives. her announcement comes after the democrats lost the house to the republicans in the mid—term elections. republicans will swear in the new speaker in january next year. nancy pelosi will stay in congress as a backbench lawmaker . tv online a backbench lawmaker. tv online a dab radio. this is gb news. now let's get straight back to dan .
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let's get straight back to dan. is news tonight now in our media bouts the first front pages are in hot off the press and they grim few years is ahead as the headune grim few years is ahead as the headline the independent. as jeremy autumn statement left voters off than at the last election in 2019, a reminder that the economy is set to shfink that the economy is set to shrink by 2% by 2024 and the uk is in recession to high tax hunt . you've never had it so bad . .you've never had it so bad. the metro's verdict as workers are hammered by the highest tax burden since world war ii and the ai laments the uk's lost decade as real household disposable income is set to fall over 7% over the next two years, sending britain's british earning back to 2013. my panel back with me now political , back with me now political, commentator dominique samuels , commentator dominique samuels, former conservative london mayoral candidate bailey and author and broadcaster amy nicol
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, now with migrants crossing the channelin , now with migrants crossing the channel in their tens of thousands taking over hotel pools and an extortionate sum of £6.8 million every day, it's communities who are bearing the brunt . so i want to show you brunt. so i want to show you this council meeting in skegness where an five hotels are being used to house migrants. one resident perfectly summed up the fears and frustration felt in the town watch . so i've heard the town watch. so i've heard reports they're having them around the schools and you're saying, no, no , you weren't in saying, no, no, you weren't in your own words. we don't know what information is about these people. they running around our schools with that, caging them schools with that, caging them schools and. the court now talking about us, not a war zone. child stays behind because the school teachers got attention, said detention or the playing basketball or whatever. not going . and they come out
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not going. and they come out tonight. they are going to be we want to argue about all any of you have trouble actually . you have trouble actually. meanwhile, over 300 miles away, torbay is battling the home office to prevent a third hotel being occupied migrants and piling even more strain on the town's services. this local anger comes as the government revealed that migrant arrested on suspicion of rape , a 13 year on suspicion of rape, a 13 year old boy has gone missing after being released on bail. office sources say they do not have the power to detain the individual and claim there is evidence he absconded . social value, absconded. social value, anything islington liberal elite is going to wake up and realise that actually in local towns up and down this country like skegness and torbay this is the number concern of voters . it's number concern of voters. it's not a surprise that five hotel was shown full of migrants
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closed off from visitors. that is devastating to a local economy. but this is the problem is that you have people who constantly talking about the migrant but don't actually have to deal with it and you have local community listening to you have no voice and you do have to deal it and that's always deal with it and that's always going tension. i think going to be the tension. i think people left have always had a blind spot when it comes immigration and that's why i've constantly said to people okay it's fine to block all the tory plans you know do thing, plans you know do your thing, run but ask run your campaign, but ask labour ask the left labour party, ask the left what they're actually do they're actually going to do about believe if they about it. i believe if they don't this will be one don't address this will be one of those simmering things and what to be addressed what needs to be addressed because. starting because. we already starting to see blamed for see migrants being blamed for things fair. we things which isn't fair. we shouldn't a whole shouldn't characterise a whole group as criminals, shouldn't characterise a whole grotif as criminals, shouldn't characterise a whole grotif it as criminals, shouldn't characterise a whole grotif it isn't as criminals, shouldn't characterise a whole grotif it isn't dealt criminals, shouldn't characterise a whole grotif it isn't dealt with inals, but if it isn't dealt with properly and i mean the source not at the border, not just in hotels, i mean at the very source if it isn't with source if it isn't dealt with properly, become properly, it will become the mute it will be because mute means it will be because i'm happy to speak about anybody in party enough to in your party brave enough to say should leave the say that we should leave the muswell where we were the
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muswell house where we were the shoes ties . so instead we're shoes ties. so instead we're sending million pounds more france with no up to agreement . france with no up to agreement. the boats are going to be taken back to cali and in fact there's now of dominic cummings show me relationship french authorities it's disgusting very good point to make actually on those recordings but i think the issue is that there's no way sunak is to back suella is he to leave echr? well, i remember during sunak's campaign that he said he was going to look at and he was willing to actually change the, you know the word look. he also said he was going, which is true, said was going to true, but he said was going to look at the definition of asylum seeker and look to change it . seeker and look to change it. i'm really convinced now that there's anything the tories can do to actually rectify the situation in time because it's is. yeah, it's out of control you've got. yeah. but but the economy in effect and we've got open borders. i mean, i mean a
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couple you look at that frustration in a town like like that how you feel if you were living in a local community and the fire hotels in the town were taken over completely by we wouldn't put up with it then wouldn't put up with it then would you. i think you should flip it around. think about the experiences of the people that are staying in the hotels detention centre there. so these people . will pass the group of people. will pass the group of horny. let's just be honest , but horny. let's just be honest, but i've spent time on a migrant. horny. let's just be honest, but i've spent time on a migrant . at i've spent time on a migrant. at night you will feel very think thatis night you will feel very think that is a massive assumption to make that men come from another country. it's they're more likely to commit crime is the real i will in terms of statistics i will acknowledge sweden right up to the europe germany the number of sexual assaults rocketing coinciding the number of asylum at the moment 96% of these people are not processed. we don't know who they are we don't know what's going on. and these people are stewing in trouble . we had this
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stewing in trouble. we had this argument the same last week. i'll just travel oceans. there are also some very nice. not nice. they're completely closed down. so it's a star hotel is it's a full 4 hours at five star hotel when it's in use you can't put this as being like we're putting migrants in the most terrible conditions look what happenedin terrible conditions look what happened in months. okay. what you want the man to do in escape, nick? i want the man who signed the fabric of his entire community being destroyed . think community being destroyed. think the man is putting problems to the man is putting problems to the migrant community in in his community. what be left at the door of government. these hotels are akin to prisons the moment these people aren't run into prisons. how are they running away? the poor living conditions in skegness is a separate issue to the fact that there are migrants living in hotels. how would they look? yes, i think that man should talk to me. sorry. can you answer that question if they're prisoners
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how will that people abscond in from the hotels? the man that right. the 13 year old boy disappeared that's this all this stuff is completely unverified and it is being used at the moment by the of britain first and this is this is going to lead to these arrested this whole focus on the rest of the people . i think my focusing on people. i think my focusing on the one bad incident that's happened as these are examples of these are recurring where people i think and i'm sorry for me and i've been very clear on this one right by an illegal asylum seeker is to march one terrorist attack is too much and i've been so honest about this you need one unverified person to come the channel without any documentation to into a human trafficking gang and to commit an act terrorism. it only takes one. so we have . right. so then one. so we have. right. so then why does this the door of the home office more they want to
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process more just 4% and then get to the what their needs are so that they can integrate into community and to society because these people are here and what they want to contribute and they're being stopped. so there's a part of me you can't characterise all, all people seeking immigration as if criminals because because they're true . they're not simply isn't true. but oh oh it sounds but we know oh oh it sounds a little like paul doing that but oh no but we've just made the point, we're just really oh don't hold on. but, but it's going to be one this is not the only needs on you may be correct about that the start fair but the point is it doesn't around fact that these communities are going do it and they're going to have do it and they're not the help and amy not getting the help and amy keep it's the home keep saying it's the home office. campaigners office. well, the campaigners who to make sure who work so hard to make sure that we don't deport anybody or put anybody back their put anybody back to their country. have country. the people have justified way they justified for the way they documents way here. documents all the way here. there for this there is much to answer for this as home office. so it's all as the home office. so it's all true. but can i just say quickly. it's the home office that also paying like serco that is also paying like serco to actually house and take over these took
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these hotels. maybe if you took these hotels. maybe if you took the incentive away the financial incentive away these private companies you'd see no, no, no i'm see it's no, no, no, no i'm crazy. i'm not making excuses to the home office. this is a political decision. the home office is just doing their job. it's a political decision. somebody needs to fess up and about it. you can't the about it. you can't blame the home office for the time that they paying private they are paying private companies political take companies up political to take over. companies up political to take over . some of these people have over. some of these people have been hotels for 15 been in these hotels for 15 months. on and, months. okay now, moving on and, a breathtaking scientific discovery check out the resident doctor of itv's this morning brazenly informing nation that men can now have of loss and most commonly is caused just by pefiods most commonly is caused just by periods when men with heavy periods. but if you're a man or a woman whose periods have stopped, it can be through blood loss through your gi tract. if you're a woman who's you're a man or a woman who's pefiods you're a man or a woman who's periods have stopped, if you're a or a woman whose periods a man or a woman whose periods have you're or have stopped, if you're a man or a woman whose periods have stopped tight, amy's just said, men quite men
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men can have quite quite men have periods, you know, far higher would understand simple biology by but she does have form this woman here she is dufing form this woman here she is during the how at her use announcement that the astrazeneca present prevented 100% of hospitalisations deaths. well what's really is and it's a statistic that i think should be shouted from the rooftops that after 12 days from the first vaccination of the astrazeneca vaccine, you are 100% effective against hospital ization and death . so, you know, very little death. so, you know, very little statistic we need to be hearing and that's why haven't we heard that before ? well, here i am am that before? well, here i am am . all right. these are the so—called excellent. can i just say because it was 2010, i just i just say i've been a say because it was 2010, i just ijust say i've been a man i just say i've been a man a long time now. i've never had a period. i mean just because i might disagree usually disagree. it's just to put all us into body and i've i've been a man definitely have a lot to say
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when it comes to the physicality of being a man i'm an expert i'm 51 years of experience. i've had a period no suggestion , a a period no suggestion, a period, nothing. there are other men . i have gout tablets. thank men. i have gout tablets. thank you so much. i'm coming up as g. leaders plot worldwide vaccine our insidious global elites trying to take our freedoms away. that plus newspaper reactions to jeremy hunt's catastrophic mini—budget . the catastrophic mini—budget. the media boss returns at 1030 . but media boss returns at 1030. but first has the anti growth coalition so fed by rishi sunak's ? liz truss finally one sunak's? liz truss finally one top economist patrick manford tax top tax rising statement today and whether we should have stuck with trust all because the bold of a line policy he inspired back after the break .
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short of tax rises and public spending to clean up rishi sunak's covid mess was an all out assault on the middle classes. so how did we end up here? last month, we readied ourselves for trust. nomics a low tax, high growth war plan that would get britain booming. remember how liz it to the anti—growth . i will allow the anti—growth. i will allow the anti—growth. i will allow the anti growth coalition to us back the militant unions the vested interests dressed as thinktanks, the talking heads, the brexit deniers . they prefer talking on deniers. they prefer talking on twitter to taking tough decisions . they taxi from north decisions. they taxi from north london townhouses to the bbc studio to dismiss anyone challenging the status quo from broadcast to podcast they peddle the same old answers . it's the same old answers. it's always more taxes, more regulation and more meddling . regulation and more meddling. wrong wrong, wrong . and but
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wrong wrong, wrong. and but unfortunately is sloppy presentation over economic so who to pay out one of the most blatant globalist coups in living memory? now we have jeremy hunt of the most loathed tory employers , party members tory employers, party members ordering to dig deep down ordering skint to dig deep down the back of the sofa during a crippling recession one man who backs was pat truman fit the former economics adviser to margaret thatcher . the margaret thatcher. the inspiration actually for nomics he joins me now. now patrick there was a great missed opportunity with liz truss i know we both maybe the way that she implemented the mini budget wasn't right but the philosophy wasn't right but the philosophy was right and of course you were the economic the economist who she backed her now patrick after looking at mini budget today the autumn statement do you think the growth coalition has won won? well, they're certainly in the driving seat, aren't they? that's the problem. and they've certainly got a budget which is
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implementing the anti growth agenda. i mean, this is going to the recession. it's to turn it into a nasty recession and it's going to stop growth going to it's going to damage growth . the it's going to damage growth. the irony is that there focus of pubuc irony is that there focus of public finances will be undermined by this damaging growth. and so in the long run will be bad for the public finances . the debt ratio , gdp finances. the debt ratio, gdp will go up because because there won't be the growth long term . won't be the growth long term. and you say jeremy hunt has taken a red keen ball to the economy. what do mean ? well, i economy. what do mean? well, i mean, that instead of trying to help the economy recover and get out of this , he's he's actually out of this, he's he's actually deepened the recession and he's also damaging the growth by putting up corporation tax, which is an absolute tax for business in centres for growth
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and unproductive city and investment and this is, this completely wrong and bad for the economy and as i say on, fortunately they the office of budget responsibility which is the kind of the of organisation which is supposed to underpin this and is as a result got a vested interest in gloomy sort of projections it what it what it's done is it said that the new fiscal rule jeremy hunt is talking about means that that that the debt public debt to gdp ratio be falling in 2027 which is only five years ahead . and of is only five years ahead. and of course what that does is it means that to hit that they've got to kind of stop growth , got to kind of stop growth, they've got to raise taxes an
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awful lot and also stop spending , you know, prematurely . that's , you know, prematurely. that's not what fiscal rules are all about fiscal rules are about having debt over ratios. you coming down over the long term down? nope, not in five years time after you've had a terrible which they're helping to create so it's all nonsense . and the so it's all nonsense. and the other thing they say that the markets, you know , very worried markets, you know, very worried about britain with this nonsense . if you look at the credit default swaps now, the same as the us , they're very low and the the us, they're very low and the rates of the risk perceived for britain is low. and the other thing they say bang on about is how it's to help bring down inflation. but it because if you tax people up to the eyeballs they're going to demand higher wages, which will actually inflation worse and anyway. the inflation worse and anyway. the inflation is going to come down a of its own because prices are reversing . so, you know, all the
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reversing. so, you know, all the sort of reasons they're giving a nonsense and. what they're doing is on the basis very bad reasoning . they're hurting the reasoning. they're hurting the economy really hard when ought to be supporting it. economy really hard when ought to be supporting it . oh, economy really hard when ought to be supporting it. oh, i couldn't more. and i think actually the perfect words to sum that up completely nonsense patrick, thank you so much. former adviser to margaret thatcher and the inspiration for trust the nomics now up would bofis trust the nomics now up would boris have saved from austerity and the tory party maybe from itself if he was still in the driving seat close ally lord moylan reveals what the ousted pm would have done differently in today's autumn statement. he's cancelled it 1045 but first, as g20 leaders worldwide vaccine passport our insidious global elites trying take our freedoms away, i'll expose the latest from the back slapping barley a treat and bring you more of those front pages of jeremy hunt in the media. bosnia bosnia .
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let's return to tomorrow as you no no media lots front pages are in tories soak the strivers is how the daily mail is covering today's autumn statement as they point the middle earners will be hammered by high tax hunts punishing . budget experts say punishing. budget experts say the number of brits paying the 45 b top tax top rate of income tax will balloon from 250000 to 1 million after hunt brought the threshold from 150000 to 125000. i'm going to love column from sarah vine, i think. and there was me thinking we'd voted in the conservatives couldn't have put it better myself the of osborne the policies of brown so the daily telegraph david jones, a former cabinet minister, told the paper these tax hikes will make the chances of tory election victory quote more
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remote no sugar sherlock from bad to worse is the headline in the guardian as country braces for the biggest hit to livingston , it's on record livingston, it's on record following high tax hunt's autumn statement victory leads the daily express as it celebrates the successful campaign to secure a 10.1% state pension increase in. the autumn statement yeah , the triple lock statement yeah, the triple lock stage. one of the few pieces . stage. one of the few pieces. good news, i guess today . i'm good news, i guess today. i'm very excited by this football is coming. ho ho ho! says the sun as a new three lions anthem is revealed for a christmas world cup featuring lyrics such as santa says let's play christmas tree formation . you know i love tree formation. you know i love three lions. i love christmas p0p three lions. i love christmas pop songs . this is really good pop songs. this is really good news for me. very excited. it more than many of fans. now, though, tonight's superstar panel though, tonight's superstar panel, the political commentator samuels, the conservative leader, mayoral candidate bailey, and the author and broadcaster amy nicholl . now, as
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broadcaster amy nicholl. now, as 620 broadcaster amy nicholl. now, as g20 leaders return from their bali retreat, the effects of their plotting is starting to come to light. of course , was come to light. of course, was just a quote unquote conspire theory during the covid pandemic that vaccine passports were only the beginning of a government effort to dictate where we travel. but this dystopian nightmare come true. so in the 620 nightmare come true. so in the g20 leaders declaration point 23 notes that the elite want to quote support world health organisation morena vaccine technology transfer , adding we technology transfer, adding we acknowledge the importance of shared technical standards and verification methods facilitate seamless international including of vaccinations breaking down that disturbing statement further, the businesswoman bernie spot for tweeted. this means any vaccination the world health organisation determines you have. changing your rights and freedoms forever . and and freedoms forever. and political commentator james
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wrote no one voted for this. this illiberal discriminatory mandate is an affront . democracy mandate is an affront. democracy and civil liberties . dominique and civil liberties. dominique samuels, again , here we are samuels, again, here we are again . another moment where were again. another moment where were called conspiracy theorists for against the world health organisation's plot. when it comes to vaccine, passports and. we were promised, weren't we? this is just the pandemic. it's only temporary. don't worry. we're going give you back your rights to travel . lies. more rights to travel. lies. more lies . health organisation. lies lies. health organisation. lies and this is what i'm saying. it's a slippery slope. you know, you told it's nothing at first and then bit by bit they expand it until boom it's compulsory and this is the problem, not even getting into the fact that we still don't how effective or even how harmful the many covid vaccines been. there are several investigations ongoing now. five of themselves have even announced that they're looking into some of the adverse effects when it comes to heart issues in young people. so why would you
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then seek to mandate this sort of thing in this weird health and basically someone's ability to travel . and look, people to travel. and look, people might say , you know, we've might say, you know, we've always had this because of calls for some countries, you have to have vaccines. but the fact is , have vaccines. but the fact is, will be far centralised and far easy in terms of dictating where people can and can't go. and that's the fear and indeed, we didn't vote for any of this. we didn't vote for any of this. we didn't vote for schwab. we vote for these organisations to have such power over our lives. and that's a real problem. i mean, what's happened to the freedom to travel to bodily autonomy? do you sign to this madness? i mean , you sign to this madness? i mean i , you sign to this madness? i mean , i think you're jumping ahead a little bit because this is in case of another pandemic , which case of another pandemic, which could be any time in the next 400 years. it's going to be tomorrow. pandemics like i say, one of the things i know you rallied against during the last fight and during the last
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pandemic was the inability to travel of all travel and, the grounding of all the flights. so we're all of that. but that doesn't mean that the flights. so we're all of tisign3ut that doesn't mean that the flights. so we're all of tisign up that doesn't mean that the flights. so we're all of tisign up to at doesn't mean that the flights. so we're all of tisign up to vaccine 't mean that the flights. so we're all of tisign up to vaccine passports. at i sign up to vaccine passports. but there is a lot of mention of the word voluntary in point one. but wasn't pandemic though but it wasn't pandemic though was that the was it. i think that the preparedness is something that need for the next pandemic and this is just a bid to donate looking at me like you want to kill me, you're very naive , i kill me, you're very naive, i think. you really think all of these world leaders just to make your life so i would rather think that just whatever your life so easy and not that this so many companies thing , it will so many companies thing, it will die, but it will make you know, it will make sense. i know. i don't i don't think it seems sinister at all. i think it seems a group of leaders who want to make sure we're prepared if this happens again, because we sadly, i have to say , if we sadly, i have to say, if there's a concern, the concern is who made the world health organisation's so powerful? it's looking like they'll have more power that, by the way, help up covid in the first place with
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china. but it looks they'll have more power than any particular own health experts or health organisation, which is a worry because they're beyond that, beyond the democratic process. if do or say something politically active , particularly politically active, particularly out of order people america, india, scandinavia , britain will india, scandinavia, britain will not be able to affect any policies, but yet their policies will affect way we live. where will affect way we live. where will it end? and i think that needs to be looked at and the worry of course is that thin end of the wedge. they start with this. where do they. yeah, it just dominique just to dominique's. just dominique just to dominique's . one the dominique's. one of the cleverest ways use process against a group of people is to establish process and then leave yourself in charge of what the definitions look . so unless the definitions look. so unless the definitions look. so unless the definitions can be voted on by nafions definitions can be voted on by nations or affected by nations , nations or affected by nations, we are handing out an awful lot control over to a group . people control over to a group. people who are unelected , changing the who are unelected, changing the definition of vaccine change. that's a shrewd change in the definition that led me to see
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the likes of trudeau and all other leaders. they might seem great now. when extra ness or organisation is doing what you want. but what happens when they go a different direction? i think you should retain control in your world. i mean serious. do you trust the world health organisation? i don't feel at this point that i have any real reason, not. okay. well, and i think if go i think you need to have a really good look into what the world health did at the start of the pandemic because believe me, if you trust the world organisation you haven't looked into research because they may . why did the world they may. why did the world health organisation conspire with the ccp in? china at the start of the pandemic to ensure that the world wasn't able to get a handle on covid wasn't able to investigate whether this had been leaked from a lab. they are effectively operate as a branch of the communist party and the problem is because all
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of the globalist hate donald so much actually they ignored the american president . he removed american president. he removed american president. he removed america from membership of the world health organisation . he world health organisation. he actually did so for a very good reason. i actually recommend you go and have look at the world health organisation's behaviour at of pandemic and at the start of the pandemic and then tell me if you then come and tell me if you still trust them. we all. lost our minds during. still trust them. we all. lost our minds during . the pandemic our minds during. the pandemic not think if you not an excuse to think if you continue look for these continue to look for these cynical conspiracies . cynical conspiracies. everything. no, this isn't a conspiracy . make these things no conspiracy. make these things no conspiracy. make these things no conspiracy about how the world health organisation acted at the start of the pandemic. it an absolute fact. i urge you this is all publicly accessible. it was widely reported the world health organisation was lockstep with the chinese authority used to cover up the origins of that . we haven't heard a peep from the world health organisation about what's currently going on in china because in china people are still under completely inhumane and it thousands even
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and they have no they have no issue with that. but you know what do you want tobin say i'm going to say to you go and educate yourself well consider that homework we'll talk about next week. now there's been plenty of alliances forged at this elite fest that is g20 . this elite fest that is g20. none more sickening than prime minister sunak cosy up to globalists in chief trudeau i think it's something we should actually keep a close eye on in the future, but for now it's more infuriating than alarming. as the pair capped off their budding bromance with a worthy joint call pledging ongoing support to ukrainian president volodymyr zelenskyy and how annoying it must have been for them that the whole thing just happened to be on video . l—r happened to be on video. l—r vladimir it's rishi and justin. i really wanted you to hear from us as friends. we absolutely . us as friends. we absolutely. how difficult yesterday was it was horrific for you and your country and we have called it
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out in the session that we've just and on the media this morning and we made that point loud and clear russian i really wanted to reach out to reassure you to show you were standing with you and to say we're going to we're going to figure out this step by step altogether . this step by step altogether. thank you, vladimir. talk to you soon, okay we get it. pseudo that's so i'm calling them. you're the good guys . although you're the good guys. although if it were that obvious, they wouldn't be such need. would therefore cynical play that? it's also also worth pointing out we never actually hear zelenskyy during that video . zelenskyy during that video. perhaps he asked them to leave a voicemail when he realised just how performative the call would be . i don't think it'd how performative the call would be. i don't think it'd. how performative the call would be . i don't think it'd . sean be. i don't think it'd. sean taylor makes appeals to stand by because coming up . oh, here he because coming up. oh, here he is again was donald right about climate change all along? we'll explore as i crowd i'll find him greatest person that you need jackass of week for my
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it's time now for one cancelled and this is where britain's top commentators speak out on controversial issues . the fear controversial issues. the fear of the cancel culture sweeping the rest of the media now as said in my digest tonight, today's show of an autumn statement is a tragic win for the anti growth coalition and proves the true damage these disastrous lockdowns have caused our economy. there's no escaping the fact that it was boris johnson who pulled the trigger on quarantining nation on quarantining the nation although. pm although. it was current pm sunak who signed off reckless amounts of pandemic era spending as chancellor but i do not
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believe for a moment that our backstabbed former leader would have accepted this type of economic torture. is economic torture. that is straight out of labour's socialist . and i'm not alone. socialist. and i'm not alone. bofis socialist. and i'm not alone. boris ally lord moylan agrees. the ex—pm would have saved us from this global government's tax overreach and prevented era of austerity. that is only just beginning. and lord moylan joins me now . boris always made it me now. boris always made it very clear he he didn't want go back to the osborne of austerity. well was very much his manifesto. i mean we have to be honest that we don't know what boris has done. anything we say is suspect know he we not the prime minister. he's not the one making. but you do know him well, but he obviously got elected on that. i haven't discussed. we didn't know he got elected on the basis of not going austerity. he got going back to austerity. he got knocked sideways by covid the whole country did. and this has been the cause of mess we're been the cause of the mess we're in . but i think the great in now. but i think the great thing about boris's was an inspirational leader. he had
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leadership qualities and he understood politics. i think one of the real problems we have now is that the government seems to think, i mean, they've spent, if you like, putting lipstick on a pig , you like, putting lipstick on a pig , nobody thinks you like, putting lipstick on a pig, nobody thinks is a you like, putting lipstick on a pig , nobody thinks is a good pig, nobody thinks is a good budget. even the chancellor would prefer not to be reading out of this budget. so this is about this is bad for the country. it's unhappy the country. it's unhappy the country. but they've been put in the best case on it . what they the best case on it. what they haven't told us is all that harsh detail that's going to come follow. and already come out and follow. and already we've discovered wasn't mentioned today. it isn't even the official red book about the fuel duty rises and i imagine there'll be more of that to come over the next few days . so it's over the next few days. so it's not like this budget has we've got the budget. now we can stop, move on to other things. the budget is going to go on and dominate things for a long time to because next thing will to come because next thing will be people out where cuts be people finding out where cuts are fall. indeed. but are going to fall. indeed. but don't going to be don't you think going to be a tory coming already tory revolt coming already because duty which as
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because the fuel duty which as you say high tax hunt, that's what i'm calling them now. you didn't the balls didn't actually have the balls to be crude about it to talk about it in the house today was actually a mannequin in the studio gb news looking through the obe document . holy heck 23% the obe document. holy heck 23% increase on fuel duty in march that means a six per litre increase on diesel and petrol wasn't even on the tory. i'm not going to accept that treasury's been gagging for that for. yeah. so they are getting all the taxes they want to put , they're taxes they want to put, they're now saying oh chancellor well here's another one, you could slip in and will help and slip in and will all help and it'll go into the mix, so on. well it's many of the tory mp so we're a really position because let's it , they the let's face it, they were the ones wanted to have sunak ones who wanted to have sunak and they, they much wanted sunak that they prevented effective nick boris from standing a contest against him. they wanted without consulting members because they were worried the
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members might not choose . they members might not choose. they wouldn't have chosen to be honest about it. they would have with boris. well, they have gone with boris. well, they have gone with boris. well, they have gone with boris and he had the numbers. i this. they still numbers. i know this. they still a of people, the let's say a lot of people, the let's say the tory circles , one nation, the tory circles, one nation, tory circles who keep trying to say, oh, no, you know, boris didn't numbers. i'm didn't have the numbers. i'm sorry, the numbers. he sorry, boris had the numbers. he was over the was only just over the threshold, but he had 102 graham brady has said that boris had. yeah but and i see no reason why graham brady say something was untrue on this he's the japanese the neutral figure who runs the election so he said boris had numbers to stand and the reason he didn't stand is that a lot of mp well, if you get elected we won't in a government under you we'll make it a terrible mess that might affect it. some conservative party members might have been put off by that because they mess. people because they don't mess. people want devote but want to devote, maurice, but if so, don't what the so, we don't know what the outcome then i think boris outcome was then i think boris would. the point is they would. but the point is they wanted sunak and wanted sunak knowing that he was going to be
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an austerity . they've got to an austerity. they've got to hold their nose and say , well, i hold their nose and say, well, i don't know what they're going to don't know what they're going to do now mean what's their position now we? wanted sunak we wanted an austerity and wanted him on an austerity and now don't like the result. hey well it was fascinating there yesterday wasn't see esther mcvey in pmqs and remember this was particularly significant because had signed up to be deputy prime if he had got through the leadership contest he obviously didn't even come close to . yes, exactly . but she close to. yes, exactly. but she in the house said very clearly least you dump hs2 which we've somehow able to find hundred billion pounds for. i'm not voting for these tax . so that is voting for these tax. so that is the beginning of a rebellion in. yeah, well, the trouble is now everyone's own chancellor of the exchequer . that's what's exchequer. that's what's happened to discipline in the conservative it's gone is that everyone be their own chance the exchequer everyone say i'm going to public money on this to spend public money on this but not on that. you come and you obviously you can't run a
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country that you've to country that and you've got to have which will actually have a party which will actually stand and vote you know stand up and vote for you know for what the chancellor says. but suspect there will be but i suspect there will be reversals quite quickly on some of these measures as they try to recover . so i of these measures as they try to recover. so i think of these measures as they try to recover . so i think they may recover. so i think they may have got the politics wrong . have got the politics wrong. they get the markets right , they they get the markets right, they get the obe. all right. because the budget is being written to please the obe are not pleased the country they get the markets right they get the obe all right. but do get the right. but do they get the politics right that's yet to be seen i'm convinced they seen? well, i'm convinced they haven't. what do you haven't. i mean, what do you make this term that i've been using the past of days tie nose to ps in name only because i couldn't about and couldn't sell about sunak and i say about valued colleagues say that about valued colleagues the tory party, the conservative party is a broad church. people with of different as you with of different views as you well down . and it would be well know down. and it would be cruel unjust , say the cruel and unjust, say the peaceful. okay, well, peaceful. but okay, well, let's look at let's look at economic policy then tell me the difference now between a
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prospective labour government and a slippery starmer and robots at greeves and this tory government under regime high tech. so did a different way and i wouldn't use those those rubrics that you've chosen but i'll put a different way. we to spend about 35% of national income . the government used to income. the government used to spend about 35% of national income . the difference between income. the difference between the conservatives and the labour party. the conservatives thought 35% was about right and the labour party would prefer to spend something like 41 now spending over 45% of national income and it's very hard to tell the difference between the conservatives, the labour party . there's been this massive ratcheting in how much the state controls, how much of your income. the state is spending on what it's doing and we ask ourselves is it spending it well and most people say probably they feel it spent they're spending it well terms of the services they're getting and like that. so what lay but what
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would labour do it would labour ramp it up to 50? what are they going to do how they we don't know because they have the luxury opposition have luxury of opposition they have to rachel reeves well, to say that. rachel reeves well, yeah if they've got their green new which they have pay new deal, which they have to pay for they do have to for that sorry they do have to ratchet taxes. well they ratchet the taxes. well they probably ratchet probably will have to ratchet where comes from and where the money comes from and you frankly heading you end up frankly heading towards of, you towards you know, sort of, you know, really entrenched sort know, a really entrenched sort of socialist by the way, i'm not on conversation we have to on this conversation we have to have the country is how have with the country is how much the national income much of the national income should the government be spending ? we're this much. spending? we're not this much. and excusing labour and i'm not excusing labour because think if sunak sorry because i think if sunak sorry i think if starmer had been in over the course of covid actually would probably be a depression by now because he wanted harder and locked up. so i'm not excusing labour but of course it is your party that in power. question , boris. power. final question, boris. when look at what's going on now possible that there could be a comeback before the next election? well, anything's possible . look, anything is
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possible. look, anything is possible. look, anything is possible. but who when the next election is going to be , i think election is going to be, i think the conservative party has know i think it's quite difficult to see how boris can come back to lead the conservative party between and the next general election. but you people about be honest with you can't anything out . i wouldn't rule it anything out. i wouldn't rule it out 100% the way that this budget is going to look great to see thank you so much. but it is time now to reveal today's greatest britain and duty and jackass. greatest britain and duty and jackass . superstar panel with jackass. superstar panel with ted dominique as your nominee for greatest britain please. my nominee is donald trump for. for greatest britain please. my nominee is donald trump for . a nominee is donald trump for. a speech you did in 2020 at the world economic forum where he called out the climate and really got down. i we can see some of it actually yeah of what they want and that is more power and more control in the name of climate crisis . i call it climate crisis. i call it something we should all be sceptical, but to embrace the possible cities of tomorrow we must reject. the perennial prophets of doom and their
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predictions of the apocalypse apocalypse . shaun bailey, your apocalypse. shaun bailey, your nominee , my nominee for greatest nominee, my nominee for greatest britain is baroness claire fox, who in the house of lords gave a great speech talking up about the just stop oil protest is not being martyr and i think we've got some of this to cliche it's really good just like to point out that the suffragettes democrats without vote and democrats without the vote and just stop oil anti—democrat with the vote. so i think is a real distinction there are yes there also i'm saying love the way she speaks. i mean look how, your nominee is someone that you call robotic, but i call our chancellor in waiting . well, i chancellor in waiting. well, i think she is the in waiting, but i think she's also very robotic. robotic shall i call it out ? robotic shall i call it out? course it's going to be baroness fox. incredible speech. sean bailey agree with you there totally unique and jackass time now though dominique you'll nominate mine is stanley johnson this is really a regular on this show dominated this is really
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considered we were just talking about saint boris who really wouldn't have done anything different. i don't think. i different. i don't think. but i nominate stanley johnson for him claiming mark should claiming that mark should actually win . i'm a celebrity. actually win. i'm a celebrity. i don't know what he's living on. that's so for so wrong. stanley just showed bayley your nominee my union jack is the quality assurance agency who critical race very taught in many subjects for maths the chemistry it is i'll university to be a bastion of learning how to think, not what to think . think, not what to think. destroying universe. yeah, to that our students love to think for themselves that shocking amy nicole your union jack jackass my union jack this week is the man who took a dump on us all. it's jeremy hunt. oh, amy i don't like that language. however are you going to be shocked ? but you've won. yeah, shocked? but you've won. yeah, because i think the high tax huntis because i think the high tax hunt is today's union. jack that was a totally despicable autumn . and i'm not over yet. don't
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hello. good i'm tamsin roberts in the gb news room. the chancellor's delivered his plans to get the economy on track as he acknowledges the uk's already in recession . as part of his in recession. as part of his autumn , jeremy hunt has reduced autumn, jeremy hunt has reduced the threshold for the higher of income tax from the threshold for the higher of income tax fro m £150,000 to just income tax from £150,000 to just over 125,000. the state pension benefits tax credits will rise in line with inflation by than 10. millions of households will pay 10. millions of households will pay more in energy bills from april . the typical bill
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