tv Dan Wootton Tonight GB News November 22, 2022 9:00pm-11:01pm GMT
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free no spin, no bias , no censorship. no spin, no bias, no censorship. i'm dan wootton tonight shapeshifting. starmer pulled out all the stops today to present himself as a labour leader who will get tough on immigration in the days when low pay immigration in the days when low pay and cheap labour are part of the british way on growth must end . but make the british way on growth must end. but make no mistake, this is a man who's ready to throw open the borders and i've got the receipts to prove it. don't miss my digest next, do brexiteers need to stay on high alert for as long as afterglow? owner jeremy hunt remains at ownerjeremy hunt remains at number ten. and could farage re—establish the brexit party to save our sovereignty ? i speak to save our sovereignty? i speak to our very own night at 930 as lord frost to quit boris johnson's government over lockdown measures speaks out . lockdown measures speaks out. does the covid inquiry risk becoming a whitewash? i debate at 1030 with my superstar panel. amanda patel. reverend calvin robinson and rebecca rees with olympic medal winning former
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boxer anthony ogogo losing hundreds of followers for a tweet supporting england stars juua tweet supporting england stars julia bellingham, bukayo saka and raheem sterling is celebrating , quote, black celebrating, quote, black excellence offence of anthony grace as the south said juju get out with our man calvin inside special get your verdict two plus fleet street iconic calvin mckenzie tears into the bbc over their guitar hypocrisy and i'm cancelled at 1045. oh, the liberty in politics of truss dead lad no jayawardena. a rising star of the tory party whose cabinet career was cut short when truss was ousted , short when truss was ousted, breaks his silence on the globalist coup that could down the conservatives . he joins me the conservatives. he joins me at 1020. is there a woke war on men? straight talking red wall mp ben bradley is calling for more male role models in the classroom and beyond. that's at 950 plus. guess who else has waded into the battle of the sexes? but for a woman, i don't care if she is perhaps the most successful woman in finance in her mid—fifties, i promise you someone will still go. yeah, but
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she was such a in college. and is this really the motion picture event of a generation . picture event of a generation. i see . see. discuss the latest meghan monologue, the return of avatar and more in the media buzz throughout the ten hour 2 hours newspaper front pages in grace's version union jack has on the way to dan wootton way to this is dan wootton tonight let's go . tonight let's go. my tonight let's go. my digest coming out but first the news with alice porter . i'll the news with alice porter. i'll come . i'm alice porter in the gb come. i'm alice porter in the gb news room. the rmt union has announced new industrial action over the festive period. it says its members will not work
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overtime over christmas and will stage a series of 48 hour strikes in december on january. dates include the 13th to 14 and 16 to 17th of december, the third to fourth and six to 7th of january and save were a long running dispute over pay, jobs and conditions. rmt general secretary mick lynch told gb news the union has been reasonable. the government is blocking any resolution as the government are in disarray . they government are in disarray. they don't really know to how handle this industrial dispute . they've this industrial dispute. they've got all these other problems in with public sector pay and the state of the economy. we've seen they're performing in a series of mini budgets which have been disastrous for working people and economy . so i'm and for the economy. so i'm going to try and find out on thursday from the secretary of state exactly what he's up to, if prepared to be a person if he's prepared to be a person of create that of goodwill and create that atmosphere where we can develop atmosphere where we can develop a settlement that could happen very have no very quickly and will have no need for any strikes. we can put it members . parliament's it to our members. parliament's anti—corruption watchdog has
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ruled that matt hancock did break government rules. why not consulting them before appearing on i'm a celebrity get me out of here. lord pickles, the chair of the advisory committee on business appointments , informed business appointments, informed the office of breach the cabinet office of the breach in today. under the in a letter today. under the rules , hancock have rules, mr. hancock should have sought clearance from the committee for any employment committee for any new employment or appointments within two years of leaving office , a of leaving office, a spokesperson mr. hancock spokesperson for mr. hancock said guidance the said the guidance on the committee's website was followed in good faith . nottinghamshire in good faith. nottinghamshire police say the mother of two young children who were killed in a flat fire has died. the case is now being treated as a triple murder. case is now being treated as a triple murder . fatoumata case is now being treated as a triple murder. fatoumata haidara had been on life support since the blaze in clifton early on sunday morning. the children, aged one and three, were treated at the scene for smoke inhalation but later died in hospital. detectives have been given another 36 hours to question a 31 year old man on suspicion of killing the family . footballer cristiano ronaldo is leaving manchester united
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with immediate effect as part of a mutual agreement with the club. it's after the 37 year old criticised the club and its management last week. in a statement , management last week. in a statement, united thanked him for his immense contribution dunng for his immense contribution during his two spells at old trafford and the king has been hosting his first state visit as monarch . king charles welcomed monarch. king charles welcomed the south african president, cyril ramaphosa , during cyril ramaphosa, during a ceremony at horse guards parade . they then proceeded along the mile by carriage to buckingham palace , where a banquet has been palace, where a banquet has been held and the presidents honour king charles personally requested that only sustainable flowers be used at the meal with foliage from the palace gardens and windsor castle. tv online and windsor castle. tv online and dab+ radio. this is gb news. now it's back to dan wootton tonight. we know by now that slippery stammer is a shapeshifter, but
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his fantasy today to present himself as some sort of anti—immigration advocate who hasn't spent his political advocation for open borders and free movement takes the cake . free movement takes the cake. look, i know what labour is trying to do, and it's politically clever if dishonest, as the likely next government. they are working two years out from the next election to neutral ice areas where they will be vulnerable to attacks from but the policy from the right. but the policy does back their rhetoric. so does not back their rhetoric. so speaking to the cbi today, starmer talk tough in his prepared address . we will expect prepared address. we will expect you to bring forward a clear plan to boost skills and more training for better pay and condition for investment in new technology. but our common goal must be to help the british economy off its immigration dependency , to start invest more dependency, to start invest more in training workers who are already here . migration is part already here. migration is part of our national story. always has been and always will be. but let me tell you , the days when
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let me tell you, the days when low pay and cheap labour are part of the british way on growth must end . sounds good, growth must end. sounds good, right? but the reality of this policy is altogether different . policy is altogether different. there is no target to reduce the number of immigrants and no plan to stop the invasion of illegal migrants via our weak southern border . in migrants via our weak southern border. in fact, when pushed , border. in fact, when pushed, starmer would only say he would take a, quote, pragmatic approach to the numbers, which in reality means even more arrivals putting pressure on our already stretched nhs and housing system. how far would your pragmatic approach go in terms of increasing immigration in the short term, and how much is your stance on this driven by pubuc is your stance on this driven by public considerations? as much as economic ones. well, alex, just let me take the final part of that question first, because i am utterly frustrated at the short term fixes .
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short term fixes. i will be pragmatic. of course i do . i pragmatic. of course i do. i don't want a repeat of what we saw last year with hgv drivers. i get that. as i say, that's anti—growth and anti—business. but we. so what exactly does starmer mean by being pragmatic ? you only need to look at his own public statements and policy positions to find the answer. like the letter he sent to the labour for free movement campaign in 2020, where he wrote, i believe . free movement wrote, i believe. free movement should be protected as we leave the eu and i am very concerned at the impact free movement will inevitably have on our economy . inevitably have on our economy. or how about his own tweet where he insists we have to make the case for freedom of movement and we have to make it strongly. coupled with this video from the day we finally left the eu . so day we finally left the eu. so we to make the case for the we have to make the case for the benefits of migration, the benefits of migration, the benefits of migration, the benefits of free movement. i want people in this country to be able to go to work abroad in
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europe. and i hope people will come and continue to work here . come and continue to work here. as a conservative spokesman, respond it today. starmer is a dyedin respond it today. starmer is a dyed in the wool open borders advocate who wants to give illegal migrants priority access to work permits. his shadow home secretary won't even say if she wants to see the level of immigration fall. and that's the problem we have at the moment. the tories have been taken over by socialists in an anti—democratic globalist coup with suella braverman, the only true brexiteer and conservative in the cabinet. but the alternative we could be facing for five years on the slippery stormer is far more terrifying to respond now. my superstar panel top daily mail columnist and broadcaster amanda patel . and broadcaster amanda patel. the conservative columnist , the the conservative columnist, the reverend calvin robinson . and reverend calvin robinson. and the author and journalist rebecca reid. amanda patel, what do you make of it? i don't know what to press me more today than actually watching keir starmer's speech on my way and watching australia lose four one to
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france in the world cup . they france in the world cup. they won for the first 27 minutes, so i'm taking a bit of hope out of that. the guy is just a complete hypocrite. he's cut him through his whole dna. the whole dna of the labour party is that they are pro migration, pro . they are pro migration, pro. they really believe that anyone who comes to this country is worthy of staying here. that's their view. one of the quotes that we've been talking around for some quotes today, one of his, you know, we welcome migrants , you know, we welcome migrants, we them. and we don't scapegoat them. and then another quote in that clip that played is there's that you played is that there's another section in where he actually that even though actually says that even though brexit been done and brexit have been done and ratified and have not yet gone through, said, if became through, he said, if i became prime minister, i would reintroduce movement of reintroduce free movement of people the eu. that's who people from the eu. that's who he is. and as you point out, all he's trying to do is to he's 20 points ahead in the polls . he's trying to do is to he's 20 points ahead in the polls. he knows that the tories are going to go down to a crushing defeat. he just wants it to be even bigger as you would as a politician of the opposition leader opposition . and so
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leader of the opposition. and so he's tick off all he's trying to tick off all these so i'm going to be these boxes. so i'm going to be tough migration. i really am. tough on migration. i really am. yeah. that's to yeah. like that's going to happen. know, i got all the happen. you know, i got all the i'm pro—business, like that is ever going to happen. and this john key talks about today, which is british jobs for british workers . isn't that what british workers. isn't that what tony blair said ? isn't that what tony blair said? isn't that what gordon brown promised? and in the end, this absolutely no substance is just his plan. and there is a real solution to this. if we could get the 3 million people who choose not to work in this country to actually work, that's the really fundamental problem we've got . i fundamental problem we've got. i just made both. it may be despair in one may because he's such a charlatan, but it made me despair even more, even more than that. australia result because he's going to be the next prime minister. unless i'm political earthquake happens and kelvin that's what i felt today actually what he's trying to do is make this an easy election
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campaign for him. oh look, two years ago, i was talking tough on immigration , but we know he on immigration, but we know he doesn't mean it. we know it's not where he's that philosophically, but it's a clever ruse which the media because they were in the tank for keir starmer will buy into . for keir starmer will buy into. yes. and he's right the uk doesn't need to wean itself off migrant labour, but he doesn't believe it is a big con on the voters will see through it because they know what he wasn't even a target even prepared to put a target number. wasn't even prepared number. he wasn't even prepared to say he actually wants to go down it whatsoever. i don't down in it whatsoever. i don't know. we just to look at know. we just have to look at what he said previously that we should to drive should import people to drive lorries to solve the hgv crisis , that to defend , that he wants to defend migrants rights by allowing eu citizens to vote in our elections. i mean that one. and the labour pledges to relax the uk migration crisis as well. the rules around it, sorry. so that it's easier people to come it's easier for people to come oven it's easier for people to come over. so he's pro—immigration for that need for him to suggest that we need to ourselves off is to wean ourselves off is disingenuous. reed
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disingenuous. rebecca reed i mean, your open borders is down on this panel. i mean, the love it even at one point is actually to feel betrayed that keir starmer is pretending to be mr. right wing today. no, because everybody here is clever enough to know that, of course, he wants to win the election and none of us are stupid enough to think that it's a crime to say things that people who might vote will like. it's vote for you will like. it's what all of them do. and i think realistically he will follow through because he doesn't want four he eight four years. he wants eight years. to line years. and he wants to line himself that by not himself up for that by not making cross . and making the red wall cross. and he that for lot of he knows that for a lot of people in this country, myself, not immigration not included, immigration is a very, big, scary, very, very big, scary, terrifying thing. i have to say what hearing a bit of here what i'm hearing a bit of here is do understand that mummy is i do understand that mummy sarala done what sarala has not done what everybody her but everybody wanted her to do, but it hasn't been fixed. but realistically, crisis has realistically, the crisis has happened guys. and no happened on you guys. and no open borders under blair. yeah, but the only country i can credibly tough on the
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conservative government for the past 18 months about what i believe is a genuine national emergency in terms of the invasion via the southern border. so i'm not trying to say this isn't the war on this possibility and i actually think salalah is probably the only genuine conservative in the cabinet. she hasn't done anything because she can't. her hands are tied . i mean, look, hands are tied. i mean, look, i'd buy spice sunak by hand. i mean, honestly , if suella mean, honestly, if suella braverman was prime minister, i have no doubt we would be out of the air and it would be a immediate target for legal immigration to be in the tens of thousands. i don't have any doubt of that. the reality is she's in charge. she's not she's not in charge. she's not in charge. that's not where in charge. and that's not where she's instincts and it's not hunfs she's instincts and it's not hunt's instincts. i mean, they are so i mean, it's hard to distinguish them from your average new labour average kind of new labour person. they're both very pro—immigration , but they are pro—immigration, but they are they pro—immigration, but they are pro—immigration, but you pro—immigration you can be pro—immigration without this current without being pro this current situation. i think most people who prime migration approach who are prime migration approach the points the australian style points system, as nigel farage used to
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say, a thousand times a week, where you have people where you, you have people coming want an even coming who you want and an even left people like the idea left wing people like the idea of having caseworkers, more of having more caseworkers, more doctors, filling doctors, more people filling roles unskilled but roles that unskilled base, but not necessarily you need to be able to do you have a problem , able to do you have a problem, rebecca, with the fact that keir starmer has been politically disingenuous or i would argue dishonest today because he's talking the talk about getting tough on immigration , but then tough on immigration, but then when it actually comes to the facts, he said, oh, no, no, no, we're going to be completely pragmatic and let you in. i don't think they've decided yet. i think they're talking about what they're do in two what they're going to do in two years if and they win. years time if and when they win. and what they're doing and i think what they're doing at moment signposting. at the moment is signposting. i think they're think probably what they're doing i know really how doing not that i know really how it works, is running staff up the flagpole and seeing how people think people respond to it. i think this a soft launch this is probably a soft launch for with some immigration for labour with some immigration opinions. saying opinions. i think they're saying how people feel about it. they've to years until they they've got to years until they actually anything. actually have to do anything. don't wrong, if they don't get me wrong, if they did change minds, this was change their minds, if this was their i'd be happy.
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their policy, i'd be happy. but i think it might be numbers to backit i think it might be numbers to back it up. you need numbers to back it up. you need numbers to back and just saying back it up. and just saying you're pragmatic you're going to be pragmatic means because you know you're going to be pragmatic mearpragmatic because you know you're going to be pragmatic mearpragmatic means? you know you're going to be pragmatic mearpragmatic means? it»u know you're going to be pragmatic mearpragmatic means? it means' what pragmatic means? it means throwing door open. i do throwing the door open. i do think the fundamental issue, though, amanda, for your party, the that the conservatives, that right now believe now i cannot believe we're sitting realistically sitting here and realistically said rhetoric, said that in terms of rhetoric, we have a labour party that we now have a labour party that actually appears wing actually appears more right wing than conservatives. it is than the conservatives. it is astonishing. it's astonishing. well, it's certainly on the certainly camped on on the conservatives it's conservatives ground, but it's easier because , you easier and easier because, you know, they'd keep slipping off the and becoming and the sofa and becoming more and more hope you haven't more left wing. hope you haven't worn today because you're worn red today because you're a historian. never voted labour in my life. and i would never if it came to if there was a snap election tomorrow, i would not vote at all. i would not vote. are you going to put across a no? no. i'll draw a big william . sometimes your personal moral vote is that i did it when ? vote is that i did it when? dufing vote is that i did it when? during the 97 election, when major's up against blair, i couldn't vote for these tired tories anymore who didn't deserve office. and that's how i feel about this lot. amanda
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patel . calvin robinson. rebecca patel. calvin robinson. rebecca reid, my super star panel who were here all night. but still to come. can the conservative government be trusted to deliver brexit while ramona jeremy hunt remains in number 11? and how can brexiteers fight back nigel farage has the answers at 935. but first, as boxer anthony a 60—60 reveals, he lost hundreds go—go reveals, he lost hundreds of followers for tweets supporting england players. jude bellingham , mackay, osaka and bellingham, mackay, osaka and raheem sterling is celebrating black excellence discriminatory. the olympic winning medallist goes head to head with calvin. who's going to stick around with me actually in the clash next. as ever, your view matters most , though. email me down at gbnews.uk. tweet using the handle tv news, there's handle at tv news, there's a poll running there. it was very close just before the show. so you get your vote. and now this kicks straight out to the kicks off. straight out to the bright .
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to time now for the clash as you know, england thrashed around six two at the world cup yesterday. and the fact for of the five three lions goals, scores were black was widely celebrated online . okay. osaka celebrated online. okay. osaka and marcus rashford , who were and marcus rashford, who were both racially abused online after their penalty misses in last summer's euros final , were last summer's euros final, were joined by 19 year old star jude bellingham and raheem sterling on scoresheet . white winger on the scoresheet. white winger jack also bagged a goal jack grealish also bagged a goal . olympic medal winning former
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team gb boxer anthony ogogo took to twitter to express his pride side and celebrated the team's , side and celebrated the team's, quote, black excellence, a phrase that was trending on the social media site. but it sparked a backlash. and a few hours later , he tweeted again, hours later, he tweeted again, saying, i lost hundreds of followers for this tweet. i'm just giving credit where it's due. i will always champion talented black men because let's be honest, the press have not always been good to us . now, the always been good to us. now, the reason this has sparked a lot of debate, i guess, is because if the term white x meant were to be used in the same context would have been a totally different reaction. so tonight, i'm asking, is celebrating black excellence discriminatory? let me know your thoughts by emailing me at at gbnews.uk. you can tweet me at gb news. i'm running a poll there, too, and the result shortly. but first, i'm delighted to say i'm joined live studio the man live in the studio by the man himself. the olympic medallist turned wrestler anthony glover, who be sparring who is going to be sparring without physically without hopefully physically sparring because i have a
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feeling i know who would win. but own callum . me, me, feeling i know who would win. but me. own callum . me, me, feeling i know who would win. but me. oh, own callum . me, me, feeling i know who would win. but me. oh, iwn callum . me, me, feeling i know who would win. but me. oh, i certainlyn . me, me, feeling i know who would win. but me. oh, i certainly met/ie, me, feeling i know who would win. but me. oh, i certainly met you.|e, me, me. oh, i certainly met you. but look. and i found this discussion yesterday absolutely fascinating because i know my view on race is now very unfashionable . but when i was unfashionable. but when i was brought up, we followed the martin luther king junior and the john lennon approach that society should colour—blind society should be colour—blind and is the way for us to and that is the way for us to move forward. we're all english. we're all british. so for me, i was a little bit uncomfortable yesterday because i thought, what about jack grealish? there was a white guy who scored a goal was a white guy who scored a goal. and actually, i don't walk around judging people in society by whether they are black or white. i just think it was a great england performance. so why wrong ? because i'm why am i wrong? because i'm fortunately the world, the country. we haven't we haven't got mums like me mean you gone there saying i'm half white? my mum is one, my wife is white. on the least racist person in the planet . but unfortunately the planet. but unfortunately the world isn't like that. like we aren't colour—blind because we
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were colour—blind. then last yeah were colour—blind. then last year. when rashford. and when sterling. and in the sack and miss penalties last year they weren't get that one game. they missed their parent ship bags they got called this that black see where this black sea were at that so if the world was fair then 100% i wouldn't have to do it . a black excellence. we it. a black excellence. we forfeit. well, it isn't fair. and i'm literally, as i said in my caption , i'm celebrating my caption, i'm celebrating young black boys. they're positive role models for people that look like them up. and they're an tower block. and then for us, like , i was up and down for us, like, i was up and down a country, that's all it is. okay. well, that sounds like a positive message, but kelvin, you actually say that anthony's tweet was racist . i do think it tweet was racist. i do think it was quite racist. i'm not sure that was the intention, but it did turn out to be racist because you're signifying that there black excellence is almost like black superiority. oh, like a black superiority. oh, no, no, no, no. he didn't no, no, no, no, no. he didn't say yeah, i didn't say
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say that. yeah, i didn't say black family. you'll see, anthony. excellent i'll let you speak. i'd appreciate if let speak. i'd appreciate if you let me think like me speak. i think it's like saying superiority, saying black superiority, because okay because if someone said, okay and shown and grealish is shown demonstrating white excellence, we would say is signified we would say that is signified white superiority. you you're white superiority. so you you're putting that skin colour into that performance . don't think that performance. i don't think that performance. i don't think that anything to do that success was anything to do with skin colour and i don't think people this think most people in this country identified as country would have identified as skin colour to do with them scoring goals. think most scoring goals. and i think most people said that, you know, people you said that, you know, most don't on racial most people don't on racial colourblindness stuff. i don't know it from know where you get it from because most because i do think that most people racially people are racially colour—blind. there colour—blind. i think there a very small minority of people that people like that called out people like marcus last time and marcus rashford last time and said and what they see what that and people us have and people like us would have called out for being called them out for being racist. i don't think this racist. so i don't think this time do the exact time around to do the exact same, in the opposite, same, but in the opposite, i don't think that's the appropriate response. so my tweet though. that best tweet was full though. that best minority tweets for them minority must tweets for them like got triggered like a low. if you got triggered by in a positive spin on by me in a positive spin on twitter, then you are bit strange and you can say my twitter is like i am black. twitter is like but i am black. excellence is like saying black
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supremacy superiority. supremacy or black superiority. it's i didn't say it's not like that. i didn't say that. i specifically didn't say blacks you pro—morsi black excellence, excellence. blacks you pro—morsi black excellluck. excellence. blacks you pro—morsi black excellluck. can excellence. blacks you pro—morsi black excellluck. can i excellence. blacks you pro—morsi black excellluck. can i can ellence. blacks you pro—morsi black excellluck. can i can illence. blacks you pro—morsi black excellluck. can i can i just e. blacks you pro—morsi black excellluck. can i can i just can good luck. can i can i just can i just put the counter scenario on to you a just say all of that. just, just just say all of the goalscorers at this game. say, say it was kane , maguire say, say it was kane, maguire and grealish and then a white boxer had posted a picture of those three goalscorers and said , white excellence. i think anthony, in this current society they would have been cancelled within minutes. but also you're giving them bait. so if you're saying it's black excellence, it seems you're suggesting that their talent comes because of their talent comes because of their skin colour. oh, no. afraid it's not. but that's what it seems like. but if people up come, i reckon if be careful what we say. because if people see that say okay, they're excellent football because they're black, what are they bad because and because of this and that? and then people this. i cannot then people bring this. i cannot i . it's not to me how
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i cannot. it's not up to me how somebody interpret something. i cannot. it's not up to me how somifiody interpret something. i cannot. it's not up to me how somif you interpret something. i cannot. it's not up to me how somif you put rpret something. i cannot. it's not up to me how somif you put somebody thing. i cannot. it's not up to me how somif you put somebody like,. but if you put somebody like, it's to to integrate this it's up to you to integrate this statement. i am celebrating black excellence because those three black boys are what we can be. unfortunately they are negative stereotypes and what they advertise was excellence. no white person ever lost a job because they're white, not white person has ever not been interviewed for a job because they're white. but people have an alter. how you know white an alter. how do you know white people? they then people? okay if they have, then is this white? i got some hope when i'm from and i get that right. i know one is not. and by the way, calvin, we've discussed issues of race on this show a lot. calvin doesn't deny that. there are lots of examples of racism in this country. there are lots of examples of racism in this country . what we racism in this country. what we do today is that the countries institutionally racist, i guess what i would suggest to you, anthony , is are tweets like that anthony, is are tweets like that actually encouraging more division ? and because i worry division? and because i worry that by putting black excellence on a pedestal, actually what you're doing is saying to white people in this country, you
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never had any issues with racism. actually we're different. we're not all english . you've got no. there's the engush . you've got no. there's the english thing that the british thing isn't english isn't there. i'm saying i'm supporting, i'm celebrating some black boys at home. well yeah, which is great because why was it. well thank you, but you can't say it's great on one hand and say that i'm quite agree this to denigrate anybody is what is going to go dividing people based skin colour. if based on the skin colour. if you want support english want to support the english team, i'd say team england did fantastically. it's not including players. including these players. yeah, that's well, i that's inclusive. well, when i say it was say it's great, i think it was great you celebrated that great that you celebrated that the players who scored because this grealish wasn't this time grealish wasn't celebrating they got because they got so much they took so much flak last year. i get why black people do two of them four years bellingham did. but the people in flak were separating them from the other team members. done exactly members. but you've done exactly the see the the same. do you see the problem? it's the middle problem? so it's the middle fingers and those guys they fingers up and those guys they but reason can i just but the reason can i just clarify the reason you clarify that the reason you didn't celebrate grealish didn't celebrate jack grealish
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in was because of his in the tweet was because of his skin colour. a big reason i didn't. i said, why? because jack didn't get any jack grealish didn't get any racial abuse last year. because he's white. neither did bellingham. he was bellingham. in fairness, he was was was young to in the was he was young to be in the squad. ultimately so ultimately, all of us celebrate young black talent because guess what? growing up as a kid , i'll see growing up as a kid, i'll see a black person on crimewatch. unfortunately, stereotype types follow people like me around . so follow people like me around. so i am literally elevating three boys that worked hard , that are boys that worked hard, that are done well. they've got to score a goal for their country at the world cup. now, any kid, there's loads of people out there that don't do very good things . what don't do very good things. what people also but any kid , as people also but any kid, as i said in ohio was building watching telly on twitter. and so the three boys did really, really well . i can be like that really well. i can be like that now . that's i can see, therefore now. that's i can see, therefore i can be set up by a young black if you've got good intentions. but i think there was a lot of uproar because their race was
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mentioned last time around and you're bringing the race into it this time. i don't think you can have and eat it. have your cake and eat it. i don't think you beat white supremacy with black supremacy. i have to bring i think we have to bring everyone together to say, look, these footballers all on these footballers are all on team i never said team england. all i never said stormzy. said, stormzy. so as i said, excellence, they're he excellence, they're black. he was promising was primacy promising black excellence, falling excellence, you said, is falling into supremacy. yes. into black supremacy. yes. that's saying this that's not i'm saying this black excellence race women, while excellence by race women, while i like ultimately black i can't be like ultimately black people been pushed people have been pushed down for many, many, by who? many, many, many, many by who? who's people down who's pushing black people down . got to make a bold . if you've got to make a bold statement that black people have been pushed you know, black been pushed on, you know, black people equal rights, people have had equal rights, how people have how black people how people have had equal rights. had equal half equal rights. black people, everyone in this country equal country had equal whites. everyone country has everyone this country has sanctioned black people have had equal have. i'm asking you question when 50 is the when my dad came to this country from nigeria in the 70 he was your dad playing . what's your dad dad playing. what's your dad playing? did you. because my mama talking to. oh did any of these players suffer from being oppressed of fighters not oppressed of these fighters not have people they put up for a
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place. why more than than than people commit war crimes in london then other people can this the crime rate speak for themselves. people get pulled over by the police because they have that they're have demographics that they're looking about, looking for. it's not about, oh, he's black, pull him he's black, let me pull him oven he's black, let me pull him over. it's like who committed a crime in this area? who am i looking for? he missed the criteria. been criteria. have black people been held this country? yes held down in this country? yes or all black people know how or no? all black people know how they me. i'm i'm asking they beat me. i'm i'm asking questions. much works questions. i know how much works by black people. i know by who have black people. i know black people off you hold on by society. have they when have they? 50 years ago. 100 years. go, pop . they have they have go, pop. they have they have sort of have been how long they came as black walking. we're not being held. but right now chinese people are being held back. it's historic. most people have. back. it's historic. most people have . don't know what your have. oh, i don't know what your tweet this is something that happened on andrew. just go. hi, can i just speaking for. i'm talking i'm still as i said, i you're looking at something that may have happened 100 years before you were born and say, i need make a statement about
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need to make a statement about this now. that doesn't make any sense. i can do i can do what i want. if i want to celebrate what me does my what i look like, me does my things celebrating things should be celebrating people. you people. well, i think you shouldn't do all things you shouldn't do it. all things you do. ultimate i. i appreciate do. the ultimate i. i appreciate you saying i disagree. must be what said , i what you're saying. as i said, i will always champion of the viewers. let's put it the viewers. let's put it to the viewers, that was viewers, because that was absolutely from absolutely fascinating from anthony. calvin anthony. go, go. and calvin robinson . but who you agree robinson. but who do you agree with is celebrating black excellence discriminatory? franco says he simply could have said excellent performance from england and the gold scores. but as ever, he's obsessed with race and couldn't help himself . and couldn't help himself. michael says. you have to put this in context. black players got abuse last year when they missed penalties in the final. these lads were excellent, by the way, and from dads on twitter, why not just celebrate the england team? why the division by colour? imagine the outrage if i said white excellence and your verdict is now. and look, this is a split decision. it's pretty close, but 60% of you agree with calver in
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that celebration. england's black excellence is discriminatory. 40% of you black excellence is discriminatory . 40% of you with discriminatory. 40% of you with anthony saying that it wasn't. i found that a really fascinating debate. so thank you both so much. but coming up, positive male role models being raised by a woke war on men. straight talking red wall mp ben bradley is campaigning to right this wrong in schools . he joins me at wrong in schools. he joins me at 950. but first to brexiteers need to stay on high alert for as long as ownerjeremy hunt remains in number ten and cut out various nigel farage re—establish the brexit party to save our sovereignty. the man himself joins me straight after the break. stay tuned .
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it's what the farage time now and with archibald on our high tax hunt number 11 and the globalist coup that it's claimed stalled him reportedly hell bent on pushing britain back into the eu's fingers. is it any eu's greasy fingers. is it any wonder the brexiteers are feeling with the man? feeling nervous with the man? we're turning right now we're all turning to right now who us back control in the who gave us back control in the first place and who could yet prove our saviour? maybe with the political comeback of the decade, join nigel. mean , decade, join me, nigel. i mean, look, i know it's shocking that we're even having these conversations, but can i come to you first? because of course, you're an important factor in all of this. nigel and i have been reading some speculation this week that there could even
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be discussions going on about bringing back the brexit party, giving it now looks like brexit might be under threat from this current tory regime. any truth to that, nigel? well let's just get things straight from the very beginning. the brexit policy, i changed the name of the brexit party. once we got brexit done , albeit a very brexit done, albeit a very imperfect one, to reform uk. all right, so reform uk is the successor to the brexit party. i am the honorary president of it, which means i've been pushed upstairs with a bottle of brandy. i hadn't . richard, i. brandy. i hadn't. richard, 1. he's running it and you might have noticed that despite not much publicity in the weekend polls, it's now between eight and 9% against the conservative party. that's on about 2020 1. so reform uk is the vehicle , is so reform uk is the vehicle, is the structure. there's no need for a new policy . that the structure. there's no need for a new policy. that is the structure. there's no need for a new policy . that is what for a new policy. that is what the brexit party moved into and
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reform is campaigning on a whole range of issues such as genuine energy independence . it's energy independence. it's campaigning very hard for the rights of small business. extraordinary, isn't it , that extraordinary, isn't it, that a conservative government is literally launched a war against the five and a half million men and women that run their own businesses or act as sole traders ? and of course, you know traders? and of course, you know , what reform wants is massive update and change of our institutions. the first past the post voting system might have worked before the first world war. it isn't much use to us anymore. the house of lords is a joke . we even hear now that a 27 joke. we even hear now that a 27 year old press girl from boris johnson's office is about to become a little bit . so reform become a little bit. so reform is about using brexit to completely modernise and update the entirety of our policy and richard tice is doing that job and looking after it very, very well . my position and my role
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and looking after it very, very well. my position and my role in all of this is very simple . well. my position and my role in all of this is very simple. i was a businessman who came into politics because i believed that our relationship with the european union was robbing us. lawrence full rights of self. the determination simple as that. i believe the british people should govern britain and do it by the ballot box. now if brexit is completely betrayed and given the way that hunt is taking, i'm forget soon that he's a puppet. i'm sitting here , i'm running the place . given , i'm running the place. given the direction hunt is taking us and if we really are that it completely set out in every way towards a swiss style deal or whatever else it may be . and if whatever else it may be. and if we get to that point , you know, we get to that point, you know, i would have no choice but to do something . it is not done on top something. it is not done on top of my bucket list. i can promise you now you've got the best job
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in the world, nigel. now, right? you've got the best job in the world at tv news. i'm thoroughly enjoying gb news news. i'm thoroughly enjoying the fact that we're actually building a platform that i believe. but the time of the next general election is going to be a serious force in the national debate in our country. serious force in the national debate in our country . and debate in our country. and that's because the growth of gb news is organic. it's growing of itself . the fan club is building itself. the fan club is building , you know, our constant presenter is in shows, is growing and maturing, is the interest in the more and more labour mp is not just tory mps now want to appear on gb news. i'm enjoying my life as it is. now want to appear on gb news. i'm enjoying my life as it is . i i'm enjoying my life as it is. i have lived a modern political life unlike anybody else . liz life unlike anybody else. liz truss had it for a few weeks , truss had it for a few weeks, but don't forget i was the devil. i was saying we have to restrict mass immigration and train british workers. i mean,
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for that i was compared to 1930s german leaders . you know, when german leaders. you know, when keir starmer says it today, that's okay . i've get a lot of that's okay. i've get a lot of i yeah i've lived the life of being the outsider i've lived the life not just of me having up to 24 seven secure as a but my close family, children suffering as a result of it . suffering as a result of it. income diminished to zero. i've done all these things . i do not done all these things. i do not want to do this again, but i'll make it very, very clear if, as in 2019, under theresa may, when i had my first big comeback , if i had my first big comeback, if i had my first big comeback, if ihave i had my first big comeback, if i have to be really look like a modern day senate rep and come back , then if they portray back, then if they portray brexit, i would be left with no opfion brexit, i would be left with no option . i want to say this very option. i want to say this very clear. yes to conservative party leaders and thinkers. if i have to go back and do this again at the next general election, you won't lose . you will be
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won't lose. you will be obliterated . literally obliterated. literally obliterated. literally obliterated. it will be like the collapse of the liberal party 100 years ago, who then got replaced by labour . so it's up replaced by labour. so it's up to you guys, you know, on the bogeyman, i'm the badass , i'm bogeyman, i'm the badass, i'm the bad guy. you don't need me back in politics. i will ruin your political careers . you'll your political careers. you'll all be out of work. your political careers. you'll all be out of work . so do not all be out of work. so do not betray brexit. get on with delivering what people voted for . and that means border controls. stop the nonsense in the english channel giving our small and medium sized businesses a chance to operate in this and other markets around the world. giving our fishermen proper access to our own tariffs or your waters. these are things that we voted for. we didn't just vote for them once we did it in a referendum . we did it in it in a referendum. we did it in a european election. we did it in december 2019 by giving boris
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johnson an 80 seat majority . johnson an 80 seat majority. there was no doubt. now that just the johnson took the brexit party agenda won and a big majority that i was thrilled, delighted . don't betray when it delighted. don't betray when it did. and you just have to go back and read that conservative manifesto from 2019 and there was no wriggle room. so nigel, i just want to rewind slightly to work out why we actually got here. and it was because of this extraordinary free front page splash of the sunday times at the week and now the msm seem to have moved on from this. nigel because at the moment they don't want to anything want to do anything that seemingly questions this new globalist . but we have globalist regime. but we have had no denial from jeremy hunt that he was the source of this story . it's extraordinary, story. it's extraordinary, nigel. we have the chancellor of the exchequer essentially going behind the back of the prime minister to brief the most up important sunday newspaper that he wants a swiss style brexit.
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and no one is questioning jeremy hunt . why not? what's going on? hunt. why not? what's going on? jeremy hunt was put there by the imf the day the europeans central bank, the bank of england, goldman sachs, the white house , the german white house, the german chancellor . white house, the german chancellor. i mean, hunt was the coup sunak is little more than a puppet. this is the man with the real power in our government. be in no doubt about it. real power in our government. be in no doubt about it . and he has in no doubt about it. and he has his friends in the global bond and currency markets, his friends in big government, his friends in big government, his friends in big government, his friends in all the supranational organisations. this guy is in charge . make no mistake , nigel charge. make no mistake, nigel farage. i like it. are we going to call you our badass? nigel from now on after that declaration tonight? why he's got a i been called worse that it is true that is true but yeah ihave it is true that is true but yeah i have a feeling faraj is going to be causing quite a few
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shockwaves to the tories over the next few months. and of course he's back here tomorrow night at 7 pm. on gb news. thank you, nigel. but coming up with 7 million on waiting lists and service becoming and the service becoming a financial have sunak financial black hole have sunak and too quick to and sturgeon been too quick to rule radical reform of the rule out radical reform of the nhs? whether it's the nhs? i debate whether it's the fault the msm with my fault of the msm with my superstar panel in the media buzz.
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at ten. ben bradley is tonight's outsider . now have ben bradley is tonight's outsider. now have equality ben bradley is tonight's outsider . now have equality laws outsider. now have equality laws put in place to encourage more women into science technology , women into science technology, engineering and maths effectively declared war on men . my guest tonight straight talking tory backbencher ben, who's been described as the first blue brick in the red wall, is fighting to prevent the extinction of positive male role models with a campaign focusing on the classroom . having on the classroom. having discovered there are 3200
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schools in england with zero male teachers now ban that's almost 1 million children who have no men to look up to. and one of the most critical areas of their formative years. i feel so passionate about this because my father was a schoolteacher and i still get people coming up to me today talking about how important it was for them to have a male role model in their lives, especially when they came from a family, maybe without a father . well, that's exactly it, father. well, that's exactly it, don . and i wanted to be a don. and i wanted to be a teacher as well. right. that was my raison d'etre before i actually became a politician. i think it's so important. and increasingly, as we find more and children without dad at and more children without dad at home, with difficult relationships might relationships at home, he might be domestic abuse be experiencing domestic abuse or other challenges, and particularly post covid when they've been locked home with they've been locked at home with that the two years. that for the last two years. those male role models and trusted in school trusted adults in school settings, youth work are increasingly important, but as you point it out, we don't use that equality axe both ways. we
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don't use it support men into don't use it to support men into roles. doesn't seem fit roles. it doesn't seem to fit comfortably our comfortably in our conversations. reason. conversations. for some reason. pardon. irony isn't it? pardon. the irony isn't it? we're obsessed with we're so obsessed with increasing diversity in every other place apart from when it comes to men . what precisely ? comes to men. what precisely? and we've. i made the same argument in debate in the house last week where, you know, a huge amount has been done to increase racial diversity in our schools. many reasons schools. and that's many reasons , understandably, i think the kind bme population of kind of bme population of teachers greater than the teachers is greater than the population . a lot done to population now. a lot done to support women into leadership roles. the example roles. you used the example there of girls into stem , the there of girls into stem, the precise same legislation that allows us to take positive action to support girls in stem could to take the same could be used to take the same positive action support young positive action to support young boys to want go into boys and men, to want to go into teaching. but we don't. and in this and many other areas of life, people , whether life, people, whether deliberately or inadvertently , deliberately or inadvertently, misunderstand the point of the equality act and use it in the wrong way . and then why is it wrong way. and then why is it
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that you think men are so reluctant to go into the classroom these days ? i have classroom these days? i have a sister mission that it's in part because is very concerned about being accused of doing things. we have seen young male teachers who were innocent have their lives ruined because of false accusations. do you have any understanding about what it is thatis understanding about what it is that is making men so reluctant to become teachers these days ? i to become teachers these days? i think there's a number of things. i think one of it is that we have a very negative view sometimes of men as male stereotypes of abuse and all sorts of things. you see it in one place and you feel sometimes like it's almost assumed if all men in care giving settings which is awful and a whole variety of ways, there's also an element . i think there's still element. i think there's still a perception that particularly early teaching is early years, primary teaching is still woman's job, which early years, primary teaching is still woman'sjob, which is still a woman's job, which is again totally old fashioned and out of date. and i think increasingly male role models at that age are so, so important. but those barriers do exist and
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those perceptions exist. nursing's very similar. i'm nursing's very similar. if i'm very men in nursing, but in very few men in nursing, but in those caregiving roles actually , i think in the modern day, even more important that young boys and young girls are able to see men in caring settings, are able to see positive relationships between male and female teachers, able to female teachers, are able to have trusted male role models in their lives that can help them to understand what all of that means. indeed . indeed. now, means. no, indeed. indeed. now, look you are described as the first blue brick in the red wall. what do you make of what's going on with starmer and the fact that he's tried to toughen up on immigration ? i spoke about up on immigration? i spoke about it in my digest at the top of the show. are you worried, ben, that at the moment it looks as if this new labour leadership might actually be a bit more right wing, a bit more conservative than sunak and hunt 7 conservative than sunak and hunt ? i don't pretend to be . i don't ? i don't pretend to be. i don't believe for a second that he's got any commitment to tackling small budgets and he has made
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the opposite case almost in the same day, hasn't he, that we need to rely more on migration for economic reasons , but at the for economic reasons, but at the same time he's willing to get tough immigration. i don't think residents will believe it for a second. but what's absolutely clear we a conservative clear is we as a conservative party need back solar. we party need to back solar. we need to give climate that need to give it the climate that she and we to make she needs and we need to make sure do deliver because that sure we do deliver because that trust in our own management of the is pretty as the system is pretty strong as well as it is. but but how worried are you, ben , about the worried are you, ben, about the polls , about this new leadership polls, about this new leadership that actually wasn't elected by anyone?i that actually wasn't elected by anyone? i mean, what are your constituents telling you? are you worried about rotating your seat ? well, you worried about rotating your seat? well, i'm you worried about rotating your seat ? well, i'm not worried seat? well, i'm not worried about that at the minute. i think we're talking nearly two years probably. so the next election, two years is an awfully long time in politics. the way things have been recently in particular, i think in january of 2019, we were on maybe 15, 18 points in the polls and we won an 80 seat majority in december. look, things can change . i think there's every
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change. i think there's every reason to have a period of calm and stability. would like and stability. but i would like to obviously as we move to see as obviously as we move towards election, both towards that next election, both tackling but also tackling small boats, but also laying a proper, laying out a proper, fundamentally small sea conservative the conservative agenda for the future. think that's future. because i think that's what is 2019, do what we need for is in 2019, do you think you can win that with sunakin you think you can win that with sunak in hand ? well, they've got sunak in hand? well, they've got to make a case and certainly the polling isn't grand at the minute, but clearly , you know, minute, but clearly, you know, we've been put in that position. he's got a job to do to help us to that case to and listen to make that case to and listen to make that case to and listen to colleagues like myself and like who i know like lee anderson, who i know you have on an a regular basis from seats around country from seats around the country tomorrow. he's maybe tomorrow. i mean, he's maybe here okay. okay. here tomorrow night. okay. okay. we so it sounds we put together so it sounds like it's very cautious endorsement this point, which i think is fair enough. ben, you weren't at the beeb dinner. have you heard about this last week? jacob reece mogg. folk like that , the bringing back boris dinner in london . i was invited to a in london. i was invited to a few things last week but got i run a council so i've got to
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work to do my and go to many dinners i'd probably better that way actually out doing things for my constituents. what about the concept of it could ? you see the concept of it could? you see any back for boris johnson any way back for boris johnson in wall champion well, in the red wall champion well, certainly he's populist and i supported him before he was dunng supported him before he was during the last contest because he's popular. i think very few people have that draw in terms of the ability to engage the pubuc of the ability to engage the public and get people interested. but don't it interested. but i don't see it happening any time soon. clearly, rishi, if we're going to have a chance that election, we need to back him and help him to things in the right place to get things in the right place to get things in the right place to tackle the issues that matter. we'll make that case to him, we don't support him him, and if we don't support him to try deliver, it will not to try and deliver, it will not be good shape anyway. it's be in good shape anyway. it's straight talking tory backbencher ben bradley. thank you joining me you so much forjoining me tonight. up are tonight. but coming up are the libertarian politics trust libertarian politics of trust dead? of her close dead? well, one of her close allies, randall jayawardena, whose career was cut whose cabinet career was cut short by last month's downing street upheaval, breaks his silence on the globalist coup that could doom the tories. he's
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with me at 1020. but first, with 7 million on waiting lists in the health service becoming a financial hole , have sunak financial black hole, have sunak and been too quick to and sturgeon been too quick to roll out nhs reform to appease the msa? but is it wrong to rishi choosing private rishi for choosing private health by our panel, health kit by zip? our panel, which to write that in the which tends to write that in the media, falls back in 2 minutes .
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is 10 pm. i'm dan wootton tonight out as 21 mps and peers, including lord frost, who quit bofis including lord frost, who quit boris johnson's over lockdown measures, raised the alarm bells. the covid inquiry risks becoming a whitewash that shames a person. that's my big debate at 1030 with tonight, superstar panel amanda blue tell reverend calvin robinson and rebecca reid with gary lineker and his guitar cohort dialling up the virtue signalling . ever since fifa signalling. ever since fifa chose qatar back in 2010, the
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smallest nation to have hosted football's greatest competition. let's face them. big questions stick to football, say fifa. well, we will for a couple of minutes at least. we see just desperate to avoid cancellation. but covering the world cup as all fleets read. icon kelvin mackenzie lets rip it onto hypocrites at 1045. although the battery and politics of trust it all makes day forever. ginawa and a rising star of the tory party whose cabinet career was cut short , trust was ousted, cut short, trust was ousted, writes his silence on the globalists coup that could doom the conservatives. he joins me at 1020 as the muslim go to bat for the cash sucking health service again at the likes of sunak and sturgeon. been too quick to rule out radical reform of the nhs ? up for debate next. of the nhs? up for debate next. plus, is meghan trying to stoke a battle of the sexes? but for woman i don't care if she is. perhaps the most successful woman in finance in her mid—fifties . i promise you mid—fifties. i promise you someone will still go . yeah, but
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someone will still go. yeah, but she was such a in college . oh, she was such a in college. oh, that's dignified . why not? and that's dignified. why not? and it's the long delayed sequel to avatar. really? the film within of a generation or is it about to become the biggest flop in cinema history? maurya like you and supposed to fight , pretend and supposed to fight, pretend to be born . over you. that in to be born. over you. that in the media what's coming up. there'll be tomorrow's newspaper front pages hold of the brace, too. and they knew greatest person and union jack before the night is out. but first, the news headlines at without news headlines at ten without a supporter . news headlines at ten without a supporter. good evening. i'm alex porter in the gb newsroom. the rmt union has announced new industrial action over the festive period and says its members will not work overtime over christmas and will stage a series of 48 hour strikes in december and january. dates
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include the 32, 14th and 16th to 17th of december and the third to fourth and six to 7th of january is over a long running disputes over paid jobs and conditions rmt general secretary mick lynch told gb news the union has been reasonable . the union has been reasonable. the government is blocking any resolutions. the government are in disarray. they don't really know how to handle this industrial dispute. they've got all these other problems in with pubuc all these other problems in with public sector pay and the state of the economy . we've seen their of the economy. we've seen their performance in a series of mini budgets which have been disastrous for working people and for the economy. so i'm going to try and find out on thursday from the secretary state exactly what he's up to if. he's prepared to be a person of goodwill and create that atmosphere where we can develop atmosphere where we can develop a settlement could a settlement that could happen very will have no very quickly and will have no need for any strikes. we can put it to our parliaments, anti—corruption watchdog has ruled that matt hancock did break government rules by not consulting them before appearing on i'm a celebrity get me out of
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here. lord pickles, the chair of , the advisory committee on business appointments , informed business appointments, informed the office of breach in the cabinet office of breach in a letter today . under the rules, a letter today. under the rules, mr. hancock should have sought clearance the committee for clearance from the committee for any new employment or appointments within years of appointments within two years of leaving office . a spokesperson leaving office. a spokesperson for hancock said the for mr. hancock said the guidance on the committee's website in good website was followed in good faith . ukraine's government faith. ukraine's government urging people to conserve energy following russian attacks that have destroyed the country's power supplies. it's off to the united nations. warned of a humanitarian disaster in ukraine this winter . authorities say this winter. authorities say millions face power cuts until at least the end of march due to the missile attacks. planned power shortages are happening in all regions with ukraine's grid operator calling the damage colossal . footballer cristiano colossal. footballer cristiano ronaldo is leaving manchester united with immediate effect as part of a mutual agreement with the club. it's after the 37 year old criticised the club and its
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management last week . in management last week. in a statement, united thanked him for his immense contribution dunng for his immense contribution during his spell at old trafford . the club has also announced that board of directors are considering new investment into the club. a sale or all the transactions involved in the company . and the king has been company. and the king has been hosting his first state visit as monarch . king charles welcomes monarch. king charles welcomes south african president cyril ramaphosa during a ceremony, a horse guards parade . they then horse guards parade. they then proceeded along the mile by carriage to buckingham palace, where a banquet has been held in the president's honour. king charles personally that only sustainable farmers we use at the meal with foliage from the palace gardens and windsor castle . tv online and dab+ castle. tv online and dab+ radio. this is gb news. now it's back to dan wootton tonight eyes . back to dan wootton tonight eyes. towards you. tonight, not only
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the bells . only one front page the bells. only one front page in.thus the bells. only one front page in. thus far. and it's the eye which sees whether she should have been forced to back down over housing by 50 rebel tory mp. in the first taste of the pm's leadership, dozens of backbenchers and cabinet backbenchers and former cabinet ministers scrapping ministers demanded scrapping compulsory housing targets and had planned to stage a revolt . had planned to stage a revolt. yep, the civil war continues . yep, the civil war continues. folks, my superstar panel back with right now are not at war yet . daily with right now are not at war yet. daily mail columnist broadcaster amanda patel of the conservative commentator and gb news presenter, the reverend calvin robinson and the author, best selling author, in fact, and journalist rebecca reid . now and journalist rebecca reid. now in of pathetic msm gotcha the empty ambition establishment is trying and failing actually to make a mountain out of sunak having private health care sent in blood. last week they to launch the attack, but the pm refused to be drawn on the issue of his own situation. do you have private health care? have you ever had it? i, as chancellor i oversaw record increases in nhs funding. it's why prioritised it recently . you
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why prioritised it recently. you make sure that i can work on the private not on a private level. you don't go through elective back.i you don't go through elective back. i think most people appreciate that talking about we want families. health care is probably appropriate, but probably not appropriate, but determined to start another leftie beat up on the rich. the guardian revealed that he is in fact registered with cholera fact registered with a cholera london which charges for london clinic, which charges for a half hour consultation office appointments the evenings and appointments in the evenings and weekends. is this really a big deal? man's wort h £730 deal? the man's worth £730 million. wouldn't he go million. why wouldn't he go private when the nhs has become a financial black hole with the speck a waiting list topping speck of a waiting list topping 7 million? look, in my opinion, the only to life back into the only way to life back into the only way to life back into the floundering health services to start thinking the unthinkable that unthinkable. that means rethinking the whole thing. but when it emerged yesterday that scottish health leaders had suggested charging the rich for some treatments, the idea was immediately shut down. even the suggestion which was seized upon by msm, had sturgeon a fishy by the msm, had sturgeon a fishy where she tripping over themselves the themselves to shut down the claims, pledging continue claims, pledging to continue pounng claims, pledging to continue pouring into the bloated
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pouring money into the bloated and dysfunctional current system without radical reform. but kelvin, actually i think that's a mistake. radical reform is needed. a mistake. radical reform is needed . and the problem is, needed. and the problem is, look, i don't necessarily think the scottish health chiefs got it exactly right. but the problem is now bash down the moment they try and solve the problem because the nhs is the new religion, isn't it? you can't criticise it, but i think the right. why should rich people free health people be getting free health care? why should everyone get free is a safety free health care is a safety net. you can't afford health net. if you can't afford health care, should be there care, the nhs should be there for but if can't afford for you. but if you can't afford to course you should. of to pay, of course you should. of course. sunak multimillionaires like should like billionaire should be paying like billionaire should be paying his health. this paying for his own health. this is service to the is an hilarious service to the country doing service country so we're doing a service to country. sorry, two to the country. sorry, two things. yes, i he is. i think if you have money, you should pay for doctor's appointments. you have money, you should pay for
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obugafion health care, i think you have an obligation private obligation to take out private health. who can afford? and health. but who can afford? and because nobody. because the because nobody. yes, because the nhs there help, who nhs should be there to help, who can't but that's not, can't afford it. but that's not, that's not the essence of the nhs, there to help nhs, it's there to help everyone. you're changing nhs, it's there to help eve model, you're changing nhs, it's there to help eve model, i you're changing nhs, it's there to help eve model, i knowr're changing nhs, it's there to help eve model, i know it; changing nhs, it's there to help eve model, i know it wasanging nhs, it's there to help eve model, i know it was greed the model, i know it was greed taking off, everybody was if you can afford to pay for yourself and get the free version and you go get the free version you're of public you're taking out of public purse, it's a simple purse, but it's not a simple thing really vehemently thing that i really vehemently disagree with you, but i do on this. why why? yes, you get free health should health care. why should 1? health said to health care, as you said to i guess just let me speak to margaret thatcher 30 years margaret thatcher said 30 years ago, of course, i private medical i can afford it. medical cover. i can afford it. i do it. it's no i choose to do it. it's no reflection on nhs, said all reflection on the nhs, said all i'm by paying for my own i'm doing by paying for my own care my family's care is care and my family's care is shortening. case people. shortening. the case for people. now the same in now i feel exactly the same in those a 5 million people those days. a 5 million people took private medical care. now there's 8 million. they contribute. it's something like some like 5.8 some ludicrous figure, like 5.8 billion to the budget . but not billion to the budget. but not all. and no, i agree with no. between what what i disagree with anyone who says i should pay with anyone who says i should pay for it. yeah and i do pay
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for it by choice , but i do not for it by choice, but i do not think you have any right to say to anybody else just because you're. i don't think you ought to to take get people poorer than you to pay for your health care. me? already pay care. excuse me? i already pay for health. i know, for their health. i know, but i pay for their health. i know, but i pay the way every single pound of tax is taken by this government. 50 pay goes to the singles. the nhs by having so be that. so i'm paying double. i'm paying that. so i'm paying double. i'm paying double another. so do you think i should pay to have the baby privately and not used ? i baby privately and not used? i can afford to. spencer well, you've how do you decide? so that's up to you. i could i could i do it with having sell my yes. it be my house? yes. would it be a massive financial impact? yes. so you decide can so how do you decide who can afford the cost for you to decide? but that is when it's all we need to have a all but why. we need to have a discussion, though, because where could lead, where the discussion could lead, for would be breaks for example, would be tax breaks , for example, choose to , for example, who choose to have private health insurance. and i think what my issue is that rishi, over summer, when we saw the real rishi actually did want to consider these sorts of
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measures because he remember, advocated position to charg e £10 advocated position to charge £10 every time they missed a gp appointment if they weren't on benefits. so if they were to benefit, which i actually think was, i really think was totally i mean but he's dropped the ball . not because as calvin . he's not because as calvin says, there's religion of says, there's the religion of the . so this is there are the nhs. so this is there are a lot of problems in this country with people being able to with people not being able to suggest and you suggest stupid things and you need white board out need to get the white board out and stupid the and put stupid things on the whiteboard without somebody being like she something being like she says something stupid it's all just stupid her out and it's all just this amanda, this stupid thing. amanda, though, every though, the fact that every single the per centage of single year the per centage of our tax money that we funnel into the nhs black hole a third the people in the country do become a third of the people do actually work. we have is bankrupting the country. i know it is it is silly that. bankrupting the country. i know it is it is silly that . but the it is it is silly that. but the thing is you're not going to get you're not going to have any debate over the reform of the nhs this conference is nhs because this conference is it the new religion. well it is the new religion. well between the next general between now and the next general election okay, know, election. okay, you know, they're going perform.
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they're just going to perform. i know the political parties might not, but i will the debate not, but i will have the debate because. yeah, because because. well, yeah, because you can all around can look at countries all around the has the better the world that has the better model because australia does fairly well and that you pay fairly well and that you can pay for of people pay for an for a lot of people pay for an appointment. i personally pay for gp appointments because i like to have booked ahead. like to have them booked ahead. instead i want them to. that's a really nice carpet . my one. what really nice carpet. my one. what i'd like to , but right now we're i'd like to, but right now we're baker though actually you would find if you tried to get an nhs gp appointment. it wouldn't just be a case of getting it , not gp appointment. it wouldn't just be a case of getting it, not on the day you would be lucky to get a phone call back in a week because i have to. i have in previous times on it what i will say is that when it comes to babies and young, they are extraordinary. they always say you fit you in. unfortunately, that service doesn't apply to older it as older people who need it just as much are incredible much but they are incredible with they really are. with babies. they really are. there's also a weird reverse snobbery journalists are snobbery that journalists are really gotcha him really trying to gotcha him have. for private health
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have. you pay for private health care know, i know. care? of course. i know, i know. but what? so disappointing but guess what? so disappointing about sunak, though. as amanda points he's not points out, he's not a thatcherite. it's because if he was a thatcherite he would have had answer immediately. he had the answer immediately. he would made it simple would have made it that simple speech people would have speech and people would have understood and but he doesn't understood it and but he doesn't have the guts and i just hate it when he starts to sort of into yeah well i put all this money into the nhs but that's all they're going to for next they're going to do for next yeah they're going to do for next year. is the reason he year. but this is the reason he doesn't the guts this doesn't have the guts and this is of the issue. i know is sort of the issue. i know folk like allison pearson were pointed at the time, the pointed it out at the time, the summer. the fact that he's not just rich, right? yeah he's making he's not i don't making he's not like i don't i don't making he's not like i don't i dont an making he's not like i don't i don't an issue, but he is don't have an issue, but he is not richest friend not like your richest friend from that he's like you from schools that he's like you just schools, hospitals just run from schools, hospitals . he an issue with, look, . so he has an issue with, look, i'm to have this wealth. i'm willing to have this wealth. let's he's he's inadequacies as a politician and his betrayal of the conservative party it lets him off easy. well, i was actually think i was trying to say the only thing would say say the only thing i would say is isn't a new thing. is this isn't a new thing. because i remember tony blair's
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children's schooling being a huge discussion point, every single leader. but that discussion so . but similarly, discussion is so. but similarly, david cameron, that was there was a big i would say the tories are against the idea of private health law. but but but with health law. but but but but with david cameron they were obsessed with his child were children one term? i'm fond of that, by term? yes i'm fond of that, by the way. apparently that stands for laugh out. oh, i'm so sorry. if anybody watching what you just confused, and just confused, tweet me and i translate don't translate the movie. don't meghan markle may not like the fact she's still part of the royal family, but for as long as she really a big ask she is, is it really a big ask for her to act with, like just a tie a bit of decorum, a tiny bit . in the latest episode of that tedious archetypes podcast , tedious archetypes podcast, which is a flop, by the way, complete flop. now the duchess of sussex gamely pointed out the double standards between men and women are there in society . women are there in society. okay, fine. but i think she were undermining her point somewhat by throwing out any sense of palace propriety . as you're palace propriety. as you're getting older, you're exploring
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and starting to understand your sensuality , your feminine divine sensuality, your feminine divine being, your sexuality . being, your sexuality. oftentimes it can be very much used against you. and i give the example of, you know , for a example of, you know, for a woman especially versus a man, a man, if he is a player, i would have. but or whatever he's doing, it's often celebrate it even heralded. but a woman, i don't care if she is perhaps the most successful woman finance in her mid—fifties is. i promise you someone will still go. yeah, but she was such a in college. i mean, it's impressive really, isn't it? she manages to find a new way to embarrass the royal family every single week . family every single week. rebecca read calvin robinson about how to stop showing up as 21 employees. and here's the alarm. does the covid inquiry becoming a whitewash? my superstore panel return along with more of tomorrow's newspapers in the media about p0p, newspapers in the media about pop, too. that's at 1030. but first, are the libertarian
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politics of trust dead forever ? politics of trust dead forever? rand paul jayawardene a rising star of the tory party whose cabinet career was cut short when trust was ousted , breaks when trust was ousted, breaks his silence . when trust was ousted, breaks his silence. he's when trust was ousted, breaks his silence . he's live straight his silence. he's live straight after the break .
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conservative party, a channel of brexit and boris , whose brexit and boris, whose political career reached new heights after being selected as environment secretary by his close ally, liz truss . just close ally, liz truss. just seven weeks later, it all came crashing down after that globalist coup which saw truss and her visionary libertarian ideas ousted from number ten before a loyal guests or purged from the cabinet. now, right now , jayawardena joins me for his first interview after leaving government and returning to the back benches. sir. and first, i have to ask you, are you okay ? have to ask you, are you okay? because the last couple of months must have been very bruising psychologically. of course, you had been a minister for two years in the johnson administration. you've previously been vice chairman of the tory party, too. so you'd had these big jobs, but this was a really momentous moment for you in your career. you had a seat around the cabinet table. you were environment secretary. really important, consequential pose. really important, consequential pose . seven weeks later, you're
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pose. seven weeks later, you're out, you're back to the backbenches. now i'm fine, diane. great to be with you today. and look , there are ups today. and look, there are ups and downs in politics as in life . it was a great privilege , of . it was a great privilege, of course, to serve around the cabinet table, to serve at the department of environment, food rural affairs, a big job. it affects people's lives every of the week and i sort of left them. yes, but equally, it was great to serve at trade before that. great to serve at trade before that . it was great to be that. it was great to be involved in writing the manifesto. and that's what i'm going to get back to now. i'm going to get back to now. i'm going to get back to thinking about think about about policy and think about what to do a party to what we need to do as a party to make that we rebuild for make sure that we rebuild for the future , that we go out and the future, that we go out and win the support of the people in future elections . but isn't that future elections. but isn't that the big problem? actually the big problem? and actually heard another truss side, heard from another truss side, you might say? simon clarke in recent weeks, he's very concerned , toned about the concerned, toned about the policy direction under sunak and because actually you can say a lot of things about liz truss
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and you know i'm very open about the fact that i supported her throughout the summer and i supported during supported her during her premiership. you can say that maybe she went far . maybe maybe she went too far. maybe the budget wasn't the mini budget wasn't implemented right way. implemented in the right way. right. that . but the right. you can say that. but the tory understood . i can tory party understood. i can hunt your party seemingly if now turned their back on growth . turned their back on growth. well, we do need to be mindful of both stability and growth, as you rightly say . look, i won't you rightly say. look, i won't pretend that i agree with absolutely that, jeremy has announced jeremy is fundamentally a good person . i fundamentally a good person. i wish him well in doing his job. i think we won't. i simply want the conservative party to succeed. but at the same time they need to be champions in parliament of lower taxes of freedom for people . he's just freedom for people. he's just increased the tax to the highest everin increased the tax to the highest ever in history. trust was going to cut taxes . well, i didn't to cut taxes. well, i didn't vote for those proposals, but i would say that actually whatever
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happened today, we need to make sure that tomorrow we are making the case for cutting taxes in the case for cutting taxes in the years ahead . and i want to the years ahead. and i want to make sure that those hardworking families who work every single hour of every single day , who hour of every single day, who get up whilst the curtains are drawn in people's homes, drawn in other people's homes, they know that the conservative party is their side and it is party is on their side and it is not good enough to simply say the labour party, though this is true, labour party true, that the labour party would more. we need to would tax you more. we need to demonstrate that we are giving people how they people choice on how they spend their everybody the their money. everybody at the moment right moment is sounding more right wing tories, which is wing than the tories, which is really . look, really extraordinary. look, i know about your know you care a lot about your constituents, what the hell know you care a lot about your con you ents, what the hell know you care a lot about your conyou saying what the hell know you care a lot about your con you saying to 'hat the hell know you care a lot about your conyou saying to theme hell know you care a lot about your con you saying to them when. know you care a lot about your con you saying to them when they are you saying to them when they come to you at the moment and say, i didn't vote for sunak over summer, i voted for truss . over summer, i voted for truss. no one's ever voted for jeremy hunt . and certainly this wasn't hunt. and certainly this wasn't the tone and the tenor of the conservative manifesto in 2019. how do you justify to them where your party has gone? well look,
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clearly there are a number of events that unfolded that sadly brought the demise of lizzie's premiership . but what brought the demise of lizzie's premiership. but what i'm brought the demise of lizzie's premiership . but what i'm really premiership. but what i'm really focussed on is when i'm speaking to my constituency saying, well, what am i championing ? and to my constituency saying, well, what am i championing? and i'm going to continue to champion freedom . know, going to freedom. you know, i'm going to make that in parliament make sure that in parliament that all people standing up for freedom, freedom people to freedom, freedom for people to spend money, freedom spend their own money, freedom for their own for families to live their own lives, also and it's lives, and also and it's important as the conservative important we as the conservative party here in this country, where freedom to where we have the freedom to debate , where we have the debate, where we have the freedom to disagree, whether we have worship have the freedom to worship whoever want. well, whoever whatever we want. well, yes but that yes, but we do that internationally. but the media and establishment and the political establishment are celebrating at the are sort of celebrating at the moment because they feel the downfall truss they have downfall of truss they have ended peronism and the ended liberty peronism and the tory party forever. do you think that's true or actually is there a way for your wing of the party to come back? no, it is not true. there is certainly still a great deal of support not only
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in parliament but out in the country for that agenda of lower taxes , of making sure that we taxes, of making sure that we taxes, of making sure that we taxes to drive investment and get the growth we need. it remains true that you cannot tax your way to growth that remains. that was true in the summer. it's true now and do all sorts of events unfolded that meant that felt it best to resign . that felt it best to resign. we've got to stand up for that principle . that's how we create principle. that's how we create the jobs of tomorrow , not by the jobs of tomorrow, not by more state spending . was liz more state spending. was liz truss treated unfairly ? yes, truss treated unfairly? yes, i think liz. his policies were right . everyone will draw their right. everyone will draw their own conclusions as to how they were exit duties and the wider context in which they found themselves. but ultimately , the themselves. but ultimately, the policy of cutting tax, letting people keep more of their own money and making sure that we're going for growth in every corner of our united kingdom. those are the right policies and i know
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there are many people in the conservative party, not only in parliament, but party members, loyal party members who've been party time of party members since the time of margaret and they're margaret thatcher. and they're the us. the people who agree with us. yes, there's a lot of yes, but there's also a lot of party members leaving because they like they have been they feel like they have been ignored. they feel like their right to elect their leader has been trampled on. and i'm not blaming you for that, by the way, because, of course, you always supported boris and then you remained loyal to trust. but i'm just wonder read how on earth you keep these people loyal to your movement at the moment and indeed was there at the very end with liz and i certainly wish her well . how is certainly wish her well. how is she doing? she's she's continuing to fight the fight for the people of south west norfolk. and i think that shows the character of the person that she's starting to sell back into that work. is that matt hancock in in the i'm a celebrity jungle? i ironically has declared liz truss as political career of . do you agree with career of. do you agree with
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that? well i know that she wants to stand again for the great office of member of parliament for south—west norfolk . so i'd for south—west norfolk. so i'd say it's anything but over. could she come back to a bigger role? no. who knows what the future has in store for any of us? i'll do anything she wants to do. i it's not for me to say , but i know she really believes , in the principles that i believe to in, and say it's incumbent on us to to the those people that you rightly said are thinking about the conservative party. a think about is this the place for us? i think they should be assured from what i and others say. simon clarke likewise the benches likewise on the benches yesterday , there are people in yesterday, there are people in the conservative party that are standing up for their views and in fact by even thinking about leaving the conservative party, what they will do is dilute our ability to stand up for that position or dilute our ability to stand up for that in the future. so basically, i'm the
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first past the post. it's the tories or bust. there is no alternative. look, just finally, were you at this beeb ? have you were you at this beeb? have you heard of this? the beeb dinner last week apparently attended by the of jacob rees—mogg, of course , i'm referring to bring course, i'm referring to bring back boris lots of mps now openly suggesting that come next july . once the privileges july. once the privileges committee is out of the way, once there's been local , there once there's been local, there could be an act too for the prime minister who, like former prime minister who, like former prime minister, who by the did deliver that landslide majority in 2090. would you rule out supporting boris johnson again, or do you think he could have another political comeback? well, ultimately, boris decided, that he didn't want to come back . course, got to be . and so, of course, got to be his. you're absolutely his. but you're absolutely right. secured the biggest right. he secured the biggest conservative majority since 1987. he did get brexit done. yes there's more to do with the no northern ireland protocol. but he got brexit and do it became often parroted . did get became often parroted. did get the big calls right during the tough times that we faced . look, tough times that we faced. look,
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you're not ruling it out. it's for him to decide. but he he he's done so much good for. for him to decide. but he he he's done so much good for . our he's done so much good for. our party and for the country. okay well, look, i'm sure there's going to be another political act for you as well, because you're a big loss from that cabinet. but have you cabinet. but great to have you here. that the conservative here. that was the conservative mp of course, the environment secretary liz cabinet. secretary in liz truss. cabinet. we're wharton. but we're now jill wharton. but coming up , we're now jill wharton. but coming up, are the bbc turning up virtue signalling to avoid cancelling nation for covering the qatar world cup ? fleet the qatar world cup? fleet street icon kelvin mackenzie is a up and ready to give auntie's hypocrites at 1045. hypocrites a kicking at 1045. but first, as 21 mps and peers, including frost speak out does the covid inquiry risk becoming a whitewash that shames the person by superstar panel the back to debate that in the media palace next we'll have more of tomorrow's newspapers hot off the press as well. so do stay with us .
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lester tamsin roberts is tonight on our mediabuzz. lots more from faces being delivered. the metro is leading on rail strikes announced by mc grinch for the 13th 1460, the 17th of december. i see this bloke's scumbag as he's denied. he's ruining christmas, but he is . and that's christmas, but he is. and that's why they've branded him mick grinch. obviously his real name is lynch i'm where i start coverage on the front page of the mail when will rein in the unions intent on christmas chaos? they ask exactly why. that's alongside a gorgeous stat of wearing pendant owned by of wearing a pendant owned by previous princess of wales, including late mother in law diana and the queen mother as i state dinner tonight, the guardian leads with a warning from doctors that poverty is forcing sick people to keep going to work. according to publication refusing sickness. i can't this. do you know what in the guardian, the ideal world, no one would ever go to work. basically that's they just basically that's what they just hate the fact that people go into work with a sniffle. i say if you go into work with a
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sniffle, good on you. the daily telegraph reports that menopausal nhs staff will be able work home if able to work from home if required. course, health required. of course, health chief pritchard said chief amanda pritchard has said that employers that other employers should follow help middle women follow suit to help middle women thrive and the mirror thrive at work and the mirror reports on qatar quote war on equality, branding the world cup host the country that fans love . that's following claims fifa used , quote, extreme blackmail used, quote, extreme blackmail to england to remove to get the england to remove their one love armbands. to get the england to remove their one love armbands . my their one love armbands. my superstar panel back now daily mail columnist about how the conservative commentator , conservative commentator, reverend calvin robinson and the author rebecca read lord david frost has won the covid inquiry is in danger of becoming a whitewash because it's now dominated by pro lockdown fanatics. the former brexit secretary who i have huge respect for is one of 21 meps and peers who have signed a letter to the inquiry. chairman baroness hallett accusing her of excluding groups likely to challenge the government's decisions the pandemic . decisions during the pandemic. the fear that fundamental the group fear that fundamental questions raised lockdowns questions raised by lockdowns like infringing liberties and safeguarding children are
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safeguarding of children are being and the damage being sidelined and the damage of lockdown are becoming clearer by . startling new by the day. startling new figures office . health figures from the office. health improvement disparities has improvement and disparities has revealed that hundreds more people than expected dying people than expected are dying from cancer in england each month health experts month with health experts warning diagnosed during warning missed diagnosed during lockdown are largely to . as you lockdown are largely to. as you know i've long feared this covid inquiry be rigged in favour of lockdown advocates. which is why i set up my own lockdown inquiry on this show to ensure difficult and important questions , we're and important questions, we're asked of the right people . but asked of the right people. but rebecca reid , surely now you can rebecca reid, surely now you can see that this lockdown inquiry is completely out. so this covid inquiry is completely out of step given everything that we're learning about the cost of lockdown . they're going to be lockdown. they're going to be talking about that at all. i think it's really important they try to get this right because otherwise it's a really expensive thing to do and it's really time consuming. and if they do a situation is they do a situation which is sounding , they do that they've
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sounding, they do that they've affected to be tried to risk it in their own favour, then no one's going to believe it. we're not to anything it. not going to anything from it. and it's really a waste of time and money. and i think we could really to and i'm sorry really try to do and i'm sorry if this sounds little like if this sounds a little bit like world world answer world peace, miss world answer would say this actually would be to say this is actually a useful let's actually get to the of it. let's not try the bottom of it. let's not try and blame people and get angry and blame people and get angry and make a big fuss. let's not try fight about it. let's try and fight about it. let's try and fight about it. let's try and fight about it. let's try and out if something try and work out if something this ever happens again. how will approach differently? will we approach differently? how what how can we do better? what actually can we usefully out actually can we get usefully out of i agree that as of this? yeah, i agree that as a former principal at calvin, my huge with this is not what huge issue with this is not what this is for. because if you go for an establishment sort of inquiry, they're asking all the normal usual establishment folks and honestly, this is going to become one of those things that we should have lockdown three weeks earlier, back in 2020. look at the cancer dance. now that yeah, they need some serious diversity of thought and but they're not in the but it's not they're not in the risk groupthink and i think
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risk of groupthink and i think it's too important for that children what even in the scope the inquiry to start with you know children were muzzled locked kept of school job locked down kept of school job to unnecessarily . it's important to unnecessarily. it's important that we address that and think why did we do this or why did the government do this to our young people? i mean, they search going to search and they're not going to be not really be believe me, not really anything about damage anything in there about damage or that vaccine or about the fact that vaccine more out age groups , for more out to the age groups, for example. i mean, amanda, look know this is not an issue that you as passionate about as someone like me but surely you can see now. well i suspect am i wrong? i i know i'm not i actually feel incredibly passionate about this inquiry. goodness. i as know from my long time politics, every time you get a really tough thing where the government's completely screwed up , am the government's completely screwed up, am i the government's completely screwed up , am i that so screwed screwed up, am i that so screwed up as you are? he did it twice. all you do is you set up an inquiry and keep it. it's a long process. look at the time frame
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for that was five and a half. gosh the inquiry was not initially there anything to know about ten people who were either in the tower as it was being or the families . but there to even the families. but there to even speak, they to fight and fight. we used to have a voice. you look at hillsborough 30 years and this is the classic set an inquiry skewed the whole thing make sure it's biased completely against establishment and then you just make it go on for years and years. it feels like they should they should effectively it feels that they should effectively have a trial in the classic sense that we do all justice works are just non—linear about trial as kalfin said lost the other. we are still reeling from that one, but i do feel like actually we have a good justice system broadly . a good justice system broadly. speaking works with its exceptions . why don't exceptions. why don't we literally why don't we have a trial rather than an inquiry? and if we're going to have an inquiry, don't we have inquiry, why don't we have a nice swiss who's never nice swiss person who's never met us to be charge of
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met any of us to be in charge of the well politicians want the court? well politicians want affirmation. they don't want guilty making any wrong guilty of making any wrong decisions. actually, way decisions. and actually, the way that is to look at the that this work is to look at the overseas examples very overseas examples where very different were taken, different approaches were taken, for sweden, for example, for example sweden, for example, us like florida , which have come us like florida, which have come through this lockdown period, the writhing, but also what we should do, i don't know what we need to do is not try and come to the conclusion of it before we get there. like i write books and often i write the last chapter and then i write the entire book to not. that's why i write stuff. i fascinate it by that because what about your creativity? what if you want to take story somewhere else? take the story somewhere else? i think you probably need to have take the story somewhere else? i thi it's'ou probably need to have take the story somewhere else? i thi it's not3robably need to have take the story somewhere else? i thi it's not crazy)ly need to have take the story somewhere else? i thi it's not crazy enough. to have take the story somewhere else? i thi it's not crazy enough. but ave it. it's not crazy enough. but dan wootton's christmas dan wootton's book and christmas question on anyway about dan wootton's book and christmas qthinkyn on anyway about dan wootton's book and christmas qthink you on anyway about dan wootton's book and christmas qthink you should. anyway about dan wootton's book and christmas qthink you should. butnay about dan wootton's book and christmas qthink you should. but anyway,1t i think you should. but anyway, what is it feels like what my point is it feels like science. everybody science. it is you. everybody here, probably has here, i think probably has decided the conclusion of decided what the conclusion of this be. all this should be. we might all have different conclusions, but we've really come to a conclusion actually we conclusion and actually we shouldn't having any shouldn't be having any conclusion do the conclusion before we do the bloody inquiry, do the inquiry, find conclusion. they
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find out conclusion. yeah, they have. including have. they're not including setting inquiry around it setting up the inquiry around it so. so i think i'm not so. yeah. so i think i'm not saying that it's, i'm not saying that they're doing in, in a that they're doing it in, in a good or a way. i'm just good way or a bad way. i'm just saying have decided saying they have decided right from right from the from the start, right from the start, scientific start, the scientific establishment, political establishment, political establishment the in establishment and the msm in this made the that all this country made the that all they cared was covered and locked was just this little side issue . but they've been proven issue. but they've been proven wrong with statistics on a daily so for me until this inquiry actually tackles lockdown with a parity i think it needs parity with covid because believe me , with covid because believe me, i've said for a very long time when we coming close to this already more will end up dying in this country from the effects lockdowns. they will look at the nhs waiting lists. lockdowns. they will look at the nhs waiting lists . you know, nhs waiting lists. you know, people can't get treatment for breast cancer, can't even get a hip hop these days unless of course your private insurance voted you know this before the there were only 1600 people on
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an nhs waiting list for longer than 12 months. as of today , than 12 months. as of today, 400,000 people in this country on nhs waiting lists for longer 12 months. and that was the issue . as soon as we made the issue. as soon as we made the national health service, the national health service, the national covid service , as soon national covid service, as soon as we shut down the country , as as we shut down the country, as soon as we ruined children's mental health and education, as soon as we told people, you know, remember speaking know, i remember speaking doctors. patients doctors. i have stroke patients and heart attack patients. they would tell me dying at home, they are so scared about coming to a&e because they're worried about catching this little virus with a 99.8% survival rate. but look, i think i'm prepared to say this point, unless look, i think i'm prepared to say this point , unless there say at this point, unless there is a fundamental root and branch review of what this inquiry is going to be, it is going to be a whitewash. so i'm not going to wait and see the results because they looking in the they are not looking in the right direction. we're going right direction. now we're going back mythical of pandora back to the mythical of pandora now, newest trailer for now, but the newest trailer for the long delayed sequel to avatar, highest grossing avatar, the highest grossing movie of all time. i've got
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movie of all time. now, i've got to honest with, you love to be honest with, you i love this movie because i can't wait to my specs back home. to get my 3d specs back home. but worry directorjames but i worry directorjames cameron have set himself up cameron may have set himself up for fall with the bold for a major fall with the bold claim the marketing for claim made in the marketing for the the water. given it's the way of the water. given it's been 13 since the original been 13 years since the original release, goodness, makes release, my goodness, that makes me a look and see me feel old. take a look and see what mean . i seen . what i mean. i seen. more more warrior like you and supposed to fight pretending to be cool . the fight pretending to be cool. the motion picture event of a generation really . they have a generation really. they have a smart debate against though who's also behind box office juggernauts titanic terminator two and aliens. but in a new interview, the filmmaker hinted the why if water needs to become at least the fourth biggest movie of all to even break even
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, which means grossing more than £1.7 billion. don't worry james, though i will be buying a ticket. that is for sure . i want ticket. that is for sure. i want calvin through the scene. the first time you slept through it. yeah.i first time you slept through it. yeah. i couldn't stand all those blue people with eyes on the side of the disney for growing up. it was just. it wasn't even very conscious, but it was good. it was terrible. it was to my eyes.i it was terrible. it was to my eyes. i thought it was very good. but come 13 years for a sequel, come on. james cameron, your finger out now. coming up, was right welcome was elon musk right to welcome trump bird boss trump to twitter. the bird boss is in the running for one of tonight's top prizes. i crowned the next gracious and the next gracious person and union but union jackass at 1050. but first, as gary lineker and co go to town in qatar, are the bbc ramping up the virtue signalling to for covering to make up for covering the world fleet street world cup? i saw fleet street icon calvin mackenzie lets rip it dante's hypocrites in i'm cancelled next .
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next it's next wsfime next it's time now frank and this is where brits britain's top commentators speak on controversial issues without . controversial issues without. the fear of the cancel culture sweeping the rest of the media. now, it wasn't just southgate's england squad virtues out the world cup kick off yesterday . world cup kick off yesterday. the bbc has been an asset from the very second the despicable tournament. his health screens just listen to highly paid autocue really lineker's autocue really gary lineker's monologue opening monologue during the opening which the beeb cut away from the way since fifa qatar back way ever since fifa qatar back in 2010, the smallest nation to have hosted football's competition. let's face big questions from accusations of corruption to the treatment of migrant workers. stick to football , say fifa. well, we for football, say fifa. well, we for will couple of minutes at least .then will couple of minutes at least . then after the main threat of a yellow so far, suits ditch their apparently highly prized values. it announce harry kane wouldn't send a flimsy message to the qatari state by wearing a
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rainbow armband . after all, bbc rainbow armband. after all, bbc pundh rainbow armband. after all, bbc pundit scott took it upon himself to uphold the empty stunt . despite that embarrassing stunt. despite that embarrassing u—turn one pointless political gesture, sadly, did kick off as england's players took the knee to highlight injustice in a stadium literally saw stadium that literally saw poverty immigrant poverty stricken immigrant workers its workers die during its construction . but predictably, construction. but predictably, the beeb totally lapped it up. just listen to the lead commentator guy mowbray and england's players will miss gareth southgate promised they will take the knee , saying will take the knee, saying strong statement to go round the world for young people in particular see that inclusivity is very important. particular see that inclusivity is very important . oh please. is very important. oh please. three legend colin mackenzie with me now. i mean, calvin, look bbc a broadcast station the tournament so this is just hypocritical virtue signalling isn't it . well, i what we have isn't it. well, i what we have to do is, is to look at who funds the bbc . it's hundred and funds the bbc. it's hundred and 59 quid and we all pay for it.
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but all we all a view about what's happening in qatar and the answer is no. if you take ferdinand, cher lineker for obvious reasons , they all have obvious reasons, they all have one view we should wear a one love band, we should be this, we should be that having harry redknapp had a slightly different view , which is the one different view, which is the one that i rather agree with. look, if you want if you don't like the country, don't go there. don't play football there , stay don't play football there, stay at home and any any of this ridiculous swearing of some kind of band. right. why that why start with one love? why don't we say pro migrant or anti—migrant the truth about the matter is the bbc are not allowing 100% of views about this issue . my bet is. my bet is this issue. my bet is. my bet is that perhaps 60 or 70% of the country couldn't give monkey stuff about views about
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homosexuality or regrettably the death of migrants. they don't like it, but they do like the stadiums which they're which they're having a good time in and watching their game and they just want to have the football they don't want have the rest of it which i quite understand i would like see the debate so i'd like to see lineker or ferdinand being taken on by people saying, well i don't really accept that all countries have bad aspects them. what about china? what about russia? what about quite a lot of the world? i mean, the world is becoming a more dangerous place every single day . so why is it that only one view is allowed to prevail with our money ? it's our 159 quid. our money? it's our 159 quid. these guys getting paid to produce one view and that is what i don't like. so talk about one love. what about one side? what about one man saying one
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view but having the point is for me they are all coming up with this one view to try and assuage themselves of the guilt that they feel from early millions from being at qatar in the first place. if they truly cared calvin, if they really gave a about the illegal homosexuality or the no rights for women , the or the no rights for women, the dead migrants, they would not have got on the plane. and that's what me so angry that they like to virtue signal actually from the stadium just zip it and talk about the football . a very good point . so football. a very good point. so then why aren't you included in then why aren't you included in the debate that takes place pnor the debate that takes place prior the game? the answer is clear because that does not conform with a kind of liberal centric basically west london's view of the way that football should be discussed and it's absolute shocker really the
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trouble with it is that the actual game itself is so huge that all this little this politics of it all gets in the wash and people allow it to go over heads they shouldn't do . over heads they shouldn't do. why don't they simply say if, remember, remember , right? no remember, remember, right? no you don't get any representation right ? with your 159 quid, you right? with your 159 quid, you get view shoved at you morning, noon and night. this is why streaming does so well because actually you can make a decision . i tell you. i do. you know, i don't like i don't like that netflix attitude. i tell you, i'm too not sure about that disgust. i tend to what i'm going to do i'm going to turn it off for 150, 159 quid. you can't turn it off effectively . you're turn it off effectively. you're going to get sent to jail. yes. you pay for it. well, indeed, i, i by the way, i covered i know these people don't actually really care. i mean, look at
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alex scott, right? who was wearing that one love armband. there on the of there she is on the right of screen, a few years , screen, calvin, a few years, happily holidaying in dubai, where homosexuality is illegal. she didn't give a then, did calvin ? no eye to eye. that's a calvin? no eye to eye. that's a good piece of. i don't know who found that. that that photo out. what fantastic piece hypocrisy that it's got involved in. but she won't get fired for that. she won't get moved to one side because as long as you're on the right side of the argument, you will have work until it's coming out of your ears and the bbc. but kelvin can one more thing. what about gary lineker ? what about gary lineker? because, you know, for years the bbc have gone forward with this charade that he's not news and current affairs presenter in any way. and this is how he gets away with spouting his james o'brien talking points ad infinitum on twitter breaking all of the bbc impartiality rules. well, surely now, after
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turning him in to a and current affairs presenter , going to have affairs presenter, going to have to follow the impartiality rules or leave the bbc . can i just say or leave the bbc. can i just say that last bit? leave the bbc is never going to happen , right? never going to happen, right? he's got them in rather rather good bind . yeah. they pay him good bind. yeah. they pay him the most money of any any presenter. he's allowed . say presenter. he's allowed. say what he likes, even although he knows that most of the audience don't agree with him, they're never going to get rid of him. it's a very odd position, one that the director general deal with, but he doesn't know what to do because actually the director general really director general is not really in charge of our money . it's in charge of our money. it's just an incredible thing . very just an incredible thing. very good for money. but that's our now completely fleet street legend kelvin mackenzie . thank legend kelvin mackenzie. thank you. cavan we will speak next week , but it's time now to week, but it's time now to reveal tonight's greatest person in union jack as patel, in union jack as amanda patel, your nominee for gb, the england scorer jack grealish, who when he made a promise to a little 11
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year old boy who had cerebral palsy and he said if he scored it, he would do this. well shall we have a look? amanda yeah . you we have a look? amanda yeah. you don't want me to do it? no, thank you. this is. yeah i do. i do that for you. all right? i promise. but remember, i've got a schoolgirl next time. next on the school. yeah. all right. all that, i fear is even slightly. do do you want to do it, amanda? oh, no, it's okay. want amanda to do it? oh, god. keep doing it. and all the reason that it's so important is that. that jack's sister, holly, also has something . a really good something. a really good footballer out, a decent message . that means something. kevin robinson. greatest nominee. mine is honorary and elon musk for allowing donald to come back as well as carl benjamin jordan peterson. he is freeing the bird. rebecca regional money minus the iranian football team can't go without talking about iran, but they they did not sing the national anthem, which is
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incredibly brave. and i imagine would not have gone down well. but it was an astonishing protest against the very real problem of what's going on in a very. sure. i'm going to go with a movements on that a couple movements on that because musk is because think what elon musk is doing so important also doing is so important also because i just want to keep away from polish from celebrating the polish of the cup, because i just the world cup, because i just want it to be about the football. amanda battaglio jack has david beckham has nominee david beckham football he's about helping itv show he's got about helping poor to play football. poor kids to play football. tearfully saying all i ever wanted to do was give something back to football. but he's already got 10 million. 10 million tickets are gavin you wouldn't give me matthew hancock because it came out this week that vitamin c does significant . they reduce covid infection and mortality . vitamin d was and mortality. vitamin d was seven days between days and he said to parliament that there'd been a trial and nothing and there was no trial. it was another i feel like calvin needs to follow gwyneth paltrow because she knows all about vitamins. reed. vitamins. and rebecca reed. gareth and harry kane for gareth bale and harry kane for this stupid, stupid armband
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nonsense . to be honest, i like nonsense. to be honest, i like of those choices. so you could have of one tonight. but i'm actually going to go with the manager and david beckham because i just feel so outraged . he's there in that stadium making 10 million quid. yeah big. not because i think there's anything wrong with him making that decision, but because he wants to continue to us about it's great to be gay and why he loves girl power . well he loves girl power. well he doesn't really does when comes to taking the money amanda patel. calvin robinson. rebecca reid. my fabulous superstar panel reid. my fabulous superstar panel. i'm back again tomorrow from 9 pm. headliners is up next, though. good night .
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good evening. i'm out as porter in the rmt union has announced new industrial action over the festive period . it says its festive period. it says its members will not work overtime over christmas and will stage a series of 48 hour strikes in december on january. dates include the 13th to 14th and 16th to 17th of december and the third to fourth and 67th of january. it's over a long running dispute over pay jobs and working conditions. running dispute over pay jobs and working conditions . rmt and working conditions. rmt general secretary lynch told gb news the union has been reasonable and that the
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