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tv   Dan Wootton Tonight  GB News  January 4, 2023 9:00pm-11:01pm GMT

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n0 spin, no bias , no spin, no bias , no censorship. no spin, no bias, no censorship. this is dan tonight with me, mark dolan . he's been accused of mark dolan. he's been accused of going a while, but rishi sunak came back with a bang today staking his premiership on five key pledges. we will inflation and grow the reduce debt , cut and grow the reduce debt, cut waiting lists and stop boats . waiting lists and stop boats. but will rishi's hail mary work? will his prayers be answered ? will his prayers be answered? i'll analyse in my digest shortly, but i'll also ask my superstar panel. dawn nissen, adam brookes , nigel nelson . adam brookes, nigel nelson. plus, at 935, westminster's
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toughest talking mp lee anderson gives his verdict on whether rishi's plan can stop labour , in rishi's plan can stop labour, in particular, cotton sunak stop the boats amid fear that masks distancing and work from home orders will return. should we back to covid restrictions to save the nhs, we'll debate that. we'll hear from both sides in the clash and i'll find what you think. that's at 920 and sparks will fly as he reportedly investigates the death of princess diana for his new memoir is it time prince harry let his mother rest in peace social media sensation and self—professed chief of gammon june slater is cancelled at 1040 after warnings that's a quarter , right a quarter of our labour force are inactive all work shy brits bankrupting . the country brits bankrupting. the country will debate that at ten as he plans to make the subject
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mandatory for 18 year olds. is rishi wrong to prioritise maths over other subjects? we'll ask my highly educated panel. over other subjects? we'll ask my highly educated panel . at my highly educated panel. at 1030. and is white privilege a myth? all explore reports of the concept being in parliament in the company of top rapper author and podcast host zuby . at 945 and podcast host zuby. at 945 plus tomorrow's papers and greatest britain and union has along the way. this is dan wootton tonight with me, mark dolan. let's go . dolan. let's go. way will rishi sunak's five point plan by five more years in number 10. my digest is on its way. but first the headlines with taxi a sanchez . mug. thank
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with taxi a sanchez. mug. thank you . this is the latest from the you. this is the latest from the gb newsroom. in his first major speech of the new year, prime minister rishi sunak set out his government's five key priorities . he pledged to halve inflation and grow the economy. stop illegal immigration. reduce national debt and cut massive backlogs in the nhs . he even backlogs in the nhs. he even told the public the him accountable if waiting time waiting lists in england not fall in two years time. those people's priorities they your government's priorities and we will either have achieved them or not. no tricks no ambiguity. we're either delivering for you or we're not. we will rebuild trust in politics through , trust in politics through, action or not at all. while shadow education secretary bridget phillipson said labour also have plans tackle the small
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boat crisis . we do need to see boat crisis. we do need to see to clamp down on those criminal gangs that exploit people. we would make sure that we're setting up a new part, national crime agency, to take and to make sure that are not making that journey which, you know, as we've seen all too often ends in tragedy. the royal college of nursing accused mr. sunak of being detached from reality following his speech as leader pat collins says, the pressure is being by the nhs could not be blamed on covid or current high levels of flu cases , she says. levels of flu cases, she says. health leaders believe that staff shortages are the root cause of the issues. nurses are preparing to go on strike again this month after joining preparing to go on strike again this month afterjoining the this month after joining the picket for the first time in the rcn history month . while the rcn history month. while the prime minister also touched on the ongoing rail strike, saying his government's door is always open for dialogues with unions, it comes on the second day of the first of 248 hour strikes by
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workers with over 40,000 rmt members walking off the job over pay, members walking off the job over pay, jobs and. train drivers in the aslef union will strike tomorrow followed by a second 48 hour rmt strike on friday. a man who raped and sexually assaulted dozens of children over a six year period has been jailed life. this is footage 50 year old martin armstrong from pembrokeshire being arrested in july last year after technology used that on pixelated . a used that on pixelated. a picture of his face found photos he taken of himself abusing his victims . and author fay weldon , victims. and author fay weldon, best known for her novel the life and love of a she devil has died the age of 91. published more than 30 novels during her career , as well as short stories career, as well as short stories and plays written for tv, radio and plays written for tv, radio and the stage. she was also one of the writers of the popular seventies drama series upstairs downstairs. her say she died
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peacefully in sleep this morning . tv peacefully in sleep this morning. tv news. now it's back to dan wootton tonight with matt dillon dillon . dillon. the daily star newspaper, which is my opinion, a cracking read , is my opinion, a cracking read, teased the prime minister today with their front page, saying he's that cartoon character. wally who wears a stripy jumper bobble hat and disappears from view into a big. he's the headune view into a big. he's the headline forget about where's wally . where's rishi? they ask . wally. where's rishi? they ask. well the lesser spotted sunak has been spotted. and he may be a wally after all. our prime minister, who's in the post for just a matter of weeks, is a man
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with a plan. well, actually , with a plan. well, actually, he's got five. take a listen . oh he's got five. take a listen. oh five promises. we will have inflation. grow the economy . inflation. grow the economy. reduce debt. cut. waiting lists. and stop the boats. those are the people's priorities . they the people's priorities. they are your government's priorities. and we will either have achieved them or not. no tricks, no ambiguity. we're either delivering for you or we're not. we will. casting a critical on his speech. you could say that some of those promises are really creative accounting likes of which gary barlow or jemmy carr would be proud . after all, his promise to proud. after all, his promise to chopin proud. after all, his promise to chop in half is hardly an impossible task . as the global impossible task. as the global cost of energy comes down, and as demand for goods is reduced due to recession , which is due to recession, which is always deflation . every man and always deflation. every man and his dog knows inflation is heading south. however promising
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to cut it in half is , still to cut it in half is, still bold. and if he's able to deliver on that . we'll take it. deliver on that. we'll take it. you might expect nhs waiting lists to also come down by the summer as they tend to, but in the end, whilst some of those pledges may have happened anyway . there isn't anything outlined that most people won't like . as that most people won't like. as shopping lists go. it's a belter boost the economy, reduce debts , cut inflation, get the nhs, serve patients again and tackle illegal migration. boom. of course there is a risk that sunak's five point plan will have echoes of former labour leader ed miliband . ed stone do leader ed miliband. ed stone do you remember that with pledges carved into a block of granite , carved into a block of granite, a block granite? not a bad description for miliband himself. but this is no gravestone for sunak in my view. when people have been asking where's rishi? well i think we've got our answer. he's been
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holed up at number 10, quietly making plan to fix the country's problems. he knows that his job depends on it. problems. he knows that his job depends on it . and the beauty of depends on it. and the beauty of today's speech is that it contains pledges . commitments, contains pledges. commitments, promises them. at last. contains pledges. commitments, promises them. at last . a promises them. at last. a politician we can hold to . for politician we can hold to. for now. in january of last year, exactly 12 months ago, i covid tyranny and a number 10 operation in dogged by selfish scandal after scandal. i went on the national television and radio airwaves and. i called for sunak to become prime minister. at the time i said we needed a grown up in the room. well after a tumultuous year and two prime ministers later , he's in the hot ministers later, he's in the hot seat and it's time for him to deliver . so there it is seat and it's time for him to deliver. so there it is in seat and it's time for him to deliver . so there it is in black deliver. so there it is in black and white. and what i liked about the speech is that he set the bar high , not just for
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the bar high, not just for himself , but the bar high, not just for himself, but for all of us, urging change in the mentality of this country. sunak is thinking big not just for himself but for britain . himself but for britain. education, for example, must be the focus of government policy , the focus of government policy, the focus of government policy, the ultimate investment. he's right and nothing boosts social mobility more than giving people the best possible start in life . giving youngsters the tools with which to make something of their god given talents . and their god given talents. and he's right to point out the scandal of a quarter. that's right. a quarter of work age adults being economically . right. a quarter of work age adults being economically. in 25% of the population who can work but don't. that is not sustainable . now the highly sustainable. now the highly talented and boris johnson who to vast credit got brexit done and kept jeremy corbyn out of number 10, was self—confessed chairman of the country when he was pm. that's right. he was the
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chairman of britain . well, what chairman of britain. well, what we have in is a sea ego. someone can look at every department of state crack the whip and, make it better in a way that i hope will have echoes of his historic predecessor from the 1980s, margaret thatcher. and as we on last night's show facing down the unions with their irresponsible and inflationary wage demands could be sunak. falklands moments . in my view, falklands moments. in my view, there were two key questions to answer about rishi sunak. the first is whether he has political judgement . to. well by political judgement. to. well by zero in on the five key issues that matter most to the british people. i believe that today he has passed that with flying colours . but the other question colours. but the other question is to which we do not yet have an answer. has he got the character , the backbone? has character, the backbone? has
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this minister got a pair of balls ? because seeing through balls? because seeing through this five point plan, including tackling illegal immigration will, i believe, see him comfortably reverse labour's . comfortably reverse labour's. but it will take political . but it will take political. there will be ups . there will be there will be ups. there will be downs, including further economic and infrastructural strife. in his game of chicken with mick lynch and the other union barons. so frankly, things could get worse before they get better . had could get worse before they get better. had sunak could get worse before they get better . had sunak got the better. had sunak got the determination, the vision , the determination, the vision, the conviction, the guts to this through . ultimately, whatever through. ultimately, whatever your political colour , we all your political colour, we all need sunak to succeed . but in need sunak to succeed. but in purely political terms, if he delivers on those pledges, the fab five, the list that he's booked , another five years of booked, another five years of accommodation in that famous edwardian house in central london . so sunak has laid out london. so sunak has laid out his roadmap, but there's no point a map if you don't stick
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to the rates. talk is cheap . to the rates. talk is cheap. there's a lot of work to be done. so dishy, rishi. let's get busy. people are talked about how awkward he is around real people including this recent excruciating encounter with a homeless man at a food shelter. it was awkward, to say the least . okay, so he hasn't got the comments touch. i couldn't care less . rishi comments touch. i couldn't care less. rishi sunak comments touch. i couldn't care less . rishi sunak shouldn't less. rishi sunak shouldn't pretend to be something he's not. don't need him to be man. the people. salt of the earth. someone that you'd like to go to the pub with. rishi sunak doesn't have to be a great person . he has to be a great. person. he has to be a great. prime minister. and today we saw the makings of just that now. what's your view , dan, at what's your view, dan, at gbnews.uk? i'll get to your emails shortly, but reacting to that and all of the big stories of the day, my superstar panel, former editor and current
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columnist at the daily star, queen of all media, a very old friend of mine, dawn neesom, businessman and pub entrepreneur and in my view, speaker of common sense, adam brookes. and then surely the owner of the best title, the longest serving political editor in this country in fleet , the political editor in fleet, the political editor of the sunday mirror and the sunday people, nigel nelson. nigel, let me start with you . nigel, let me start with you. today was a bad day for, keir starmer, wasn't it? no, it was a very bad day for rishi sunak. how many did you have ? the green how many did you have? the green room were alcohol free hair on dan wootton tonight ? room were alcohol free hair on dan wootton tonight? i room were alcohol free hair on dan wootton tonight ? i know, but dan wootton tonight? i know, but you couldn't even get coffee there. oh that's right. it sounded to me like winchester head boy that he once was giving his end of term cheap shot. nigel nelson . cheap? well, nigel nelson. cheap? well, actually , that's what he was. actually, that's what he was. his family worked hard. actually, that's what he was. his family worked hard . they his family worked hard. they built up their business. so he tells us great gatsby to steve. and he was it was light on any kind of substance and heavy on
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platitudes rather than the ed stone . it reminded me more stone. it reminded me more replies pledges that he went into the 9097 election. but at least with blair, he put figures on those pledges to show the targets he was aiming and to judge him on whether whether he would actually make it. richard said it did. none of that. so inflation forget . of course inflation forget. of course it'll come by half. the office of budget responsible , which has of budget responsible, which has been predicting that more than half, it'll be 3.8. similarly with debt. debt is going to come down. it'll be 30% higher than it was in 2012. but it will come down when it comes to waiting lists . they're also going to lists. they're also going to come down. but by how much? a million. one, two, three people. we had no on that. and the predictions areas they'll peak in june and start dropping after that. in june and start dropping after that . the one interesting one that. the one interesting one was he will stop the boats and he won't stop the. what he was questioned on that by journalists afterwards he then
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said well it stop some boats , said well it stop some boats, you know one or two or something like that. he didn't make an absolute pledge to end channel crossings . dawn, you're chomping crossings. dawn, you're chomping at the bit to go just to say he didn't actually, i thought the words were very well chosen. the boat he didn't say, i'm boat things he didn't say, i'm going so i'm going going to stop them. so i'm going to that issue. but as you to tackle that issue. but as you say, he was very very say, nigel, he was very very thin on substance. how you going to tackle what's to to tackle it? what's going to happen exactly? he didn't mention rwanda or any of those. but, how it's but, you know, i know how it's going reduce the nhs going to reduce the nhs list. i mean, i lost the will to live for a start. so that's one of the waiting. went on how the waiting. i just went on how the waiting. i just went on how the five promises take longer. the in pace. honestly, it's the more in pace. honestly, it's like word , wasn't it? it was like a word, wasn't it? it was like a word, wasn't it? it was like , just give me some facts, like, just give me some facts, give me some figures. give me how you're to do it. it how you're going to do it. it like it was like he was the opposition leader. like opposition leader. he was like keir when says, i'm keir starmer when says, i'm going to this, i'm going to going to do this, i'm going to bigger better longer and bigger and better and longer and harder but doesn't harder and then but doesn't actually how going actually tell you how he's going to of and i just thought to do any of and i just thought that was what i got to i didn't
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get great speech from you get great great speech from you by bobby should prime by the way bobby should be prime minister. i'll tell you minister. well, i'll tell you what. you get my brother, and, yeah, it just i just honestly wasn't getting leadership. i wasn't getting leadership. i wasn't getting leadership. i wasn't getting margaret as a leader. you mentioned ceo . i leader. you mentioned ceo. i thought he was more like a marketing man, more the pr man, very slick . i'll tell you what very slick. i'll tell you what i mean. what he's booted out as pm, which the tories , a habit of pm, which the tories, a habit of doing at the don't like. doing at the moment don't like. and you obviously. i and it's not you obviously. i mean then go on and mean, rishi could then go on and be i don't know, a really good black presenter cbeebies because reading out stories the little kids send sleep kids would send them to sleep straight away or maybe overnights on gb news. i'm going to to say that i to, i'm going to say that i think that today was the moment that actually sunak moved the dial. he's a plan. he's now made himself accountable. and in two years time, he can go to the british public and say, here are the five things i said i'd do back me or sack me. i think they were bites just to keep were sound bites just to keep the happy, you know, the public happy, you know, especially phone , as especially on the phone, as i tweeted , just said,
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tweeted yesterday, just said, rishi, mob , i dropped it. i rishi, mob, i dropped it. i tweeted yesterday, where is our prime minister you know, and i was quite excited to see the star. but obviously they read my tweet. but look, i'm someone that does not trust rishi sunak we my industry needed his guidance and to hear and see him in early 2022, he went missing . in early 2022, he went missing. he put the vanity back up . my he put the vanity back up. my industry. he threw us under bus and then just went missing for months. and that was because he was his powder dry and his clean for a leadership that he knew was coming and had planned the year before . all of his pledges year before. all of his pledges in the leadership race . he's in the leadership race. he's u—turned i think he's a liar. i don't think is a leader and certainly the conservative party not get my vote. we famously leader and as chancellor you know that name carefully i mean look not not that ringing from adam brooks. what your view,
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dan, that gbnews.uk. i think it was quite a moment for rishi sunakin was quite a moment for rishi sunak in his premiership he can now be held to account . but now be held to account. but what's your view? let me know. i'll be speaking to no nonsense tory mp lee anderson later this hour and of particular focus on emigre policy can rishi stop the boats . so lee anderson live at boats. so lee anderson live at 935 but next in the clash as the establishment ramp up the hysteria again, should we go back to covid restrictions to save the nhs anti—lockdown micro biologist david livermore goes head to head with and broadcaster nina minkoff see you into .
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top tory mp lee anderson reacting to rishi sunak's speech today. he's live in the studio. can sunak stop boats? he's up shortly but it's time now for the clash . there are fears the clash. there are fears a raft of covid restrictions could soon be rearing their ugly heads. ministers are reportedly being pressured to consider last resort plans to advise brits to wear masks on public transport work from home and socially distance. if the health service is at risk of collapse from not just a new cases of the virus,
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but an influx of flu patients, staff shortages , the usual staff shortages, the usual winter pressures . while the winter pressures. while the government has for now played down the threat of such moves being implement it health chiefs and experts have already urged people to stay or wear a mask if they feel unwell. meanwhile labour mp rachel maskell has called for a discussion on the return of wait for it mandates covid isolation . in other words, covid isolation. in other words, you get covid, you lock yourself at home for two weeks. so should we go back to covid restrictions to save the nhs. what would you choose? save our health service or give up your freedoms? let me know your thoughts at gbnews.uk or tweet at gb and please , or tweet at gb news and please, in the twitter poll , because in the twitter poll, because paige is , keen to get your votes paige is, keen to get your votes in and we'll get you the results of those votes very shortly. but to debate this, i'm delighted to welcome david livermore , welcome david livermore, professor of microbiology at the university of east anglia and journalist and broadcaster nina mischka . david, let me start mischka. david, let me start with you. should we bring back
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covid restrictions to save the nhs ? n0, covid restrictions to save the nhs ? no, we suppose they saved nhs? no, we suppose they saved the nhs three years ago with restrictions and clearly the nhs today is wobbling. we failed in that saving the nhs and what's being talked of is bringing back masks. well, look at china. the chinese are encouraged be assiduous maskers masks are still compulsory. there have been photographs shows them wearing and yet they've gone negligible numbers of cases month ago to a quarter of a billion people infected within three weeks. masks fail. they don't work. what we achieve all the restrictions over the past three years was to disrupt our natural ecology with a range of viruses the flu, respiratory in situ virus, minor viruses , also situ virus, minor viruses, also strep a and. we've got to re—establish that equilibrium. and that's what's happening at present. and if we put in place
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all, we do is we delay that re—establishment of an equilibrium . we keep kicking the equilibrium. we keep kicking the can down road, we create more a more of an immune deficit in ourselves. and it does no good. it makes it worse in the long term. it was taking on the nose that the balance established need a mask . society can't need a mask. society can't afford any of these measures again and the economy can't, can it? well, at the present we're only talking about mask wearing and. i'd very much like to ask david as a medical man, why do surgeon to wear masks to stop splash of blood from surgery, to stop droplets as a life and so on going into the patient. absolutely and also presumably to protect them to against splashing, not against viruses . splashing, not against viruses. we don't know that this is so tiny it passes through the pores on the mask. well that's the first time i've heard that the have been tested and if there are three layers of their proper mask that ffp two or three and if they fit tightly then you are
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protected. now look, i think some experts explain to me, david do condoms all the time. yes. if you a condom over your head , then it would certainly be head, then it would certainly be a decent barrier against virus. so no, no , i think it's you know so no, no, i think it's you know . no, i'm not saying i'm not. so i'm not suggesting i'm talking about i'm talking about condoms dunng about i'm talking about condoms during sex now. condom is a barrier it prevents hopefully a pregnancy. if you don't want it. and also sexual transmission with . yes, i'm sorry gcse with. yes, i'm sorry gcse biology and my apologies and the male reproductive fluids the condoms barrier, the masks don't work in this. no, no, no. but what i'm it's a very crude analogy to say it's about it's bits but but it is a barrier. you said that if you had a mask fitted properly, a proper mask , fitted properly, a proper mask, it's been proven that countries
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that have up in japan and china, you actually believe anything they tell you in terms of figures on who was wearing masks or you studies. you can look at japan severely. but what about japan? japan is have major surges of covid. japan has a population of 127 million being the first. make your point. i'll come back to you to say japan. the countries have generally advocated mask wearing have had lower deaths from covid. japan in particular. so far 55,000 deaths, i believe. and population of 127, which we know about t—cell immunity from from far eastern population. we don't about what about american states because that's more comparable. what about florida who lifted mask mandates before mask mandates months before california and they lower california and they have lower per per per capita adjusted deaths from covid? well, who knows? but it makes sense to me if virus is airborne, which it then if you prevent from
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breathing in or your prevented from breathing out and breath, then there's got to be there's got to be more of you've got a chance. got to be more of you've got a chance . if masks were made of chance. if masks were made of condoms , you would be right condoms, you would be right unfortunate. you would not then able to breathe through , not able to breathe through, not breathe streaming of masks. nobody released condoms. yeah, that wave of masks is such the can get through them or it get around them and you raise the topic of time if it it and 95 plus well they've been in bavana plus well they've been in bavaria for example i think one or two of the parts of austria as well. but the parts of germany where they've mandated have fared no and no worse than other what people have, what . other what people have, what. david if these and i'm no fan the masks but if they prevent some covid cases and prevented some covid cases and prevented some covid cases and prevented some covid deaths perhaps they're worth it . if they did . they're worth it. if they did. but the evidence is they don't look at those numbers from china
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. china has gone from a standing to a quarter billion people infected, 18% of the chinese populace over a matter of about three weeks. and those the data leak out of china. and yes i agree with you, you cannot trust numbers from china. you've got less. trust is . the sampling of less. trust is. the sampling of people coming off planes into . people coming off planes into. milan from china of whom 50% were infected . so you've got were infected. so you've got undoubtedly you as somebody a logical are you telling me that that if as we are talking here, there is no between us, if there a barrier of, say, a screen , a barrier of, say, a screen, would that make a difference if ? there was a so if there was a solid plastic screen and we spoke to each other at that moment. so that that would make a difference i'd say we've musk does not well can we why on earth are surgeons wearing it while another nurse is wearing it to stop blood spots not just
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blood spatter. sure but at the point of contamination mean. but, nina, the point about these surgical masks are the little the blue ones you see in hospitals is that they've been used by surgeons for years . used by surgeons for years. they're considered. they they're not considered. they weren't accepted germany weren't accepted in germany dunng weren't accepted in germany during pandemic as as during the pandemic as as a proper face mask on. the germans don't think they work, at least that particular variety. can we close issue, nina, close on another issue, nina, which the other policy? which is the other covid policy? so working from home, encouraging people to work from home, lots of people do so efficiently, but it will cost the economy, won't it? and also self—isolation ? do we really self—isolation? do we really want to go back to last winter? no, we don't want to go back last winter. we don't want to go back to anything like that. but the that people don't the trouble is that people don't behave sensibly they they they think it's all over it's necessarily all over . i think it's all over it's necessarily all over. i mean i was on the tube for tubes yesterday. nobody's masks. it's very, very crowded. you the nhs is crumbling. it's not just
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because of this, but many reasons which we're not going into tonight. but we need to keep ourselves healthy and to prevent ourselves from infecting other people. and it's complete sense to me to take this you think that you think masks are not good enough to take, but to take the precautions that we can. well, david, let's leave those other measures. what do you of the other ideas? you think of the other ideas? work home, social distance, work from home, social distance, that kind of thing. futile because yes. do a very because? yes. they may do a very amount of good in the short term, but in the long term we train ourselves of a not immunity. normally ripping up against each other. we get we get asymptomatic with this or that. what we find the office we call, we cough , we wheeze, and call, we cough, we wheeze, and our immunity strengthens our immunity strength . we get a mild immunity strength. we get a mild asymptomatic . we've been doing asymptomatic. we've been doing this for hundreds , thousands of this for hundreds, thousands of years. all our individual our lifetimes. and as a species for thousands of years . so how many thousands of years. so how many deaths were you prepared
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countenance then to what you're saying is let it rip because that's natural. let it rip and it'll kill off the private how willing to come how many to model of letting it. and sweden has the lowest excess mortality of any country in it has the greatest mortality rate than the other scandinavian . no, denmark other scandinavian. no, denmark , finland and no. i had norway is very marginally , but finland is very marginally, but finland and denmark if you look again. so how many deaths were you prepared to countenance many old people? well, you prepared to see just sacra like that. it is not a question of it is it is neither one about deaths covid us wh actually a lower of nina david you finish point in i'll come
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back to you david make your final point that you sequester old people away to give a few months few weeks of life, but they cannot see their ones. do you think you're protecting them? in fact, you're denying them? in fact, you're denying them that choice. quality of life is , not legally. it is not life is, not legally. it is not up to you. and i respect , life is, not legally. it is not up to you. and i respect, all your qualifications and your standing . but i don't standing. but i don't necessarily respect your attitude. i it not up to you to play attitude. i it not up to you to play and say life and death. let them go. well, let me individual who wants to sequester themselves away . but you cannot themselves away. but you cannot do that to a whole society . it's do that to a whole society. it's okay. you can not kill off a whole generation strong sense. you will not kill off a generation and it doesn't have a motto. you go look, this show is all about opinions. a fascinating and respectful conversation . feelings are conversation. feelings are running high, understandably so do let me know your thoughts down at uk, but thank down at gb news uk, but thank you to the professor microbiology university microbiology at the university of anglia. i think you've of east anglia. i think you've retired now. david.
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congratulations that. david congratulations on that. david livermore a good friend , livermore and a good friend, mine and broadcaster mine journalist and broadcaster of , street legend mine journalist and broadcaster of metcalfe, , street legend mine journalist and broadcaster of metcalfe, who aet legend mine journalist and broadcaster of metcalfe, who willegend mine journalist and broadcaster of metcalfe, who will return nina metcalfe, who will return to gb news very shortly. thanks to you both, who do you agree with? should we go back to covid restrictions to save the nhs? lloyd twitter no , lloyd on twitter says no, because they make zero difference every winter. the difference every winter. for the past years, nhs has been past 20 years, the nhs has been in a mess. it's years of underfunding poor working conditions our conditions that's failing our health benjamin says it health service. benjamin says it didn't work before. what would save the nhs is a removal the current custodians of it rishi and his mates bin them off and get grown ups in government. mark says it shouldn't up to mark says it shouldn't be up to the population save the general population to save the general population to save the that's government's the nhs. that's the government's job and verdict is now in. job and your verdict is now in. 12% agree that we should return covid restrictions to save the nhs. 88% say that we should give up our freedoms again . keep up our freedoms again. keep those opinions coming . coming those opinions coming. coming up, as it's revealed, parliamentary will now be banned from learning about white privilege in the workplace . is privilege in the workplace. is this concept a myth or something? we should think about a musician podcaster zuby gives
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take in the outsider at 945. but what you think white privilege is not a thing but first. after boldly promising stop the boats today, can the prime minister be the one to so solve the migrant crisis ? rishi, stop the boats . crisis? rishi, stop the boats. westminster's toughest talking mp lee anderson joins me straight after the .
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break now, rishi sunak's point plan earlier today included bold promises, but perhaps the most important was , his final pledge important was, his final pledge to stop endless onslaught of migrant landings on britain's shores . and now that is shores. and now that is a promise. we've heard countless already from so many prime and with more than 45,000 illegal migrant crossings across the channel last year alone, can rishi really stop the boats? westminster is tough. is talking mp and tory of the year lee anderson certainly hope so keenly aware the next election hangsin keenly aware the next election hangs in the balance . lee hangs in the balance. lee believes that delivering on like finding a solution to the migrant will stop labour's lunatics taking over asylum down at westminster. well lee anderson joins me now. highly high mark, great to have you on the show . will rishi sunak's the show. will rishi sunak's five point plan wash with your
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constituents . in five point plan wash with your constituents. in i five point plan wash with your constituents . in i think to be constituents. in i think to be honest with you i think that we're not happy with the one point plan with the small boats. at the moment, the margin of problem that's the one that fell was my inbox every single week people are obviously furious. i've been on this show nine two times banging about this times banging on about this subject. know what is subject. but you know what is it? i think he's been bold and brave. rishi it is a man with a plan and he's actually done a couple things since he's been the pm that. no the prime minister don't. why i've there remember have been three prime minister shinzo i've been elected one is sort of the elected so one is sort of the new coal mine that's in cumbria . that's that's music to the ears read more voters and is promised he's made a pledge that we have a new coming into the house next month that will ensure that anybody here illegally through illegal routes will not be to claim asylum and are going to go straight back detained and then go straight back. now, we never had that in
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the nationality and borders bill but that that but not allowed that that promised prime promised by a previous prime minister. secretaries minister. all home secretaries you know to rishi. it you know fair play to rishi. it wasn't my first choice, like wasn't my first choice, but like i come out swinging is i say is come out swinging is the right policies. but the problem we got at the moment is that in politics at an all that in politics is at an all time low and people are being marched up this whole before and many of us backbench mp is up as well you know we sometimes well and you know we sometimes saying it going to happen? saying is it going to happen? i hope . rishi does deliver on hope so. rishi does deliver on this because. you know, he hasn't charisma and hasn't got that charisma and that razzmatazz of boris. he hasn't but he has got some hasn't got but he has got some strong policies needs to strong policies they needs to deliver. if does to say deliver. and if does not to say it will keep the lunatics of it will keep the lunatics out of the asylum in two years time in my daily digest monologue , i my daily digest monologue, i suggested that today he demonstrated the political judgement that we might hope he's got by identifying the five key issues that matter to your voters and to the millions. watching gb and this programme . watching gb and this programme. however, the other question i think remains has he got the
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courage ? he got the guts, has he courage? he got the guts, has he got the balls to see this through ? well, i think what is through? well, i think what is dumas is he's had on the chopping block it's put himself and said, look, i'm making these five pledges i'm going to on. and by the way, they look like they're making some a good conservative manifesto . so he's conservative manifesto. so he's put these out on the chopping block and said, look, i'm block and he said, look, i'm going to deliver if going to deliver these. and if don't in years time. simon don't in two years time. simon now election balls that now those election balls do that know your reputation know is staked your reputation on this so i hope i hope we do open source nhs and halve the inflation and grow the economy the data and so it's the sorts of data and so it's about if it does and then you know in six months, two years time people think know what time people think you know what is actually delivering on his promises that will be the promises and that will be the worst possible sir keir worst possible news for sir keir and labour and the labour and the labour and the labour backbenchen and the labour and the labour backbencher. i'll tell backbencher. because i'll tell you on that tweet you what mark said on that tweet today, there in the house today, i sit there in the house of commons week i look of commons every week and i look at shower opposite them, the at the shower opposite them, the lib dems and the scottish nationalists. and i think my word , yeah, in a couple of years word, yeah, in a couple of years time there could be another hundred of those people in
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parliament scares me parliament and that scares me to death country lee death and it the country lee anderson i guess rishi sunak and all tory mpps and all mpps will face the public about two years time at the next general election. what is the measure of success for rishi sunak in terms controlling illegal immigration ? he's going to stop the boats. that's what he wants to do. i don't think anyone expects those crossings can end unilaterally. but what a good number look like. let's say on daily basis. i what he's got to do is to eliminate it. full stop . we've eliminate it. full stop. we've got to stop it. and what the opfics got to stop it. and what the optics are awful of this. you know we've had people killed over four years in lorries so we don't see so we don't turn a blind eye but it's just not the same with this well i'm say not on the screen. people say every single they say our filling single day they say our filling up this our public services have been it. what been affected by it. so what we've got to do is get the rwanda plan in place. get these these in place , make these agreements in place, make sure that the visuals of what we
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put in these young men these days, you on the way, these these genuine asylum these are genuine asylum seekers. that you see seekers. we know that you see the visuals of these getting in. non—arab planes have been flown to and once the to wednesday came and once the british the british public say that the trust in our government and the prime minister will shoot that's all want to our all they want to protect our borders and they don't want scenes like this because it absolutely the absolutely makes me sick to the stomach to see it. like i say, they're not genuine asylum. they're freeloading they're not just freeloading migrants. you're migrants. i hear what you're saying, what is a realistic saying, but what is a realistic timeline which sunak the timeline which sunak stops the boats . it's not going to timeline which sunak stops the boats. it's not going to happen tomorrow, is it? and suspect tomorrow, is it? and i suspect it still going on by the it will still be going on by the next election , although i don't next election, although i don't agree with the it's got to stop way before the next election. that's not good enough. we've been promised people since i've been promised people since i've been elected the three years or so, since went to so, three years since i went to parliament, we're going to parliament, that we're going to stop then the stop the next year. then the next comes it's still out next year comes it's still out there. pressed know three there. and i pressed know three years you know, we've years later, you know, we've been told it could be a hundred thousand this june. that's going to got to stop this to stop. it's got to stop this yean to stop. it's got to stop this year, you know, even if that
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means me and some of my means for me and some of my colleagues, leaving isa is colleagues, leaving the isa is just, know, sorry, stick just, you know, sorry, stick them the centre. them on the flight centre. wonder that's we wonder maybe that's what we going but, you know, going to do. but, you know, for me, she's plan and me, she's got a plan and i believes it themselves that we've the backing, it's we've got the backing, but it's got way before the next got to stop way before the next election. that's not good enough. a final thought on rishi sunak. exactly of sunak. he's not exactly man of the mentioned. the people. as i mentioned. i don't that matters. i don't think that matters. i don't think that matters. i don't he's got be don't think he's got to be a great person. i think he's got to be a great prime minister however, some, including many of my viewers, consider to be my viewers, consider him to be a cool figure, even a globalist stooge, world stooge, signed up to world economic some economic forum. you know, some people characterise rishi sunak as justin trudeau are as britain's justin trudeau are you having that ? no i'm not i'm you having that? no i'm not i'm not into i if you keep it in this wet nonsense all the time you know people said it on social look i know rishi quite i'll speak to him on many, many occasions . i i'll speak to him on many, many occasions. i get i'll speak to him on many, many occasions . i get on with i'll speak to him on many, many occasions. i get on with him, i get well to say not a man of the people is corporate, is like a chief executive of a is very polished. he knows a details man is like an accountant is not got the razzmatazz charisma of
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the razzmatazz and charisma of bofis the razzmatazz and charisma of boris know ask ourselves boris but you know ask ourselves what we want at this moment what do we want at this moment in time or do want somebody in time or do we want somebody going pay attention to detail going to pay attention to detail or be a little bit boring and not see him on the front page of the, you know, the daily mirror, every single slaughtered by by the mainstream media to want some measure of it being number 10 guinness at that working 8 hours a day and get the country back feet. and it does back its feet. and if it does that i hope it does and then that and i hope it does and then the control get behind him lee anderson mp, delight and anderson mp, a delight and a privilege have you the privilege to have you on the show. look forward to your in show. we look forward to your in a time when dan wootton a week's time when dan wootton is the hot seat. dan, of is back in the hot seat. dan, of course, back on monday from nine. coming up in tonight's mediabuzz all mediabuzz with a quarter of all working age adults. that's right a quarter now economically inactive brits risk inactive do lazy brits risk bankrupting the country. my superstar panel will react to that and. we'll see a first look at tomorrow's papers and exactly 10:00. but first, with civil servants blacklisting, the concept of white privilege . concept of white privilege. that's right, white privilege from parliament diversity
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training . is the whole thing training. is the whole thing a myth ? should we reflect on the myth? should we reflect on the idea of white privilege or is divisive nonsense? well rapper and activist zuby weighs in straight after the .
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break rapper and podcaster zuby is tonight's outsider . rapper and podcaster zuby is tonight's outsider. big rapper and podcaster zuby is tonight's outsider . big news rapper and podcaster zuby is tonight's outsider. big news. parliamentary staff are now banned being taught about so—called white privilege with civil servants vetoing use of the term, according to leaked internal documents. the concept to the supposed or perceived advantages enjoyed white people compared to non—white people in british and indeed society . but british and indeed society. but it's been criticised in some quarters for being too
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simplistic and, even divisive. this didn't stop the parliamentary staff diverse . a parliamentary staff diverse. a tea group parly reach encouraging colleagues to acknowledge their privilege and their internal allies racism in their internal allies racism in the wake blm protests in 2020. well, let's the view of rapper activist and top podcaster zuby . hi zuby. hey how's it going? i'm really well . great to have i'm really well. great to have you on the show . zuby i'm really well. great to have you on the show. zuby is i'm really well. great to have you on the show . zuby is white you on the show. zuby is white privilege and true concept upon which white people reflect or is it a myth ? no it's not a useful it a myth? no it's not a useful concept. in my personal opinion. i don't think it's i don't think it's accurate. i think it's an extraordinarily low view on the reality of the world and on individuals . and i don't think individuals. and i don't think that it's i don't think that it's accurate and i don't think that it's helpful. it's extraordinarily divisive. i would argue that the concept in itself is and some people may
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not like me saying that, but yeah, i don't i wouldn't go i wouldn't the term myth because i think we can all acknowledge that depending on who we are and all of our that we all have all sorts of advantages and disadvantages in society and different ways. but i think to just reduce it to the concept white privilege, especially if you're not going to talk about all of the other types of privileges that exist out there, then i think you're doing a massive disservice. and i think that this primarily being used as a weapon rather than as something that's actually going to bring people together , help to bring people together, help people . yes. i mean, this people. yes. i mean, this expression, zuby white privilege has been floating around for a what did you first make of it when you heard the expression? well, if i hear something like that. my first question is, well what exactly do you mean by now? oftentimes people who use this term will say that it is people describe it in different ways . describe it in different ways. some people will just simply say
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that it means that your skin colour is not a disadvantage or that you're not going to experience racism . other people experience racism. other people will say that they are so, you know, genuine advantages and benefits that sort of directly receive based off of this. and oftentimes people conflate it with what i would simply describe as majority privilege. if you are in any nation there is a majority population in terms of or ethnicity in many cases. terms of or ethnicity in many cases . and oftentimes a lot of cases. and oftentimes a lot of the things that people would call white privilege, i would argue simply elements of majority privilege and. i would say that if you're going to talk about that sort of terminology, as i said before, then i would be more accepting of it. if you were also if people are also open about, the various open to talk about, the various other concern of privilege that could exist, why not just on racial lines, but on many others? i mean, if you were to think of the things that truly people advantaged or, disadvantaged our then to disadvantaged in our then to sort of reduce it to race being the primary the primary thing
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which is what that phrase suggests is entirely disingenuous and it's not accurate either. well, i suppose zubyit accurate either. well, i suppose zuby it ties in with so—called critical race theory, which that to a degree are prejudicial or even racist, just as a consequence of the colour of skin. in other words, if you're white, you harbour racism , even white, you harbour racism, even if you don't know it is there in that it's garbage. it's a garbage it's a garbage it's a garbage it's a garbage it's a garbage concept . i don't garbage concept. i don't understand why anyone would be wanting to push this on other people. it's not good for white people. it's not good for white people. it's not good for black people. it's not good for black people. it's not good for people of any colour. i don't think it's good to be telling young, black or brown boys and girls that they're inherently disadvantaged in society and that white people are out to get them or are privileged in weird way. it's actually a sort of invert version of white supremacy , just concept. it's supremacy, just concept. it's just kind of this weird left left wing version of it . and i
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left wing version of it. and i don't think it's good to be going around and telling young white people or people in general that they are somehow architects of , you know, that architects of, you know, that they're playing into this racist system. and they know it system. and whether they know it or that they're racist or or not, that they're racist or that they're or they're that they're this or they're that, see how of that, i don't see how any of that, i don't see how any of that society i think it's much better to treat people, individuals in all of these situations, to not constantly obsessing over race and sex and gender and sexuality with all of this stuff. and just to see people as individuals treat people as individuals treat people equally, don't try to shout people down based on their race , their gender or anything race, their gender or anything like that. and you know, don't give people unfair nor give people unfair disadvantages. just have an equal and fair playing field as best as we can. and i think that's the best that we're going to get as a society. and i do think that we have made incredible strive we've made incredible strive we've made incredible strides forward on this over the past several decades. alone century. and decades. let alone century. and i positive. and it i think that's positive. and it should celebrated . amen to should be celebrated. amen to that. i've only got
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that. look, i've only got a couple of seconds left, but zuby, can't mention the zuby, i can't not mention the fact you are a rap fact that you are a top rap music star. you a businessman? entrepreneur of course. you've got your hit podcast as well, and you've now got a million followers on twitter. what's the secret of your success. i mean, you don't buy into the victim mentality , recognise your own mentality, recognise your own potential, and have the on your seeds of greatness you are. and so just keep on working. believe in yourself . listen, you are in yourself. listen, you are a hero to me. what a star. do you check zuby on twitter? it's at zuby music, isn't it? check zuby on twitter? it's at zuby music, isn't it ? that's zuby music, isn't it? that's right. aswe music . great stuff, right. aswe music. great stuff, zuby. we'll see you in a week's time. fantastic stuff. what hero, as i say now coming up with the number of british kids wanting , gender identity wanting, gender identity treatment going through the roof oh, children making changing decisions to soon. well, i've got a story you billy burley trans and female before transitioning back again . i
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transitioning back again. i believe he's transitioned a couple of times . it's a horrific couple of times. it's a horrific story . he shares his incredible story. he shares his incredible tale at 1015. that will be dropping telly. you won't want to it. but first, with 25% of working age people now economically inactive, do you work brits risk bankrupting country. my panel will give us their thoughts. plus, we've got papers and the media buzz all after this short .
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break it's 10:00. i break it's10:00. i am mark in for dan wootton tonight . as rishi sunak wootton tonight. as rishi sunak promises to fix broken britain by growing the economy and sorting out the nhs and tackling the small boats he delivers stark warning about our increasingly idle workforce . and increasingly idle workforce. and it is staggering that at a time
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when business is crying out for workers a quarter. our labour force is in active, so our work shy brits bankrupting the country . i'll get stuck into country. i'll get stuck into that with my panel next it will be explosive conversation. let me tell you. tonight i'm joined by dawn neesom adam brookes and nigel nelson plus he unveiled plans to make compulsory school until 18. that's right maths in school until 18 is the prior prime minister is you wrong to prioritise maths over other ? prioritise maths over other? what do you think? are we making too of maths? what about pe? what about english? what about home economics ? that's all big home economics? that's all big debate at 1030 as he reportedly investigates the death of princess diana . investigates the death of princess diana. his investigates the death of princess diana . his new book, is princess diana. his new book, is it time prince harry let his mother rest in peace . social mother rest in peace. social media sensation and self—proclaimed gavin june slater is on cancelled at 1040. also coming up as number of
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children seeking gender identity treatment skyrockets to thirds in less than two years, all kids being forced into life changing surgeon before they're ready. well have i got a story for you, billy burley, who transitioned to female before transitioning again? sounds the alarm . he's again? sounds the alarm. he's live at ten. you won't want to miss his story. plus, you got tomorrow's front pages hot off the press . tomorrow's front pages hot off the press. i'll tomorrow's front pages hot off the press . i'll crown tonight's the press. i'll crown tonight's greatest britain and union jackass before . the night is jackass before. the night is out. lots to get through . but out. lots to get through. but after this, we're going to sort out lay easy britain. but first, the headlines with a very hardworking tatiana sanchez . hardworking tatiana sanchez. mark, thank you. this is the latest from the gb newsroom in his first major speech of the new year, prime minister rishi sunak's set out his government's five key priorities . he pledged
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five key priorities. he pledged to halve inflation and grow the economy , stop illegal economy, stop illegal immigration , reduce the national immigration, reduce the national debt and cut massive backlogs in the nhs. he even told the public to hold him accountable if those waiting lists in england do not in two years. those other people's priorities , they are people's priorities, they are your government's priority eighties and we will either have achieved or not tricks. no ambiguity , we're either ambiguity, we're either delivering for you or we're not. we will rebuild in politics through action and or not at all. what the shadow education secretary bridget phillipson said labour also plans to tackle the small boat . we do need to the small boat. we do need to see action to clamp down on those criminal gangs that exploit and we would make sure we're setting up a new part of national crime agency to take action and to make sure that
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people are not making that journey, which, you know, as seen all too often ends in tragedy . the royal college of tragedy. the royal college of nursing accused mr. sunak of being detached from reality following that speech its leader, pat collins, says the pressure is being felt by the nhs could not be blamed on covid. the current high levels of flu cases . she says health of flu cases. she says health leaders believe that staff shortages are the root cause of the issues. nurses preparing to go on strike again later month after joining the picket line for the first time in the rcn history last month . the prime history last month. the prime minister also touched on the rail strike, saying his government's door is always open for dialogue with unions. it comes on the second day of the first of 248 hour strikes by rail workers with over 40,000 rmt members walking off the job over paid jobs and conditions , over paid jobs and conditions, train drivers and the aslef union will strike tomorrow, followed by a second 48 hour armed strike on friday. now a,
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man who raped and sexually assaulted dozens of children over a six year period has been jailed for life. this is footage the 50 year old martin armstrong from pembrokeshire being arrested in july last year after was used that unpicks the latest a picture of his face. found in photos he'd taken of himself abusing his victims. photos he'd taken of himself abusing his victims . and author abusing his victims. and author feiwel then best for her novel the life and love of a she devil has died at age of 91. she published more than 30 novels dunng published more than 30 novels during her career , as well as during her career, as well as short stories and plays written for tv, radio and the stage . she for tv, radio and the stage. she was also one of the writers on the popular 1970s drama series upstairs . her the popular 1970s drama series upstairs. her family the popular 1970s drama series upstairs . her family say the popular 1970s drama series upstairs. her family say , the popular 1970s drama series upstairs . her family say , she upstairs. her family say, she died peacefully in her sleep this morning. died peacefully in her sleep this morning . tv, online and this morning. tv, online and debate radio. this is gb news. now it's back to dan wootton
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tonight with . tonight with. mark my thanks to tatiana who returns in an hour's time tomorrow . news in an hour's time tomorrow. news tonight now in our media buzz. and let's kick off with a first look at tomorrow's front pages. hot off the press and have the eye newspaper. more bad news for our health service. nhs sending patients to hotels ease bed blocking. three nhs authorities signed to discharge patients care hotels which offer accommodation for people well enough to leave hospital but who still need some care . also, the still need some care. also, the daily star having a bit of fun with rishi sunak's point plan . with rishi sunak's point plan. pm to fix the nhs. with rishi sunak's point plan. pm to fix the nhs . can't say pm to fix the nhs. can't say exactly when. pm to cut debt, but can't say exactly when. pm to immigration but you guessed
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it. can't say exactly when. the headline. i have cunning plan and they've done a brilliant photoshop of . rowan atkinson photoshop of. rowan atkinson from of course, what was it, blackadder and behind him is baldrick , a.k.a. our prime baldrick, a.k.a. our prime minister, rishi sunak. those are the front pages we've more of the front pages we've more of the front pages shortly. but reacting to those the big stories of the day, we've got former national newspaper edhon former national newspaper editor, a columnist at the daily star tv star gb news presenter doneit star tv star gb news presenter done it all. she's got more gigs than i have it's dawn neesom dnnks than i have it's dawn neesom drinks are on her. we also have entrepreneur pub , businessman, entrepreneur pub, businessman, activist, you name adam brooks and the longest serving political editor in fleet street, the sunday mirror's nigel nelson . now, one of the nigel nelson. now, one of the standout moments of rishi sunak's five point plan today was a staggering revelation that 25% of working age a quarter are economically inactive and it is staggering that at a time when businesses crying out for
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workers a quarter of our labour force is inactive . so our growth force is inactive. so our growth will look at how we can support those who can to move back into work , including through the work, including through the welfare . unfortunately, rishi is welfare. unfortunately, rishi is not guilty on this occasion of hyperbole has suffered the fourth highest increase in people dropping out of work since the start of the pandemic in 2020. behind the global powerhouses colombia , chile and powerhouses colombia, chile and switzerland . and that coupled switzerland. and that coupled reports that one in ten unemployed youngsters plan on never getting a job. and let's not forget the work from home brigade. you have to fear for the future of uk plc . so as many the future of uk plc. so as many of us grind hard to put food on the table and keep the country running, all the rest of work shy brits bankrupting the country . well, look at you are a country. well, look at you are a top entrepreneur. you've got the work. can you explain to me why
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5% of working age adults they work well at this started the early 2000s under blair gordon brown and the system of this country become a way of life a choice for many people that want to work you they could survive on benefits and you know tell story to get those benefits where's before. and rightly so benefits were for the genuinely needy people of this country and should remain that way . needy people of this country and should remain that way. now i was astounded by what rishi sunak said. 25% of our workforce. i thought it was a mike drop moment. it's astounding. i think there's another step that this 565,000 more people since 2019. the are not working and not active seeking to get a job but that's unforgivable. that's not you know you you can't go through life not working expecting handouts all the time and.
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another reason i'll blame is instagram we have a lot of influences out there that travelling the world are not working know they're earning their money via social media and i believe a lot of young adults believe that why should i go and do a 9 to 5. you know joe bloggs is earning from instagram he's he's going all around the world. you know , it seems it's a it's you know, it seems it's a it's an unrealistic of life. do you think wheels are such a dangerous paying, healthy adults to stay at home on and off of course, is it just made us more lazy. the messaging . yes. look, lazy. the messaging. yes. look, at the end of the day for 18 months or whatever it was for people be able to sit at home and get percent of their money spend more time with their family, do things they like. enjoy the sunshine it put in time in people's minds why should i be in an office? 9 to 5? should i be in an office? 9 to 5.7 why should i be in an office? 9 to 5? why should i be in a building site? 9 to 5? it's my things worse without doubt and i think the stats now show in the you
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know the inactivity since 2019 we wanted the worst in the world. however it's interesting isn't it nigel because you know many people many hard working brits over in their early sixties they've worked hard all their lives and they're entitled to put their feet up aren't they. well they want retire. they. well they want to retire. certainly they and they certainly they are. and they afford . one of the afford to retire. one of the problems you've got is so of those people in that age group, the 50 to 69 are sick and it doesn't help to have . it is a doesn't help to have. it is a really complex issue , but it really complex issue, but it doesn't help hugely that you've got nhs waiting lists of some 7.2 million. so you've got million long term, long term sick . they will get sicker if sick. they will get sicker if they can't treatment, which means they're off work longer. they will then have caring responsibilities on of that. and so it's those kind of areas you've got to tackle. and as far as the work shy bit go, as well, not work. i mean , the uk has the not work. i mean, the uk has the longest rise in europe. we work
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more hours than the germans , the more hours than the germans, the lower productivity. it's not like have that, but we have low productivity. absolutely right . productivity. absolutely right. we work the danes work for fewer hours than we do. and of the highest productivity. so you're right, there's the productivity is not working, but it's not as if people are not going to work. they're not doing the job very well they that dawn, well when they get that dawn, you've 12 jobs. well, we you've got 12 jobs. well, i we will be a bit more dawn neesom. but you the only part of rishi sunak's made me up was sunak's that made me wake up was despair i thought, dare despair and i thought, how dare . i really angry . if you . i really got angry. if you drill down into what he actually most of those people nigel's quite rightly alluded to are in their fifties to their 60 as they are retired. a lot of . they are retired. a lot of. these people were forced out of work by the government's idiotic behaviour to close down the economy for two years. i mean, who knew we'd end up in this financial mess when you do that? i mean, what a shock. not so. they were forced out of work, so they decided i could survive on they decided i could survive on the i survive on my savings, on
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my pension. they're not a drain on economy. not on the economy. they're not punching not punching benefits. they're not a drain economy at all. drain on this economy at all. they are now surviving their they are now surviving on their own were forced own because they were forced into situation the first into this situation the first place. this personally place. and this personally affects some people in my family. i'm not going to family. so now i'm not going to work. why would i go to work. why would i go back to work? tax is work? pay extortionate tax is the taxes for 70 years when i was put into a situation by the government first place, government in the first place, they are actually not a drain on this economy and i don't blame any and a lot them any of them and a lot of them are also long term , as you've are also long term, as you've said, long term ill hope said, nigel long term ill hope again they the nhs again because they shut the nhs down a national service and down it a national service and disabled term disabled and the carers who no help as well. okay and we will return to conversation. i did say sparks would fly but coming up more sparks on the way with the government keen to make mass mandatory up to the age of 18. is rishi sunak wrong to prioritise mathematics over other subjects in schools? what about pe? what about english what about home economics? my panel will debate that at 1030. but nearly 8000 but first, with nearly 8000
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british awaiting gender british children awaiting gender identity treated and all kids making life changing far too soon, betty burley he transitioned his gender before transitioning back again , transitioning back again, delivers a stark warning . his delivers a stark warning. his story is quite extraordinary and he's .
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next now my next guest shares the gut wrenching story of who went through hell and back in a desperate bid to cure his childhood trauma. billy burley transition being a biological male to a trans woman after being encouraged to change gender by the us medical establishment . does that sound establishment. does that sound familiar to you ? he suffered familiar to you? he suffered seven years of gruelling surgeries . the promise it would surgeries. the promise it would cure him of . deep rooted cure him of. deep rooted depression , but still never depression, but still never found the happiness he was promised, resulting in transitioning . now, after transitioning. now, after finding faith in god and finally feeling comfortable in his own skin, billy has a stark warning for the nearly 8000 children awaiting nhs gender identity treatment in the uk and. their parents who think going down the trans path will magically cure them of their troubles. i'm delighted to say that billy joins me now. hi, billy. delighted to say that billy joins me now. hi, billy . a mar
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joins me now. hi, billy. a mar a privilege to have you on the show. can i start by asking you what traumas you were trying to heal when you try sectioned into a woman . the traumas that i had a woman. the traumas that i had as a child, as i had this reoccurring thought and it started in the fifth grade that god made a mistake, i'm a girl and that things i thought that me of form of my younger life into adulthood and that thought actually plagued me so much that i had to deal it mark i had to deal with it and a lot of people may turn to maybe drugs alcohol or something i actually turned to working out as hard as i could to move the pain out of my mind and into my body and. then worked for a number of years. but mark, when i got into college and you could say all of
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that closet that i pushed, all of my emotions, the door blew off the hinges. and at that point i had to start surgeries or at that point actually and sought help for mental condition would say, looking back on it, that decision to transition into becoming a female was else's decision or was it yours. becoming a female was else's decision or was it yours . the decision or was it yours. the that i had because i trans mission back around 2000 when i thought help from the mental community i went saying i want to be healed i want to stay man i want to be healed . but i got i want to be healed. but i got this battle that is going on in my mind and after five years of trying to deal that battle, i
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the therapists i wanted to transition. i did a lot of reading and books journal articles i tried to learn what the cause and what the solution for my problem and everything that i read told me that i had to transition that i possibly had a birth defect, that my when i was in uterine washed with the wrong hormones and to fix that birth i had to change my body to match my mind and i told my therapist after five years of seeing her and trying to fix my problems , that that's what problems, that that's what i wanted to do. she gave me a hug and she told me, billy , i knew and she told me, billy, i knew you were going to arrive at this decision. and one day i didn't know it was going to take you this long and. she said, we will walk this road together. and she gave me the i needed to go to start on testosterone blocker or on oestrogen , and you start the
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on oestrogen, and you start the transition process and so it was my decision but once made that decision at that point i it she embraced and helped me through the complete transition so therefore the safeguarding the looking back on it you needed was not there and what procedures did you have done you've mentioned home or treatment but you've had operation as well, haven't you, billy a great number of them. mark the very first operation i had was . a penile inversion and had was. a penile inversion and in that very first surgery. i also had a brown shave and apple shave. and after coming out of the operating and the third gents and the nurses could not stop bleeding from my new artificial female genitalia.
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they had to put more gauze into the cavity they had to put a sandbag on my lower abdomen . i sandbag on my lower abdomen. i also had to receive a blood transfusion and plasma . so my transfusion and plasma. so my scheduled two weeks stay in the hospital for that procedure turned into a three week stay in. very fortunate . i'm still in. very fortunate. i'm still here . the bleeding did stop and here. the bleeding did stop and i was able to recover from that surgery . then after that surgery. then after that surgery, i a number of other surgeries, including mark voice, feminisation surgery and then surgery after the surgeon took knife and cut my throat and got to my vocal cords , he tied to my vocal cords, he tied sutures around my vocal and i was in twilight. sutures around my vocal and i was in twilight . so for that was in twilight. so for that surgery mark, i had to actually come out of the anaesthesia and wake up some and. i had to speak with the surgeon , tighten the
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with the surgeon, tighten the sutures so that he could the tightness so that i would lose , tightness so that i would lose, achieve a higher pitch voice . so achieve a higher pitch voice. so i went through all of these surgeries bleeding. what the therapists conveyed to me, what therapists conveyed to me, what the journal articles and that i would eventually find my peace as soon as my body matched my mind and mark, i didn't find it . it was never there. after seven years of trying and it just wasn't there . it didn't just wasn't there. it didn't happen. just wasn't there. it didn't happen . and you don't have male happen. and you don't have male genhaua happen. and you don't have male genitalia now, do you? even though you've transitioned back to being male with surgery? i've had that body part removed and the theory that that make me happy and flat out . it did not happy and flat out. it did not make me happy. happy and flat out. it did not make me happy . very fortunate make me happy. very fortunate because i'm i'm married now. i have two step daughters and but
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you can say that i'm not a functioning male, a man in that respect. well, i'm very happy for that. you're so happily married . and this step married. and this step daughters, i'm sure they adore their father. and i congratulate . you on your journey , you've . you on your journey, you've found the faith and love of god . i know you were, and i know you were in a really good place now, and you found the peace that surgery didn't give you. so congratulations on your journey. you look brilliant . know that my you look brilliant. know that my viewers and listeners will be absolutely on edge of their seat listening to your story. can i ask you what you would say to any young people in this country , in the uk, watching or listening who are considering or their families what your message be, billy ? do not do absolutely. be, billy? do not do absolutely. do not this i have made many mistakes and coming back and transitioning back to male. i eventually have identified some of my problems i had as as a kid
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because being very i have an ancient and being and turning words around in my mind and not learning how to read and much later in life , i learned that later in life, i learned that i had a lot of trouble as a as a kid . and instead of having kid. and instead of having gender dysphoria out and out. i had dysphoria was a confused young. had dysphoria was a confused young . and then confusion young. and then confusion manifest its way into gender dysphoria and i was trying to find acceptance since navigant security by changing my body to match my mind and that was wrong mark also was sexually abused when i was in the sixth grade and so that contributed to my problems as well i have to a number of other transitions and also people are having to transition and i have learned
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including myself as a data is that. including myself as a data is that . we have problems as kids that. we have problems as kids as children and we don't deal with them. so mental health professionals of doing gender affirming therapy and should be doing trauma therapy to help children deal with childhood trauma that we carry into adulthood and our acceptance the victims and security not found by chopping off body parts. victims and security not found by chopping off body parts . we by chopping off body parts. we need help. we need not gender affirming therapy . billy burley affirming therapy. billy burley i and my viewers and listeners are humbled to hear your story. you've got amazing courage to come on national television airwaves , to tell your story and airwaves, to tell your story and on behalf of my viewers , we wish on behalf of my viewers, we wish you well and we wish you every happiness and your family in the future. thanks for us. thank
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mark. billy there with that with quite the story . mark. billy there with that with quite the story. coming up with prince reportedly looking into his mother's death to fill the pages of his new book, should he let diana rest in peace? self proclaimed to chief gammon an absolute of mine freedom fighter .june absolute of mine freedom fighter . june slater is cancelled at 1040. but first, as he plans to make the subject mandatory to the age of 18, is ricci sunak wrong to force a maths ? our wrong to force a maths? our youth, especially at the exclusion of other subject my superstar panel give their verdict next .
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next let' s next let's to tomorrow's news tonight in our mediabuzz. let's to tomorrow's news tonight in our mediabuzz . and more front
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in our mediabuzz. and more front pages have landed courtesy of a mad dash from marion . and we've mad dash from marion. and we've got the daily express . ricci got the daily express. ricci judge me on my pledges to fix britain . judge me on my pledges to fix britain. pm's judge me on my pledges to fix britain . pm's five promises to britain. pm's five promises to halve inflation our economy, reduce debt, cut the nhs list and stop the migrant boats . next and stop the migrant boats. next stop, let's look. i think it's a daily mail next, isn't it, darrel ritchie, judge me on my five point plan to fix britain rishi sunak staked his premiership on a five point plan to fix the country . i've to fix the country. i've outlined that list as featured in the daily express , and it in the daily express, and it certainly is a message that is landing across most the front pages. landing across most the front pages . even the landing across most the front pages. even the guardian of deigned . they've lowered deigned. they've lowered themselves to write about prime minister sunak people to judge him on and ppe gowns in £122 million order not safe for use in nhs . there's a surprise also
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in nhs. there's a surprise also brilliant author faye weldon . brilliant author faye weldon. outspoken and fearless writer dies aged aged 91, a brilliant, brilliant and an quite a remarkable remark of a woman . remarkable remark of a woman. now, let me just offer you a little bit of balance on that guardian story regarding . the guardian story regarding. the ppe, gowns , michelle mone has ppe, gowns, michelle mone has previously denied via her lawyers that she had any involvement in the company in question, ppe medical, you go. we're nothing. if we're not about balance here on dan wootton tonight . what's the sun wootton tonight. what's the sun now , baby? born after mum now, baby? born after mum dresses up virgin mary gives birth in peterborough and one of his names is joseph pregnant. lauren coats dressed up as the virgin mary to give family a laugh on christmas day promptly gave birth when the baby arrived early , the receptionist was early, the receptionist was decked out in a £20 biblical outfit from amazon when she went
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into labour at her parent's home into labour at her parent's home in peterborough in cambridgeshire. shop x lauren, who named her son joseph, said , who named her son joseph, said, were all joking. the baby would come christmas day, but there was no way. i expected it to happen. talk about tempting that's what i news amazing , that's what i news amazing, dawn, i got to say i asked my wife to dress up as a virgin mary, but we both agreed it was a it was a miscarriage situation. this is going. yes, i've thoughts, thoughts and prayers. i've got the missus with mrs. mark. let's get reaction to all big news of the day with my brilliant superstar panel day with my brilliant superstar panel. former national newspaper edhon panel. former national newspaper editor, columnist daily star tv and radio presenter. editor, columnist daily star tv and radio presenter . we also and radio presenter. we also have entrepreneur businessman and activist adam and the longest serving political editor in fleet street, the sun mirrors nigel nelson rinse and that tonight now whilst rishi sunak's bold pledges today on key issues as immigration and nhs wait times were very much welcomed ,
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times were very much welcomed, one of his policies didn't seem to add up the prime has announced that he wants to mathematics mandatory in some form until the age of wait for it 18 and here's why the margin what greater numeracy will unlock for people the skills to feel confidence your finances to find the best mortgage deal or savings rate the ability to do yourjob better savings rate the ability to do your job better and savings rate the ability to do yourjob better and get paid more and greater self—confidence . to navigate a changing world despite rationale, the move has been branded half baked and out of touch by education and experts who claim there's a shortage . math teachers as it is shortage. math teachers as it is and that low attaining pupils are already too overwhelmed by other content to focus on that subject. our very own nigel frost was among critics asking how well could quadratic equafions how well could quadratic equations helped solve broken britain ? well, let's find out britain? well, let's find out what might think. what do you think about this nigel nelson?
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does this policy up? well, i like the idea of it being compulsory i'm probably the wrong person to ask. i was so bad at maths that they suggested i didn't even take my math so level, which i didn't. i didn't even take my math so level, which i didn't . that was level, which i didn't. that was a result . i level, which i didn't. that was a result. i did well to get out of that because can't get out of maths anymore. you know, in my day you could actually get out of it and carry on. i've learned a lot of maths since because politics and economics go in hand. to do it . hand. so i've had to do it. first of all. yes, i do. i think that the general sentiments right , people need to be . and right, people need to be. and even more so nowadays . and the even more so nowadays. and the question about it is how you actually attract people to , do actually attract people to, do it rather than compelling them to do . if i have been compelled, to do. if i have been compelled, i've just gone up the wall. but if you can make it attractive so at the end of it all you're learning compute literacy, you're learning about spreadsheet meets graphs, personal finance, all the things that you need , the modern world that you need, the modern world that you need, the modern world thatis that you need, the modern world that is fine. why what i don't
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understand is why talks about me about making it compulsory. oh well , i about making it compulsory. oh well, i suppose he's trying to lift standards . as i mentioned lift standards. as i mentioned in my monologue at the start, the show, adam, he's thinking big for himself and for britain , so out of touch. the average man and woman of this country don't need algebra being to them a 18 year mandate . you know, a 18 year mandate. you know, i don't think i've used half the things that i, i learned at school in that so i've got a b in gcse and, i didn't really put a lot of effort in to be but you know i'm a publican i do use numbers and i do need to calculate certain things . half calculate certain things. half the things that i talk to these these kids growing up aren't used know i would rather maybe make sure pupils once a week taught about budgeting about credit cards about finance , the credit cards about finance, the importance of having insurance . importance of having insurance. you know, my mum taught me most the things that i needed in life and i also through mistakes you
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know from 18 to 22 i might some silly mistakes finance, car finance and whatever. i think the curriculum needs to sort of give skills to people now you know algebra doesn't everyone i think it needs to be more customised to pupils that want to go to on university that need maths degrees to be a doctor or a scientist that needs to be there needs to be pushed. but there needs to be pushed. but the average madam woman will not use half of what told. well, there's an idea from adam brooks dawn neesom, which is actually criticised the expectations . criticised the expectations. yeah it happens once every, every every year but but it's, it's an interesting thought that we keep young people at school and we just give them an a—level in surviving life. i think that's a really good point is the point i was going to make as well because i mean, i woke up this morning and you know, the first settled man was i'm really about the level of mass education this country. education in this country. nobodyis education in this country. nobody is nobody this nobody is nobody said this morning i'm worried
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morning it is now i'm worried about anger. my mother doesn't take the test to compete with china isn't is not a good thing. well in the covid well yeah. we are in the covid stakes, i want. stakes, aren't we. what i want. i want rather than constructing the right . i i want rather than constructing the right. i think the the maths right. i think the problem in this country with education english. you know, education is english. you know, we have 9 million adults in the uk functionally illiterate, uk are functionally illiterate, one in four british five year olds struggle with basic vocabulary right. yeah. you vocabulary. right. yeah. and you know, you can't english know, if you can't speak english properly and, use grammar and punctuation. you've no chance. we an understanding maths we have an understanding maths because . english is the root of because. english is the root of all but half our all education but half our advert now promoting talk advert now promoting street talk and six great things but know what you know it doesn't help he was talking white working class boys three cause white boys 11 and three cause white working class boys failed to achieve government's in achieve the government's in bafic achieve the government's in basic language and 16. basic language and age of 16. yeah what are we doing to our kids? you know, when i run a newspaper, i might mention this. when i write newspaper, when i write a newspaper, i would journalists applying. would have journalists applying. you about my you might have notices about my nigel for jobs on newspaper. nigel for jobs on the newspaper. okay been through okay i have been through university and they university finish, and they could not write english,
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could not write proper english, speak proper english punctuality news . and it's like what we news. and it's like what we teach is it like or don't get the job something like that. yeah i think that was fine by the way. i gave him a job to do. i wanted to. he never applied. don't remember the interview that of rishi sunak? that went viral of rishi sunak? yes. saying about friends and then ask him about working class. and he said yes. and then i'll actually know. i doubt he's proving again he doesn't really know goes belief beneath know what goes on belief beneath that level . if you say that banker level. if you say banken that banker level. if you say banker, fine chris at bank level . yeah he said jeremy hunt earlier well they say yes now i'm being careful tonight, but i just think got a prime minister that's no what the working class used to be . you know he has no used to be. you know he has no and that's worrying because the working class are the benchmark and the support of this country . he doesn't have a clue how you get a verdict it's from adam brooks who with his nomination for greatest britain and union jack as alongside my brilliant
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panel at 1050 but first with prince harry digging into his mother's tragic death to fill the pages of his new should he let his mother diana rest in peace , straight talking internet peace, straight talking internet sensation june slater is next .
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next so looking forward to this. it's time for on cancelled web . time for on cancelled web. britain's top commentators speak out on controversial issues without the fear the cancel culture sweep the rest of the media now . prince harry's media now. prince harry's upcoming memoir reportedly explore the circumstance surrounding the tragic of his mother, princess. that's according to the daily mail's special investigations editor sue reid . reid said researchers
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sue reid. reid said researchers for the duke of sussex's explosive tell book spare released tuesday, had reached out individuals connected to the late princess of wales. his car crash in paris back in 1997, including journalists and french police read his probed case for decades, added a french source involved in the accident investigation has revealed that prince harry is intensely focussed getting more information about his mother's final . well, let's get the view final. well, let's get the view now of . a social media sensation now of. a social media sensation , self—proclaimed chief gammon. she's got a huge following onune she's got a huge following online join. and you know why? because drops truth bombs june slater hi the but you know jane the truth will get you in trouble these days . it just trouble these days. it just sadly especially with fact checkers who don't know what the
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truth is. it's unfortunate look i know a few truth bombs about i mean i think you're a very person and our heart goes out to prince , having lost his mother prince, having lost his mother as a little boy, it was a tragic accident . but do you think he accident. but do you think he should be sort of delving into the circumstances of how she died or should he let her rest in peace ? well i lost my mother in peace? well i lost my mother when i was young, and it was tragic. and if i was in his shoes with his entourage of people i certainly wouldn't have got to his age and gone through military college, learning to be a pilot getting on with all the royal duties . invictus games a pilot getting on with all the royal duties. invictus games and marriage a very public and then back i've been discharged with me family to turn round and say i'm going to investigate my mother's . it would have been the mother's. it would have been the number one thing i would have done. number one thing i would have done . the trouble with this done. the trouble with this couple their actions i for me everything points back to a disgruntled this that's
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constantly made him and her to diana . well i'm not a royalist diana. well i'm not a royalist i haven't got a lot of time for king charles my loyalties were with the queen because you put a foot wrong and after that there are a lot of hangers on so please mistake this as some sort of misjudged support for the royal family but the person that's the same shoes as diana spencer is kate middleton . she's spencer is kate middleton. she's married to the heir. she's also had given to another heir. she's in the most difficult position and she does it with ease. she floats through this job and no one notices the eloquence in which she does her duty is they decide to show they're the couple. they're in the andrew and fergie . they can do what and fergie. they can do what they want though they. if this was a horse race, they runs nobody's bothered what they do they could have got with quite a nice life doing the few royal
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dufies nice life doing the few royal duties he could have supported. his military career could have gone to on with his invictus and he could have continued all of it. but an element of it. but there's an element of greed here. i i mean, the queen even said she thought harry was too much in love with meghan. i do think the lord is he's not a lot, but is genuinely in love. meghan but just to show how fake i see them, i just watched a clip from his 60 minutes interview where he says quite emotionally he is breathing , is emotionally he is breathing, is perfectly timed. it's almost as though an actors coach. then he says time comes when silence is betrayal and you think, wow , betrayal and you think, wow, what enlightenment? and you realise it's from a speech back in 1967 by martin luther king about the vietnam war and, you know, friend of mine give me that of facebook go matthew so you can the two ways you can easily pick things apart now with social media and the ability to share and share your news. we don't have to work to be told by the bbc , so every
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be told by the bbc, so every thing they do is divisive and is a couple who have been paid £100 million for basically slagging off the ring laws. and if this was a normal family. off the ring laws. and if this was a normal family . the two was a normal family. the two cnses was a normal family. the two crises that they've had including a very traumatic miscarriage age, is something that people go every day of the week in normal enough to just themselves often get over in the morning. the thing i find absolutely incredible is the amount of support this couple get from working class people who will not even see a 10th of their money just to give you for instance of how pampered they are, meghan made a few trips across atlantic and the cost for across atlantic and the cost for a private jet, by the way, to do so the atlantic crossing is between 50 and $90,000 for fuel. that's without london charges. that's without london charges. that's about the cost of the jet . and this is the kind of thing that was frowned upon. i mean even prince charles when he went across to hong kong for the handover he had to fly business
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class wasn't even allowed in first class because the royals cannot just go frequently . money cannot just go frequently. money out of the royal purse and i think meghan so she i'm a princess is going to be a long now of a ride and it ain't because not the most important character kate outshines most she's dignified i'm not saying this because i the royals i'm saying this because this is why i say she's not us anything to complain about whether she's happy or not different issue this couple arriving grey . happy or not different issue this couple arriving grey. this couple are using the media and we can't trust the media can just gb news because she goes far as you dare with ofcom and what have you but if we look back to the princess diana days martin falsified bank statements to encourage diana to talk about if he faked bank from people who were close to so that she would open up would diana have opened up and us so much insight into this he bashir had been for what
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he did because bashir not have got away with that in this age of social media people like you would have been onto it. so they're a divisive couple and i think what people need to do before they start giving of sympathy is what you with are sympathising with the fact you dislike the royals and of what your allegiance to them or do your allegiance to them or do you really feel sorry for that because i don't know you can sorry for someone who just turned a hundred million quid and. next news, the money will straight into the foundation no doubt, which is a tax advantage scheme. basically, if it goes an ordinary account, 65% tax, if it goes into foundations that phase to down 5% tax and there's so many advantages to this couple living this privileged lifestyle . i think ordinary people should constant on what's going on with a contract with the cost of living crisis . and if you go to living crisis. and if you go to comment on facebook and twitter feeds do that makes a difference
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get on your employees page and tell him why you're not happy with him why you want with him. tell him why you want the cost of fuel to come down. stop worrying over these too. that's it. to right? that's how i see it. to right? well, that's see it. well, that's how you see it. that's why love listening to that's why we love listening to you.june that's why we love listening to you. june only got a couple of seconds what seconds left, but what would diana all of this? because, diana make all of this? because, you know you're a student of human nature, june, of human nature, june, watch all of your videos . and harry, you your videos. and harry, you mentioned said the couple are angry. and harry is not a well bunny, is he well . he's been bunny, is he well. he's been manipulated. she's a strong woman. you know diana . a strong woman. you know diana. a strong woman. you know diana. a strong woman. diana was a lovable woman. diana was a lovable woman. diana was a lovable woman. diana was a attractive woman. diana was a attractive woman with a good, nurturing the royal family. it wasn't to grow. and suddenly we lost a very youngi and suddenly we lost a very young i was actually in such a bad at the same time she was we went past dodi's villa and they were on a jet bike and after she got killed , we now the got killed, we went now the shops santa fe and people shops in santa fe and people were literally heartbroken and they absolutely devastated they were absolutely devastated we flowers on the jetty , we left flowers on the jetty, the villa. it was so sad . i was the villa. it was so sad. i was
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sad. everyone was sad . we loved sad. everyone was sad. we loved we felt like this about anyone ever and unfortunately, this couple are very average in what they do and milk in this woman's legacy the milk in it and that's not all for me and i don't what diana would have made but i think diana would seen through meghan markle for also let me tell you june slater drops truth bombs 24 seven on her twitter handle she's everywhere facebook youtube you name it and june slater, 70 an unmissable stuff june will catch you in a week's time. thanks so what what lady? and there you go . quite a and there you go. quite a comprehensive break down of what's going on in the world. harry and meghan . it's what's going on in the world. harry and meghan. it's time what's going on in the world. harry and meghan . it's time now harry and meghan. it's time now to reveal today's greatest and union. jack has doing just that . the former editor and current
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columnist , the daily star dawn columnist, the daily star dawn neesom businessman and activist adam and political editor at the sun mirror, nigel nelson. dawn who's caught your eye? your greatest? i'm going to nominate fay weldon fair , feisty feminist fay weldon fair, feisty feminist , great writer, wrote our lives and loves me. she devoted my favourite books made into a great tv , died aged 91 monday. great tv, died aged 91 monday. i think it was so a great writer , think it was so a great writer, great feminist and a fierce r.i.p. absolutely loved a farewell , don, r.i.p. absolutely loved a farewell, don, and r.i.p. absolutely loved a farewell , don, and she r.i.p. absolutely loved a farewell, don, and she was fearless as well. wasn't she? and quite un—pc , brooks, your and quite un—pc, brooks, your greatest brit? my britons are , greatest brit? my britons are, all the hospitality workers that works every day doing the december in the festive period , december in the festive period, facing a very uncertain future. and that is partly to the government and not understanding what my industry needs and not going forward. what has happen, though, those you know, they've
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got a very uncertain future . and got a very uncertain future. and i can't argue with one nigel nelson mine is striking rail workers . what they're doing workers. what they're doing might be inconvenient, but striking is never. and i think they deserve some respect for standing up for their rights . standing up for their rights. okay. well, look , compelling okay. well, look, compelling suggested ones, but i'll go with adam tonight because the hospitality industry been through hell and there's so many young people on pretty low pay who rely on work within hospitality and they gave up their christmases so salute you cheers to the hospitality workers. dawn, who's caught your eye today? your jack. it's plural. it's all the covid zealots, all the people that suddenly think it's a really goodidea suddenly think it's a really good idea to wear masks every time they step the door. if they step outside the door to go back to having online rather than going out supporting the hospitality industry and all the people that just want to back and turn the clock back to living under that regime. we're
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locked down again. what is wrong with people? what wrong with these people? what is wrong indeed ? adam, your union jack indeed? adam, your union jack honorary jack asks is the w h r for scaremongering again over covid and is the same w.h.o. they declared an emergency pandemic like a monkey pox when in 2022, just 25 people actually ended up dying of that disease. i trust them. their leader is being for corruption and genocide. they scare the living daylights out of me do trust the w.h.o. well daylights out of me do trust the who. well agreed with you in w.h.o. well agreed with you in the past . agree with you now the past. agree with you now i consider them to be the world health organisation. but how about your union jack ? nigel, it about your union jack? nigel, it has to be with you sunak for imposing compulsory masks on all at ten year olds without doing his own arithmetic. tories have missed the target for recruiting maths teachers every year since they've been in power and last year they missed it by 196.
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brilliant stuff. i'm going to give it to dawn . a sentence i've give it to dawn. a sentence i've never said before . a liar over never said before. a liar over zealots . many of my followers zealots. many of my followers say every night after the show i love to write my message to the covid zealots is just say no thanks to . my brilliant panel thanks to. my brilliant panel who have knocked it out of the park. but this show is nothing without you thank you for your company. we'll do all again company. we'll do it all again for last time tomorrow night for the last time tomorrow night at dan back on monday at 9:00. dan is back on monday so do join us tomorrow for one last hurrah with lots some great guests and some debates . guests and some great debates. next headline , your next up, it's headline, your first look at tomorrow's paper with. three comedians see with. three top comedians see tomorrow us .
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good evening. i'm tatiana sanchez in, the newsroom. in his first major speech of the new year prime minister, rishi sunak set his government's five key priorities . set his government's five key priorities. he pledged to halve inflation , grow the economy . inflation, grow the economy. stop illegal immigration . reduce stop illegal immigration. reduce the national debt . and cut the national debt. and cut massive backlogs in the nhs. he told the public to hold him to account . those waiting lists in account. those waiting lists in england do not fall in two years. those are the people's priority . they are your priority. they are your government's priorities. and we will either achieved them or not. no tricks , no ambiguity.
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not. no tricks, no ambiguity. we're

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