tv Farage GB News November 24, 2022 7:00pm-8:01pm GMT
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one two virgin media 2604 freesat channel 216 freeview channel 236 and youview channel 236. you can also take us you on dab plus radio with the gb news app dab plus radio with the gb news app and at the gbnews.uk. we're absolutely everywhere. come join us on gb news. the people's britain's news. it's night and this is a rush as well . live from clacton on sea. well. live from clacton on sea. please welcome . your host, nigel please welcome. your host, nigel . good it's stars at large here. clacton on sea on the coast. almost day . it's brexit country almost day. it's brexit country . it was uk country. but hey , . it was uk country. but hey, know what.7 over six years on for the referendum haven't you feeling is brexit working out for them. we we're to find out
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oh. after we get the top the out here is here a gb news is. nigel. thank you. i'm bethany elsie here to bring you up to date from the gb newsroom room now. the home secretary , she's now. the home secretary, she's committed to reducing levels of migration as the number entering the uk has hit its highest level since the second world war. data from the office for national statistics shows 504,000 more people moved to the uk than in the year to june . it beats the the year to june. it beats the previous record 390,000 in 2015, suella braverman says the rise was driven by ukrainians the war but the shadow home says the government is failing . today's government is failing. today's figures show is that the conservatives have completely mismatched both the asylum and immigration systems . so you've immigration systems. so you've got 98% of small boat cases
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still haven't been decided . and still haven't been decided. and at the same time there's been an percent increase work visas because the is failing to tackle the skills shortages , some of the skills shortages, some of the skills shortages, some of the labour shortages in the economy a 31 year old man has been charged the murders of a mother and two daughters following an arson attack on a flat in three year old fatma and one year old naima died in the fire at their home in clifton on sunday. the mother, 28 year old fatoumata hydro, was taken to hospital and put on life support , but she died on tuesday. hospital and put on life support , but she died on tuesday . a , but she died on tuesday. a metropolitan police officer has now been charged with 53 offences after the cps a further nine charges against him . david nine charges against him. david carrick served at the parliamentary and diplomatic protection command . his charges protection command. his charges include 27 counts of rape and nine counts of sexual assault relating to 13 women between
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2003. and this year, he faces trial in february and the family of a two year old boy who died after exposure to mould his home have said they have confidence in the leadership . the housing in the leadership. the housing association awaab ishak parents made several complaints to the local authority but was told to paint it. he died in december 20. the housing secretary says rochdale borough wide housing has failed to explain how. it will ensure tenants safety in the future . and the leader of the future. and the leader of the future. and the leader of the rmt union has said talks the transport secretary were positive, but he hasn't ruled out further action. mick lynch warned the government that warm aren't enough to bring resolution. thousands of rail are due to hold a fresh round of strikes over the festive period in. a long running dispute with network over pay. meanwhile in scotland, rmt members have a new pay scotland, rmt members have a new pay offer by. scotrail you're up
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to date on tv online and dab+ radio. we'll bring you mornings as it happens now. let's get back to fresh . back to fresh. good evening. with a large crack for an uneasy me on the sunshine coast, the best if i ever stopped caring . i promise you stopped caring. i promise you whenever television programmes i have to practise i've been attracted many, many times before. i campaigned here in 2014, 2015. i was here the day before the referendum , 2016. i before the referendum, 2016. i was back here in 2019. did a big open event on the pier. this is very much brexit land. there's no question about that a massive majority , 73% of klaxon voted majority, 73% of klaxon voted brexit. and of course it was
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here that you want to buy and held the seat in a general election. i could not be in a more euro eurosceptic part of england, and that was no doubt . england, and that was no doubt. but it is now nearly six years on from that referendum and it is fair and, reasonable to ask, has brexit delivered for you.7 i'm has brexit delivered for you? i'm asking that the people here in clacton , i'm asking you at in clacton, i'm asking you at home and in your cars, that question. let me know if i write at gb news dot uk what you think about that proposition earlier on today . i about that proposition earlier on today. i went out onto the windsor seafront of clacks unusual because every advert for clacton says the sun always shines at what i went out today to talk to some clacton residents and i spoke to leave voters i spoke to remain voters to ask them is brexit delivering for them . well, the government for them. well, the government are finding there's a lot of weak and wishy washy people
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there who, quite frankly, are not up to the mark all. i'm very sad and i think an awful lot other people with any common sense will just that disillusion disappointed thoroughly about it. there's good and bad in. i just want to be a part of the bigger picture i would been a better thing. i think the immigration shouldn't really and all the expense on the hotels and we still our own people sitting on the street . i think sitting on the street. i think it's very sad. it's i don't brexit is actually working and that's popping in our it what can be done with obviously people who you vote a brexit not. i really it really happened you i mean people voted for it should have what we voted for should have what we voted for should have what we voted for should have been stuck . i don't should have been stuck. i don't think over the years because it mistrusts when you breed mistrusts when you breed mistrust all that money's going but something's coming back in this country and people get to know differently . i do. well, know differently. i do. well, the reason why is firstly , the reason why is firstly, because we've got more and more people of a million
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people coming out of a million more people who can't in. more people who can't get in. has congress place. and all has congress cold place. and all they're saying well, they're saying is, well, we've got look after to the end . got to look after to the end. we've got to call for the first. why are we putting them up in hotel rooms when they're coming from a safe country, when basically we can send them basically we can just send them back any other country back which any other country does? tempted say does? i'm tempted to say i wouldn't vote tory again . oh, i wouldn't vote tory again. oh, i am very disappointed ten and 12 years and you know we're not any better off after . i one better off after. i one gentleman that referred to the big news story of the day and it is the net migration figures up to the year in june . net to the year in june. net migration has hit over half a million. it's almost unthinkable this has happened after 12 years of tory rule . well, they of tory rule. well, they promised in manifesto manifesto that migration would be, and i quote tens of thousands a year. i know that many those people in clacton and elsewhere that voted brexit did so because they
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wanted us to get back control of our borders. they can now, i believe , scarcely find it that believe, scarcely find it that net a million in one year have come into our, let alone the 2000 that have crossed the engush 2000 that have crossed the english on dinghies and without being put up in four star hotels. attacks payer's expense, all over the country . this to hotels. attacks payer's expense, all over the country. this to me is , a betrayal of what we voted is, a betrayal of what we voted brexit for. it is the concern and policy, in my opinion , that and policy, in my opinion, that has let brexit down. they never, ever believed in it. they picked up the tune that i've been saying for some they won a general off the back of it . and general off the back of it. and now i think both remainers and brexiteers are bitterly disappointed. i put this down to the conservative party , not to the conservative party, not to brexit, but have a frank open, honest debate about this . honest debate about this. councillor dan casey, you're an
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independent councillor you represent people in jaywick just down the road from where we are. i'm you're a man very involved in the local community, the british legion and all the things you do you believe that the time that brexit was a mistake and must be quite being a remainer big in clacton on sea. well put it this way i am daniel in the lion's den tonight about that. if i and i've always been a romantic that's just my thing but i have some to say, if you don't mind. to you, my chap carol. okay. we believe. this is gb news. i think we believe in free speech, i believe some of this is good for you. what benefits improve since we from the uk has the lowest growth rate in western europe, why the only part the uk growing is northern ireland which is in the single market both party trade agreements reflect eu . the uk agreements reflect eu. the uk has a labour shortage in care
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national service farming is difficult to export to the wealthiest market in the world. the eu . in actual fact, i'll the eu. in actual fact, i'll give you one more down. i give you one more of your shopping list. well, i mostly a in legal immigration is the worst for you have no relations with france y alright you've given me a long a long moan less about what's wrong with it. there is no doubt that the deal that boris johnson to the country as being oven ready if you remember was anything but we're not as indebted as other european we actually actually have shown in foreign policy the nuclear sub deal with australia with leadership on ukraine, with the vaccine rollout. if we've been part of the european medicines agency, more people would have died. there are some benefits from brexit , but not enough. the
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from brexit, but not enough. the big one i think is but jim mummery. jim from lowestoft fish market but involved the fishing industry in east anglia all of your life you a brexit party mep your life you a brexit party mep you felt so passionately about this house clarkson's fishing industry six years on from the vote. well there is industry i think there's one vote it's one vote left back in the day it was over 20 vessels in clacton with surrounding areas that you have here harwich etc. brexit a golden opportunity to rebuild clacton with its fishing industry . one clacton with its fishing industry. one one job at sea is eight on land. so if we had taken back control done of the industry with rebuilt that very very quickly so you're putting the blame the so you're not saying brexit has failed you're saying brexit has failed you're saying the implementation has failed we have in opinion nigel the industry and coastal haven't got brexit right 186 coastal
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mpas bar to all voted for the awful deal so places like clacton , lowestoft, great clacton, lowestoft, great yarmouth, fleetwood to hartlepool hull and grimsby they haven't got their brexit . let me haven't got their brexit. let me put that point to you james point is that if had been done properly, if take them back our territorial waters . norway on territorial waters. norway on the other side of the north sea that actually and east anglia could about brexit could have been a very good thing for these coastal communities with yes with the right government in place . yeah, right. okay. now place. yeah, right. okay. now maybe you and i, if you could point agreement maybe if government had done brexit , you government had done brexit, you wouldn't perhaps have your remain convictions . well. it remain convictions. well. it might not not seems like let down the fish fishing industry
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big time. okay. so we agree on that we agree on that. we found a point of agreement, remainers and brexiteers about . yes, but and brexiteers about. yes, but i thought that was going to happen tonight. so but dan, so what do you want to happen? i mean, you know, do think we should rejoin the eu do you think we should rejoin the single market? do you want to say i personally, i think the future i could well be for young people could be about a you know for me now because i've had my time basically the day i voted and voted for people. but i think some we should have it just my opinion i think the it was a certain group that's a basic voted and they're not going to be able to say what happened it goes on it should have the younger people that should have that should have been a generation that voted the future's know i'm future's there so you know i'm just left wing university students. know , i had 60 students. you know, i had 60 years in the labour party and they got thrown out. so there
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you. but can i say i'm glad to be an independent, but that's just my view of a family in europe etc. and visit family in europe etc. and visit family in europe and go to europe. this it's a upskilling the way you know it's not the same just kind of i doing the things i wanted to do well whole object actually of that we could of border controls that we could take control of border take back control of our border and sadly happened and sadly it hasn't happened half have come legally half a million have come legally 42,000 come illegally. 42,000 have come illegally. i think complete disgrace. think a complete disgrace. james, get the james, i'm going to get the thought on this, too. you i gave you , you know, the part of my you, you know, the part of my aduu you, you know, the part of my adult life campaigning for us to be independent , be free. be independent, be free. i believed in that . i still believed in that. i still believed in that. i still believe in it . believed in that. i still believe in it. but believed in that. i still believe in it . but the believe in it. but the government are making an absolute horlicks of it . unless absolute horlicks of it. unless things change , we're going to things change, we're going to finish up with a labour government rejoining the single market and no hope of taking back fishing. do you see any way this can be sorted there mechanisms that the government could have in place. you know there's acts that we could do now, but at this minute in time
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i am very worried there is still 1700 eu vessels plundering our ocean on a daily basis, eight of which are supertrawlers . those which are supertrawlers. those type of vessels are banned in china, banned in australia . china, banned in australia. we're allowing this to go on unmonitored, unregulated too, so it's not being placed whether it's not being placed whether it's oil and gas , wind energy it's oil and gas, wind energy aggregates all fishing it's all my knowledge in the way them people that billionaires . yeah people that billionaires. yeah that you a say why don't you let me let jane cut me off let that are the yes sir your word is i love the passion but let let jane finish . yes, you're going jane finish. yes, you're going to cut me off just let jane . to cut me off just let jane. yes. so like i said , it's oil yes. so like i said, it's oil and gas . wind energy aggregates and gas. wind energy aggregates fishing. yeah the uk should be harvesting those rich resources for jobs for places like clacton
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because you've got no other industry down but fishing with a rich overnighter to clacton. just like that. when iceland threw the uk fishing back in the day, they us to leave within two x the were buying fish because they needed the raw material. there was thousands jobs on the humber that needed that and it's exactly the same thing that we could have been. joe is passionate it's strong dan's views are passionate too we are the people's channel we believe in free debate we have free debate and the audience , i debate and the audience, i promise you, it's very important. but a final on this. whatever we around the country, wherever we go i did i'd say i don't i don't doubt it i don't doubt it. for one moment. but remember there were lots of people out there watching this and listening to this. so let's pay and listening to this. so let's pay some respect to them as well whenever we go round the country with this and we're doing more and more of these at and more of these farms at large, real. it's proper
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large, it's real. it's proper debate, always debate, it's open we always invite the local mp we invited giles . oh who sits . well giles watling. oh who sits. well you see they're funny. they're booing him. he's got a 24,000 majority. he said he would only come and sit in this chair and debate with me if i discussed the arts and the theatre with you . couldn't make it up on that you. couldn't make it up on that point. we'll take a break. back you in just a moment.
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possible. scott says brexit worked, but the useless government supposed be implemented. it hasn't. government supposed be implemented. it hasn't . that implemented. it hasn't. that does seem to be quite a general view. none of you says brexit is going great because successfully stem flow of illegal immigrants coming into it. yeah it's not actually a laughing matter, is it that that is you must not laughing matter it is a national security action. i believe that very , very strongly. huge very, very strongly. huge numbers of men coming from in some cases warm, torn parts the world. we've no idea of their background and the rest. they're all coming in from albania to work in a drugs trade you couldn't invent it now clarkson is suffering cost of living crisis. i noticed today in the high street more homeless people than i've ever in clarkson before . and joining me is a man before. and joining me is a man who's actually dedicating himself to doing something about it. he's lived in clarkson, but 13 years. schama masters is of the poverty group. martin's
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united foundation . schama i saw united foundation. schama i saw it today . yes. i didn't see it today. yes. i didn't see homeless people in clarkson seven or eight years ago. no what's going on? it's bad in pandemic. been going in a pandemic. been going in a pandemic. borisjohnson pandemic. been going in a pandemic. boris johnson told everybody to stay on. don't let no one work at your address so people like myself local we was a business because i served elderly i serve people's homes . elderly i serve people's homes. itook elderly i serve people's homes. i took a walk into the town centre , frustrated every day to centre, frustrated every day to beginning of the lockdown and everywhere was from the businesses to the churches. local to town hall to housing office and all see outside of a church on. pier avenue was about 30 people gathered a stopped at a cigarette. i love i love talking and i had a talk with the gassed honestly. oh yeah i'll say you . so i got talking i'll say you. so i got talking to these said what are you guys doing out here you're the only people in this town. and the
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people in this town. and the people turned around and said to me, this is normally a soup run every week. and come here for food , coffee, sandwiches and food, coffee, sandwiches and they give us things like clothes, sleeping bags and bedding. some of us homeless. some of us have mental health issues. some of us are disabilities. some of us are , disabilities. some of us are, you know, some of us unemployed. so we're in poverty . you know, some of us unemployed. so we're in poverty. but we you know, some of us unemployed. so we're in poverty . but we got so we're in poverty. but we got here to give us your argument is that lockdown has made fundamentally worse. well, yeah, they did . they locked down. they did. they locked us down. all suddenly with no funds all of us suddenly with no funds in place for , us no safety nets in place for, us no safety nets for the people, no safety nets for the people, no safety nets for businesses or organisations that like myself that are here to help people. and the people was left just get on with it and people's health went out the window , depression kicked in, window, depression kicked in, even depression kicked in. frustration in i'll talk that walk into it was the best walk of my life because i met people in the same position me and worse and i said to them so what are you here for? at one man say, i need a bar of another need to the links, another need
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to decide one pair of trainers. so i said look, i'll be back next week . i admire you. i next week. i admire you. i admire you the way that you shop . i do i everything i like, you know . yeah, actually , even know. yeah, actually, even people who were working are beginning to find the household bills of frankly, unaffordable in a very tough state job. i tell us what you think . you tell us what you think. you know, nobody can wave a magic , know, nobody can wave a magic, right. and take all this away. right. just give us a couple of points you would like to see that you think improve the plight of those society who are going through a terrible time, okay, what we need is we need government whole . all of government as a whole. all of the individual parties , the the individual parties, the house of lords, all of them . we house of lords, all of them. we need to have hearts and need them to have hearts and realise that we are beings as people . the united kingdom make people. the united kingdom make up the all of us here and, the whole nation make the country what is if we all die today or we don't wake up tomorrow, there no england. there is no united
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kingdom. so we need the government to be more loving. we need them to be more kind and treat us like human beings. on top of that , we need them to top of that, we need them to come and alongside our come and work alongside our local give the local councils, give the adequate funding they need to invest into social housing , invest into social housing, employment, infrastructure in our towns, help for the youth, help for the elderly help for the police to prevent crime. because you know, you look at this scar on my face is the cause of burglary. you know, awful people being in. we do have breakdown going on. yeah i want to say on behalf just me, but everybody , this room, it's but everybody, this room, it's very good . me, a young man with very good. me, a young man with courage like you was out now and really is a blessing to what i'm going to say thank you . and i'm going to say thank you. and i'm going to say thank you. and i'm going to say thank you. and i'm going to make a political point which some may agree with and some may disagree with . i find some may disagree with. i find it shocking that we're now
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housing tens of thousands of people who were legally across engush people who were legally across english channel, who have full access to dentists, to doctors to four star hotels , three to four star hotels, three square meals a day , many of whom square meals a day, many of whom not all, but many of whom will do us the fact we're doing this and not looking after our own , i and not looking after our own, i think, is a national disgrace. it's disgusting disgusting . in it's disgusting disgusting. in a minute what you brought about this barrage of our rise . you. this barrage of our rise. you. well, don't try to a very, very, very tough .
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and the boss of the rmt, mick lynch, is clearly articulate but clearly to make life very difficult for people who to travel around this country. mick lynch today made it dis obliging comment about me. this is what it was . let's go . to no, it's it was. let's go. to no, it's fair. you know, because if he is i'm not talking. fair. you know, because if he is i'm not talking . to well yeah i'm not talking. to well yeah that was make being rude about me but i tell you what i've had worse than that over the years here was my response the mick lynch big shout out the mick lynch big shout out the mick lynch now listen mick you were pretty derogatory about gb news i me in particular earlier on what i remind you predecessor bob crow and i got on really well two reasons for that. one, well two reasons for that. one, we agreed on lots of things disagreed others but the other was actually he was a democrat. yeah believed in having open free frank . he also knew many
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free frank. he also knew many rmt members had voted . and rmt members had voted. and indeed that is for too. so here's my little thought . i'm here's my little thought. i'm very much on side of your members getting a fair and deal. who knows ? i could even be who knows? i could even be useful to you . so here's the useful to you. so here's the offer. i'll buy you a we'll talk about it. you never know, you might even convince that you are . that's my offer to make leinster . . that's my offer to make leinster. i've of . that's my offer to make leinster . i've of course i want leinster. i've of course i want the railway workers to get a fair deal. has to be a reasonable deal, make come and have a beer. let's talk about it. it's what we do in open, free democracies talking which it's for barrage the fair age i have got five people are going to ask me questions i've no idea what those questions are. bev, i understand is up first. bev good evening . evening nigel. if we evening. evening nigel. if we ever manage to leave these dhl are if what impact will this have on the fa the good friday
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agreement and the trade and cooperation agreement ? it's cooperation agreement? it's a good point bev . you make i mean, good point bev. you make i mean, look, you know , we have a 1951 look, you know, we have a 1951 un definition of refugee is that was designed for a world which people got murdered for who they were for their religion, their race, whatever it may be , not race, whatever it may be, not for economic migrant or i don't like where i live very much that needs updating. the fact that that flight to rwanda was on the tarmac where the from the eastgate at 10 pm. said it can't go you've to rethink this we didn't vote for this we voted to take back control of our lives, not to have foreign courts overruling us . the poison courts overruling us. the poison pill . but the poison courts overruling us. the poison pill. but the poison pill courts overruling us. the poison pill . but the poison pill been pill. but the poison pill been put in by red from blair to may is to a.c.h r into everything else. devolution agreements , else. devolution agreements, good friday agreements and everything . do you know what my everything. do you know what my answer to that is? we'll cross that bridge when we come to it.
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either we want to be a full sovereign nation or don't. and i think i think what we're seeing in the english channel says we have to take action this is a national emergency . thank you national emergency. thank you very . now, mark, good national emergency. thank you very. now, mark, good evening. evening audience. thanks for taking my question. i've been known for my brevity, so this is a long one in. well, you better just just just crack on i'm after serving for 23 years in the british army and now working in around london. i many in around london. i so many homeless people, british people including ex service including some ex service personnel chatting to one today in london living on the streets trying to survive yet i recently as everyone's we've already mentioned it illegal migrants mainly young men not saying where from living a life of luxury in comparison those people our people on our and some of them are right next door to the hotels and the stately homes that they're living in and a luxury being funded us the uk
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taxpayer , my wife sitting behind taxpayer, my wife sitting behind dutch national needed the status permission to remain this country after my of my country . country after my of my country. we've lived here since 1997. she's and paid her taxes never claimed . what would you do nigel claimed. what would you do nigel to wake up those people in power supposedly in our government as well as the deluded you know delusional leftie population to this happening and what can be seriously . well . mark first seriously. well. mark first things first thank you the 23 years of service the country needs people like you . what's to needs people like you. what's to do about the lefty woke wokeist got that all must be on it but they're a small minority that's
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they're a small minority that's the point they are a small minority. i don't think there's an issue on which westminster is out of touch with the country than this issue and it's about fairness it's about fairness over a million people on social housing waiting . you know it's housing waiting. you know it's about fairness. i mean you know how easy is it to get gp appointment around here . yeah, appointment around here. yeah, yeah, yeah. i need to research that it's about and actually you mentioned your is about national now for who legally want to come to britain there are quite a few hoops to jump through and it's quite expensive, time consuming and the fact those can in chucked their passports in the we've no idea who they are it's an outrage this is the biggest issue in british politics. it's to lead to dramatic political change in our country. you mark my words this good evening . a of my words this good evening. a of all as president of the club. well not welcome you thank you
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for nightclub tonight. well thank you and this is going your question it's a statement. yeah what boris has gone . where is what boris has gone. where is anyone with the personality . we anyone with the personality. we have returned to the grime in the eyes of john major blow. blow you know it's getting a bit bonng blow you know it's getting a bit boring come back and let . oh boring come back and let. oh well that kind of you say a pleasure it is to be in this comrades club and i understand this was formed by men who returned to clacton from the great war and this was their therapy . they didn't talk to therapy. they didn't talk to their wives or children about in many the horrors they'd seen and been through . they formed clubs been through. they formed clubs like this, but they came together they talked. they shared few beers. this was their counselling this i've seen the flag . i've seen everything flag. i've seen everything you've got in this club. and it is remarkable. 100 years on these clubs are still existing
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and thriving as one is that you 7 and thriving as one is that you ? quite right . what do you got? ? quite right. what do you got? you know, you starmer in one corner and you got rishi in the other and does feel a little bit like it's the bland the bland i well you know it's i will will i it out i'm working out a plan work it out plan that trust me. all right. okay david, i know. nigel what do you suggest that we, the people can do to ? take we, the people can do to? take back our sovereign power and rid the country they unelectable , the country they unelectable, unaccountable, private individuals, private institution funds, ngos and shop and foreign interference in our internal affairs . david, i want to say affairs. david, i want to say this to you amazing letter in the financial times today signed
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by trade unions , signed by big by trade unions, signed by big business is urging the government not scrap any eu regulations . the whole point of regulations. the whole point of leaving wretched thing was to lift the burden. we heard john earlier talking with passion about the fishing industry. that's five and a half million men and women in britain running their own businesses, acting sole traders. the point of brexit was to help these people , i'm sorry to say that our establishment too much , of it establishment too much, of it are in thrall to business, in thrall to chinese money . they thrall to chinese money. they are not. and too many of our politicians, david, in my view , politicians, david, in my view, are career politicians . they're are career politicians. they're doing it because this is all they've ever understood, all they've ever understood, all they've ever understood, all they've ever wanted be they're not put at the interest of the country people first. i think we need fundamental reform of the electoral system change. the electoral system change. the electoral and there'll be fewer jobs. electoral and there'll be fewer jobs . things in parliament. what jobs. things in parliament. what do you think , david? but i'm
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do you think, david? but i'm lost on this particular list and by no means lindsay . yeah. could by no means lindsay. yeah. could the government force us to rejoin eu against a wish it's they no look they no government conservative or labour will the eu without having another referendum . that would not referendum. that would not happen. referendum. that would not happen . but as you detect in happen. but as you detect in this tonight i mean i'm in a room with an overwhelming number of brexiteers and by the looks of brexiteers and by the looks of most of are pretty passionate about it as well. and yet we're feeling this . you've got bbc feeling this. you've got bbc other channels telling every day that all our economic is down to brexit , no objective debate. brexit, no objective debate. that's what they're drilling us. the worry is not the eu. it ain't going to happen. the worry is, brian, how brexit in name that was the sell that mrs. may put to us back in 2018 and that
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was why i re—entered the arena in 2019 and we won that election. we got rid of mrs. may and we got boris of promises we've left we're not going back beyond the whole thing is a failure . my fear is that letter failure. my fear is that letter to the fta today to keep our rules the same as the rest . rules the same as the rest. brussels is a precursor to a labour government that signs us up to the single market and that in economic we no better off than we were as members of that european union, we've blown the opportunity to be a competitive nafion opportunity to be a competitive nation and be a nation that looks out beyond europe. you know, europe is 50, one 5% of global domestic product . big new global domestic product. big new markets in the world are the far east and south america and elsewhere. our priority is to after our own economy, our own borders, our own people. but to
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thrive as a nation, we have to be a global trading nation , not be a global trading nation, not a european trading nation . so a european trading nation. so i'm fearful i'm fearful, lindsey, we're headed in the wrong direction . but i promise wrong direction. but i promise you, there's enough us to fight them every inch of the way. and now . in a them every inch of the way. and now. in a moment, it is my favourite of the show, especially because the old comrades club has a very good pair on tonight. it'll be . it'll pair on tonight. it'll be. it'll be talking pints in a moment with towie's bobby norris else here in essex . see you back in here in essex. see you back in a couple. i'm michael portillo . me couple. i'm michael portillo. me on gb news on sunday morning for topical debate arts and culture and sometimes even ethical dilemmas. i don't agree with you, michael. michael sundays on gb news the people's channel britain's news channel .
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channel like it is time for talking pints . and it's not that essex pints. and it's not that essex wasn't on the map . but the only wasn't on the map. but the only way is essex on the telly very much has put essex the map over the last decade or more and one of the big stars of only way is essex.is of the big stars of only way is essex. is essex. his own bobby norris, who joins me until good morning this. norris, who joins me until good morning this . ali jeremy now morning this. ali jeremy now before how am doing what in clacton . yeah this is one of the clacton. yeah this is one of the friendly us towns i've ever to in the whole country. i like that people are friendly , even that people are friendly, even the ones that disagree with are
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friendly and well done to the councillor . you know he's a councillor. you know he's a strong remainer but he came in and i think and thank you all of you for treating him reasonably and fairly, you know , the other and fairly, you know, the other side, the hard left scream abuse at us we are better that we believe in democracy and actually point worth making the two of you isn't that what people vote for yeah is that what people sacrifice for so that we could have these debates now bobby before , you were a tv now bobby before, you were a tv star. what the hell were you? well, first job was first job. i lost it today , so i was pretty lost it today, so i was pretty good. lost it today, so i was pretty good . i was not so as low as liz good. i was not so as low as liz truss. yeah right . pretty much truss. yeah right. pretty much on par . so i truss. yeah right. pretty much on par. so i tried to be a way up . i just never got the hang of up. i just never got the hang of it. like people's at like full plates on them. and i was just walking out of one in each end and that was obvious saying going to work and still with place. i dropped one down across my first so i got cold for
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my first day so i got cold for a second shift and then i went to work a supermarket. i loved it was on the on the tales away to people. so i brought right up my straight and kind of like a little bit of a promotion to the lottery in the cigarette chaos winning like i know scotch and mean i loved doing the scratch cards and the lucky ones i dating lots of people all the time oh yeah absolutely love it loved people so when me and then after went into hairdressing and become a teacher so how does reality how does this impinge upon life how bubbly do you finish up on? well, back when i joined the show, it was in its very early days. and i mean, there was no ongoing reality . there was no ongoing reality. how was its first? we get that big brother, but people went into an hour. the nine weeks come and that was job next year paid people so they would never an ongoing reality and i'd literally for a drink in a local
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bar and there was a producer come up to me and was just literally would you be interested in filming this show i was like come into marble arch you may as chose day . it was you may as chose day. it was a place called terry towers and went in the is to make it and within week was just filming this tv and it goes to show bobby if you stay at home nothing good happens you got to get out and meet people and make your own lounge. i've now got a knock front and offer knock at front door and offer you opportunities. you know? i mean, been a big success . mean, it's been a big success. absolutely. yeah. huge it was. it's like the first of its kind in from the of that we've seen others kind of obviously got like made in chelsea yeah yeah yeah. so and reality tv is such a staple of tv now as a camera genre of its own, you know as it led for you into other things yeah so for me i left the show last summer and i host a radio show now i and i love doing my
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presenting and i did ten years on the show, which is a long time on a reality show . on the show, which is a long time on a reality show. but i'm completely grateful for the opportunity . it changed my life. opportunity. it changed my life. an open doors that was never going to be open for me. so yeah, really grateful , it's been yeah, really grateful, it's been brilliant. the sugar hot the nightclub i epicentre tower isn't it. yeah, it was all out queen vic yeah, yeah it really was. so actually it and we used to go there like through the show , i mean and we'd obviously show, i mean and we'd obviously start filming , but it was start filming, but it was a massive part of our lives, the sugar out and was a lovely place and no idea of how we back there. yeah and a terribly sad about making across all of that we went i've said you won't dwell into that right now but it was a horrible bobby you've used your know the famous your using you know the famous that you've got from that and you've sort of become a bit of a political social campaigner . oh,
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political social campaigner. oh, you're famous , you're different you're famous, you're different in one way because you're gay . in one way because you're gay. you've received a lot of online abuse. you've received a lot of online abuse . yeah. welcome to the abuse. yeah. welcome to the club. yeah yeah . luckily i just club. yeah yeah. luckily i just ignore the sound. sighs but now you've received lot of nasty abuse. so yeah , you're not abuse. so yeah, you're not alone. anyone becomes prominent. a well known coach , this a well known coach, this horrible abuse now . there is one horrible abuse now. there is one school of thought that says , you school of thought that says, you know, the old fashioned approach sticks . and stones may break my sticks. and stones may break my bones, words by me. bones, but words by hurt me. there is a perhaps a more updated view , which is this sort updated view, which is this sort of stuff, and particularly it's happened and others happened to teenagers and others is to mental health is leading to mental health declines suicide all the declines, suicide and all the rest it . tell declines, suicide and all the rest it. tell us declines, suicide and all the rest it . tell us what declines, suicide and all the rest it. tell us what you're rest of it. tell us what you're trying to do to rectify what you see as an injustice. i think hit the nail on the head. i'm big enough and know enough. i can deal enough and know enough. i can deal. i think when you're in the pubuc deal. i think when you're in the public and you work in the industry, you know one deserves the level of abuse. and i mean, this is just one guy and i don't like your hey, i won't into that
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bad some of the stuff i've been saying is but we talk a lot horrific like just level disgusting and i'll do a swap hey should see it i mean it will be interesting for me i use my voice in my profile as i say, i can deal with it. i'm in my mid fir is i've been in this industry for 11 years. i have a thick skin i know 12 a&e about . thick skin i know 12 a&e about. i would have struggled and weren't until speaking about it publicly . and i get messages publicly. and i get messages from parents that. kids have their mental health is on the floor . some of them work late. floor. some of them work late. abrahams sadly, so many are taking their own life. they're self—harming so me, if i could save one child from taking private life, why would i not spend years going to power and trying to change that? and you've been doing that. you've going to parliament, you've been lobbying , really been trying lobbying mps, really been trying your homeless . lobbying mps, really been trying your homeless. i admire lobbying mps, really been trying yomfor homeless. i admire lobbying mps, really been trying yomfor doing homeless. i admire lobbying mps, really been trying yomfor doing it.»meless. i admire lobbying mps, really been trying yomfor doing it. butess. i admire lobbying mps, really been trying yomfor doing it. but bobby,admire you for doing it. but bobby, there's a problem here . how the there's a problem here. how the hell do we control the internet without censoring the internet?
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yeah. how do we do that? because i mean, i've seen i've seen twitter not know that elon musk has got it, but i've seen twitter. you shadow banning my content just because it doesn't suit their political how do we i maybe haven't got the answer maybe haven't got the answer maybe no one has how do we strike this balance between free speech, free expression , the speech, free expression, the things that we passionately in. yeah and stopping stuff that is harmful. who decides . oh i can't harmful. who decides. oh i can't we. i know i certainly not sat here and i've never in my five years of campaigning said let's take away free because everyone has opinions i mean, we have opinions. i said it right. but for anything , this one goes up. for anything, this one goes up. he was sitting here. yeah, yeah . had tekapo same for me. anything is great. he's going for an early bath. there's no anything necessarily. go oh, flow in should be like a one line. so again, this isn't like someone's like they slip out your throat like your shows.
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okay is about kind of thing. it's irrelevant when it's things that would be let you on the central line on oxford street what am i to get in defence of the law things take time social media relatively light when i've joined the show years ago i don't think instagram we had twitter but that was still say social is a huge thing. the genie is out of the bottle and there's a hope it can be an amazing tool for people, i mean, especially for lockdowns. if we've been out to connect with people the world, i, i'd never heard same i wish i'd heard it same before. i wish i'd got some shades anyway. that's story, but it's not caught up. we've the way the world is. i mean would you say i mean i look a couple of times look look , i a couple of times look look, i genuinely think we have to do something or try and do something. i am very worried about. something. i am very worried about . the invasion of privacy. about. the invasion of privacy. but social media leads. i'm very worried about the impact young children that damaging their self—confidence and worse and we have to find a way forward i do not know what it is but you
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passionate for this campaign and i think, bobby, you're on the right track. i commend you for your success and the campaigning for our kids to live in a freer , happier space online . bobby , happier space online. bobby norris, thank you for joining , happier space online. bobby norris, thank you forjoining me . ok norris, thank you for joining me. ok of launches almost week. we come into north wales week. you want to join farage at large live 7:00 next thursday. we will be in london. no and yes can spend it. we'll be in london now if you want to come and join us in nonh you want to come and join us in north wales next thursday evening at seven, it's gb news uk. now we're here on sunshine coast, so we had find a sunshiny type song to finish but type song to finish off. but this is magic because the line of this one is the taxman has taken all my money, which seems pretty appropriate for where we are tim barton is going to play for sunny afternoon by the kinks. thank . the taxman is
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kinks. thank. the taxman is taking all my dough . he saved me taking all my dough. he saved me my stately home lazing on sunny day i've been who i can see my estate everything i've got and all got this sunny of the . new all got this sunny of the. new oh hell, man , help me help mess oh hell, man, help me help mess railway . get me to good why is railway. get me to good why is this day and i love to so pleasantly i live this let you lives and on a sunny afternoon .
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lives and on a sunny afternoon. soonin lives and on a sunny afternoon. soon in the summer time in the summer time in a summer time. i'm monday—thursday on gb news it's bev turner from 10 am. we're going to be here for you our gb news family to keep up to date, but also make you smile. the guy went from puberty to adulthood and i can't wait to bring a few of my own opinion. i have no time for cultural totalitarianism. i will engage in passionate , but always polite in passionate, but always polite with your thoughts and opinions at the centre of this whole monday to thursday pencil 12 on tv on radio and online join me dunng tv on radio and online join me during talks. my new show on gb news frank fun fearless and
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hey, welcome along to the mark steyn show. if we have a theme tonight, it's the grand vapour ization of disapproved . i didn't ization of disapproved. i didn't watch a lot of uk news before this channel started , in part this channel started, in part because the other stations never seem to talk about anything that matters. i they're great. if you think the most vital topic in pubuc think the most vital topic in public affairs is whether some here today on tomorrow minister of the crown is being beastly to
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