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tv   Patrick Christys  GB News  December 9, 2022 3:00pm-6:00pm GMT

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and celebrated an american mixed race princess as . the greatest race princess as. the greatest thing to have happened to the royal family. i couldn't 18. but harry and royal family. i couldn't18. but harry and meghan want you to believe their disgraceful behaviour. bullying ten trims lies
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a very good afternoon, everybody. you're me patrick christys on gb news now coming up over the course of the next three big hours, the archbishop of canterbury has launched another stinging attack on the government's migration policies . justin welby i'll give the rwanda will be a failure and should be scrapped. so does the archbishop actually have a point.7 should even be wading in on issues? there'll point? should even be wading in on issues? there'll be strong views on either side of that debate . the fallout continues as debate. the fallout continues as well from the duke and duchess
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of sussex's netflix documentary, which calls their royal titles now to be revoked. in fact, that's even going to be discussed in parliament. even the us don't seem to be on their side anymore . hate to it. side anymore. hate to say it. you we will bring you the results of a gb news poll to find out what you made of the sussexes tell all. and as always in touch tv views gbnews.uk on social media. i will share your thoughts throughout the show. two big ones for you. should the archbishop getting involved in migration . migration. 3:03 on rhiannon jones in the gb newsroom, the chancellor's announced plans to overhaul a good british financial by pledging to review and replace hundreds of pages of eu regulations dubbed the edinburgh reforms. jeremy says brexit has provided a golden opportunity to reshape the rules. more than 30
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regulatory changes have been unveiled, including reversing some measures healthier financially . since 2008. we put financially. since 2008. we put in place process so that issues can be resolved , which we didn't can be resolved, which we didn't have before . but on that basis have before. but on that basis we also want to make sure they can compete with other financial centres , whether it's the united centres, whether it's the united states or , asia and scotland and states or, asia and scotland and is in a fantastic place to do that. and that's why these reforms make a big difference . reforms make a big difference. the chancellor, jeremy hunt, speaking rishi sunak. meanwhile note we are moving to . on note we are moving to. on another story speaking columns for in lincolnshire issues . for in lincolnshire issues. sunak was excited the launch of a new generation fighter jet. britain will work with italy and japan to develop tempest . it's japan to develop tempest. it's designed to replace the typhoon jets and is expected to take to the skies by 2035. the prime says the joint venture aims to create thousands of uk jobs and
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strengthen security ties . more strengthen security ties. more than 150,000 royal mail staff have walked today. and a new wave of strikes in the run up to christmas and an ongoing row over pay and conditions. thousands have gathered at a rally parliament in central london this afternoon. members of the community workers union will strike again on sunday with further action throughout the month, including on eve. royal mail warns the action will affect deliveries across the uk. customers are being advised to post christmas earlier than usual this year. we do our and we like that that's what we do. we are royal mail so . we're here we are royal mail so. we're here to protect our jobs if we don't stand today and fight that destruction of royal mail not only will we not have a job, but the public won't have a service . it's a question of whose side to you on are you on the union side or are you on the disgusting tory side? there's no
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way today and this crowd is telling us that . well, meanwhile telling us that. well, meanwhile thousands of soldiers are preparing cover for other workers, striking in this christmas period. troops are in training at some british ports and airports. border force staff at gatwick, heathrow , manchester at gatwick, heathrow, manchester airports, among others , strike airports, among others, strike for eight days from december the 23rd through to new year's eve. travellers hoping to head abroad over the christmas have been told to think carefully about their plans . five men have been their plans. five men have been jailed for smuggling kurdish migrants into the uk , hidden in migrants into the uk, hidden in the back of lorries . they've the back of lorries. they've been jailed for a total 24 years between them for running a scale. people smuggling ring . scale. people smuggling ring. the national crime agency , the the national crime agency, the gang leader tarik nemec , in gang leader tarik nemec, in charge of transporting from iraq and, iran and has connections. other people smugglers over seas . fuel poverty is warning the
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rising cost of and cold weather will leave millions struggling this winter . will leave millions struggling this winter. national energy action says people are facing a choice of either accruing huge debt or living in unheated homes. it comes as the uk health security agency issues a level three cold weather alert for. england, meaning it's likely to affect people's health significantly . the met office is significantly. the met office is warning of up to four inches of snow in london and the south—east this weekend and that as the average of renting a property is by £117 a month from last year. that's according to zoopla. the property websites , a zoopla. the property websites, a typical month's rent is at £1,100 and roughly 35% of the average income of a single earner london, manchester and glasgow have all seen particularly sharp increases in the last year. particularly sharp increases in the last year . a serving police the last year. a serving police officer has been charged with two counts of rape . pc rupert two counts of rape. pc rupert edwards is alleged to have
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carried out offences in lambeth and surrey this year whilst off duty . he was first arrested back duty. he was first arrested back in september and suspended. he's due to appear at west manchester court today . and the king and court today. and the king and queen consort visited welsh football team wrexham today, along with hollywood co—owners ryan reynolds and rob mcelhenney. the club which was bought by the actors last year , bought by the actors last year, is one of eight locations across the country to gain city status this summer. the royals met and talked to players and other members of staff during tour of the stadium . this is gb news to the stadium. this is gb news to bnng the stadium. this is gb news to bring you more as it happens. now . now. patrick welcome back, everybody. let's get stuck in, shall we say, the
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immigration crisis escalated today after the archbishop of canterbury described the government. everyone policy as cruelty . speaking in the house cruelty. speaking in the house of lords, justin well, we warned against harmful rhetoric . let's against harmful rhetoric. let's just have a little look and listen to what you have to say. the i make is not about rwanda a country i know well and in which there is much that i admire. country i know well and in which there is much that i admire . a there is much that i admire. a compassionate is one that recognises have a share of global responsibility , global responsibility, outsourcing our share creates more opportune taste for people smugglers to operate in and around rwanda . it's not around rwanda. it's not a solution. it's a mistake and it will be a failure when migrants arrive here. our system is grossly wasteful in both human and financial . control has and financial. control has become cruelty. staggering inefficiencies by successive governments trap people in limbo at incredible to the taxpayer in the system for years unable to
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build a life or to contribute to our society . okay well joining our society. okay well joining me now is ben happy former brexit mep and peter edwards as brexit mep and peter edwards is — — ——— — former bel}!!! mep and peter eduard: 9.: . . ,,, . former editor brexit mep and peter edwards as — — ——— — former editor of labour. well, former editor of labour. les, i'm going to ask you both the same question straight the bat. i'll start with you. is it ungodly to want to deport asylum seekers or , have them processed seekers or, have them processed elsewhere ? oh, no, not all. i elsewhere? oh, no, not all. i mean, you know, the channel migrant , mean, you know, the channel migrant, which is it? and we're talking about invented this country illegally . and it country illegally. and it contrary to what. well said they come from a safe . there's no come from a safe. there's no there's no for compassion here. there's a requirement for the enforced british borders , enforced british borders, british laws. they've come from france, for goodness sake. these people are they're not coming to the united because they're fleeing libya or or some other war torn zone. they're safe. and we've got to keep that foremost
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in our minds . and as i've said in our minds. and as i've said before, patrick, you know, we've got to develop border control ahead of a deportation . everyone ahead of a deportation. everyone in this country , including, if in this country, including, if you don't mind me, saying there's gb news discusses , there's gb news discusses, discusses the migrant through the prism of deportation and deportation is what you need when border control has gone wrong. these people mustn't allowed to enter the united kingdom in the first. i want to come. i want come on set up. and so stay where you are perhaps even a little bit of time to. think about your answer to this question. but me, it's libellous , it? uncle liam? and i don't , is it? uncle liam? and i don't think says in the that think it says in the bible that you think it says in the bible that you pay think it says in the bible that you pay people's to come from you pay a people's to come from a country another a safe country to another country. you need to be looked after. does it? well, i think it's not role to specify what's caught i caught in ungodly, but i completely archbishop completely support archbishop justin just on the content. justin not just on the content. well i actually happen think that but more he's that he's right but more he's right to speak out because he did say successive governments is not partisan not political
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just as the archbishop of canterbury criticised the government in the eighties under and various things carried out by tony blair in the 2000 is completely right . i by tony blair in the 2000 is completely right. i think that now. but but i do deal of substance as well. but i was just driving back quite late last night actually. it's about ten or 11 pm. and i to look down it's my temperature gauge and it said minus five to the kind of rural area i driving through and i couldn't help but feel initially very lucky that i was going to get back to a nice warm flat can afford that heating on. thankfully but i can also but think the people out on the streets at the minute and if we have got a hotel rooms available for people who are coming across the channel, should doing to should we not doing more to house people who already house them people who already here and if deporting here as well and if deporting some people means that we can do that there any justification that is there any justification for well mean absolutely for it? well mean absolutely right that you have look after your own before you look after people going to the media and to the country. and we have a massive cost of living crisis.
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remember we're spending 5 million a day on accommodation for these people who've entered our country illegally . and you our country illegally. and you can double that you take can double that when you take account free health care, free dental care, cash in their pockets and all the other benefits they get . so we're benefits they get. so we're talking something like talking about something like billion pounds year for those billion pounds a year for those people who've already entered the country remember was the country remember that was the country remember that was the cut that liz truss the tax cut that liz truss wanted to give working class people and we can't do that. but that's been removed from us because the problems with the because of the problems with the national country. national state of the country. so we are, you know, so here we are, you know, feather nesting these people that have entered into the uk andifs that have entered into the uk and it's just got to stop and, and it's just got to stop and, and i reiterate that coming france, they're not coming from war torn zones . yeah. peter, do war torn zones. yeah. peter, do you think that actually the likes of justin welby and indeed religious represents anywhere could be doing a bit more to maybe put their money where their mouth is if what he's saying is they doesn't believe the deportation right or the deportation is right or outsourcing responsibility outsourcing our responsibility right we've got right if he thinks we've got a broken maybe
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broken system i mean maybe things like the church could do more fund getting more border more to fund getting more border force officers or something along those lines. you law . along those lines. you law. well, it all depends well, i think it all depends also about don't that the also about don't think that the church fund that because church can fund that because one, it's the government's job to borders safe. do to keep the borders safe. i do to keep the borders safe. i do to church every week and actually the church has a lot of assets. doesn't have a assets. but it doesn't have a particularly income. particularly high income. and that's are paid such that's why clergy are paid such modest thing. i want to pick up on one other point very briefly, which is then try to make a nuanced argument that's completely within his rights to do so. any of that nuance has been in the comments by been lost in the comments by suella you're suella braverman when you're talking invasion of talking about an invasion of foreigners british foreigners coming to british shores. there's nuance, shores. there's no nuance, complexity thought in complexity or thought in argument. just i'm afraid. argument. it'sjust i'm afraid. it's whipping up xenophobia . and it's whipping up xenophobia. and it's whipping up xenophobia. and i think there is some political game at play in this very because he's not a matter of pure economics. it's a massive human dignity. and in some case human dignity. and in some case human existence. but i'll let you come back to this of memos
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whipping up xenophobia . i don't whipping up xenophobia. i don't . so i think when you have the number of people coming across the channel the way that coming unchecked aided by the french navy meant by border force ferry to the united kingdom in large numbers growing because numbers and growing because they're encouraged to make that journey result of the journey as a result of the support we give them to make the journey in the first place and then the support give them then the support we give them when we've got when they get. we've got a completely border. we don't have border and reiterate border control. and i reiterate yet again they're coming from france. they're not coming from a torn zone . we have a war torn zone. we have specific programs in the united kingdom which entitle people in war torn zones to make application through legal processes . that's what they processes. that's what they should do. they shouldn't the country illegally . and some country illegally. and some would say that maybe maybe the church varied from its traditional message in recent years more . fundamentalist years more. fundamentalist individuals would probably say that. but just in terms of, you know, he's probably backing up his love and godliness and all of this stuff, isn't it? do you think the reality is that welby
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just wants let everyone out? he doesn't believe in borders no , doesn't believe in borders no, no, not at all. and if there's one thing the church stand for, it's the rule of law, the church, it does not said no, especially not said people should break law. he said he wants a law that set up in a fair and compassionate way and clearly when you're lumping people together under headlines like invasion we're doing that. but make another point briefly, which is the church people to act on the law refer 2000 years the church has spoken up for people on the margins of society. you don't have to be immediate threat of death on the despots to be on the margins of society. i think we agree people on the right from france open for cold, hungry and alone it's entirely right the church times any any argument just pizzas just very quickly on this any truck to say well sorry but they've put themselves in that
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situation and absolutely right people do the same desperation . people do the same desperation. and you just think everyone blanketly talking about the desperate then okay . all right desperate then okay. all right there we go. well look look talk you very much, both of you. it's great to have you both on it. good to talk. i'll show that we're going to be discussing this so nice have this throughout. so nice to have that balance. so we that kind of balance. so we we're to be discussing a we're going to be discussing a job with different job with very different religious leaders as well. so we'll that take on better we'll get that take on it better that brexit mep on pizza that form of brexit mep on pizza rebels editor labour rebels former editor labour list. already off in the list. it has already off in the inbox the way greaves inbox by the way let's greaves are dot uk make sure you are gb news dot uk make sure you do touch on this do get in touch on this particular issue. do you think it's un—christian? do you think it's un—christian? do you think it's ungodly i'm religious it's ungodly or i'm religious immoral? another immoral? it's another way of putting you know putting it. maybe if you know about inclined that we about way inclined that we should our should be outsourcing our responsibilities and lot of responsibilities and a lot of our quoting for people who our quoting down for people who are listening radio. by the way, our quoting down for people who ahavetening radio. by the way, our quoting down for people who a have ten countries by the way, our quoting down for people who ahave ten countries like he way, i have to countries like rwanda should be deporting people should we be deporting people over that? you think we over that? do you think we should deporting anyone at should be deporting anyone at all? i can't feel
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all? i can't help but feel i don't about you. i can't don't know about you. i can't help but feel though the help but feel as though the likes justin welby, as likes of justin welby, as virtuous he well be, virtuous as he may well be, realistically, he not want realistically, he would not want any and probably would realistically, he would not want any to and probably would realistically, he would not want any to allow1d probably would realistically, he would not want any to allow everybody! would realistically, he would not want any to allow everybody to ould realistically, he would not want any to allow everybody to come want to allow everybody to come in, although not the in, although was not the demographics. you demographics. what do you see him that suit his him after that would suit his religious agenda? not quite religious agenda? i'm not quite sure. vaiews@gbnews.uk get those in moving those he's coming in moving on to another favourite here to another fan favourite here i would to again out he has would like to again out he has a good point i have continued to resist . well, i'm going to say resist. well, i'm going to say the urge, the lack urge, but the urge, the lack of urge, but the urge, the lack of urge, but the public pressure, the media pressure to actually watch a single second harry and single second of harry and meghan's netflix bombshell netflix docuseries apart from the ones that i want to say pay to listen to on this show, i'll just say anyway. right. so the first three episodes of harry and meghan's bombshell, netflix series yesterday. oh series dropped yesterday. oh come kate. let's have a come round, kate. let's have a little taster. what's little taster. equally, what's most for the two of us is to make sure that we don't repeat the same mistakes that perhaps my parents made . i think most my parents made. i think most kids , through all the products kids, through all the products
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of divorced parents , have a lot of divorced parents, have a lot in . common yes. well, there we in. common yes. well, there we go.the in. common yes. well, there we go. the reason why we have that people's posting is because we have a people's poll. there's been quantitative , to the been quantitative, to say the least. some backlash against the couple's revelations. in fact , couple's revelations. in fact, it's universal backlash . it's almost universal backlash. you hate say it , it's almost universal backlash. you hate say it, but what do you hate to say it, but what do you think about, harry and meghan, let's have a look now at the gb news people as the latest gb news people as poll. so we asked if you thought harry and meghan should be banned from the king's correlation . one in four of you correlation. one in four of you said yes, they should when asked who you believe the values of britain more than 50% said prince william and catherine over harry and meghan, who were only supported 7% of the country shocking . meanwhile, only 16% shocking. meanwhile, only 16% completely agree with lady susan hussey resigning , while 33%
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hussey resigning, while 33% completely agree that she should have gone . so in light of these have gone. so in light of these results , what else has been results, what else has been coming out now? harry and meghan netflix series who better see this? because we managed to free the cinema yesterday. bless him. gb news is very unwell. reports that cameron walker was shackled to a cinema yesterday too. so had his eyes peeled open like this and he had to watch three episodes back to back to back . episodes back to back to back. harry and meghan's diatribe . harry and meghan's diatribe. what's the latest for last night's reaction? from what i can gather, social media, it seems to be to do with with a curtsy that seems to be a big point here i do it for those of you have not seen the clip . you have not seen the clip. meghan is a fellow so if you think isn't it does a what she's describing meeting the late queen for the first time and she does a very low bow which many believe is mocking as harry parodying the british culture of the royal family and curtsy in particular. now clearly, that
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has not gone down very well on social media with brits alike . social media with brits alike. many people are saying, actually. but if a british person made a parody gesture against another country's , then against another country's, then they be perceived as racist . why they be perceived as racist. why is it no work based? what's interesting , archie and i can't interesting, archie and i can't help but notice wondering even whether or not meghan may be did me variety of different me a variety of different dignitaries from a variety of different countries . some the different countries. some of the times that they have a different way greeting on the maori way of greeting on the maori culture, example, kind culture, for example, they kind of the nose to nose thing. i bet she wouldn't have dared to have criticised that, but there criticised that, but but there we kind of reviews we go. now the kind of reviews that seen far couldn't that we've seen so far couldn't help that even in help but notice that even in america, not overly america, it's not been overly popular. no, i don't popular. i don't no, i don't think it has either, actually. i was quite surprised if you remember back the 2021 interview, was mainly i would interview, it was mainly i would say very on harry and say america very on harry and meghan's side . this time it meghan's side. this time it seems to be much the dominant theme is the netflix documentary wasn't exactly in favour of harry and meghan. let's put it
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put it that way. i don't think perhaps the american went as far as every front i can see in front of rather a lot. and will bnng front of rather a lot. and will bring some of them and will bnng bring some of them and will bring some of them and will bring some of the man on the graph. so hurtful is the express so for royals upset by harry's slurs palace anger help this royal circus. yes the royals ones interesting actually because there was a bit of he said she said yesterday in terms as were the royal family asked to comment on this netflix documentary or one day buckingham and kensington palace. from my understanding said that they were never contacted by netflix for right of reply. netflix denies that and said they were say here we meant believe and that's the meant to believe and that's the problem patrick everything problem patrick with everything that's documentary that's said in this documentary these to every story these two sides to every story with artists to every with other artists to every story absolutely. will story absolutely. whilst i will defend the death that defend to the death that right to and think i would been to say and i think i would been a hypocrite if have a massive hypocrite if i'd have sat and knowing i was probably going to hate the idea or get very about deliberately very angry about deliberately taking time out of my day to it, knowing i would be annoyed, knowing that i would be annoyed,
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i i mean, my on it was, i suppose. i mean, my on it was, well, look, i'm not going to watch in the way i would watch in the same way i would have a film. i knew have watched a film. i knew i wasn't going like this rather enough commentary it's enough commentary going on. it's on of every single on the front of every single papen on the front of every single paper. yesterday we had whole paper. yesterday we had a whole host included host of royal experts included as report said, yeah, as well royal report said, yeah, analysing though analysing it. i feel as though i necessarily needed to. so to get involved with that with our viewing figures such, but viewing figures as such, but a lot people are saying that it lot of people are saying that it is offensive potentially is quite offensive potentially to queen's legacy bearing to the queen's legacy bearing in mind, it, this mind, as i understand it, this was while the was was recorded while the queen was still alive . yes. so the final still alive. yes. so the final interview was conducted august 20, 22. so literally just weeks before the late queen passed away. think one line which away. and i think one line which meghan said, which is sitting comfortably with people that she alluded to, the fact that commonwealth is essentially a kind of well, she wasn't actually i apologise. it was one of the historians quoted in this netflix documentary describe the commonwealth as the colonialism. to point out or when you know ,
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to point out or when you know, empire, as you point out, is what it was called, which of course, is colonial days, which is such an insult. i think many would argue her majesty the would argue to her majesty the queen, loves commonwealth. queen, who loves commonwealth. this family nations which she this family of nations which she built her reign. and built up over her reign. and thank very much, cameron. thank you very much, cameron. come all royal come and it out all royal reporter that think in reporter and that think in a nutshell is one of the main reasons why i didn't want to watch because let's watch it. because let's be honest, if they were going to suckit honest, if they were going to suck it all from their own side anyway, i was going to get very irate not need to irate and i do not need to listen to lot kind of pound listen to a lot of kind of pound shop faux academic, race shop faux academic, leftie race baiters comment on, baiters you want to comment on, you i don't eat. i'm alive you know, i don't eat. i'm alive anywhere you want with me. patrick christys coming up, the chancellor has announced a package reforms cut red package of reforms to cut red tape turbocharge growth , the tape to turbocharge growth, the economy. shake economy. so what does this shake actually country ? actually mean for the country? economics we had economics editor well, we had demystify it all for us before that. we're going to have a very, very quick. that. we're going to have a there is not a level playing field, because of the history of colonialism there was inequality
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across the world is the question and that is why you want to be part this is this is the question i wanted to ask though because people like you on the left keep making these people like me because you make the same recycled points about colonial. what next? what do you walk on from this completely point? you have independence. you seem a little on the rails, rewriting history , colonialism rewriting history, colonialism can and that's you get a chance to right is the final word short time out on the street is a final edition. unfortunately,
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amy is taking that very patronising left wing column, both with with patronising countries, many of the countries that are involved in empire, the commonwealth, a richer than this country. oh, look at places like singapore, canada, all those places , not some third world places, not some third world nafion places, not some third world nation that need help . and by nation that need help. and by the way , i've even been born in the way, i've even been born in a smaller commonwealth nation . a smaller commonwealth nation. there is a huge pride that is attached to being part . i would attached to being part. i would just say i would say just finally having a day. andrew's
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the professor of black studies. he once described whiteness a psychosis, and he was able to tells you all you need to know. absolutely i totally agree with that assessment. for me, i was shocked by the tragic news today from the world of showbiz five time grammy winner and music , time grammy winner and music, ceune time grammy winner and music, celine dion has revealed a heartbreaking diagnosis that has forced her to cancel an upcoming toun forced her to cancel an upcoming tour. it will have devastating impacts really on the rest of her life and career . look
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break okay, people, yesterday had labour's offering and today we've got jeremy hunt. he's announced the edinburgh reforms, announced the edinburgh reforms, a package of more than 30 reforms that will cut red tape and deregulate rules in this city in. a bid to turbo charge growth in the economy. these reforms have been described the biggest shake up since the wave of deregulation under margaret thatcher in the 1980s. so what does this really mean for the country ? well, who else? people country? well, who else? people who else to go see it with me now is cheap and easy and business editor liam halligan was on the money . lane. what was on the money. lane. what does any of this really mean ? does any of this really mean? well, many moons ago, patrick, back in 1986, before you were born there was something called the under nigel lawson the big bang under nigel lawson in margaret thatcher's cabinet. and what he did is he regulated the city london make it made it more like wall street more like america really sparking lots and
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lots of growth a lot of people around the country will think the of london doesn't do anything useful but does do some things quite useful and things that are quite useful and it generate lots of tax and it does generate lots of tax and it does generate lots of tax and it probably the world's it is probably the world's leading financial capital brexit it still is a massive centre of financial insurance expertise. i want jeremy wants to do is he wants to bolster that position the city has lost a little bit of ground in recent years so after the 2008 financial crisis were controls and clampdowns put on banks after stocks and shares and bonds collapsed , the world and bonds collapsed, the world causing a massive worldwide recession and lots of donors like this, lots of city financiers like this. you mentioned that yesterday had their schmooze fest , the canary their schmooze fest, the canary wharf, which of course, is like the east, london's part of the city of london lots of banks and so on there. and so the tories are really now saying to the big high the financiers actually we the party that you want to be back, give us your campaign
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donations and there's a serious ahead. jeremy hunt, generally genuinely believes that freeing up banks allowing them to invest with a little bit less regulation will hopefully, in his view, spark make a bigger economy , more tax, more money economy, more tax, more money for public services. yeah, we want it to sound like a well known, radio presenter who famously you couldn't grow concrete if you to grow the pie . he is trying to grow the pie and there's in his or there's method in what he's doing i would issue a note of caution no after 28 financial crisis i thought the regulations came in weren't nearly strong enough . weren't nearly strong enough. patrick financial crisis happened because you have big investment banks that have control over your money companies money, regular deposits. those regular deposits are backed by taxpayers if something goes wrong. but then the other deposits that the big investment banks money to invest
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capital go from you know highly highly investors. that is not backed by taxpayers . the backed by taxpayers. the problems emerge, in my view when those two pools of capital are mingled and mixed up when banks become too big to fail because it's ordinary people's bank balances are in danger when there's a crash . my concern is there's a crash. my concern is that reforms today ending bankers a cap on bankers bonuses allowing some rich mingling of those ordinary deposits and investment banking deposits could to the same dangers that led ultimately to the 2008 financial crisis. lots of people , politics and finance, will disagree with me, but i just want to put that out there now. obviously now i think part of me lost on something you said that which is about having control of people's me people's money, polls of me really go and really want someone to go and take of what little take control of what little money have because the ones money i have because of the ones i just set fire to it in a metaphorical fail to become available. yeah all right. all right. have it
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right. you have to find it first. but quickly, who do first. but. but quickly, who do you the banks would trust you think the banks would trust more? because rachel rees is actually some clout. it actually got some clout. it comes this. hasn't seen. comes to this. he hasn't seen. jeremy the best way jeremy hunt with the best way in the necessarily the world is not necessarily a track record with the but track record with the city, but jeremy a very successful jeremy hunt is a very successful businessman in his own right. he is sort of financially is a very sort of financially literate and in literate person and a known in boardrooms across britain . boardrooms across britain. rachel reeves, too, is no slouch in regard. she was an in that regard. she was an economist bank england. economist, the bank of england. she have so much hands economist, the bank of england. sh
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she can say that's what happened when liz oh, yes. and look what happened to the financial markets exactly . yes. liam, markets exactly. yes. liam, thank you very much as ever. liam halligan, our economics and business editor. i'm struggling to get the image rachel rees to get the image of rachel rees sniffed a lot of people in sniffed by a lot of people in the boardroom of my head. the boardroom out of my head. but you much on the but thank you very much on the last christys general last patrick christys general gb news. come. thousands news. still to come. thousands of have for of striking workers have for a rally parliament square rally in parliament square today. we'll bring you the latest all that. and you latest from all of that. and you also to hear from you, also want to hear from you, gbviews@gbnews.uk. a we're gbviews@gbnews.uk. a theme we're going to be returning to throughout about throughout the show about whether ungodly whether you think it's ungodly to that such to deport people that such a discussion lords discussion the house of lords earlier. the archbishop up again didn't and as well the harry didn't say and as well the harry and meghan fallout. did you watch didn't bother. watch it? i didn't bother. latest headlines is coming your way right now . it's 332 on way right now. it's 332 on rhiannon jones in sin gb news. the chancellor's announced plans to overhaul the british financial by pledging to review replace hundreds of pages of eu
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regulations. dubbed the edinburgh reforms, jeremy says brexit has provided a golden opportunity to reshape the rules. more than 80 regulatory changes have been unveiled, including reversing some measures introduced following the 2008 financial crash . the the 2008 financial crash. the chancellor says the reforms some of the biggest seen in years . of the biggest seen in years. banks have become much healthier financially since 2008. we put in place a process so that financial issues can be resolved, which we didn't have . resolved, which we didn't have. but on that basis , we also want but on that basis, we also want to make sure they can compete with other financial centres, whether it's the united states or asia . and scotland is in or asia. and scotland is in a fantastic place to do that. and that's why these reforms will make a big difference difference . rishi soon on a quiz that asks conings fear in lincolnshire today for the launch of a new generation fight jet. britain will work with the and japan to develop tempest . it's designed
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develop tempest. it's designed to replace the typhoon jet and is expected take to the skies by 2035. the prime minister says the joint venture aims to create of uk jobs and strengthen security ties . more than 115,000 security ties. more than 115,000 royal mail staff have walked out today. a new wave of strikes in the run up to christmas in an ongoing row over pay and conditions. thousands scavenge at a rally outside in central london afternoon. members of communication workers union will again on sunday with further action planned throughout month, including on christmas . and including on christmas. and charles and the queen consort have visited wrexham. afc today alongside hollywood co—owners ryan reynolds and mcelhenney. the football club, which was bought by the actors last year, is one of eight locations across the to gain city status this summer. the world's met players and other members of staff
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dunng and other members of staff during a tour of the stage tv onune during a tour of the stage tv online and gb press radio. this is gb news news. and here's quick snapshot of today's markets pound will buy you $1.2258 an d ,1.1641. the you $1.2258 and ,1.1641. the price of gold . is you $1.2258 and ,1.1641. the price of gold. i s £1,463.34 per price of gold. is £1,463.34 per ounce and the footsie 107,476 points . ounce and the footsie 107,476 abuse. what about prince edward, who has been merciless , mocked who has been merciless, mocked for his whole adult life? and what about harry? is he the
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victim? victim of racism, too? can you be racist about harry? a privileged white british man
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lies was irrelevant because came back race. so now people are
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very aware of my race because they made it such an issue when i went to the uk but before that most people didn't treat me like a black woman. why should you get special treatment? why should she be protected ? and i should she be protected? and i said, the difference here is the race element in this family. sometimes you know, you're part of the problem rather than well, one of the things i love most about doing these shows is
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the interaction that i get to have with. you wonderful people. gb news gb news dot uk is that email address and lots of you have been getting touch. today is no exception. there's also thoughts archbishop thoughts about the archbishop canterbury's about canterbury's comments about migrants and specifically deporting them. so says the man is , an embarrassment. how he is, an embarrassment. how he ever the job of representing the church of england. i know. he's always sticking his bacon. where? no one said, and leaving his flock neglect . said what his his flock neglect. said what his flock needs is real leadership in the christian faith, not woolly politics. he needs to understand what his job really is. now, that's interesting, amanda. i don't you on this now i am quite keen to hear from you if you are a member of the church england or i suppose prompt you. i don't want to narrow it down to that. i suppose if you religious at all do you think goes against do you think it goes against religious to. have people religious values to. have people being processed in rwanda flights off. that's a be flights taking off. that's a be taking time to process them here. i read with some interest andindeed here. i read with some interest and indeed do read with some interest now about the interest right now about the church of england coming under
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heavy criticism for a naive approach the conversion of approach to the conversion of asylum seekers after once opposed to convert and is keen keen to stress this was one individual's you know you don't want to say about everybody this is the liverpool bomber he was apparently converted to christianity . it's a way of christianity. it's a way of meaning essentially if they come from a country , they will be from a country, they will be discriminated against. if they backif discriminated against. if they back if they were christian, then i suppose it helps ease their asylum into the uk. doesn't say. i suppose there are some moral ethics with that one. but says i'm not wishy but mark says i'm not wishy washy. well, be not. might catch on actually more should be criticising government's criticising our government's failings the mismanagement failings given the mismanagement of duty in charge of the of his own duty in charge of the church, the left church, the usual left hypocrites, criticising others in of sounding nice, in pursuit of sounding nice, whilst providing any whilst not providing any sensible solutions. and my this is there with a laser is zoned in there with a laser like focus on something that you said there are no providing any solutions. help solutions. i couldn't help notice. well. it's all notice. not as well. it's all very good saying. well, very well. good saying. well, i don't should be don't think we should be outsourcing our responsibility to all well and to rwanda. okay but all well and good that be
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good saying that we should be doing more look after people doing more to look after people when we should when they come here or we should be speeding up the processing centre we should be acting in centre or we should be acting in a humane. says fine, but a more humane. says fine, but what is the answer that because hotels up hotels are filling up blackfriars i don't blackfriars centre i don't imagine amongst imagine the appetite amongst the vast british vast majority of the british pubucis vast majority of the british public is to spend more than the vast majority of the british p million to spend more than the vast majority of the british p million quid end more than the vast majority of the british pmillion quid ad more than the vast majority of the british pmillion quid a day.)re than the vast majority of the british pmillion quid a day. wethan the vast majority of the british pmillion quid a day. we are the 7 million quid a day. we are spending already just on accommodation, and accommodation, food and everything with that everything else with that as well. much well. and you probably much closer quid a day closer to 10 million quid a day and rest i would imagine and and the rest i would imagine and i'm to hear from people are i'm keen to hear from people are actually the church actually members of the church of england and whether or not you feel though the you feel as though the archbishop representing you. archbishop is representing you. shane teaches shane says jesus teaches to fish. does teach just to fish. he does not teach just to hand out fish interesting these people need to build up their own nations themselves so that nafions own nations themselves so that nations fish. christianity is not about charity, but resilience. yes christie is helping the short term, but the solution must come from within and. there is a big argument. now i'm going to leave the emails there for a bit and move on. but just on that last one, i think was also. ithink think it was derek also. i think a fantastic point in there somewhere. habit in this
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somewhere. we do a habit in this country to throw our arms country of to throw our arms around everyone from. the legal migration says it to migration says it lead to a brain drain from other nations. and a lot african and you see a lot of african nations, now, nations, for example, now, especially eastern especially middle eastern nations, the conflicts nations, with the conflicts going on over that, if we are attracting brightest and attracting the brightest and best, a great thing, attracting the brightest and best, get a great thing, attracting the brightest and best, get me great thing, attracting the brightest and best, get me wrong.:hing, attracting the brightest and best, get me wrong.:hingdoes it don't get me wrong. but does it mean of the people that are mean some of the people that are over if we've got, let's over there, if we've got, let's say best doctors or say all of the best doctors or all of the best lawyers, whatever, all of the best in particular field, it just particular field, then it just kind a over is kind of leave a over that. is that the right to do? it not that the right to do? is it not the fair thing? maybe to maybe have a tough net migration policy it policy and certainly when it comes asylum thing as comes to the asylum thing as well, are people going to rebuild country we just rebuild a country if? we just keep all over keep welcoming them all over here. don't your views, here. i don't know your views, a range views. doubt range of views. doubt vaiews@gbnews.uk. them vaiews@gbnews.uk. get them coming thousands coming in. come on. thousands of striking workers have striking postal workers have gathered for a rally in london today walking the today after walking out in the first series of strikes in first of a series of strikes in the up to christmas. gb news the run up to christmas. gb news is reporter theo is national reporter theo chikomba is amongst action . chikomba is amongst the action. yes. good stuff. they are good to see the. and he joins us live from parliament square. theo
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what are workers gathering there for today ? just us in for today? just fill us in a better place . yes. well, good better place. yes. well, good afternoon . many of them who are afternoon. many of them who are here this afternoon have gone now there are around 15,000 people here, postal from all corners of the country . i spoke corners of the country. i spoke to some people who came from yorkshire, from portsmouth, and they travelled here to be alongside their colleagues and what they're saying they want better and conditions. now better pay and conditions. now in of royal mail in terms of royal mail themselves, is what they themselves, this is what they had open letter which had seen an open letter which came yesterday is that eight months of talks with the union, a off of up to 9% over 18 a pay off of up to 9% over 18 months. but before the strikes even happened. we're losing months. but before the strikes even happened. we're losin g £1 even happened. we're losing £1 million day now. of course , we million a day now. of course, we are in a cost of crisis are living in a cost of crisis situation . the moment we heard situation. the moment we heard earlier morning from labour's shadow home secretary yvette coopen shadow home secretary yvette cooper, saying nobody wants to see disruptive strikes and calling on ministers to engage with further talk to resolve these disputes and that this we did hear from the prime minister
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he was saying if the union need is continue be unreasonable then it's my duty to action to protect the lives and of the british public . now these british public. now these disruptions will mean people who are expecting gifts, presents and, letters in the next few weeks are going have to face a bit of a delay. this just one strike amongst others we're seeing in other industries across, at the across, the country at the moment. indeed. oh, look, moment. yes indeed. oh, look, thank you very, much , thank you very, very much, though. from square, though. joining us from square, just reacting really to been going on with the latest round of protests, i suppose in the latest round of strikes. and it will be crippling us over the christmas. just like christmas. it just seem like every day when come on every single day when come on this and more protest i can't help though they've all help feel as though they've all gained we know gained traction and we know they've traction they've all gained traction perhaps by fact perhaps emboldened by the fact that rmt popping up that the rmt were popping up initially. i will say initially. but thing i will say is becoming increasingly initially. but thing i will say is ofbecoming increasingly initially. but thing i will say is of thisming increasingly initially. but thing i will say is of this view,increasingly initially. but thing i will say is of this view, which ;ingly initially. but thing i will say is of this view, which isgly initially. but thing i will say is of this view, which is that key of this view, which is that whilst do support whilst i certainly do support all of the struggles that are taking place i do think that taking place and i do think that there a justification, some there is a justification, some form pay should there form of pay should there be a sliding scale terms of the sliding scale in terms of the rises? be interesting, rises? it would be interesting, would whether or would it not, to see whether or
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not workers would be not rail workers would be willing forgo some of their willing to forgo some of their own in order allow nurses to own pay in order allow nurses to receive pay. and the other thing i will say on this is that it is the duty, any government from any particular party to try to make sure that a situation like the one we're in now doesn't happen. and the government happen. and in the government itself, unions are itself, just because unions are becoming militant, becoming increasingly militant, because they're becoming increasingly , the increasingly emboldened, the government be absolved of government cannot be absolved of . blame for this, . all of the blame for this, this a over christmas this is a crisis over christmas and. lots of people's lives in a variety of ways. whether or not it's having a heart it's people having a heart attack their homes, attack in their own homes, there's no ambulance. whether or not it's someone wanting to deliver whether deliver package, whether or not it's can't get a it's someone can't get on a train and and see a loved train and go and see a loved ones this christmas, whatever it is, to fly for is, people try to fly home for christmas. take your christmas. i mean, take your pick, really pick, frankly, they really should having a little look should be having a little look at the government as well, more than little look and saying, than a little look and saying, well, let it get to well, how did you let it get to this, you go. there are two sides to it. vaiews@gbnews.uk it's calls finals it's world cup calls finals day today as croatia prepared to take on brazil this afternoon. the netherlands are competing
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argentina tonight as well. what game that is, by the way, what i get anyway. meanwhile england continue preparations for continue their preparations for tomorrow's clash with france. the . a crunch the good the clash. a crunch the good news is that raheem sterling has made his to qatar after flying home following a break in at his home. not andre has proved rather controversial . but rather controversial. but anyway, let's cross over now to doha , where our reporter paul doha, where our reporter paul hawkins waiting for us. paul, doha, where our reporter paul h'sounds waiting for us. paul, doha, where our reporter paul h'sounds awaiting for us. paul, doha, where our reporter paul h'sounds a little g for us. paul, doha, where our reporter paul h'sounds a little bit)r us. paul, doha, where our reporter paul h'sounds a little bit more paul, it sounds a little bit more about today's games first and foremost. i mean, the big what? to be honest i'd have massively too much about brazil. you've got a load of red hot stats about one me is more about the big one for me is more about the big one for me is more about the big one for me is more about the netherlands and argentina . yeah. now i'm with argentina. yeah. now i'm with you on that. patrick i mean, for me, i know the netherlands and argentina have a of a long in competitive football and. obviously, they met in the 1978 world final. for me of world cup final. but for me of an it was not dennis an age it was not dennis bergkamp goal in france 98 the one we brought it down from a 40 hour pass, three touches inside and then bang they passed the argentineans dutch on to
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argentineans and the dutch on to win. and so there's a great history between the sides. history between the two sides. argentina, one of the favourites to this just behind brazil to win this just behind brazil you say, but netherlands you would say, but netherlands do have enough to cause them problems. argentina, problems. and argentina, of course, were beaten by course, they were beaten by saudi arabia early on. they haven't of haven't faced a side of netherlands calibre. so yes , two netherlands calibre. so yes, two big football heavyweights coming up at 7:00. your and that should be fascinating to watch right now. brazil taking on croatia. yeah it is just coming up to half time and it's currently goalless brazil being matched croatia all the way in that one. and of course, croatia do have it in their armoury to overturn brazil as well they could make brazil as well they could make brazil big favourites in that one. croatia, of course , the one. croatia, of course, the final of the last world cup, very experienced players, players like luka modric, she's 37 years young, paris, she for spurs, very good players , very spurs, very good players, very technical, you know, resilient . technical, you know, resilient. i don't write them off at all. but we're looking forward to the crunch tomorrow night. we know raheem sterling trained today returned to the england sets up
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we know declan is also fit now he did miss a training session earlier in the week because of illness but he's now back so they're all raring to go and we even heard from the earlier today french held a press conference french france manager they sean was there their goalkeeper lloris who also plays for spurs so he was asked about harry kane , about playing harry kane, about playing against them all very complimentary and fast . 18 most complimentary and fast. 18 most fascinating of all, didier deschamps at the english have no weakness is no is so france know they're going to be in for a game tomorrow they're not taking it lightly and england are they're going to have to go up two or three games to take on the champions. and it's the world champions. and it's not kylian mbappe you not just about kylian mbappe you . got great players as . they've got great players as well. antoine griezmann well. olivier antoine griezmann as so if they focus on one as well. so if they focus on one player, they run of player, they run the risk of neglecting the other five or six key players that the french have. oh, absolutely. it was a case again that could be the final really. rg pretty much like any of the ones that like any one of the ones that are taking today, are taking place today, especially netherlands, argentina one, but definitely
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france against , argentina one, but definitely france against, england. now raheem sterling is there was a little bit of controversy and question over exactly why he went home. ben, why is another one? paul i help read one? paul i can't help read things in the press today apparently have some kind of falling out with steve holland. i know. you know i don't know. do you know anything this at all all? anything about this at all all? only the reports that everyone is reading. it was reported by the mail. so it must be true, you know, but really , if they you know, but really, if they were saying that if i a falling out with steve holland, the assistant there also in the same report suggested ben moore hadnt report suggested ben moore hadn't gelled with the other players, which is quite an accusation to make given that the togetherness the england squadis the togetherness the england squad is something that gareth southgate has been lauded for england squads in the past very along club lines didn't really get along with each other. they were factions this gareth southgate's biggest strength been bringing the england team together. so when you say that one player hasn't really gelled with the other players , it's with the other players, it's quite a big accusations about, especially given it's just especially given it's not just
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because arsenal because he plays for arsenal bukayo that he's he's bukayo saka is that he's he's fitted the england fitted into the england fold he's arsenal so big he's an arsenal player so big accusations make they all accusations to make they all just that we not know just report that we do not know if there are any substance to them. england are them. the england team are keeping quite lipped about keeping quite tight lipped about it. know in round about it. we do know in round about ten and about 40 minutes time there'll be an england press with southgate and harry with gareth southgate and harry kane and no doubt some of the will be wanting to ask him some questions about that as well as the crunch tomorrow . yes, look. the crunch tomorrow. yes, look. yes yes, indeed. and as we as we look ahead to the crunch, paul, i've to ask you, what do you think the result is going to . think the result is going to. oh, god , do i go in my head or oh, god, do i go in my head or do i go my heart because my head says the french are going win my heart says i to win three, one, three, three, two. something like neither side's defence is completely robust. so i there'll be a lot of goals in it. and did you just say eight nil by the
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way. no no, no, not sold. not me. i've just put a best out of just. no no, no. so that's what. yeah issue the issue that i see that i have paul is that my head and i both mental. so you know, i just know there's no there's no right one for me to go with that but as i'm we are both deep down of course the english managed to beat the french, but thank you very paul, as thank you very much, paul, as even thank you very much, paul, as ever, speaking to you ever, i'll be speaking to you very shortly. i would imagine paul hogan's man, paul hogan's there, our man, somewhere near souk this time somewhere near a souk this time in do reckon? in qatar. what do you reckon? let's will you be let's just how will you be watching well? to know watching it as well? i'm to know how going to be watching how you're going to be watching this. i'm going to be up in scotland, which they all agree is an interesting is going to be an interesting venue watch england versus venue to watch england versus france that with france game, but that we, with the health secretary we're the uk's health secretary we're moving guys health moving on now you guys health security level security agency issuing a level three cold weather alerts in england and the office england and the met office warning across warning of snow and ice across the uk this week is this the bit in the where i say is december this happens anyway many on the lowest may struggle to lowest incomes may struggle to afford cost of heating their afford the cost of heating their homes with nowhere else to turn
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warm. banks be their only option on north—west england. reporter sophie reaper has more on warm banks as the frost creeps in and temperatures begin to plummet . temperatures begin to plummet. the choice between heating and eating has never been more perilous . is eating has never been more perilous. is hard to decide . do perilous. is hard to decide. do a term heating on or do i buy food , you know and obvious i've food, you know and obvious i've got a child home. i'm enjoying it. but you still need feeding and is a decision. everybody's it's hard as the energy crisis continues, many would simply be forced to face the freezing temperatures . christmas that is temperatures. christmas that is if it weren't for warm banks like the one gillian volunteers out i come here because obviously with the cost of living everything else
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everybody's struggling no cell included so i come here it's a warm pull back and get warm. get caught on, get your heart on enough for a warm bank because it's well worth it according to the met office temperatures well below freezing continue until at least week if that is the case, then warm banks . this one in then warm banks. this one in bolton are going to be absolutely vital for so many people. it's good to have a break. you know what you have. we recognise a lot of are struggling with the cost of living crisis the struggling to feed their families to heat their homes and we're really passionate about creating warm safe spaces and it's just really opening our doors saying without judgement , opening our doors saying without judgement, come and get warm. there's a safe space for you to come and meet other people readable , have a game of pool, readable, have a game of pool, get to eat and hopefully reduce the pressure on putting the
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heating on at your house. there are now over two and a half thousand warm up and down the uk and their doors always to everyone there is no judgement. everybody is struggling . the everybody is struggling. the cost of living at the moment . cost of living at the moment. and if you are struggling and seek help, go somewhere and you will be welcomed . you go, i'm will be welcomed. you go, i'm sure of it , with this cold will be welcomed. you go, i'm sure of it, with this cold snap set to continue , warm banks can set to continue, warm banks can act as a place of refuge for anyone who may be struggling in these difficult times . they these difficult times. they offer people hope. a light in the darkness . sophie reaper gb the darkness. sophie reaper gb news as well . wow. there we go. news as well. wow. there we go. right. okay so coming up, we meet patrick christys here on gb news. we will discuss what our reckon the main topic of the day, the archbishop of most recent condemnation of the rwanda policy. i want know is justin right and is it his justin welby right and is it his place to speak on these issues essentially in a roundabout he's saying it's inhumane and ungodly
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saving it's inhumane and ungodly process asylum seekers to process asylum seekers offshore . but what's offshore. but what's his solution, you think his views solution, do you think his views represent you think? represent what you think? frankly not they do. frankly i'm not sure they do. but before the we're going to take very break. hello take a very, very break. hello again. it's aidan mcgivern here from the met office, chris winter sunshine. for many of us today , but it is feeling cold today, but it is feeling cold out there and showers are continuing to feed some locations circulating around an area of low pressure in the nonh area of low pressure in the north sea . those showers will north sea. those showers will provide additional snowfall to northern scotland and sleet mixture elsewhere into western parts of the uk. mixture elsewhere into western parts of the uk . so as the end parts of the uk. so as the end of the day, on friday further showers are building up the snow . northern scotland, northern ireland , south—west scotland. ireland, south—west scotland. nonh ireland, south—west scotland. north west wales as well as north—west england and increasingly the south west will see those showers, rain and sleet, lower levels and around the coasts and some snow inland and over the hills as widespread freezing nice. however, temperatures in towns and cities —3 to —5 celsius in some
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sheltered spots even lower than that. sheltered spots even lower than that . and we've got those icy that. and we've got those icy patches thing because of the cold conditions and the showery nature of weather in the west and, the north, freezing fog patches , in addition to all of patches, in addition to all of that across , some central and that across, some central and southern areas, they'll persist into the afternoon in one or two spots. it stay cold where that happens, but to three celsius typically and over any upland areas , temperatures staying areas, temperatures staying below freezing saturday night then we'll see a widespread frost return and, fog patches which will be dense leading to more visibilities in places. there'll also be further showers the north of scotland in western parts. but also increasingly south—east scotland could see some snow inland. edinburgh see a covering by dawn on sunday. likewise for dundee and for perth . but the most significant perth. but the most significant snow happening over the hills of scotland and some hillier parts wales. so for example, snowdonia our own coasts and at low levels it's ice which will be the main
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hazard on sunday morning. and some of those freezing patches, there's the threat of some more significant snow into the southeast on sunday and into monday. but it stays cold everywhere . monday. but it stays cold strength tonight. amy nicole, sean bailey , tommy examens do sean bailey, tommy examens do stand by, because coming up as leslie knope secretary michael gove , the controversial decision gove, the controversial decision is opening the uk's first deep coal mine in 30 is worth it to make the country self—sufficient coal mine in 30 is worth it to privileged white british man. so let's just clarify this. he's getting all of this invective and these attacks, and it's not
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racism , but meghan markle is and racism, but meghan markle is and it is. perhaps harry is a victim of racism towards red—headed people. yeah, maybe. maybe that's what it is. not for me, of course. some of my favourite people are redheads . what people are redheads. what a dreamboat. don't knock a bit of ginger till you've tried it. ginger is a side i think the pubuc ginger is a side i think the public will see red when
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welcome back, everybody. patrick christys here on gb news. i'm coming up over next 2 hours, the archbishop canterbury, he's waded in again. he's condemned the government's migration policies. what do you make of all of this just in. well, but a speech in the house of laws today to argue that plan amounts today to argue that plan amounts to cruelty . so do you think the to cruelty. so do you think the archbishop is right? should he butt of migration issues? do butt out of migration issues? do you think he actually represents his flock by this stuff, the
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fallout from the duke and duchess of sussex netflix documentary which made host of incendiary claims , including incendiary claims, including about racism in the royal and country more broadly which is a little bit rough if you ask me. we'll be diving those this hour . always make sure you get in touch. . always make sure you get in touch . there's two top topics touch. there's two top topics for us today that we're asking you about, whether or not you think it is indeed cruel or , think it is indeed cruel or, ungodly to deport people who waiting for asylum or specifically as well, who failed their asylum claim. and also, what do you make of this, harry meg documentary? i haven't watched it. i know. keep on about i want make about that. but i want to make it clear haven't seen a single it clear i haven't seen a single second of it. i don't to apart from the clips, i've got to show it here. i have gathered a lot of people thought it was relatively good. relatively boring good. hopefully goes soon. hopefully it all goes away soon. get social as well get it on social media as well at news i will be sharing at gb news i will be sharing your throughout the your thoughts throughout the show hold back now show please don't hold back now those lots . good
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those like i said lots. good afternoon it's 4:01. i'm tatiana sanchez in the gb newsroom the chancellor has announced to overhaul the british financial sector by pledging to review and replace hundreds of pages of eu regulations dubbed the edinburgh reforms. jeremy hunt says brexit has provided golden opportunity to reshape the rules. more than 30 regulatory changes have been unveiled, including some measures introduced following the 2008 financial crash . the the 2008 financial crash. the chancellor says the reforms are of the biggest seen in a number of the biggest seen in a number of years banks have become much healthier . since 2008. we put in healthier. since 2008. we put in place a process so that financial can be resolved which we have before but on that basis we have before but on that basis we also want to make sure that they can compete with other financial centres , whether it's financial centres, whether it's the united states or asia and scotland is in a fantastic place
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to do that. and that's why these reforms will make a big difference . the prime minister difference. the prime minister has been at the launch of a new generation jet in lincolnshire , generation jet in lincolnshire, britain will work with italy , britain will work with italy, japan to develop tempest designs to replace the typhoon and expected to take to the skies by 2035. sunak's says the joint venture aims to create thousands of uk and strengthen security ties . thousands of royal mail ties. thousands of royal mail staff have walked off job in a new wave of strikes . more than new wave of strikes. more than 115,000 workers rallied outside parliament in central london this afternoon demanding better pay this afternoon demanding better pay and conditions. members of communication workers union will strike again on sunday with further action planned throughout month, including christmas eve . royal mail warns christmas eve. royal mail warns the action will affect deliveries right across the uk and customers are being advised to post christmas mail earlier than this year. do our bit and
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we like that. that's what do. we are royal mail so we're here to protect our jobs. if we don't stand today and fight that destruction of royal mail , not destruction of royal mail, not only will we not have a job, but the public won't have a service . it's a question of whose side are you on? are you on the union side? are you on the discussed tory side? there's no way today and this crowd is telling us that. and this crowd is telling us that . meanwhile, thousands of that. meanwhile, thousands of soldiers are preparing to cover for other workers striking this christmas . troops are already in christmas. troops are already in training at some british ports and airports . border force staff and airports. border force staff at gatwick , heathrow and at gatwick, heathrow and manchester airports , among manchester airports, among others, will strike for eight days from december the 23rd through to new year's eve. hoping to head abroad over the penod hoping to head abroad over the period have been told to think about their plans. period have been told to think about their plans . five men have about their plans. five men have been jailed for smuggling kurdish migrants into the uk , kurdish migrants into the uk, hidden in the back of lorries.
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they've sentenced to a total of almost 24 years between them for running a scale. people smuggling ring. running a scale. people smuggling ring . the national smuggling ring. the national crime agency says , the gang crime agency says, the gang leader, tareq nemec, was in of transporting migrants from iraq and iran and has connections with other people smuggling smugglers outside of the uk a fuel poverty charity is warning the rising of living and cold weather will leave millions struggling this winter. national energy action says people are facing a choice of either living in unheated homes or racking up debt. it comes as the uk health security has issued a cold weather alert for england with temperatures to drop to as low as minus . the temperatures to drop to as low as minus. the met office is warning up to four inches of snow could fall in london and the south east this weekend . a the south east this weekend. a serving met police officer has been charged with two counts of rape. pc rupert edwards is alleged to have carried the offences in lambeth and surrey earlier this year whilst off
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duty . he was first arrested in duty. he was first arrested in september and at the king and queen consort of mount hollywood , ryan reynolds and rob mcelhenney today on a visit to a welsh football club. wrexham afc which was bought by the actors last year, is one of eight locations across the uk to gain city status. this summer. the royals met and talked with players and other members staff dunng players and other members staff during a tour of stadium . this during a tour of stadium. this gb news. we'll bring you more news as it happens. now it's back to patrick . back to patrick. patrick welcome back, everybody. patrick christys it is 4:06 now in the ongoing immigration crisis escalated yet today after the archbishop of canterbury , the archbishop of canterbury, the government's asylum policy as
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cruelty. speaking the house of lords, archbishop justin welby piped up against the harmful rhetoric of migrants . here's rhetoric of migrants. here's some of what he had to say. rhetoric of migrants. here's some of what he had to say . a some of what he had to say. a compassionate system is one that sees the faces , those in need, sees the faces, those in need, and listens to their voices. a compassionate system does not mean open borders, but a disposition born of generosity and a readiness to welcome those whose need genuine and where we are able to meet that need . when are able to meet that need. when we fail to challenge the harmful rhetoric that refugees are the cause of , this country's ills , cause of, this country's ills, then they should that they should be treated as problems, not people . invaders to tackled not people. invaders to tackled and deterred we deny the essential value and dignity of fellow human beings. essential value and dignity of fellow human beings . well, there fellow human beings. well, there we go . can imagine. now there's we go. can imagine. now there's lots of you shouting at your tv or radio with a variety of different views on that. the
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debate comes as crisis shows absolutely no chance of abating and interesting may know solutions that from himself labour have even come to the table with a policy proposal deal with the backlog of asylum claims. shadow home secretary yvette cooper. she would prioritise asylum application from safe countries such albania, in order to reduce the backlog. really interesting comment actually because what she's meaning there is if they're safe countries and they shouldn't be. so realistically that be as that could be read as prioritising deporting issues. but of course, you wouldn't ever say that appeal to say that because that appeal to that well, keir that base. also well, keir starmer didn't out against him perhaps came out positively when it came to the idea of putting electronic tags on people who were failed asylum seekers. that is something that received a lot of criticism on twitter , mainly of criticism on twitter, mainly until he told people that the labour leader said he supports it and all of a sudden love it and then all of a sudden love the joining me now is the idea. joining me now is beunda the idea. joining me now is belinda lucy, former brexit belinda de lucy, former brexit party mep and peter tatchell, human rights campaigner and activist. both of you, thank you very have you both very much great to have you both
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on the show. belinda will start with you. some people would criticise welby views that not because of the scandal the church found itself in for being arguably too kind to rejected asylum seekers in the past. some conversion courses apparently being offered, one of which was used by the bloke who blew himself outside a maternity hospital in liverpool. yes but look, the uk is an incredibly compassionate and generous and charitable country already and i think the vast majority of brits are very happy to offer sanctuary to those most in need . but what justin was implying today is that we need to assume every single person who stepped foot on our shore is worthy of compassion . and i see absolute compassion. and i see absolute nothing christian about offering our taxpayers money to economic migrants , chancing the system as migrants, chancing the system as to focusing it on genuine refugees who can't escape camps,
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who don't the money to travel and the mobile , i think i think and the mobile, i think i think christian about overwhelming poor communities with with huge numbers of young men with with no jobs jobs and i see nothing christian about eroding national democracy in, eroding sovereignty and eroding trust in an asylum process. we have to focus the money we have on genuine asylum seekers, not everyone who claims their asylum seekers because a lot of people who come here have bathed in tension . yeah. okay. fair to tension. yeah. okay. fair to peter i'll throw up to you, justin, where we pick and choose is morals he was pretty quiet over several sexual abuse scandals also that maybe we scandals and also that maybe we should should forgive prince should we should forgive prince andrew . well first let me start andrew. well first let me start by saying that over the last 40 years, i've helped nearly thousand people get asylum in this country . every thousand people get asylum in this country. every single one of them was genuine . every of them was genuine. every single one of them has made a
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contribution to our society and economy doctors, nurses , economy doctors, nurses, plumbers, teachers care workers. this guy from uganda not long ago , he fled attempts to kill ago, he fled attempts to kill him . uganda because he was gay him. uganda because he was gay he came here. he got asylum . he he came here. he got asylum. he now works in the caste system . now works in the caste system. that's just a piece of. sorry, just just to say. yeah, please please be the ones that was that just on that to not not to diminish the fabulous work that you've done there. but i can't help wonder whether or not help but wonder whether or not you're some people's you're proving some people's point people point because those people people asylum and we people who need asylum and we are to give them are clearly willing to give them asylum. but a lot of people over the channel now wants to the channel now who wants to work albanian work the underground albanian trade, really have be trade, do we really have to be offering asylum? it is offering them asylum? is it is it christian morality it against christian morality to process in rwanda, peter? because that's that's who because that's that's really who most thinking of . most people are thinking of. well, . right. that we well, of course. right. that we should not give asylum bogus people. but i'm just telling you that out of all people that i have helped over the years every single one, perhaps about one person, has been genuine and has
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made a contribution to this economy. what i think is madness about the system is we don't refugees work while their asylum case is being processed. so for one year, two years, five years, they depend on state benefits when those people actually want to work , it could work, they to work, it could work, they could contribute the economy. they'd be paying tax they'd be paying they'd be paying tax they'd be paying national insurance . paying national insurance. that's the ban on asylum . that's the ban on asylum. working is economic madness. it's damaging our economy . these it's damaging our economy. these are people we need . you know, we are people we need. you know, we have a shortage of skills of thousands of doctors and nurses from well, i get what you mean, but you told me, look, i've i get what you mean. and there is absolutely a case for to say that. what's the point of having some of these people hanging around a hotel somewhere a around a hotel somewhere in a field when we have field in cumbria when we have got different jobs got various different jobs that need doing this country. need doing in this country. i take on the chin, but take that point on the chin, but belinda, i'll throw it back to you. he is the archbishop of the church of england and. yeah.
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okay. all right. maybe i am being a bit too black and white about this, there are a lot about this, but there are a lot of people, maybe even of english people, maybe even some of his flock, who are homeless at moment. how do you think they might feel to hear him? would appear maybe him? it would appear maybe people are coming other people who are coming from other countries different countries and of different faiths, yeah, faiths, possibly yeah, unfortunately think this is quite a common thread , sort of quite a common thread, sort of left leaning liberals is they prioritise the global above the national and can i just take point. you know, he was talking about doctors and nurses coming over here. have you ever thought about the poorer countries stripped of their medical staff , places like romania , who lost , places like romania, who lost a third of its costs, vital staff between 2011 and 2013, whose hospital hospitals had to close. and it seems like the sort of left wing middle class here don't care that that stripping whole of their medical staff and their medical researchers as long as they their feet washed in their hospitals . i think with paul you
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hospitals. i think with paul you are not going lift the global poll by allowing them all into this country. i imagine if spain had 44,000 brits turn up a bit, turn at its shores with no documents, do testing housing, demanding food at the expense of the spanish taxpayer, it would be absolute atrocious and it would never be allowed. so i don't know why england is always having to submit to this. we need to take care our own first and focus on genuine asylum. okay, we give the money. all right, peter , you know , maybe, right, peter, you know, maybe, you know, i'm not sure, but are you know, i'm not sure, but are you a little bit iffy about the head of the church been going into bat for this? because my interpretation of it is that they be trying to paint they would be trying to paint they would be trying to paint the current asylum immigration policy whatever as ungodly and unholy i understand that the church of england now has different rules and regulate comes the same sex marriage etc. that was quite a long battle. it remains a and if you take
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christianity its most fundamental level, it wouldn't have anything really to do with the lgbt groups community. how do you feel someone who is a man of the cloth going into bat? asylum seekers? is it a mixed bag for you ? maybe it is a mixed bag for you? maybe it is a mixed bag, but i think he's right on this issue and i'm prepared to judge justin welby on this issue. and i think he's shown both compassion and sense. and in response , belinda, it is in in response, belinda, it is in our of our people that have the workers we need the staff, the nhs and teach in our schools to pick the crops we need for our food. and these are people, by the way, in my case , they're all the way, in my case, they're all people who've fled persecution because of their , their because of their, their political beliefs , their political beliefs, their religion, ethnicity . these are religion, ethnicity. these are people who have to flee . and people who have to flee. and since they've been here, they've a huge positive contribution to our economy. that's the way we should look it. we should also say that if britain did more to resolve the reasons why people flee , then we would have less
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flee, then we would have less refugees coming here. so for example, over syria, i've helped many syrian refugees who suffered incredible tortures and abuses by. the assad regime, if we head earlier through the united nations and done something yeah, i and i think , i something yeah, i and i think, i think by golly, yeah . look, think by golly, yeah. look, look, i've got all of that. i do.cant look, i've got all of that. i do. can't help but feel like yes again, this is another impact of tony blair kind of flushable in our society . well, if we hadn't our society. well, if we hadn't done what we did in iraq think, we probably would gone in we probably would have gone in earlier that. but anyway there we go. i just want to keep you both the line because i want both on the line because i want you this. i believe you best about this. i believe have of york who have the archbishop of york who has chimed can can has also chimed in. can we can we play you know? the hard we play it? you know? the hard truth is our asylum system simply treat everyone same. it doesn't give people the dignity , safety and agency that their humanity deserve . lord lillie, humanity deserve. lord lillie, everyone is our neighbour. of course we can't. we can't take
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everybody , but we must therefore everybody, but we must therefore even more so have a fair system for every well. belinda is he not right? we don't treat everyone the same. i mean, there are thousands of homeless veterans, while some people are enforced, our asylum seeker hotels that we don't treat , we hotels that we don't treat, we were the same. we're certainly not treating our homeless people the same as we are newcomers. all those on housing waiting lists, the same as newcomers. look, there's a hunger over. 100 million displaced people in the world at the moment, hundreds of millions of people living under the poverty line around the world at the moment . we simply world at the moment. we simply cannot them all. cannot accept them all. therefore, we have to prioritise . the truth is, the most persecuted in the most at risk from death are those stuck in camps , not the albanian men that camps, not the albanian men that are coming over here. we have serious issues , albanian crime. serious issues, albanian crime. and i'm not trying to demonise albanians. we've got wonderful albanians. we've got wonderful albanians in our country without gaining heritage like dua lipa
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and rita ora. you know both come from albanian backgrounds . and rita ora. you know both come from albanian backgrounds. but they came, their families came here legally. the question is why albanian men throwing their documents in the sea, spending thousands to get here illegally instead of getting on a plane? it smacks of bad intentions. they should not be the same genuine asylum seekers. there are serious accusations levelled at the church about the fact that one, several people have been turned down from asylum. they would try to use the church , convert to christianity as a way of saying they would then be perfect, use it in their own country if said they if they were sent also seriously about people pretending to be gay peter in order to do just the same thing again , i'll just ask same thing again, i'll just ask you how that makes you feel because. i wonder whether or not sometimes you feel as though your good nature and some, frankly, of your lifting is really all being abused by some of these people. and whether or not that makes you feel a bit scruffy. well, assure you scruffy. well, i can assure you that asylum system is very
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that the asylum system is very rigorous . no one can simply turn rigorous. no one can simply turn up and say, i'm gay, i'm christian, and get asylum. they have prove it. that's have to prove it. that's approval long backstory. and if they prove it, they get refused . and that is quite right. we do not have any obligation to give haven to bogus refugees. i would say that the way need to act now is to put money in to employ more home office staff, to clear the backlog and to get rid of the backlog and to get rid of the bogus ones , but to provide the bogus ones, but to provide a safe haven for those are genuine because those genuine people will contribute to our economy . will contribute to our economy. they'll pay tax and national insurance . they will be an act insurance. they will be an act just. just just quickly. i was going to give the final word over to you. sorry, belinda, but i think it's a a point of i think it's a point a point of interest here for a lot of people because. well, when it comes to the proving of one's how sexuality for example. how we sexuality for example. i'm to produce backlog i'm trying to produce a backlog of evidence as a result, if you come from a country where you would be called or executed or whatever, if you gay , these whatever, if you are gay, these people produce any . and people can't produce any. and yet they are still allowed to
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stay. does that situation work in how you prove in reality, peter? how you prove that you're gay without just say, even in many repressed countries there are clandestine lgbt groups, which some of those have been involved in for a long time. but in other cases, you're right, it's very difficult for them to produce such evidence. but they can do is produce but what they can do is produce love letters , emails, whatsapp love letters, emails, whatsapp messages between themselves and potential partners. then course, when they hear that to prove that they're engaged and involved with the lgbt community and that can't just be a one off and that can't just be a one off a tendance in an event it has to be a long history. plus, of course they have to get information and recommendations from home office recommended experts who can attest the persecution in their home country that they have to have a lot of documentation a lot of evidence . because both of you, evidence. because both of you, thank you very much. i enjoyed that chat rather a lot of see for brexit party mep, belinda de
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lacy mp as well, human rights campaigner and activist . right. campaigner and activist. right. that issue we're going to that is the issue we're going to be going in with. well throughout really on throughout the show really on and which is whether or not you think is ungodly cruel be think is ungodly or cruel be deporting people who are failing asylum processing or to be processed offshore. but as people will be able to see on the bottom of that, that meghan and harry. yes, that's the other big on the course of today's show you are with me. portuguese on on coming up it is on gb news on coming up it is that meghan and harry topic. they've made renewed claims that meghan and harry topic. they'vracism. renewed claims that meghan and harry topic. they'v racism. thezwed claims that meghan and harry topic. they'v racism. the new claims that meghan and harry topic. they'v racism. the new netflix about racism. the new netflix documentary anyone documentary and anyone else clocking bulletins clocking out bulletins earlier about that apparently about the fact that apparently king went to wrexham king and camilla went to wrexham football club to meet the celebrity owners of the. i believe that wrexham as a documentary on netflix. i can't help but feel though that's maybe a little bit of a side eye that we'll be talking about all of this very, very shortly. don't go anywhere . of this very, very shortly.
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this. they are destroying us. so while they are desperate to present themselves as victims of the media, i wanted to bring some facts to this debate. the paper drops intrusion. they speak of took place. all of it outside of the uk in the us and canada . like this moment in new canada. like this moment in new york we have that pap on the scooter . his york we have that pap on the scooter. his men are with her same guy. same guy. oh, my god . same guy. same guy. oh, my god. watched them go into this park andifs watched them go into this park and it's going to be with us. this year. he was just ahead. yeah, those are the guys in the
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basement of the building, too, as we were doing that walk, we were recording to just see where this part of the worst scenarios of see our first person scenario were going one garage to another like it is we see stuff that happenedin like it is we see stuff that happened in america, not the uk where they have lots of protection because of deals done between the media and the royal family. of course , the woke family. of course, the woke american media has lapped all of this up loving presenting our royal family and country as institute. racially racist make the country self—sufficient . my superstore panel returned
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to debate that and we'll learn what more of tomorrow's newspaper is make of the hurricane. harry and meghan talking. the media vows to attend . but first, as prince attend. but first, as prince harriet, he sacrificed every thing to join meghan in her world, have the thing to join meghan in her public will see red when they watch this rubbish. this couple have burned their bridges and have burned their bridges and have reached the point of no return. so my review for this film is a simple one. i'm giving it one star. even though meghan should get an oscar for her performance, i almost believed she was real.
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writes, i have a minor that i'm going to make now and it is in relation to fact that apparently a documentary wrexham is not on netflix is on disney. i was one of my producers who is remarkably , as pointed out, you remarkably, as pointed out, you may be asking what , i said this may be asking what, i said this one is in relation to something thatis one is in relation to something that is on netflix, not meghan and harry series has now been on netflix more than hours. netflix for more than 4 hours. there's no of revelations, apparently, with the couple discussing childhood , discussing harry's childhood, their the media their frustration with the media and course couldn't get away and course we couldn't get away with could meghan's race people need to understand is as far as a lot of the family were concerned everything that she was being put through they've been through as well. so it been put through as well. so it was almost like safe passage. and some of the members of families like right. but my wife had through that . so why had to go through that. so why should girlfriend treated should your girlfriend treated any differently? why should you
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get special why get special treatment? why should be ? and i said, the should she be? and i said, the difference here is , the race difference here is, the race element , i difference here is, the race element, i see difference here is, the race element , i see yet difference here is, the race element, i see yet again is this not a slightly confusing thing from prince harry, where he appears to be making one point and then manages to confuse himself halfway through and make a completely different is a completely different point is they go through and they all to go through it and then clips of fergie then he played clips of fergie and both quite noticeably and diana both quite noticeably white went through white and they all went through the thing. how it the race the same thing. how it the race thing that is the problem for meghan anyway . joining me now to meghan anyway. joining me now to discuss these claims is, afzal pervez who is commonwealth youth leader. there are a things to say about the commonwealth as well. apparently i'm so great to have the show. do you have you on the show. do you think that prince harry is right to? point out, along with meghan, fact race may meghan, the fact that race may played her treatment , played a part in her treatment, her shocking, sickening, disgusting by the disgusting treatment by the press. just worth noting a little that previously little said that previously meghan along with many meghan markle along with many celebrities , will have enjoyed celebrities, will have enjoyed press attention. let's put that way. always patrick, you said it
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yourself and. i totally agree. he contradicts himself. he said that, you know, they all went through as a writer on stage, all the wives of the princes and the duchesses that we. but then he says it's because of her race and another visibly ethnic person said, i think to myself , person said, i think to myself, well, what is element of race where you this from? and i'll be honest, i have to say this it makes me embarrassed that all the work do all the work i do about race in this country is completely overshadowed by someone just making this claim that some race is the real irony here. a tragic irony that what harry and meghan are doing by banging on about race much may actually be the impact that genuine racism has on people it's taking away from all the hard efforts of real activist race equality activists is taking away from their efforts.
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i mean , you know, the work i do i mean, you know, the work i do with the cornwall about racial equality, you know, you get people they saying all these things. no, i things. you think, no, i mean, i actually, you know i stand by the point. but britain not an institutionally or systematic racist not and racist country and it's not and we celebrate what we have we should celebrate what we have in that is racial in this country that is racial equality for equality opportunities for everyone of every colour of everyone of every colour of every . can i ask you a personal every. can i ask you a personal question have you encountered racism in your life ? this racism in your life? this country ? i have. i have like . country? i have. i have like. i've encountered in other countries i travel the commonwealth. as i said previously on this programme and ihave previously on this programme and i have experienced race. i get the questions where are you from? i get those questions from bigoted people. but that's a very small minority people very small minority of people who know need a bit of educating and i mean, move yeah. and i mean, move on. yeah. i mean, can imagine how it made mean, i can imagine how it made you but i mean, how does you feel, but i mean, how does it you feel now, the idea it make you feel now, the idea that, you know, meghan harry in their life , luxury being paid, their life, luxury being paid, eczema, tens of millions of dollars for their and yet prince harry already millionaire meghan markle quite probably a
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millionaire i'm sure she was that she was in suits for that length time . you know, these length of time. you know, these people now making it all about them. we're in the middle of a cost of living crisis. we've got nurses strike. we've nurses going on strike. we've got so got strikes left right. so people struggling to, heat people are struggling to, heat their might not their own homes. they might not be even being able to buy food and stuff. and you've this and stuff. and you've got this law you know, we all law who saying, you know, we all need them . it's need to pity them them. it's genuinely shocking. and you're right. i mean , i've been called right. i mean, i've been called a race traitor a number of occasions. i up and do a speech and i get called a race track by, you know, hard left these who can't see beyond my colour and think we've got there the race because they can't see beyond my colour and they are these millionaires living in a supposedly private life in california the left, the united kingdom, the private life . so in kingdom, the private life. so in fact, what i am looking at, the views and analysing country i'm not watching a documentary because all i'm just giving them privacy they have always asked for. yeah, well, indeed, i did a similar thing, but these views
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are freely available. the fact is i cannot ignore what i mean. i'm not made to watch clips on this show . i i'm not made to watch clips on this show. i mean, i'm not made to watch clips on this show . i mean, obviously this show. i mean, obviously it's stuff like that it's my job and stuff like that and. it's part and parcel of it. i will not actively be sitting in and tuning in and our money on can't for on netflix, you can't move for it on as well it must be it on twitter as well it must be said. i it is pretty, said. i mean it is pretty, pretty much all over the place. but you and your role, a commonwealth youth leader, they have teed off for not the have also teed off for not the first by the on the first time, by the way, on the commonwealth, linking it to empire, it to racism, empire, linking it to racism, linking to slavery. your linking it to slavery. your views on that that ? why are they views on that that? why are they gaslighting of people who proud commonwealth citizens? right. i've said this before and i'll say this again. i've said this before and i'll say this again . the commonwealth say this again. the commonwealth is a free union of independent countries who all come together for common values. countries who all come together for common values . they have for common values. they have voluntarily in this union had a number of additions this year to the commonwealth and it's the conflict funding organisation the her majesty, the queen worked so hard to create this commonwealth as a free union of
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. countries with common values and with them similarly isn't saying, oh, you're in this race union. that comes from an empirical past. we all have a past we all have a history. we learn from it, we move on that we better. what the queen did was appreciate the negatives of the and turn it around into something in collective repository . you know i simply repository. you know i simply cannot support cannot agree with anyone who's going to yet criticise commonwealth such a way that was so good for this world it just absolutely cracks me up. the idea you've got these two people that from a monty szeto mansion and everything just just lecturing those all about life and about the struggle in life. and it is i honestly believe it's just something that helps them both sleep out because you look at the amount of immense privilege that both of them will have , that both of them will have, even meghan yes, i'm sure she, worked hard to get her worked very hard to get her first appearances whatever, first appearances in whatever, but you she's but since then. what you she's on all time and she's got on tv all the time and she's got money in. get
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money coming in. she does get immense privilege . i think it's immense privilege. i think it's one of those things that it makes me better at night by just lecturing this all about stuff really. thank you really. anyway, so thank you very. i've sat perez was very. i've sat perez who was a coming youth leader vaiews@gbnews.uk on all of that and to the big one straight off the top that ladies and gents that had did and had the that we had did and we had the initial from justin welby, initial one from justin welby, the archbishop canterbury was popping the archbishop canterbury was popping house of lords popping up in the house of lords on that actually it's on saying that actually it's cruel and read between cruel and i mean read between the as well to be the lines, the as well to be deporting people. had deporting people. we also had meghan and harry. yes, you are with me. patrick christys on gb news is the chancellor has announced his plan to tear up banking red tape post—brexit. oh, relief. i can see it oh, that's relief. i can see it now. how it work and now. but how will it work and what it all really mean? what does it all really mean? will crunch numbers and all will crunch the numbers and all of our very of that with our very own economics editor, after your headunes. economics editor, after your headlines . thank you, patrick. headlines. thank you, patrick. it's 432. this is the latest . it's 432. this is the latest. the gb newsroom the chancellor has announced plans to overhaul financial sector, pledging to and replace hundreds of pages of
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eu regulation dubbed the edinburgh reforms. eu regulation dubbed the edinburgh reforms . jeremy hunt edinburgh reforms. jeremy hunt says brexit has a golden opportunity to reshape the rules . more than 30 regulatory changes have been unveiled, including reversing the measures introduced following the 2008 financial crash . banks have financial crash. banks have become much healthier financial . sin become much healthier financial. sin process so that financial issues can be resolved, which we didn't have before . but on that basis have before. but on that basis we also want to make sure they can compete with other financial centres, whether it's the united states , asia and scotland is in states, asia and scotland is in a fantastic to do that and that's why these will make a big difference . the minister has difference. the minister has been at the launch of a new generation fighter jet in britain, will work with italy and japan to develop design to replace typhoon and expected to
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take to the skies by 2035. rishi says the joint venture aims to create thousands of uk jobs and strengthen security ties ties . strengthen security ties ties. more than 115,000 royal mail staff have walked the job in a new wave of . thousands gathered new wave of. thousands gathered at a rally outside parliament in central london this afternoon. better pay and conditions as members of the communication union will strike again sunday with further action throughout the month, including christmas eve. king charles and the queen consort, who visited wrexham meeting the football club's . meeting the football club's. hollywood co—owners ryan and rob mcelhenney . the royals also met mcelhenney. the royals also met players , other members of staff players, other members of staff dunng players, other members of staff during a tour of the stadium . during a tour of the stadium. tv, online and radio. this is gb news. stay with us. patrick's back in a moment.
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institute. racially racist is like categorically evidence. it's not a pact with personal photos and a home videos because they want to tell this side of they want to tell this side of the story and their version of events. it really was was the couple's chance to tell their love story on, their own terms. in part, it's a royal love story love story on, their own terms. world, have the sussexes exposed an imbalance in their relationship? will the man who's documented their revenge mission from the start? biographer tom bower. he's live with me in the studio straight after the .
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welcome back, everybody. now, chancellor hunt has announced the edinburgh a package of more than 30 reforms that will cut red tape and deregulate rules in the city. and that is in a bid to turbo charge growth in the economy. these reforms have been described as the biggest up since the wave of deregulation under margaret thatcher in the 19805, under margaret thatcher in the 1980s, as the reforms include relaxations on what bankers can do with their money requiring regulators make london more competitive on international stage and scrapping red tape to boost the stock market. so what does all of this really mean to the country? with me now to discuss is gb news, his very own economics and business editor is liam halligan. all the money .
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liam halligan. all the money. picking up on what we after in the last hour? well, there's this whole tit for tat going on between the tories and labour. labour had their business schmooze fest, canary wharf, schmooze fest, the canary wharf, that citadel to east london style capitalism . and now the style capitalism. and now the tories have back with scrapping on bankers bonuses , easing on bankers bonuses, easing regulations around banks, trying to drum up more investment in the city of london . what's going the city of london. what's going on underneath is a kind of battle for campaign donations , battle for campaign donations, right? because we saw in the run up in the three months, up september for the first time since jeremy took over as labour leader back in 16. of course, now by keir starmer, labour are actually raising more money for campaign coffers than the tories . that's yeah. that doesn't happen very often . and so this happen very often. and so this is partly about campaign donations but also i think on the part of jeremy hunt the chancellor is also a genuine move on his part to try and drum
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up more business in the in the city of london which of course tax revenues for the rest of the country too. yeah so why do you think the labour party is raising more money now than than the tories? because that will be quite shocking for a lot of people hear. it's people to hear. yeah, it's raising more money because it's starting of business starting to say sort of business friendly things. shadow chancellor raised chancellor rachel. we raised often discussed wants to often discussed she wants to scrap business rates. patrick patrick that the kind of patrick ney that the kind of levies on the rateable of business, you pay them , you own business, you pay them, you own a factory, you them , you a big factory, you pay them, you run shop or a plumbers run a kebab shop or a plumbers yard much builders, merchants like that, they are the bane of the life, particularly small the life, particularly of small and enterprises, and medium sized enterprises, because pay them because you have to pay them whether raise any money or whether you raise any money or not before you take in a penny revenue, you pay your revenue, you have to pay your business rates. they always business rates. they are always there don't make any there even if you don't make any profit. same time, i profit. at the same time, i think the tories getting think the tories are getting very in the of lots of very tired in the of lots of people. i think what could happen two things i happen though? two things i wanted to say. firstly these this this kind of easing of these on, the city, these regulations on, the city, these regulations on, the city, these this is a sort of reversal
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of some of the regulations that brought in in the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis, which, of caused which, of course, caused carnage, a major recession across the world economy . i across the world economy. i think when we look back , it think when we look back, it could seen as a mistake to could be seen as a mistake to ease these regulations. now i think yet again, we've forgotten the lessons of history, the lessons of history being always that you forget the lessons of history. the other thing i wanted is that i do think wanted to say is that i do think that starmer's is now that keir starmer's is now sensing power. that keir starmer's is now sensing power . they that keir starmer's is now sensing power. they are 20 points ahead in opinion polls. patrick consistently and the reality is, as we saw at canary wharf yesterday, 350 business leaders suited and boots it from the likes of hsbc insurance giant aviva microsoft uk. when they sense there's going to be a change of government. they want to get in there they want to start their knitting they want to start influencing the people that think will submit that they think will submit don't will come but wonder don't just will come but wonder on no because on the odds. she's no because it's all the labour party won
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because the labour party for ages saying, you know, ages have been saying, you know, oh, the pockets, oh, the tories are the pockets, the bank is everything. the big bank is now everything. and opportunity the and the first opportunity the labour to do. labour party is to do. everyone's to say to be so everyone's going to say to be so responsive, hsbc, you don't strike me as naive. look, when the doing labour the tories are doing it, labour will business cronyism. will say it's business cronyism. when it, they'll when labour do it, they'll say, oh, consulting with oh, it's consulting with captains industry says yes , captains of industry says yes, all about rhetoric here , all about the rhetoric here, isn't it? look, neither party as far as we can see the numbers cited that from the electoral commission. neither party is breaking any laws. there are actually very laws around actually very strict laws around campaign donations in this country. you and i can be cynical or certainly sceptical about motives rightly . so about motives rightly. so i think but this isn't like the us or somewhere where campaign donations are basically determined political outcome aims. at least that's how a lot of people would say. we also are a couple of years away from the last time, like probably see how we get it could be as as late as 2025. yes yeah, exactly. so once these big beasts have thrown their weight behind the labour
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party, or were party, whether or not were just consulting, not consulting, whether or not they've up, how they've made their minds up, how easy it to turn our back on easy is it to turn our back on these people just now? they have to sign they're backing to sign that they're backing labour general and labour at the next general and that's guys that's that look, these guys sophisticated, they backed both sides , of course. that's what sides, of course. that's what big business does. they will see it as part of their you know, pubuc it as part of their you know, public service. they want to help develop help political parties develop their policies and all the rest of it. but course, they get of it. but of course, they get in there and influencing and trying close to lawmakers trying to get close to lawmakers at the same time i think we're going see a real battle now this as the polls with labour now well ahead in the polls assuming the betting market certainly at this point still awaiting they're going to be the next government. there is going to be a big focus on these campaign donations and i predict throughout this of discontent. yeah. like throwback to the 19705 yeah. like throwback to the 1970s with lots of industrial action there will be a lot of pressure on the labour to criticise what trade unions are . but of course it's very difficult for labour to do that
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because they still get millions of pounds a year from the public sector, from the unions, trade unions still make up a third of labour's ruling national executive . they they send a half executive. they they send a half of all delegates to labour's national party conference. now labouris national party conference. now labour is the party of the unions , but labour is heavily unions, but labour is heavily influenced by the unions and a lot of labour people say, yeah, and i'm proud of that. yeah, without apology, lots of gb news years, listeners will think that's exactly right. the organised labour, organised political representation . and on political representation. and on the other hand, i would say over the other hand, i would say over the next few weeks and it could be months of strikes , that idea be months of strikes, that idea that the trade have a right to strike, that always correct to face up to the bosses to face up to the government that could be sorely tested . well, it will be sorely tested. well, it will be it will have to be at some point. this continues, especially when at the especially when you look at the pay especially when you look at the pay demands, it's a perfect pay demands, and it's a perfect storm the rate of storm as well of the rate of inflation the moment. and inflation at the moment. and those demands going up as those pay demands going up as that kind crystallises whether or should right or not they should have a right and or that demands
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and whether or not that demands and whether or not that demands a thank you a reasonable. thank you very much, halligan. much, liam halligan. our economics business editor. economics and business editor. i just you all of the just want to get you all of the latest that. right. okay. so i'm not know thousands of male workers out strike a workers out on strike in a dispute over pay conditions as the the workers the war between the workers union and mail continues to grow. this comes as the c w u announced . they were planning announced. they were planning more strikes in december . a more strikes in december. a large rally held today in parliament to rally support behind that conditions, the general secretary, dave ward , general secretary, dave ward, said his members would not even accept . a 50% pay rise if it accept. a 50% pay rise if it included the terms and conditions. well, i'm going to ask we'll get stuck into that, because i would imagine if you put to members, you'd be wrong about that. but then we can show you the willingness, the posters to strike. former of to strike. a former editor of the mckenzie is with the sun, kelvin mckenzie is with me . kelvin, you see me now. kelvin, what do you see when you look at the latest round people through parliament square waving their union flags . i see a lot dues, to be honest. i feel sorry for them
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because the general secretary is clearly an idiot saying something about 50. but more important than that is if you're in ten years time or more importantly, if i'm around in ten years time, instead of employing 115,000 employee royal mail would be lucky to employ 20,000. the reality is nobody wants a letter . the only letter wants a letter. the only letter that has any consequence these daysis that has any consequence these days is those brown jobs and i don't know about you. i don't like receiving them. so i see us coming to a day where. letters are delivered once a week or once a month or even. we have to go down to the centre and pick up our own . and by the way, the up our own. and by the way, the bosses see this and actually see the unions see this . but as with the unions see this. but as with all unions and i worked in the print in eighties and nineties , print in eighties and nineties, it was in the eighties anyway, and the seventies it was an absolute nightmare . they are absolute nightmare. they are a bunch of mafia thugs who when
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they got the opportunity especially in the print , they got the opportunity especially in the print, would simply stop a paper because was a 24 hour business. these haven't got the leverage. they're very nice people. my local postman. right a great quy- local postman. right a great guy. however, their jobs are over. guy. however, their jobs are over . it's a guy. however, their jobs are over. it's a bit like guy. however, their jobs are over . it's a bit like replacing over. it's a bit like replacing horse racing plates on horses . horse racing plates on horses. it was great. it was being done . it's not going to be done anymore. it's over. and what they should is do what the printers accepted when they took the rupert murdoch in the end of the rupert murdoch in the end of the day. they should be negotiating huge redundancy payments and then they can set out an equally highly paid jobs. nothing to with the royal mail. theidea nothing to with the royal mail. the idea of being a postman. i'm or post person i should say is a 20 year old idea i'm afraid the way that i am talking to you the onune way that i am talking to you the online world is the way that all communication is being delivered. it's very sad . well,
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delivered. it's very sad. well, not very decent people. the games . yeah, well, it's not just games. yeah, well, it's not just that as it's just other companies delivering stuff. you've got your amazons, you've everything. the idea of a monopoly and, potentially just dining out on the fact that it's called royal mail , trying to called royal mail, trying to insinuate fool it's some insinuate the fool it's some form of british institution yet find okay if you change the find okay but if you change the name think people of name i think people lot of normal might feel bit normal people might feel bit less sympathetic towards. the bigger though, when bigger picture, though, when it comes strikes in comes to these these strikes in general, think they general, do you think they recognise lot of the time that recognise a lot of the time that potentially being up by potentially they are being up by a load of people who possibly do have links to the communist party, the kremlin? if you believe the times, do you think that the workers actually being used by people push used by people to push a political agenda . no, no, political agenda. no, no, no. they love those lefties in charge. they love them because the lefties, the communist east which the of the rmt which was the times investigation showed he's on the executive committee communist party of great britain. he actually wants to destroy capital and he's one of
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the made is one of the three of the made is one of the three of the broad left the their rmt all these guys know that their input that their members want you to be nasty as possible. why put money in their pocket with the royal mail? i have no leverage . royal mail? i have no leverage. sorry, it's goodnight to post quy- sorry, it's goodnight to post guy. yeah, but the others do and it's part of a bigger picture, which is the fact that they all rise, not just the royal mail, is it? let's be honest. these nurses is ambulance workers. that's the trains, as we alluded to, probably at some to, teachers probably at some point. the, of course, point. i mean, the, of course, is went on strike and i is if i went on strike and i want know viewing figures want to know the viewing figures are go up now. please, are probably go up now. please, everybody, be pleased. we'd be getting have getting emails here. have getting emails here. have getting emails. well, i tell you what see. oh, you'll see. what you'll see. oh, you'll see. yeah. probably give you yeah. we'll probably give you a bonus staying the air bonus for staying on the air increase will. probably, probably. yeah. i'll get in every when is every single day. when is patrick just so we patrick on strike? just so we can make sure that we that we actually tune in. but you can be actually tune in. but you can be a great postman you be a great postman. yeah yes, postman. yeah well, yes, i suppose so. you make a great. all but together all right, but but together collect they these people
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collect they all of these people do have leverage and are we witnessing a bit of a sea change now? corbyn one becoming even more emboldened by, the other. well, there's no doubt that there is a competition between these in these general secretaries to say who could be the more this guy saying, i wouldn't take 50. that wins by a thousand chance. by the way, somebody should announced. yes, you've won the prize. you are more stupid than any other trade leader. honestly, it's a tremendous fight out there. but you've done it. a ridiculous thing . i know, but no post thing. i know, but no post person would actually say that's a good idea. they know what they do know it's a dangerous area, but the idea the nurses are going on strike , the ambulance going on strike, the ambulance people, it's incredible and not even the driving lesson people are going to strike . well yeah are going to strike. well yeah but i think i think that takes the absolute biscuit, by the way, certainly the chap, bless him, did driving test and to wave me through with no mind
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when at one point i went the wrong way down a one way street which. you know, i've done my best to try to improve upon well, when i did mine it all banged on the on the thing too bright and bright my reaction bright and i bright my reaction was good on this occasion went bang not a forward and bang not a shot forward and produced this knows enough story and that's the story you told the judge. all right. covid just just wrestling it wrestling it back to the main topic. just wrestling it wrestling it back to the main topic . would back to the main topic. would you be in favour of a sliding scale pay rises? because i wonder whether or not we could pitch this to a variety of different union leaders. so would rail workers be to would rail workers be willing to forego some of that pay rise if that towards ? are we now that went towards? are we now confronted with a situation where we have decide of all where we have to decide of all of different striking , who of these different striking, who we think is the most important to society? finally rank people ? no, that's impossible . that is ? no, that's impossible. that is literally impossible nor desirable. we all do it we have we have we all you have a system where. nurses were given this amount of money by the average
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pay amount of money by the average pay under under this system that would go out to 41,000. so it's not to it's not not fantastic , not to it's not not fantastic, but it's not too bad. so we have a system that works like that. life isn't fair and the bit the other issue that isn't fair, supposing you are a non state worker that 25 million of our country do not work for the state, the 5 million that love putting the arm on us and have most fantastic pensions . nobody most fantastic pensions. nobody talks about that 20% of their money they can get in pensions. it's fantastic . whereas if it's fantastic. whereas if you're in private industry , you're in private industry, you're in private industry, you're lucky to get you. you're lucky you get a couple of couple of sticks of kit—kat, frankly. well, one i think. yeah, one thing i think what would be fascinating . impossible. this is fascinating. impossible. this is impossible what would be fascinating is if we did some form of referendum because whatever on vox pop whatever i go out on vox pop people like you want to pay people like i do you want to pay more willingly you get a lot more tax willingly you get a lot of people, lot of people go, oh absolutely, we need to fund it. and the camera starts and and then the camera starts and they way but not saying they have no way but not saying it's refugees welcome
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it's like the refugees welcome. right? what right? cause obviously what would you would you would you want to live in your spare room. of let one in of course. and let one live in my spare room. what's the problem? the camera stops. absolutely am absolutely no way in. how am i letting a random albanian chap move my nan? you know, it's move with my nan? you know, it's happening. wonder if we happening. but i wonder if we actually did form of actually did some form of national referendum this. okay, do you want to pay this more tax in order to pay all of this stuff? i don't think the result would be close . yeah, no. nobody would be close. yeah, no. nobody theidea would be close. yeah, no. nobody the idea there's some rather nasty rail road train driver. he says, i'll tell you what do i'm going to give i'm going to give 4.3% of my money to that nurse done five or six years because she's earning possibly about 60% of what i make or 50% out of the question. i'm afraid as it has turned out . this is a fight to turned out. this is a fight to the death it's not quite a general strike because there's 25 million homeless who haven't
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got the leverage to destroy or kill somebody grandmother . well, kill somebody grandmother. well, that's what it comes to. the house stuff 100. no, we've spoken about in this issue that we feel very, very about, i think more people to feel passionately about, actually, because for me, i've copped it big this online and at big time on this online and at times in the inbox by. but for me it is as black and white as if you knowingly do choose to. go into a line of work. i've got massive if the pay structure of the if to your liking. i've got huge sympathy for the fact that the way inflation is and everything you know you might now a result of now be skin too as a result of it. i not that discredit it. i was not that discredit that he probably in that i'm sure he probably in some do deserve more money but it mean an elderly it does mean an elderly lady dies. of dies because dies. a lot of us dies because you turn up. i'm sorry, you don't turn up. i'm sorry, but i'm not in favour of that. and there are more patients than there are people working in the. there's lot of people working there's a lot of people working in i make no excuse in the nhs. and i make no excuse for the side of the for being on the side of the patients. does end, patients. but does this end, kelvin, the thing is said, it's a death. in the end a fight to the death. in the end is the person needing these
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services, whether it's the trains, people trains, whether when people passing test, passing the driving test, whether know, whether it's patients they know, people lose. because people who really lose. because if go pop, i don't if the unions go pop, i don't know told me how does this end but it's going to end any time soon right. so there's going to be no easy solutions and. the idea that those jerks border folks but actually ruin people's pockets months in advance , i'd pockets months in advance, i'd like to see them actually locked in their houses , see how they in their houses, see how they like it when . you can't do what like it when. you can't do what you want to do . what about the you want to do. what about the rmt next week? i have no idea how that's going to work. loads of people are simply not going to go to work now. he's not going to have the effect it would have had two years ago. what i'm sorry, five years ago. but he's definitely it's going to business. going to damage business. it's going to damage business. it's going to guys out where to put little guys out where they don't give stuff about they don't give a stuff about anybody. fighting anybody. they're not fighting for they're for anybody else. they're fighting well, fighting for themselves. well, what cost to the what about the cost to the economy well, roughly economy as well, roughly speaking 30 million quid a day for these trade strikes. if you
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want yep, it's want everything. yep, it's impossible but it's want everything. yep, it's in numbers but it's want everything. yep, it's in number that's but it's want everything. yep, it's in number that's so but it's want everything. yep, it's in number that's so itut it's a number that's so big it wouldn't fail in this piece of papen wouldn't fail in this piece of paper. probably, know. paper. it's probably, you know. some media some of the well—known media celebrities packet celebrities monthly pay packet by the sounds of things you know that that's astonishing that would that's an astonishing amount to be costing amount of money to be costing this daily and this country on a daily and actually at point it become actually at what point it become actually at what point it become a . what i love the idea of a crime. what i love the idea of the government getting the front foot and actually trying to force them now it's not going to be it's not going to be easy. this but they feel like somebody has got to say to the nurses, i tell you what the reason you came into this was not to kill people . it was the same people people. it was the same people they say this the junior they say this to the junior doctors. they say this the doctors. they say this to the ambulance we watching ambulance guys. we are watching the destruction of the nhs and funnily enough , that may be a funnily enough, that may be a good thing. we've had i think 75 years of it i think thank thank you hour and it's time to go lucky very much covered mackenzie our former editor the sun with his v strong stuff as always jb views gbnews.uk moving
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for now though a gang of armed criminals who were about to carry a hit have been arrested. we'll bring you all the latest on that also a financial shake—up at some point but it was a financial shake—up those gangs wasn't there anyway. now, though is your whether a bet is chilli . though is your whether a bet is a long standing queen who commanded respect and affection . it's a slightly it's changed now. people are more prepared to criticise the monarchy and, you know, it went well for several weeks, months. but i think they they are very
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welcome everybody is just gone. five p patrick christys here on gb news. coming up over next houn gb news. coming up over next hour, the chancellor has announced a package of reforms touted as . the announced a package of reforms touted as. the biggest financial shake up since the era. so why have they done it? what's it all really about? we'll break all of that down economist vicki that down with economist vicki price controversy price and the controversy continues from the duke and duchess of is six. tell
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duchess of sussex is six. tell all that's quite a all netflix that's quite a difficult turn of phrase to actually the sussexes six episodes anyway some people are even calling for that royal titles to be stripped . do you titles to be stripped. do you think about that? i'll bring you all the latest results of all gb news people's find out news people's poll to. find out what make of the sussexes what people make of the sussexes truth and new shameful nhs stats out as well . you'll never guess out as well. you'll never guess how many people are now on an nhs waiting list. it somehow has gone up we all of us, very, very shortly . i'll also be delving gone up we all of us, very, very shortly. i'll also be delving in as well to the idea maybe, just maybe we are not a particularly nice and welcoming nation. that is what archbishop of canterbury, justin welby, appears to say. he really thinks it is essentially ungodly us to be deporting people all overseas. your views on that views our gbnews.uk will potentially going to go priest versus priest on as well. you love to say that email again gbviews@gbnews.uk on social media. our gb news. i'll give you my thoughts later on throughout the course of the
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show, but now it's time for your latest . good afternoon 5:01. i'm latest. good afternoon 5:01. i'm tatiana sanchez in the gb newsroom. the chancellor has announced plans to overhaul the financial sector , pledging to financial sector, pledging to review and replace hundreds of pages of regulations dubbed the edinburgh reforms. jeremy hunt says brexit has provided a golden opportunity to reshape the rules more than 30 regulatory changes have been unveiled, including reversing some measures introduced following 2008 financial crash . following 2008 financial crash. banks have become much healthier financially since 2008. we put in place a process so that financial issues can be resolved, which we didn't have . resolved, which we didn't have. but on that basis , we also want but on that basis, we also want to make sure they can compete with other financial centres, whether it's the united or asia
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. and scotland is in a fantastic place to do that and that's why these reforms will make a big difference. thousands of royal mail staff have walked off the job in a new wave of strikes. more than 115,000 workers rallied outside in central london. demanding better pay and conditions , members of the conditions, members of the communication union will strike again sunday with further action planned throughout the month, including christmas eve. the prime minister says the is looking at tough new laws to help minimise disruption disruption . royal mail workers disruption. royal mail workers at the rally explained why they're action . meanwhile, they're action. meanwhile, thousands of soldiers are preparing to cover for other workers striking this christmas . troops are already in training at some british ports and airports . border force staff at airports. border force staff at gatwick throat and manchester airports , among others, will airports, among others, will strike for eight days from december the 23rd through to new
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year's eve. travellers hoping to head abroad over the christmas penod head abroad over the christmas period have been told to think carefully about their plans . the carefully about their plans. the prime minister has been at the launch of a new generation fighter in lincolnshire. britain work with italy and japan to develop a tempest designed to replace the and expected to the skies by 2035. rashi sunak says the joint venture aims to create thousands of jobs strengthen security ties . while a pupil at security ties. while a pupil at a school sussex, who's thought to have had the invasive strep a infects sharon, has died. the uk health security agency the child had attended hove park school. if that is working with brighton and hove city council as well as the school to raise awareness of the school to raise awareness of the signs and symptoms. it bnngs the signs and symptoms. it brings the total number child deaths from the recent outbreak of strep a in the uk to 16. five
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men have been jailed smuggling kurdish migrants into the uk hidden in the back of lorries . hidden in the back of lorries. they've been sentenced to a total of almost 24 years between them for running a large scale people smuggling ring . the people smuggling ring. the national crime agency . the gang national crime agency. the gang leader tariq nana akua , in leader tariq nana akua, in charge of transporting migrants from iraq and iran and connections with other people smugglers overseas . a fuel smugglers overseas. a fuel poverty charity is warning the rising cost of living and cold weather will leave millions struggling this winter. national energy action says are facing a choice of living in unheated homes or racking debt. it comes as the uk health security agency has issued a cold weather alert for with temperatures predicted drop to as low as minus ten . the drop to as low as minus ten. the met office is warning of up to four inches of snow could fall in london in the south—east this a serving met officer has been
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charged with counts of rape. rupert edwards is alleged to have carried out the offences in lambeth , surrey earlier this lambeth, surrey earlier this yean lambeth, surrey earlier this year, whilst off duty. he was first arrested in september and suspended and the king and queen consort have met hollywood stars ryan reynolds and rob mcelhenney today on a visit welsh football club. the royals met and talked with players and other members of staff during a tour of the stadium . this is tv news will stadium. this is tv news will bnng stadium. this is tv news will bring you more news as it happens. now it's back to patrick . patrick. patrick all right. let's just. i've got loads coming way this hour on a variety of different topics. yeah, there's the and harry stuff. we're obviously gonna be talking about those remarks, rather incendiary remarks
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actually made justin welby, actually made by justin welby, the canterbury in the archbishop of canterbury in the archbishop of canterbury in the well saying really the lords as well saying really essentially paraphrasing essentially i'm paraphrasing here is ungodly to deport here but it is ungodly to deport we'll have big debate on that we'll have a big debate on that but we'll saying with but we'll start saying with chancellor hunt who's chancellor jeremy hunt who's announced of more than announced a package of more than reforms red tape and, reforms to cut red tape and, deregulate rules in the city in a bid to turbo charge in a bid to turbo charge growth in the , banks have become the economy, banks have become much healthier financial free since 2008. we put in a process so that financial issues can resolved, which we didn't have before . but on that basis , we before. but on that basis, we also want to make sure they can compete with other financial centres, whether it's the united states , asia and, scotland is in states, asia and, scotland is in a fantastic place to do that and that's why these reforms will make a big difference . make a big difference. absolutely cynical whatsoever about doing this announcement in scotland. couldn't think of another reason why he might be anyway. these reforms have been described as the biggest shake up since the wave of deregulate under margaret thatcher in the
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19805, under margaret thatcher in the 1980s, as the reforms include relaxation on what bankers can do their money requiring do with their money requiring regulators london regulators to make london competitive on the international stage. now let's get to an expert on all this stuff to pick through the noise. chief economic at centre economic adviser at the centre for economics business for economics and business research crucially , research and former crucially, government's vicki . government's adviser vicki. thank you very much. vicki right. look, is this public sessions that was iea event last . the institute of economic affairs . there was more than affairs. there was more than a little bit of annoyance in the room really that maybe they dared to dream . they dared to dared to dream. they dared to dream. and the bank , england dream. and the bank, england came and just clobbered them. and establishment financiers and clobbered them. and now we've got , you know, archetypal man in got, you know, archetypal man in a up edinburgh . a suit hunt up in edinburgh. well, it would appear making life easier for the bankers again. didn't british public again. didn't the british public be on board with this? well, it remains be seen also remains remains to be seen also remains to be seen how implementable some of the today would be. first of all, we had reforms. yes, surgery forms, as you suggested . but in a number of
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suggested. but in a number of cases, we have been consulting in order to change things in the future. and of course, the moment you start consultations, start sort of start having everyone sort of writing for writing and objecting. so, for example , there is also amongst example, there is also amongst all and the intention to modernise the consumer credit act. i mean, that act, credit card purchases, personal is something that's been with us for decades , a 50 years. so you for decades, a 50 years. so you know, yes, these things are know perhaps they need to be done to regulate what building societies do. so they are small things. it's the bigger things that really make a difference . really will make a difference. we really to get them we really managed to get them through yeah, someone through. yeah, but can someone just explain optics to me about, you know, when liz or kwasi kwarteng said , you kwarteng stood up and said, you know, going lower the know, we're going to lower the amount of tax that maybe some people are going have to pay. people are going to have to pay. and was like, whoa you and that was like, whoa you absolute nutters you can't possibly something like that. possibly do something like that. and look around at the and then i look around at the minute actually minute and i think actually everyone is absolutely and people struggling to heat or people are struggling to heat or eat. got people going on strike left, right and centre. and
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yesterday i saw the labour party cosying with bankers at events by hsbc . now cosying with bankers at events by hsbc. now today i've cosying with bankers at events by hsbc . now today i've got by hsbc. now today i've got jeremy hunt cosying up to the bankers again. why is there we're making noise about this? they are still just cosying up to the banks and helping to make the wealthier even all of that money. it's a very good point. now, of course, the regime that we may be moving towards is one of deregulating what's of deregulating from what's happened financial happened after the financial crisis. course, good crisis. that, of course, be good for banks. although some for those banks. although some of the big banks have said that this the move towards separating the retail, banking and consumer and commercial banking activities from investment banking activities. what we called casino banking in words investment banking stuff was the one which was really risky and which caused a lot of the pressures that we had during the financial. those ring financial. those were ring fenced. we're about fenced. now we're talking about ring going away . that ring fencing going away. that ring fencing going away. that ring fencing going away. that ring fencing disappearing over a of time. the big banks say actually operated rather well under you were under that regime. you were talking whether they talking about whether they really not. the big
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really pleased or not. the big banks actually find this is a way preventing smaller ones way of preventing smaller ones from into market taking from into the market and taking any the costs are any share because the costs are quite so to quite considerable. so you've to look that way as well. but look at it that way as well. but i think quite right to i think you're quite right to say the financial sector say that the financial sector right seems to certainly right now seems to be certainly a more than others. i mean, just remember what rishi sunak has said originally, which was he was chancellor , there's a was chancellor, there's a surcharge that was imposed on the banking system about percent. so they were paying an extra . that surcharge was meant extra. that surcharge was meant to come down in next financial year to 3. even the backs went up everywhere. that cut is still happening. so the financial sector is being held that way. bankers bonuses again have been removed or they will be removed . yes, you're right. i think there is a an attempt to cosy up to the financial sector, which, of course, is worried. and the reason why they're doing it, they're about brexit they're worried about brexit and they're worried about brexit and the that has had the impact that brexit has had on standing of the city of on the standing of the city of london. but had enough sounds to try say, get over it now try and say, get over it now really? are just carping on really? are they just carping on
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about that should about something that should have been and gone and also is? been been and gone and also is? well, they're still going on about although struggling about although we're struggling to that is to deal with brexit, that is actually conservative actually the conservative party's because party's fall, isn't it, because they it for they messed around with it for long. got all wrong. long. got it all badly wrong. couldn't themselves couldn't agree with themselves based off a few leaders in the process now where we are. process now are where we are. you blame it on brexit, you can't blame it on brexit, you the governments, but you know the governments, but i mean my car into wall mean crushing my car into a wall and know it on car and and know blame it on the car and on myself. you're right. i on myself. no, you're right. i mean one of the things that did not in negotiation not happen in the negotiation that had with europe was have that we had with europe was have a proper agreement in terms of what could do under what regime here could do under the regime . we by the regulatory regime. we had by comparison under comparison to what happens under the in europe, the regulatory regime in europe, in having equivalence in other having equivalence so that accept what each of that you accept what each of those regimes doing that we didn't actually manage to do so there is going to be a problem we deregulate in any way to sure that because there's dispute that because there's no dispute paris we're paris amsterdam when we're deaung paris amsterdam when we're dealing with europe just very okay how many those books behind you have you actually read . oh you have you actually read. oh well the vast majority actually, because they've been there for
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since i was i haven't there but there books that i've accumulated through the years and tell you one little and i'll tell you one little secret reason why are so secret the reason why are so many for long many is because for a long penod many is because for a long period of i was reviewing period of time i was reviewing something like ten bucks a week for the banker magazine. so a month the bank magazines. month rather the bank magazines. and five and that was everything. five years. you can well calculate years. so you can well calculate how collecting every how many i was collecting every year doing anything at year without doing anything at all. well. vicky, i all. we well. well, vicky, i must say i'm incredibly jealous. i the only books i read i mean, the only books i read have got lots and lots of. and vicky, thank you very much. former government an former government adviser and an economic pryce. that economic guru, vicky pryce. that right. okay whizzing into the latest economic stuff, but back to back to my level now, which some would argue is the gutter the first volume of harry and meghan's bombshell netflix docu series dropped and plenty of you the people have been letting us know what you really think. so let's have look at the latest let's have a look at the latest people's poll poll . gosh, that people's poll poll. gosh, that music pumps you up just now . we music pumps you up just now. we asked we asked if you thought
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harry and meghan should be banned from the king's coronation. yeah that's right. we went that way. but we asked or not. you thought that harry and banned from the and meghan be banned from the king's ? one in four king's coronation? one in four of you said yes, they should. asked who you believe represents the of britain , over 50% the values of britain, over 50% of you said prince william and catherine instead of harry and meghan, their response by 7% of the country. plenty to chew here. and joining me now to dig deep into this is entity alignment guru is rebecca twomey. they'll give very much rebecca great to have you on show. right. okay. so when it comes to the idea that people shouldn't sorry shouldn't be shouldn't be sorry meghan and harry i should say should the king's should be attending the king's coronation . and what do you coronation. and what do you think of this? do you think they actually british are actually the british public are right do you think right about what do you think there's so much there's a turn them so much apart from fact that meghan apart from the fact that meghan across badly . well across pretty badly. well i actually this documentary is actually this documentary is actually helpful to i personally have changed my opinion of mechanism full circle and i
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think as it goes on this documentary volume two comes out next week . i think public next week. i think public opinion might just sway because we see just how happy prince harry is. he's a favour royal. i think one of the things is that we all need some good, positive news. and wouldn't it be if the king's coronation next year so the whole family again and meghan and harry really show a sense of solidarity with their family and perhaps the british people. now i know those people weren't happy with the documentary the netflix documentary the netflix documentary yesterday and that's that to me i understand and i appreciate they would feel appreciate why they would feel that . there's a lot to that way. there's a lot to forgive. can i just stop you there ? well, we stopped actually there? well, we stopped actually at but think at an abc, but do you think prince harry happy ? the prince harry is happy? the little obviously it looks little clips, obviously it looks he's going to stop he's still going to stop blinking help morse code any blinking for help morse code any moment. yes i don't think he's not as i fired, as comfortable in front of the cameras as obviously meghan, a former actress is, but he's been in front of them his whole life. that's of his problem, isn't it? yeah, well, no, it's not living like a reality show, which some
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have documentary of have accused documentary of being. i think that being. and i think much that harry's nervous how he's harry's quite nervous how he's perceived. meghan seems perceived. whereas meghan seems more comfortable in and of more comfortable in and sort of working certain working towards a certain narrative and. harry seems to be slightly along with that narrative. i think what he wants. yeah i mean, i don't think it's almost a drag harry along to other things. certainly nothing las vegas indeed nothing las vegas so indeed a rather fruity germany themed costume if past evidence. and another thing to go by. but when it when it comes to public opinion, do you not some of it is centred around the fakery of it, certainly when it comes to british so we the british people. so we the british people. so we the british of course, there british public, of course, there is a vast chasm of differences, not atlantic in between not just the atlantic in between us when it comes to what's in america popular over here . america most popular over here. i like to think there's a bit more authenticity here then more authenticity over here then you sparkle , you got a hollywood sparkle, pizzazz, as it were. and when you seeing of, you know, you are seeing of, you know, i mean, supposedly some of their most intimate moments almost moments, and you become acutely they're like filming it themselves on their own mobile phones , you would think
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phones, you would think inherently british just go, well this is fake at all where'd i don't think british people think it's or weird. i think like you said it's been made for a global audience and predominate and american audience who are very the kardashians. i think it's all used to reality tv. we all very used to reality tv. we watch an awful lot of it. we are very used to this talking, to the camera and the emotions the camera and the high emotions around, camera. what i think the camera and the high emotions aro all, camera. what i think the camera and the high emotions aro all find camera. what i think the camera and the high emotions aro all find quitera. what i think the camera and the high emotions aro all find quite bizarre.t i think the camera and the high emotions aro all find quite bizarre. thisink we all find quite bizarre. this is who wanted privacy. is a couple who wanted privacy. they the royal family they left the royal family because wanted control because they wanted to control their and their own their own image and their own privacy. they're filming privacy. and yet they're filming some some very some what you said, some very intimate, personal on intimate, very personal on camera very happy camera and then were very happy to share substantial to share quite a substantial amounts of money when it's a shame british taxpayer was shame the british taxpayer was paying shame the british taxpayer was paying didn't paying for them. they didn't want anything. now want to share anything. and now netflix very happy netflix are they're very happy to we do have to. well on that we do have a point of i will say yes, 100% on that one. but presumably they wouldn't want to come to the king's coronation in any way, would they? because if this is a royal that has institutional royal that has got institutional racism heart and racism at its heart and represents racist slave based
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commonwealth or whatever next line's going to be, well, presuming there won't want to be a part of that with it, they wouldn't want to endorse it. well i do think part of this netflix documentary is very interesting to actually start talking about the racism and the of microaggressions in the british press, which i think has genesis. i was sort of interested to see that perspective, but they still do love their family, speak to a lot of the members of that family. and i think look whose family. and i think look whose family perfect. all got family perfect. we've all got our and issues. i do think our flaws and issues. i do think they be there for they want to be there for family, but maybe not for the public. question public. all very last question and a little bit and i'm being a little bit cheeky here, but your cheeky here, but in your esteemed your esteemed expert and in the world of showbiz entertainment, if you're being really honest, if i struck you to lie detector test, not now, how surprised you be in two years time if you're ryan report about the fact that i got divorced okay i wouldn't wish that on any anyone but yes that was what i was thinking
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yesterday. i think if that ever happened, it would tragic. but i wonder what would actually say about her marriage to harry. there is a narrative with meghan that i she'll follow the that i think she'll follow the rest her life of. all rest of her life because of. all right. thank very much. i thoroughly enjoyed there thoroughly enjoyed that. there you you very, you go. right. thank you very, very rebecca told me that. very much. rebecca told me that. right. well, that was. yes, interesting. interesting. what do picking through do make it out? picking through the people's the results of our people's poll, shock, horror. poll, which is shock, horror. the majority you have the vast majority of you have opinions, like opinions, particularly like harry i mean, i could harry and meghan i mean, i could have but it's have told you that, but it's good do poll on the last good to do poll on the last anyway. mean me? patrick anyway. you mean me? patrick christys on gb news coming up. i think just times have hit another high. another another record high. another i bear mind that there was 7.1 bear in mind that there was 7.1 million people waiting for routine nhs care . can you guess routine nhs care. can you guess what it is now lastly after the break, but how we fix it? how do we fix it? what do you think we should do? i say what won't fix it? strikes out more? not a tech. hello again. it's aidan mcgivern here from the met office winter sunshine for many of us today, but it is feeling cold there and showers are continuing to feed into some
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locations is circulating around an area of low pressure in the nonh an area of low pressure in the north sea those showers will provide some additional snowfall to northern scotland and sleet mixture elsewhere into parts of the uk . so as we end the day on the uk. so as we end the day on friday, further showers are building up the snow for northern scotland northern ireland , south—west scotland, ireland, south—west scotland, north west wales as well as north—west england and increasingly the south—west will see those showers, rain and sleet. it's a lower levels than around the coasts and some snow inland and over the hills a widespread freezing night. however, temperatures , towns and however, temperatures, towns and cities —3 to —5 celsius in some sheltered spots , even lower than sheltered spots, even lower than that. sheltered spots, even lower than that . and we've got those icy that. and we've got those icy patches first thing because of the cold conditions and the showery nature of the in the west and, the north freezing fog patches , in addition to all of patches, in addition to all of that across some central and southern areas, they'll into the afternoon in one or two spots. it will stay cold with happens
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but otherwise to three celsius typically and over any upland areas temperatures staying below freezing saturday night then we'll a widespread frost return and patches which will be dense leading to poor visibilities in. there'll also be further showers the north of scotland in western parts but also increasingly south—east could see some snow coming inland. edinburgh see a covering by dawn on sunday likewise for dundee and for perth but the most significant happening over the hills of scotland and some hillier of wales. so for example our own coast low levels it's ice which will be the main hazard on sunday morning and some of those freezing fog patches. there's the threat of some more significant snow into the south—east on sunday and into monday, but it stays cold everywhere everywhere .
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break now, after the release of their netflix series christmas in montecito is bound to be a very lonely affair as the sussexes viciously cut ties with each of their families . just take a look their families. just take a look at meghan's snobbery when she trashed her father, thomas markle's side of the family, particularly going after her wonderful half sister, samantha . and suddenly i just have my
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mom , who's classy and quiet in mom, who's classy and quiet in there. and then you have the other side of my family that is just acting differently . my half just acting differently. my half sister, who i hadn't seen for over a decade, and that was only for a day and a half. suddenly it felt like she was everywhere. i don't know your middle name. i don't know your birthday. i hadnt don't know your birthday. i hadn't had her fall out with her. we didn't have a closeness to be able to have that and i wanted to be able to have that and i they are very dangerous. she's a very manipulative and ambitious
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woman who's used harry to leverage her own personal ambitions. but it's vindictive and vicious, and we saw incident in swinson's today with with the programme, you know, comments about , for example, the princess about, for example, the princess of wales being married only because she's sort of dutiful, you know, really nasty comments . and this is what they're doing, this drip, drip feed of stuff that they're hinting at. but you're right. stuff that they're hinting at. but you're right . and i mean, but you're right. and i mean, who knows what will
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welcome everybody. now, before the break, i was asking you if you could guess in a rather morbid game of gas, really what the current nhs waiting time figures are people of a routine treatment. it was previously 7.1 million of us, but now brand new nhs england figures have revealed that it's up. it's now? yes. another record 7.2 million people are awaiting treatments at the end of october. this comes as warn that the health service is a breaking and comes at the same time . the nurses and at the same time. the nurses and ambulance workers are plotting to go on strike. so is the nhs on the brink and? what can we actually do about it? joining me is andrew vallance own is dr. andrew vallance own former director and former medical director and chief medical officer bupa. so a really good guess, as it's called in the business. thank you very much. have your insights and everything on this. first of all, that is the nhs. just to sacred cow that actually probably need slaughtering . it's
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probably need slaughtering. it's certainly sacred cow and the system itself with primary care as a sort of gatekeeper is , a as a sort of gatekeeper is, a good one but i'm not sure needs slaughtering. but derek i think it needs radical change in many ways but i don't think we should slaughter it and i that would be really bad and i think the politicians would never get away with it anyway. okay well, no, no. but it's good that you mention the politicians that because fortunately our because i'm fortunately our health just a health service is just a political football not political football and it's not as easy as saying, oh, well, that's always running into the ground mean, it's always may ground i mean, it's always may well into the ground well have run into the ground they've been in charge the last 12 years but mean the nhs 12 years but i mean the nhs always a little of a always been a little of a nightmare. of, of nightmare. i think of, of different guises do wish as different guises. do you wish as a man it was almost just a medical man it was almost just left up to single medical experts as long as are experts because as long as are using it for political clout one way or the other, surely the brave decisions are not to be able to be made the heartless decisions. maybe it is just a
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ruthless spreadsheet based ones . yeah, i just want to make just make a further point just on the politics. i mean, i do think the department of health and the civil and the policy side should be kept completely from those who and mentor deliveries service in the national health service . maybe you'd have to service. maybe you'd have to have a separate minister that should be run much more like a business with a board and should run their own show . yes, i think run their own show. yes, i think doctors should be involved. i mean, i, for instance , you've mean, i, for instance, you've just talked about the waiting list . we now have nearly , well, list. we now have nearly, well, 13,000 people that have been waiting more than two years. one of the things that doctors can do prioritise on basis of need , do prioritise on basis of need, you know, if you just say, well, you've been waiting two years, so it's your turn and you've got an ingrown toenail. i mean, just to take a ludicrous example, you know, clearly they be they should be helping to the people who need it most people with cancer and other things where
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there's pain and disability , there's pain and disability, they could really play an important there in terms of prioritisation . and i, i think prioritisation. and i, i think that one of the biggest things though for people is they need to faith just to talk about patients now they need to have faith in the health service. i can remember younger and nobody on which part of the world you're in. to be fair, but sometimes you'd be really hoping you didn't get ill in part you didn't get ill in that part of world because you'd be of the world because you'd be worried of health worried about the kind of health care get. i mean, we've care that you get. i mean, we've all felt that right. we've all felt that these to be that are was okay about the idea of me getting in country. getting ill in this country. because thought, you know, because i thought, you know, i'll decent i'll probably get quite decent treatment, look at it treatment, but then i look at it and think, well, 7.3 million people treatment and people waiting treatment and people waiting treatment and people oh routine health people go. oh is routine health care. it's is routine care. sorry, it's is routine health as well actually , health care as well actually, because now having to health care as well actually, bectto e now having to health care as well actually, bectto get now having to health care as well actually, bectto get stents now having to health care as well actually, bectto get stents fitted, having to health care as well actually, bectto get stents fitted, people to pay to get stents fitted, people having to to get also of having to pay to get also of what i would regard as being quite serious done. mean quite serious done. i mean the nhs now really a national nhs now is not really a national health is it. i mean because anyone who's rich can have to go to bupa . well, the only thing
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to bupa. well, the only thing i'd say that is that if can't afford to go to the private sector, they aren't doing the national health service a favour and instead they're being criticised for doing it. i think it's really important that. yeah, but should as many, should as many, should as many. gp as you see immediately. we all you can see immediately. we all know the exact know, should as many or medical many gp's or medical professionals actually going professionals be actually going going they going going bupa, should they be going private they were private because if they were sticking in the nhs sticking around in the nhs may be know from number be you know doreen from number 42 a dodgy episode and 42 could get a dodgy episode and that it's a that's a business decision isn't it . the that it's a that's a business decision isn't it. the gp's are few wholly private gp's mainly in sort of centre of london because people do still have whatever , you say do have whatever, you say do have a pretty good faith in their gp , pretty good faith in their gp, which is why they're so upset when they can't get an appointment with a gp and there just aren't enough of them. so i think you'll, you'll see more of the consultant specialists perhaps moving into the private sector . they are disillusioned
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sector. they are disillusioned in one way or another with the nhs we've got to concentrate on delivery, you know, the new money that has been said by, by the chancellor, it's to go to the chancellor, it's to go to the shop and patrick instead of getting caught up on all the ways in between with the layers and everything, money needs to go directly to coalface. it's got to grow to support particularly the nurses. so is the problem that is. yeah, but is this different because i can't help but feel we spoke about the nhs being used a political football annoys me . political football annoys me. many nhs staff appear to be quite political themselves when it comes to all of this it comes to the all of this stuff i refuse to accept the stuff and i refuse to accept the idea that if you decide to freely of your own free will go into a industry. i accept that maybe your pay is not what you want it to be and maybe you should even be paid more. and i'm sure that a very messy job andifs i'm sure that a very messy job and it's a very difficult job of that stuff is true. at the same time me personally. is it time for me personally. is it also true that it is also being true that it is morally repulsive you to go morally repulsive for you to go on you're an
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on strike and if you're an ambulance worker, example, ambulance worker, for example, and the bottom and leave someone at the bottom of stairs but actually of the stairs or but actually you know, they should you know, should they should they to maybe directing they try to maybe be directing their anger at their managers and higher up the pay and the people higher up the pay them not government them and not the government because lot of waste going because a lot of waste going on. is no. no, there is is there no. yeah. no, there is a of waste and i think a lot of waste and i think you're right actually , you know, you're right actually, you know, the doctors union, the nurses union, you know, they often say they speak for patients, but but actually, we know, don't we, from what they're saying , they from what they're saying, they are a vested interest and. their main interests in the bma for instance is about doctors themselves . and it worries me we themselves. and it worries me we don't have a really good patient advocate group . it surprises me, advocate group. it surprises me, you know, there should be an innovative dynamic group which stand up for patients who are not people who would say vested interests like doctors nurses politicians and you know i would dearly like to see a you know why don't the consumers they stand up in other indian gas industry bullies because you get demonised it's because it's
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selling it's because you got demonised because it is bracketed is you're only the in oh st now so you're either telling a pro patient or i anti nurse a no one wants to be anti it you know and this is it you see it play out on social media i mean, i made a point when i said, look, you know, when it comes to nurses strikes and, i'll say anthem in the i'll say anthem blue in the face. yeah absolutely. it's a job i could never do. i've never saved life. i will probably saved a life. i will probably never on account of never save a life on account of the that i'll be useless in the fact that i'll be useless in that situation. i do think that i deserve a pay rise to 19.2. is mad ask me, but they do mad if. you ask me, but they do deserve a rise. but going on deserve a pay rise. but going on strike at these age strike at these older age children's hospital, great ormond street, i think is morally wrong. well, then you copy all your hate nurses, how? well, they're whatever. i hate nurses. it's all i think it's wrong. so this is i think maybe why there are patients groups but would like to see maybe but you would like to see maybe what patients , a more, what more form patients, a more, you know, a national you know you've got the consumers council which covers all consumers but
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if you think about it there isn't patient voice that you can go to who will really say this is not good . we have to do is not good. we have to do something more whether it's the doctors or the nurses or the staffing. should speaking up for patients, they would be a very powerful lobby given . the holy powerful lobby given. the holy cow, as we've talked about already of the nhs , it's a shame already of the nhs, it's a shame we don't have them, but you know, that was what what i think i agree with you it is morally wrong and. the only defence i suppose is that they just feel pushed into it after years and years of austerity and they seem to have been , you know , more to have been, you know, more affected perhaps in some other , affected perhaps in some other, although there are other groups saying that same thing. of course . yeah. and there's there course. yeah. and there's there are a lot of if want a good nhs we've got to have you know enough nurses and enough doctors. well this is they are leaving, they're going, they're finding it cheaper, they earn more money stacking shelves in lidl which terrible to be lidl which is a terrible to be the case you know for nurses who
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are looking after these patients dogs dry because they i don't believe we've spoken before i would dearly love to speak again on this show. i've thoroughly enjoyed it. thank you very much, doctor valentine, doctor andrew valentine, that former medical and chief medical officer at baby, really insightful stuff. this is just a potent combination. there's so much going the and much going in the nurses and medical staff slaved away during the coronavirus. yeah hundred percent. that. you've percent. i get that. you've got inflation all this stuff. inflation, got all this stuff. but same time, while all but at the same time, while all a bit the minute anyway a bit skin to the minute anyway right we're moving on moving on patrick christys lgbt to come as a topic this archbishop a hot topic this the archbishop of incendiary of canterbury incendiary comments policy comments about the ruined policy so really an christian to so is it really an christian to want to stem the of migrants coming over here our very kelvin robinson will join us to discuss that but first there's your latest news headlines . thank latest news headlines. thank you, patrick. it's 534. i'm tatiana sanchez , the gb tatiana sanchez, the gb newsroom. the chancellor has announced plans to overhaul the
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financial sector pledging to review and replace hundreds of pages of eu regulations dubbed the edinburgh reforms . jeremy the edinburgh reforms. jeremy hunt says brexit has provided a golden opportunity to reshape the rules more than 30 regulatory changes have been unveiled, including some measures introduced following . measures introduced following. 2008 financial crash. banks have become much healthier. since 2008. we've put in place a process so that financial issues can be resolved, which we didn't have. can be resolved, which we didn't have . but on that basis we also have. but on that basis we also want to make sure they compete with other financial centres, whether it's the united or asia . and scotland is in a fantastic place to do that and that's why these reforms will make a big difference . than 115,000 royal difference. than 115,000 royal mail staff have walked the job in a new wave of strikes. thousands gathered a rally outside parliament in london
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this afternoon demanding better pay this afternoon demanding better pay and conditions. members of the communication union will strike again on sunday with further action planned throughout the month, including on eve . the prime minister has on eve. the prime minister has been at the launch of a new generation fighter jet in lincolnshire . britain will work lincolnshire. britain will work with italy and japan to develop tempest . designed to replace the tempest. designed to replace the typhoon expected to take to the skies 2035. rishi sunak's says the joint venture aims to create thousands of jobs and strengthen security ties . and king charles security ties. and king charles and the queen have visited wrexham meeting the football club's . hollywood co—owners ryan club's. hollywood co—owners ryan reynolds and rob mcelhenney . the reynolds and rob mcelhenney. the royals also met players and other members of staff during a of the stadium tv , online and of the stadium tv, online and dab+ radio . this is.
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dab+ radio. this is. gb news. here's a quick snapshot of today's the pound will buy you 1.2 to 1 one dollars and ,1.1598. the price of gold is £1,466.38 per ounce, and the footsie hundred closed at 7476 points.
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and author and broadcaster amy nicole. dominique your first reaction? mine was i mean, watching it at first. i think it was you know, it was kind of anticlimactic because we'd seen
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anticlimactic because we'd seen a lot of this anticlimactic because we'd seen wanted a sister . while in a tv wanted a sister. while in a tv world exclusive , the victim of world exclusive, the victim of those vicious attacks, samantha markle joins me now to give her side of the story . i look, side of the story. i look, samantha, we had welcome back, everybody. in our to one of if not the main story of the day, because archbishop of the day, because archbishop of canterbury has waded the immigration debate once again claiming that current asylum policies amount to cruelty. speaking in the house of lords, the archbishop justin welby warned the harmful warned against the harmful
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rhetoric on migrants. here is some of he had to say. a campaign passionate asylum system . one that sees the faces system. one that sees the faces of those need and listens to their . a of those need and listens to their. a compassionate system does not mean open borders, but a dispossess zone of generosity and a readiness to welcome those whose need is genuine and where we are able to meet that need. when we fail to challenge the harmful rhetoric that are the cause of this ills, then should that they should be treated problems, not people invaders to be tackled and deterred . we deny be tackled and deterred. we deny the essential value and dignity of human beings , and they get of human beings, and they get well. you might remember it's not the first time that justin welby has intervened on this issue. earlier this year said the rwanda policy was the opposite sorry. it was opposite the nature of god. well, who better to speech about all of this than gb news very own
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presenter, father kelvin robinson covered duncan very much. mean let's get straight down to the chase and this it ungodly to deport people or have them processed . it's not ungodly them processed. it's not ungodly fact. protecting our borders is very godly. nations and tribes of biblical god divided world into nations for a purpose and actually told us to look after our neighbour. that means first and foremost, each other. we have to look after ourselves before. out and before. we can reach out and help people. and he's help other people. and he's forgetting a lot of that. and actually listening to his speech . the global . you mentioned the global community bit of community as i'm still a bit of a globalist agenda and think a globalist agenda and i think he forgets , you know, he lives he forgets, you know, he lives in a palace if he wants to house a immigrants, he's happy to a few immigrants, he's happy to let do so. yeah. i mean, i did wonder whether or actually, wonder whether or not actually, maybe some element to maybe there was some element to that of self—awareness, that lack of self—awareness, perhaps little lot perhaps a little bit like a lot of the wealthy people. it to say, i'm i've always say, well, i'm sure i've always paid more. you know, you come voluntarily pay more but voluntarily pay more taxes, but church doesn't pay church of england doesn't pay tax. know, it not? tax. you know, does it not? that's interest. we've got £10 billion worth of assets. we don't pay tax it. so do you
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think the of should think that the church of should be quite literally putting be be quite literally putting their justin welby his their money? justin welby his mouth there's an mouth is? i think there's an argument be made there argument to be made there and especially that especially i say people that live palaces literal, palaces live in palaces literal, palaces with should with multiple wings should be housing before housing immigrants before telling we need to know telling us that we need to know our borders are essential is the government's main to the government's main to protect the borders? wonder some of borders? i wonder how some of the feel to learn or the people feel to learn this or to which is that the to reread this which is that the church of did copy church of england did copy little bit the wake of the little bit in the wake of the liverpool asylum seeker bombing . only . thankfully was the only individual who died that is individual who died in that is the you dropped a suicide the guy you dropped a suicide vest homemade vest to himself vest of homemade vest to himself and detonates the house. what i believe is your as large maternity hospital. well, supposedly england supposedly the church of england was running a little bit was all was running a little bit of which would of a pseudo scheme which would allow who've been refused allow people who've been refused asylum to convert to christianity to see be able christianity to see to be able to say they be persecuted to say they would be persecuted in country on grounds in their own country on grounds of their christian faith. some people at the time called it a racket. it is a racket. and racket. yes, it is a racket. and ihave racket. yes, it is a racket. and i have evidence that it's going on. i know priests that have done this and it's a great shame because is
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because they are what is sacrilege, really? because baptism sacrament and. it's baptism is a sacrament and. it's something that gives you a membership to christ's body into his it shouldn't be used his church. it shouldn't be used as a ticket get someone to as a ticket to get someone to entry a country illegally. entry into a country illegally. shouldn't said. we know if we shouldn't be said. we know if we give a baptism, if you see give you a baptism, if you see a christian, it will help on your application resubmit application and you can resubmit your claim is illegal and your asylum claim is illegal and it's a moral and know priests it's a moral and i know priests that been doing and i that have been doing that and i called the time actually called out at the time actually got a lot of trouble for it. got in a lot of trouble for it. no, it's an interesting really because you are obviously a greek yeah. and then greek god. yes yeah. and then part give out views. of part you give out views. of course, you're to do it course, you're paid to do it here as but want to do here as well. but you want to do it anyway. of course you do. should religion and religious should a religion and religious figures involved in figures get involved in political discourse and so should the likes of be getting involved when it comes to this stuff. this is where i do disagree with a lot of our viewers. i do think they should be involved in politics just not party i don't think party politics. i don't think you separate the faith from you can separate the faith from politics because very politics because it's very political. telling people political. it's telling people life, live life, essentially, how to live your to good your life how to live a good life. there's no way to do that
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without being political. okay. so his right to so you would defend his right to say he you disagree say what he said. you disagree with yeah. the problem is, with it? yeah. the problem is, i don't think he comes from a biblical perspective. i think he comes a liberal globalist comes from a liberal globalist perspective. and that's very troubling everything troubling because everything heard house of heard him say in the house of lords globalism. this lords today has globalism. this globalism that britain bad british that british people. that is unhelpful kind on that unhelpful. well kind of on that point do you he's point actually. do you he's forgetting he forgetting potentially here he to represent yes people to represent which yes people might argue with humanity as a whole. don't wrong but is the whole. don't me wrong but is the church all. there are a lot of engush church all. there are a lot of english who are currently homeless and paul is talking about potentially there is housing people who've just come across the channel in various at the taxpayers expense . would he the taxpayers expense. would he do better to maybe focus on charity starting at home because he assumes everyone coming he assumes that everyone coming over is doing so over the border is doing so because they're fleeing persecution, and know that's persecution, and we know that's not suggest at not true. the stats suggest at least of coming over least half of people coming over the border are doing so for economic purposes, fleeing persecution or warfare or anything we know that anything like that. we know that anything like that. we know that a people are coming from a lot of people are coming from as example lot of as an example and a lot of people coming from france,
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people are coming from france, which country. so which is a safe country. so assuming and foremost that assuming first and foremost that people come people are needing to come here. but on other, he's also but then on the other, he's also neglecting the homeless people. as you mentioned, we've we've got country who got veterans of this country who afford a house, afford to get a house, mind heats the house winter . and heats the house this winter. and we're all we're forgetting about all of those and neglect those people and neglect them. his priority be the his first priority should be the engush his first priority should be the english people, the british people helping them. and that course extend in course we extend a hand in foreign as we do so, we foreign aid. as we do so, we contribute aid contribute lot to foreign aid around the world. i think with the fourth contributors the fourth largest contributors of the that is of aid around the world, that is no amount of no insignificant amount of money. so now, kelvin, money. no so now, kelvin, i actually believe i informed earlier on the you name checked. oh, gosh, you 19 during this discussion in the house of lords it was a discussion on immigration the refugee now yes sir. gb news is presenter our very own father karl robertson was mentioned by lord robertson. let's just take away is it ? let's just take away is it? there's another question. why kelvin robinson kicked out as an ordinance? i don't know . kelvin robinson kicked out as an ordinance? i don't know. he may be very unsuitable , but but his
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be very unsuitable, but but his story has come out. it's not good. not going now. he makes a good. not going now. he makes a good point. i still don't know why i was kicked out while i was just inform got more wampum . just inform got more wampum. well there were a few conversations so i, i called to the priesthood. i asked the church if they thought i was called to the priesthood they said, yes, we feel your call to the priesthood paid for me to go to oxford for theological training. spent two years in oxford, great oxford, studied hard, got great grades. course, grades. at the end of course, when was supposed be sent when i was supposed to be sent into london , the into parish in london, the bishop of london said , we're bishop of london said, we're going hold off on i going to hold off on this. i said, okay long or why? and said, okay how long or why? and no answers came back. and essentially i had to down conversation she conversation with her and she said you can't be saying things like the church not institute like the church is not institute synod i feel it synod racist. i said, i feel it is. i feel there are individuals that racist with any that racist as with any institution, they should be addressed. however can't addressed. however i can't see that church as is that the church as is systemically she i can systemically racist. she i can tell you as a white woman it is . and then i realised that we're looking a world from two
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completely views and completely different views and we were never going to find common this area and common ground in this area and this one of reasons this is one of the reasons i believe that i wasn't ordained. but know this is this but then, you know this is this is back in june. i'm that now. that was a long time ago. and i'm comfortable happy. i'm very comfortable and happy. i've parish in north—west i've got my parish in north—west london and i've been ordained a deacon still the anglican deacon still in the anglican church. i'm actually in communion with 80% of anglicans around just around the world. so it's just a it's a minority england it's just a minority england that i'm not in communion with. however it is a very however and raising it is a very point to has sparked me to think what are people that what if there are people that don't a platform i do that don't have a platform i do that are conservative in their theology politics. but theology or their politics. but i was also just i was also argue just parishioners church or normal parishioners or church or normal people in any walk of life but wonder whether or not whether or not i am christian myself, by the way. so i'm saying is a genuine policy and i'm not trying to make any religious point here. i think it's important that people who are coming forward that, you know, it important that the church, it is important that the church, any church or, any religious set, suppose, know, set, i suppose, you know, welcomes people welcomes as many people as
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possible. but it possible. and get that. but it is it's sending out a message that you believe that borders that if you believe that borders a good thing that maybe you're not welcome in the church of england. i don't know because i'm and there's a lot of people who go to church every single sunday or whatever do think that what's on in channel is a what's going on in channel is a bit ridiculous. yeah. and we see this church is using words this the church is using words welcoming inclusive more , welcoming and inclusive more, more. it means more. but actually it means becoming more and more exclusive because british folk and because normal british folk and you'll stats the more you'll see in the stats the more people in the church of england voted than people voted for brexit than people in the country the rest of the country actually. that yes, it actually. is that true? yes, it is. and more people in the church of england, all you know from all kind of thought process that looking after that we should be looking after our but we should our neighbour, but we should also protecting people, also be protecting people, making sure homeless vets are looked all this of looked after and all this of stuff, the church wants stuff, whereas the church wants to really, to trans issues and really, really don't affect really issues that don't affect vast majority and make those the biggest conversation day biggest conversation of the day hope a couple of weeks hope we saw a couple of weeks ago church cambridge ago trinity church in cambridge said that jesus might have been trans that was processes and nonsense but the archbishop of
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canterbury archbishop, do canterbury the archbishop, do not and say this on not stand up and say no, this on this untrue. christ was a man this is untrue. christ was a man he was martin cornet that is in the scriptures so they're not standing for the faith. and so i think lot people feel left think a lot people feel left behind. calvin, thank much behind. calvin, thank very much your come is your time as ever come from, is that fellow robinson very that fellow calvin robinson very own right? lots of have been own right? lots of you have been getting in with your thoughts on the are the archbishop's. if you are just us, have you just joining us, where have you been? h just joining us, where have you been? it the fact that been? but it is the fact that basically archbishop justin welby it welby essentially said that it was, paraphrasing but was, i'm paraphrasing it, but ungodly nice and, cruel, ungodly and not nice and, cruel, cruel to, essentially deport anyone as far as i could tell. anyway jill says, just google. how much the church of england owns. perhaps welby is so concerned about the illegal immigrants should some immigrants he should donate some land homes for land for building of homes for them out some the them all. rent out some of the church's property. the case church's property. in the case of feel like of hypocrisy, but feel like maybe joe has got a point really there is a line there . you could there is a line there. you could house people on it. maybe you could some of the church's could use some of the church's wealth to raise money wealth or assets to raise money to that. and is to help do that. and how is these local communities these so that local communities maybe have a say maybe who don't have a say in the matter by the way about
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money going to hotels not just well but three. well not just two but three. margaret hotels in some communities expense of communities at the expense of local at expense of local taxpayer at the expense of local taxpayer at the expense of local public services. maybe, just church could a just maybe the church could do a bit out with all of bit more to help out with all of that. any it says the that. any model it says the church is not particularly church here is not particularly about homeless already about our homeless already living well, i'm living on the streets. well, i'm just count outside just going to count outside because would be ludicrous to because it would be ludicrous to suggest sure you're suggest it, as i'm sure you're not in such black and not making in such black and white terms, mandalay bay will be totally ludicrous to suggest the a whole the church as a whole doesn't care homeless people. care at all homeless people. they a lot good it's they do do a lot good work. it's just whether not they're just whether or not they're wrong issue, which is wrong about issue, which is it is is cruel to allow is whether is cruel to allow people be processed in people to be processed in rwanda, did think rwanda, for example, i did think calvin a good calvin robinson made a good point which the point earlier, which the assumption that it is cruel based around the fact that every single is indeed a single coming here is indeed a genuine an asylum or genuine an asylum seeker or a refugee , in reality, that's not refugee, in reality, that's not the case. and that means that you it just diminishes it. so if i lost my train of thought that sorry. it'sjust i lost my train of thought that sorry. it's just because with good reason by the way, as you're about to find out, i've
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just had it in head croatia just had it in my head croatia have beaten brazil in the world cup . so there we go penalties in cup. so there we go penalties in the quarter final and there's some life that you can see of . some life that you can see of. i'm assuming croatia and croatian fans wherever in the world they may be and they are they are extremely happy about they are extremely happy about the fact that that team is beaten brazil. so brazil you know what it might actually be coming home if england can get through france tomorrow, which i hope they really do , then hope they really do, then actually, realistically, we've got we've a crack jones got to we've a crack in jones then one of the netherlands and argentina are going knock each other that game later on other out and that game later on tonight. whichever one of tonight. so whichever one of those out. that's great. those is out. that's great. realistically is england's, isn't england's , he says isn't it? is england's, he says he but anyway have to wait he says. but anyway have to wait and see . yeah. so guys in zagreb and see. yeah. so guys in zagreb by the way those so they are that i mean it could have i thought was leicester square for a minute. no. alas. anyway, right. look thank much right. look thank you very much everybody been obviously getting in touch with to get in touch with you to get throughout course of this
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throughout the course of this whether or been whether it's been online or been whatever gbviews@gbnews.uk whether it's been online or been whateveoff 3views@gbnews.uk whether it's been online or been whateve off 3views(thankvs.uk whether it's been online or been whateve off 3views(thank you< whether it's been online or been whateveoff 3views(thank you very popped off today. thank you very much, . somebody else popped off today. thank you very muc will . somebody else popped off today. thank you very muc will be . somebody else popped off today. thank you very muc will be popping)mebody else popped off today. thank you very muc will be popping off body else popped off today. thank you very muc will be popping off over else who will be popping off over course of the next hour is michelle dewberry dewbs& here michelle dewberry dewbs& co here in you very much, in the studio. you very much, michel. well coming up, i imagine you'll be leaning on the fact that croatia beats and brazil. oh yeah, definitely. and your on that, your dreams might be on that, but reality, but not in reality, unfortunately. i'll tell you what i'm not doing tonight as well. i'm not doing harry and meghan edge and fraser and meghan edge and i'm fraser and i'm about that. i do want i'm happy about that. i do want to talk a lot about strikes last week, much all of my week, pretty much all of my viewers were absolutely behind the backing them all the strikers, backing them all the strikers, backing them all the we can we've had more the way we can we've had more strikes happen and announced i'm pondenng strikes happen and announced i'm pondering are people still backing the strikers are there any lines by which people say okay now that's going little bit too far. what we all make as well the army having to step well so the army having to step in up is that the right in and step up is that the right course of i also want to course of action? i also want to ponder the facts but nurses patrick many places now are popping up - patrick many places now are popping up . you cannot spend popping up. you cannot spend cold, hard cash. we've all just
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kind of shrugged and gone, okay, yeah. fair enough. but is it fair enough? it's legal in this country to not accept cash but should be the case. i don't actually think should and the police get that it's a police of got onto social media to ask parents to stop telling kids you if you know the police will come and take you away that community relations well it made me laugh because i've got to say i'll definitely be that line on market. i can tell you. but apparently kids shouldn't fear the police. none of us should. we should respect the police and them essentially as of us. them essentially as one of us. really, because eyes fantastic. they you know the police come they if you know the police come and take you away i it's a great line you used to live relatively near to police station and i was particularly naughty, which came as no shock to anyone . i was as no shock to anyone. i was quite naughty on that. mum quite naughty on that. my mum threatened to call the police that i'll go downstairs. don't call that call the police. and at that moment sirens were going past outside and all the police actually take me away. actually had to take me away. but go. michelle, but anyway, we go. michelle, thank i'm sure thank you very much. i'm sure
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it'll a great show michelle it'll be a great show michelle dewberry dewbs& co she dewberry that we dewbs& co she will there in just a matter will be there in just a matter of moments. thank you very much. is treated not just today is treated to me not just today but of course week. i'm off but of course all week. i'm off now. see you again on now. will see you again on monday p.m. now. will see you again on monday pm. a fantastic monday 3 pm. have a fantastic weekend hopefully we can weekend and hopefully we can all england french see england thumping the french see in how hello it's aidan in a bit how hello it's aidan mcgivern here from the met office it stays cold the weekend ice , snow and fog for some but ice, snow and fog for some but for many others clear skies by night and crisp winter by day. we've still got cold air in place across the uk and we still got low pressure in the north sea, helping to maintain some showers. but it's mainly wind wood coast where we see those showers so that that for friday night it's northern scotland into parts of northern ireland. western and the western england and wales. the showers coastal level will be around spray and sleet, perhaps some hail, but inland and with any elevation falling snow covering for snowdonia , for covering for snowdonia, for example, for high parts of cumbria and a lot of snow building up for northern now
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parts of the northern scotland where we see some clear spells overnight could to as low as overnight could dip to as low as minus lower and for much minus ten or lower and for much of the uk so widespread frost and some freezing fog patches to wake up to as well. that fog will be slow to clear poor visibility and 1 to 2 spots continuing into the afternoon. also there's icy patches to watch out for early on saturday in the west and the north. a cold day to come for all of us, 1 to 3 celsius typically and below freezing where we've got the fog and where we've got any higher parts . the fog and where we've got any higher parts. now into the fog and where we've got any higher parts . now into saturday higher parts. now into saturday nights, the fog and the frost will widely reform and so another cold night there'll be increased risk of some showers feeding into southeast scotland parts of covering inland here some significant snow over the hills and certainly in the north and the west that continues to be that risk of icy patches as we of sunday it's dense freezing fog patches especially for southern and central parts of the uk. most of these will disperse by the afternoon but
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some will continue and then a signal for some more signify and snow perhaps to affect southeast england some uncertainty about that of the forecast but if it comes off of course it could bnng comes off of course it could bring some significant disruption . all gb news right disruption. all gb news right the nation you can get us on television on radio, on digital we're absolutely everywhere. amazing you see amazing you remind may of me of the european parliament's here's the most important that we not part of the mainstream we think and speak just like you do are the people's channel magnificent. that's really really thoughtful. come and join us on gb news. the people's news channel e r and we'd like to say you to each and every one of you for bringing us your for helping our great nafion your for helping our great nation find its voice. we are here you on radio, television and online across scotland,
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wales and northern ireland. it's not bbc, you know, you actually get your facts, right? we are proud to be gb news the channel britain's news .
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talking about racism here a ridiculous argument that he was making, you know, talking about
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the commonwealth being being empire to . but these things, you empire to. but these things, you know, do do seep into people's consciousness. and i think there is a real danger that people begin to believe some a lot of this story before, you know with the numerous glossy , know with the numerous glossy, uncritical interviews that they've done so lot of it

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