tv Dan Wootton Tonight Replay GB News February 1, 2023 3:00am-5:01am GMT
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you for the cost of extra any you for the cost of extra and lost wages caused the strikes. well kelvin mckenzie says it's high time the lefties paid for the pain they are inflicting on hard working brits. and he's going to live on that at 1040. donald trump is pulling no punches on blistering return to the trail . well, i return to the trail. well, i hear he might run, you know , i hear he might run, you know, i consider that very disloyal. but it's not about loyalty. but to me is it's always about. so is it too early to .7 write off the it too early to.7 write off the former president making a style comeback . us journalists former president making a style comeback. us journalists making galley gives us the lowdown stateside at 950 and with j.k. rowling calling out to sturgeon, the first minister's close ally, telling rebels to leave , the telling rebels to leave, the party has scheming sturgeon destroyed her political career by pandering to these woke extremists? we're going to debate the brewing civil war at 1030. plus, matt hancock, some money grabbing . get him out of money grabbing. get him out of here . are you telling the truth?
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here. are you telling the truth? when you say that it wasn't your primary. absolutely. absolutely. of so did you negotiate the fee ? of course, there was a discussion and negotiation over the fate , more of the disgraced the fate, more of the disgraced mps car crash interview coming up in the media files will have 2 hours newspaper front pages for you hot off the press and they knew gracious person and you need jackass to this dan you need jackass to this is dan wootton tonight let's go . wootton tonight let's go. in independence day brexit day whatever you want to call i actually think today should be national bank holiday although with the economy in the state it and we probably don't need any more those . i'm going have more of those. i'm going to have a brexit day digest just more of those. i'm going to have a moment.rexit day digest just more of those. i'm going to have a moment. first,iay digest just more of those. i'm going to have a moment. first, though, .t just more of those. i'm going to have a moment. first, though, the st a moment. first, though, the news with polly middlehurst . news with polly middlehurst. dan, thank you. good evening. the top story on gb news.
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tonight, tens of thousands of teachers in england, wales have joined the uk's largest education union to take part in strikes tomorrow . the national strikes tomorrow. the national education union, 40,000 school staff signed up a fortnight. tomorrow's the first of seven days of strikes by the union across february and march in a dispute over pay , the education dispute over pay, the education minister, nick gibb. dispute over pay, the education minister, nick gibb . the strikes minister, nick gibb. the strikes as disruptive . it is as disruptive. it is disappointing that the nea has decided to go ahead with these strikes when. we are still discussing issues of and working and other issues very constructive . even yesterday we constructive. even yesterday we were having those discussions and strikes are disruptive to children's education, particularly after the two years of disruption during, particularly after the two years of disruption during , the covid of disruption during, the covid pandemic and its disruption disrupting to two parents and families as well . a new report families as well. a new report by international monetary fund is predicting a negative outlook for the uk economy . it's for the uk economy. it's forecasting that the uk's
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domestic product or gdp . will domestic product or gdp. will shnnk domestic product or gdp. will shrink by five points, 6% over the coming year, even though in october the same imf expected growth of 0.3. however, the chancellor jeremy growth of 0.3. however, the chancellorjeremy hunt says chancellor jeremy hunt says britain outperformed many other financial forecasts last year despite higher interest rates and tighter government budgets. the shadow rachel reeves though and tighter government budgets. the shad blaming the imf stance on 13 years of conservative economic policy . the uk economy has got policy. the uk economy has got huge potential and yet the government is to seize the initiative and we see today with these forecast from the imf, with the uk now at the bottom of the league table for growth, both this and next, the government needs to be doing so much more to fulfil the potential of the uk economy it needs away from home. the actor alec baldwin has been a charged today with involuntary
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manslaughter over the fatal shooting on the set of the film rust . cinematographer helena shooting on the set of the film rust. cinematographer helena was killed during rehearsals in the us state of new mexico in 21 when a probe gun that baldwin was using a live round . baldwin was using a live round. baldwin says he never pulled the trigger and that it was just a tragic accident. he could face. though up to five years in jail if, he's convicted . now, news at he's convicted. now, news at home. lancashire police say they found and are speaking to a key witness. they're appealing too to come forward earlier in their search for the missing mother of. two, nicola believes the 45 year old was last seen her dog by the river wyre on friday. her mobile phone was later found on a bench on a conference call to work and her dog was discovered running loose nearby . and the running loose nearby. and the princess of wales says essential to know what's needed help the future generation become happy,
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healthy adults . launching her healthy adults. launching her new early campaign called shaping us. the princess says she hopes to help people understand . how early childhood understand. how early childhood affects later and adulthood . affects later and adulthood. kensington palace says the importance of early years development will be a key for kate for the rest of her life . kate for the rest of her life. let's get you to date on tv, onune let's get you to date on tv, online and dab plus radio. this is gb news, the people's channel. let's get back to dan wootton tonight . wootton tonight. brand new from the no sugar sherlock file of british bashing so—called journalists lack quote, understanding basic economics and are guilty of uninformed groupthink when . it uninformed groupthink when. it comes to financial reporting that very honest revelation came from a report commissioned by
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wait for it the bbc board. it's both. and while it focussed specific on the corporation's coverage of taxation and public spending, government borrowing and debt, all of that is relevant to how beeb has completely missed point when it comes to our decision. leave the european union, which i'm celebrating the third anniversary of tonight . happy anniversary of tonight. happy brexit day. happy independence . brexit day. happy independence. from the start the bbc along with let's be honest almost all of the msm broadcast media has hated brexit according to them. so what the brexit a racist backward and stupid rather patriotic, sensible passionate about the need for britain to have sovereignty over our own and by being so stuck in their london metropolitan champagne socialist bubble, they failed . socialist bubble, they failed. see the seismic decision coming that would become our biggest even that would become our biggest ever. and in opinion greatest
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mandate. of course, after very briefly licking their wounds, they began their to diminish brexit voters and paint the as a failure as i suppose. looking at the crowd it is a very crowd mostly . i've never seen so many mostly. i've never seen so many people in one place. it's an extraordinary story. joe biden is in the room. boris johnson's presence is not required . and presence is not required. and given that britain is no longer part of europe, how much influence does the uk prime minister have? you only have to look at the pound. you only have to look at people going on holiday. have to look holiday. you only have to look at who told newsnight at doctors who told newsnight they're the they're worried about the availability of. cancer drugs. this is far from not this is this is far from not ideal. this is this is far from not ideal . this is a horrendous out. ideal. this is a horrendous out. this is unprecedented. the scale of this catastrophe is absolutely unbelievable . the nhs absolutely unbelievable. the nhs was one of the headlines facing a staffing crisis after brexit because it sparked a jaw dropping 96% fall in eu nurses applying for jobs.
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dropping 96% fall in eu nurses applying forjobs. i mean that applying for jobs. i mean that make people think i want to rethink that decision to leave the single market why bother with a milkshake when you could get some battery acid . as ever get some battery acid. as ever the bbc and the msm missed a fundamental point brexit voters backed leaving eu because of the importance for us to make our own decisions . of course, own decisions. of course, politicians could up and they have time and again this past three years failing to take advantage of many of the amazing opportunity provided by brexit. that doesn't mean the decision to leave itself was wrong . not to leave itself was wrong. not that you would believe that by watching the current hysterical coverage on the msm around brexit, you think brexit's going well. oh, i think brexit well. for a whole range of reasons . well. oh, i think brexit well. for a whole range of reasons. i can't give you one to start with. can't give you one to start with . £191 billion that we've with. £191 billion that we've saved by not part of the covid
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bailout . i would give you bailout. i would give you another one that insurance is cheaper because when no longer subject to the business, no longer subject the vino curricular and the benefits component of this line. here is where it be. if it had continued growing at the same rate as before, the. that's according to academics at king's college london. but reality, it stalled . the uk is the only major rich economy that's smaller poorer than before the pandemic . would than before the pandemic. would it not be more honest to acknowledge brexit is failing on its own terms for business? what we now can do is set the future of our own country in the way we wish to with complete freedom , wish to with complete freedom, and that is a huge opportunity. do you we're doing that for 50 years. so your message to people who are now regretting it or thinking it's wrong or starting to wonder why on earth we did it this well is not a ringing endorsement . it is . essentially endorsement. it is. essentially the gig is up three years in and
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not really anybody is pretending that things going to get better . hagi verhofstadt, the eu's hater and wreck of brexit coordinator, even used an interview this morning to . blame interview this morning to. blame the ukraine war on the uk's decision to leave the eu . i decision to leave the eu. i think maybe without brexit maybe there was no invasion. i don't know . i know you're talking know. i know you're talking rubbish. this deranged against brexit will continue you? until those sorts of knuckle heads eventually drag us back into the eu? what's missing in the coverage is the understanding that the blob and the political establishment want to do all they can to undermine our leave decision. set imminent closer decision. set up imminent closer ties with the eu they ties with the eu once they predict where keir starmer is as pm. we have now been free from the single for over two years. we have regained autonomy, although the shameful northern
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ireland mess remains unresolved as the european group pointed out today, we have the ability for freeports and more welfare improvements, cheaper motor insurance, immigration controls, no annual eu budget payments and the option for tax reform . but the option for tax reform. but now our politicians must ignore the media, haters and wreckers and prove that they will truly embrace to brexit create a better united kingdom. sadly, i have little faith they have the gumption to do that. to respond now my superstar panel top mail columnist amanda patel, now my superstar panel top mail columnist amanda patel , the columnist amanda patel, the conservative commentator , conservative commentator, reverend calvin robinson, and the author , journalist rebecca the author, journalist rebecca reid at amanda patel. there has been so much dishonour reporting around brexit and i think it has hit fever pitch today. it astonishing leaving here leaving home to come in tonight. i had to put bob marley on because i was so distressed. i was listening to lbc and they were contemplating the theory that if
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we if it weren't for brexit brexit, caused putin's invasion . ukraine. that was your first mistake that lbc you've got to listen something i've got some friends on them not listening to brian. i've got to say. i know . brian. i've got to say. i know. but look, we aren't the diverse channel, you know i need to give. i need to hear these voices. that's i thought it was the beauty to hear what we're up. it's ukrainians are dying a daily basis because we because we voted for brexit. and it just it's just layer upon layer of total nonsense . but, you know, total nonsense. but, you know, i just they've all leapt on the on this new economic report that, you know, again , because it's you know, again, because it's a forecast , it's not a prophecy. forecast, it's not a prophecy. well, i guess it is kind of prophecies. the forecast but you know we're going to sink all the other countries in the entire world except for new zealand are going to do better than us and everything that they can possibly link to brexit. they're
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linking. but the real villains in this piece , apart from the in this piece, apart from the mess , is, i'm afraid the, tory mess, is, i'm afraid the, tory party because . you've got party because. you've got a bunch of remainers in charge , bunch of remainers in charge, you know jeremy , hunt remainer, you know jeremy, hunt remainer, rishi reluctant opportun mystic leaver and they have had years to do about this. we left six years ago, three years go. we technically left and they have done absolutely nothing and. they dare to come out and say to us, actually, now what we're going to do in the next year before the election is when is stop all the links with trade. when you take that tape out. when you take that red tape out. i thought that's what they were doing all along, dan thought doing all along, dan i thought that that job that that's what that their job was and the tory party that was and it's the tory party that it betrayed brexiteer is it betrayed the brexiteer is kelvin robinson you were big brexit and you went hard core for us to leave . do you agree for us to leave. do you agree with amanda that ? the tory party with amanda that? the tory party hasn't done enough honour brexit. first of all, happy
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brexit. first of all, happy brexit. day. done. oh yeah. to all of us. happy brexit to me. brexit i, i look, i'm not one of these people by the way, who says we should get new public holidays for everything. i think we should have this because. it's independence. it's it's our independence. it's funny i think we should funny because i think we should have more public holidays. i don't necessarily think need don't necessarily think we need them it them for this. that party was it was to get everyone back was amazing to get everyone back together celebrate our together and to celebrate our leaving. a good thing. leaving. it was a good thing. i know. it a wonderful night. know. it was a wonderful night. we remember the same we can all remember the same party. we're all the we just remember it's. like when the first on moon too first man landed on the moon too young you. rebecca i didn't young for you. rebecca i didn't vote we all vote and you know, we all remember where. don't get it, do they?i remember where. don't get it, do they? i heard meet on newsnight last some the clips last night and some of the clips you played they still don't you just played they still don't what was about. it wasn't what it was all about. it wasn't a argument. that's a economic argument. and that's why the vote was all why they lost the vote was all about me it was central about them but me it was central on national sovereignty it was about we are an about saying we are an independent not of independent country, not part of a federal the united a federal state of the united states europe. we independent a federal state of the united sta are europe. we independent a federal state of the united sta are british pe. we independent a federal state of the united sta are british and ile independent a federal state of the united sta are british and that'szpendent we are british and that's something of. that's something to be proud of. that's what it was about for me. you still don't get it, do you, rebecca? let's be rebecca? because let's be honest. know you
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honest. i know you say you didn't know, but you are part of that london metropolitan scene i talk just think it's talk about. you just think it's in the off. never let it slide. brexit is a pain. they also would love to stop talking about it lost the vote, it and i, when we lost the vote, i wait, i didn't. but i say, wait, i didn't. but i thought when it didn't, you did not. i voted for 24. i was drunk. 24 voting age and i think it should be , but it no, it should be, but it no, i really thing to say i really i really thing to say i really i really just but she's been honest. yeah. look, she's been and a lot of people did a lot of things like tell you on this show that would honest but they would be rather revealing and it's probably best not say them that you should not have said oh on the economics can i just say the reason we're in downfall the reason we're in a downfall right because of the imf right now is because of the imf getting and the elite getting rid of and all the elite getting rid of and all the elite getting of rishi sunak i get getting rid of rishi sunak i get getting rid of rishi sunak i get getting sorry rid of mistrust. i'm to as i can about i'm going to as soon i can about this well . i i'm going to as soon i can about this well. i think i'm going to as soon i can about this well . i think there's this as well. i think there's been a lot of people that worry about the cost of living and if we stuck trust, quite we have stuck with trust, quite a place. now i'm a lot better place. now i'm eating taxes, but oh look at
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eating up taxes, but oh look at the like me saying if the gdp. it's like me saying if jeremy won election jeremy corbyn won the election been place, but we been a better place, but we don't know, you know that is that i don't know . but you that i don't know. but you can say if was that happened. my say if it was that happened. my issue there is a problem . it issue is there is a problem. it feels like what we do is just negativity. it's easy and lazy. they are often involved the bbc is not involved. it is not the beat. bbc doesn't make policy, it is not the bbc's fault. this has meant that a lot of improvements are right. the policy of policy without a lot of influence economically because you and obviously i was doing that because wycombe was a very dull role which actually if you it's not my fault. that's a good tonight. rebecca reed calvin robinson around for televised superstar here right now coming up as noted brexiteer and columnist daniel hannan says there is remain a coup to put us back into the eu by stealth does al brexit hear the man who made it all happen nigel farage that our dream is at risk and how would he say brexit? farage is going to be with me live this
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independence at 935. but up next independence at 935. but up next in the clash , speculation that in the clash, speculation that meghan markle won't say major role in negotiating the coronation peace deal with justin welby be can the duchess of sussex be trusted to do the right thing by britain joanna george you niall gardiner and richard join me straight after the break. and i want your views on this, too. email me to down tweet me at gb news. our poll running mate to the clash straight after these messages .
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and despite meghan markle taking a rare of silence since the publication of spare royal insiders fear there could be an ulterior . we know that the insiders fear there could be an ulterior. we know that the uber woke archbishop of canterbury justin welby has been in to mediate discussions between the firm and the sussexes over their role in the coronation and i as revealed in my mailonline column , insiders worry that by making no comment on spade's contents , no comment on spade's contents, meghan could be setting herself up as a power broker in likely forthcoming negotiations between harry and king charles. so amid speculation that, she wants a major role in negotiating the agreement. can the duchess sussex be trusted to do the right thing by britain? let me know your thoughts . me down at
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know your thoughts. me down at gbnews.uk vote in our poll at gb news. those shortly. but right now i'm joined by the social commentator anjou, former aide to margaret thatcher, niall gardner and the royal commentator rich fitzwilliams. nile gardiner can we trust that make it is going to do the right thing by the country and the right thing by the monarchy rather than just the right thing by herself . great to see you, by herself. great to see you, dan . i have to say that we dan. i have to say that we simply cannot trust. meghan markle at all. i think she has really led a vicious campaign undermine the royal family here . she is thoroughly untrustworthy . i think hugely untrustworthy. i think hugely vindictive . and we simply cannot vindictive. and we simply cannot in any way. i think trust anything she does in terms of deaungs anything she does in terms of dealings with the royal family. she is the last person on earth , frankly, who should be handung , frankly, who should be handling kind of negotiation with the british monarchy. i think that this is an extremely dangerous idea. joanna george,
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you you you're a big supporter of meghan. how do you respond? can we trust her. i mean, the whole question to me makes absolutely no sense because first of all, should meghan, be that in this family mediation, which is what this is , is not. i which is what this is, is not. i don't think she should . you've don't think she should. you've got two different, you know, sides that are talking. you know something this that's hugely important. this is about family mediation , something that meghan mediation, something that meghan has been hugely involved in. and secondly , about the whole thing secondly, about the whole thing about can she be trusted to do the right thing by. what decision is even going to be made in these mediations that's going to remotely anything to do with britain . this is about a with britain. this is about a family that's been things have a huge amount died. joanna i would say huge amount because the eyes of the world are going to be on britain. on the day of the coroner action. and as it stands prince william, i think quite rightly is highly sceptical , rightly is highly sceptical, highly suspicious and actually deeply worried that harry and
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meghan might use some sort of stunt to try and overshadow the coronation. now i'm saying i don't trust her to do the right by britain, but i'm happy to hear the side. why should we trust joanna? well, i don't think that there's anything that meghan could possibly do based on that behaviour in the past, when there's been very public events that the royal family been involved in. you know, clive at conversations has attended sorry for harry has attended sorry for harry has attended his grandfather's he's attended his grandfather's he's attended his grandfather's he's attended his grandmother's funeral. and when actually came to the queen's funeral , she to the queen's funeral, she didn't say a word. yet the british press went after her as if she made the whole thing about herself. she came. she was quiet they both were quiet and respectful . and i think this is respectful. and i think this is another family occasion where they're just going to turn up if they're just going to turn up if they decide to, and just cooperate and type. well, i think the issue is about what they did after about fact that, for example, they recounted a
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personal conversation between father and son harry and charles just minutes after a grief stricken charles had laid his father, prince philip, rest that entire conversation was recounted in spares. so the sort of damage. but, richard, you've heard there say actually , heard there say actually, meghan's done nothing wrong here. we can trust her as a royal commentator. do you think has outpaced interests at heart 7 has outpaced interests at heart ? i think she has her own interests topped on by certainly anidea interests topped on by certainly an idea of where those interests might lie. what we've got is an absolutely extraordinary we've got the archbishop canterbury apparently if the reports are true, mediating between king charles and the sussexes with william a report oddly extremely sceptical about ought to be borne in mind since the december there have been a series of vicious attacks by the sussexes . the royal family have moved
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with time . trailers are one of with time. trailers are one of them, of course, deliberately intended to upset the prince . intended to upset the prince. princess of wales is to bust them. then subsequently we have 6 hours of netflix and travel. that documentary and attacks on the commonwealth several these trusts. very nice them for christmas and subsequently we have spent all those interviews as so far as meghan is concerned but i do think that part the plan might very well be is to be involved in some sort of the go session with the royal family whereby . they would get an whereby. they would get an apology as such as way that they said that they weren't. they will. i think might get some up to what they think they've suffered. she could use that in the future. yeah exactly . nigel, the future. yeah exactly. nigel, i'm sorry. they don't deserve that. i'm fully with william here. why is charles ben lying down to satisfy these two? nigel, at the end of the day, if they don't want to come to the coronation don't come. but let me tell you, they will be here
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because all of their multi—million deals , nigel, are multi—million deals, nigel, are completely dependent , having completely dependent, having a close proximity to the british royal family yeah, that's absolutely correct , dan. and absolutely correct, dan. and i think that prince william's instincts are fundamentally right on that. you know, he really fears that harry and meghan will will basically be disrupted if they come over to be like kingdom. they have a long track record, of course, of briefing against of the royal family they will use conversations in, order to sell books, basically. so they're in it for their own agenda . fact, it for their own agenda. fact, they are basically i would describe as high level external witness in many, many respects, making extraordinary demands of the royal family. there are no position whatsoever to be making any demand at all. they should be really cast into the
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wilderness. family should have no future role. i within the british monarchy at all. joanna how do you respond to that nile gardiner you know this a man very politically connected says and meghan and now highly extortionists , i think extortionists, i think absolutely ridiculous. i think why harry had every right to give his account of his story. and he's done that now. and i think it's completely ridiculous and ludicrous that anybody would think that any he has, you know, any interact with his family, that he's going to write in a book. and actually, i am . book. and actually, i am. realistically, when we think about the accusations that harry has made the book just because he's you know, put his head above the parapet and said this is what i think. this is my story. does it mean that the royal family been briefing and haven't been leaking stuff, but they've behind closed doors just because somebody that. richard shaking his at that richard why you shaking your head at that but shaking my head because the
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lie is in spare for example i mean the idea of the press and not talking about the paparazzi were talking about the royal rota. we're talking about royal correspondent . it's on correspondent. it's on commentator land. the prejudice on social media, an extension of the buckingham public relations. there's absolutely rubbish. what we seen very careful manipulation the sussexes and incidentally regarding the royal racists now we're told nearly two years later i'm thousand doesn't exist nothing to . see doesn't exist nothing to. see nothing to see here richard until meghan's autobiography i'd say they'll save it for that . say they'll save it for that. thank you so much to the social commentators . yo energise you commentators. yo energise you former aide to margaret nile gardiner and the royal commentator richard fitzwilliams. do you fitzwilliams. but who do you agree amid speculation she agree with? amid speculation she wants role can the wants this major role can the duchess of sussex be trusted to do the right thing by britain in the negotiation over the coronation of the king from julia. they shouldn't be allowed near coronation the day is near the coronation the day is about the king and queen, not
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the pair who sold out royal family for money. richard on twitter writes , why should she? twitter writes, why should she? she is full of her own importance. the majority don't want her at the coronation. but from fiona. yes is a family event so that's a different take. your verdict is now in just 6% of you agree that meghan can be trusted 94% of you say keep out of those negotiations with woke just about have to say i've got to be honest with you one of my issues is i don't trust justin welby in this case do the right thing by britain ehhen do the right thing by britain either. remember team harry and meghan up, donald meghan. coming up, as donald trump pretends to the campaign trail blistering fashion, is trail in blistering fashion, is it too early to write ? the it too early to write? the former president making an epic political comeback start . us political comeback start. us journalist meghan kelly live me stateside at 950. but does nigel farage agree that country's freedom from the eu at risk and what needs to be done to save brexit from a stealth? ramona. 0 britain's brexit hero outlined his battle plan live
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all of the independent united kingdom , a victory for ordinary kingdom, a victory for ordinary , decent people. it's a victory against the big merchant banks, against the big merchant banks, against the big businesses and against the big businesses and against big politics. and i'm proud of everybody who had the courage in, the face of all the threats day they were told they had the guts , stand up and do had the guts, stand up and do the right thing. i know you want a ban on national flags, but we're going to wave you goodbye and we'll look forward in the future to working with you the labour. future to working with you the labour . but future to working with you the labour. but we're yet to take advantage of the countless brexit benefits. and as prominent brexiteer daniel hannan writes in the daily , the hannan writes in the daily, the evidence is there really is a remainer plan to rejoin the eu stealth . so nigel happy in day stealth. so nigel happy in day but can you really be selling to
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three years on given that climate that daniel talks about he can celebrate the fact that we smashed the establishment i mean what happened in parliament square as we speak 100,000 people were in parliament square on a cold late january night, many of them without , but they many of them without, but they were there to celebrate, not just leaving eu, not just getting our independence, but beating a political establishment that done their best for three years to ignore the referendum result. so let's not forget the significance of it, but i feel like i've moved house, you know, that was it. we were moving into a big new home with lots of rooms and three years on, many of the packing boxes are still there untouched. there's been almost no attempt in many areas to do anything and they blame the pandemic. all they blame the pandemic. all they blame the war in ukraine. truth of it is the conservative party never actually believed in
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it. in fact, the people who then took over post the referendum and then and then post the european elections of 2019 had been my mortal for 25 years and suddenly those that have fought me well the defend is of national democracy . we're going national democracy. we're going to deliver brexit. they never believed in it. i'm not even sure johnson actually believed it. it was a political now. of course there were some that did, but not the majority , the but not the majority, the conservative party. so we find ourselves with some small victories . we stand taller on. victories. we stand taller on. the world stage in terms of foreign policy, we proved with the vaccine , whatever you think the vaccine, whatever you think of it, the free from you , that of it, the free from you, that was a dead hand of bureaucracy in the eu there's more that we could . but you asked you know, could. but you asked you know, five and a half million men and running small businesses. have they found a better fit? the answer is no no. we simply haven't removed the regulations. let now six and a half years on
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from the referendum is a piece of legislation in going to the house of lords that would get rid of some of this nonsense. so the we haven't delivered but the big one and this must be ignored the turnout in the referendum was over 10% higher. there were so—called experts predicted and you know why ? because getting you know why? because getting back control , you know why? because getting back control, an island of our national borders was seen to be a key priority. tonight rishi sunak has sent out an email to conservative party members saying, three years on, we got brexit done. we've taken back control of our borders. i don't know whether to laugh or cry . know whether to laugh or cry. it's an outright lie . legal it's an outright lie. legal immigration is running at levels hitherto never even dreamt of an illegal immigration . i put that illegal immigration. i put that poster up that of young coming into the eu. i condemned for it,
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but what i was saying was only leaving. can we stop this happening to us? and yet it's happened anyway . so the. the happened anyway. so the. the millions of people out there , millions of people out there, while very political, who are obsolete, hacked off of the lack of delivery on borders , on small of delivery on borders, on small business regulation , on business regulation, on financial services , on financial services, on fisheries. and i could go on a list as long as you're are. the problem is this if i was polled now by the guardian , you know, now by the guardian, you know, am i pleased with the way brexit has worked out i'm a negative i am in the negative camp and that is being by david lammy in particular. but you know and stop as a means where the next labour government will keep us as close to eu rules as they possibly can. exactly exactly. whereas as you point out, a lot of brexit is a dissatisfied about the fact that the conservative government gone far
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enough. and look , you talk about enough. and look, you talk about lammy, right? and actually, i think it's really important to acknowledge the nefarious role , acknowledge the nefarious role, the broadcast media played in terms of doing down brexiteers from the moment that the referee and the result came in, because hated it so much and they it feels to me, nigel but look tell me if you think i'm wrong, but it feels to me like they are emboldened. now, this is a moment they are putting everything in it together, including of the damage caused by lockdowns and blame it on brexit. and they are emboldened by these new opinion polls. well, absolutely . i mean, look, well, absolutely. i mean, look, you know, i had for 20 is i was treated by mainstream broadcast media as no better than a war criminal . it media as no better than a war criminal. it was just the extraordinary , you know, for extraordinary, you know, for danng extraordinary, you know, for daring to say we should
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independent of it. i was you know, i've been the worst figure that it appeared in british politics many, many decades , you politics many, many decades, you know, since the thirties . yeah, know, since the thirties. yeah, look , if you listen to radio look, if you listen to radio force, they start with a holiday programme , you know, go through programme, you know, go through farming, go through the food programme, go through hour. they write the way through. you will find every single programme blaming the problems we have today in this country on brexit and lbc this morning even broadcast without really even challenging a comment from guy verhofstadt, the former the former leader of the liberal group in the european parliament. the fact that putin invaded ukraine because of brexit and all of this goes on day after day unchallenged all of our ills get blamed on brexit is it any wonder that are getting disenchanted so we have a real problem here that there
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is whilst you know we don't want to i mean we are not going to rejoin the eu for many, many many years to come. the argument could be five or ten years down the road. we're mirroring their laws, so why don't have a say that's that is some way off. the problem we're heading to mrs. problem is we're heading to mrs. may's may brexit in name may's brian may brexit in name only northern ireland. cut off from the rest of united kingdom borders more open than they even were before the brexit vote at a class at westminster who are now more detached from the rest of the country on a whole raft of issues that they've ever been . issues that they've ever been. the question of the problem is how do we fight this? yeah. so what's the solution ? well, if what's the solution? well, if i knew that if i knew that i'd bottle it , you know, knew that if i knew that i'd bottle it, you know, i don't know what solution is other than to say there may come a point i do think we're there yet, but
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there may come a point when need to aim for a political revolution that is even bigger than brexit itself was. and by that what i mean is we have to main parties is running this country who are now pretty much identical. yeah there are small differences erin there on non—dom tax status or what they say about the eu. but you know, there's point saying we're going to stop the boats and then not stopping the boats. i mean, starting with stop boats. but then soon i won't either and there may come point in the next couple years when public are genuinely ready for an historical shift in terms of the policies we see fit to govern us.the policies we see fit to govern us. the last time it really happened was after the first world war, when the liberals who'd been in power for a very, very long time got replaced , very long time got replaced, literally replaced by the labour party . and if we do see this
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party. and if we do see this back towards being aligned . the back towards being aligned. the eu roles potential membership lined up in the years to come with all of that implies that that moment may come, but now we've seen it in france, we've seen it initially. i in italy you say, look it there, but then you say, look it there, but then you come up against the problem of our electoral system. yeah. you know, you're georgeham would have struggled to win a single seat in the west and it is prime minister really the i'm not pretending there any quick easy solutions that i've managed to think through this point, but what we cannot do is to betray about 100,000 people that i spoke to at the moment. what i think the count was out at the moment we left the eu three years ago tonight we cannot betray that historic against the establishment and i will be putting abaco fighting for it . establishment and i will be putting abaco fighting for it. i don't yet know exactly how, but
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i will and we will do so here as well. but look , celebrate today. well. but look, celebrate today. a toast to you all. the independent state nigel farage. congratulations. my goodness . congratulations. my goodness. was a historic achievement . now was a historic achievement. now coming up, amid bullying allegations for being, quote rude and abrasive , is dominic rude and abrasive, is dominic raab the latest victim ? the raab the latest victim? the massive plot to purge tory government of its biggest ? my government of its biggest? my superstar patton returns to debate that at ten and we'll have a first look at tomorrow's front pages. then to . but first, front pages. then to. but first, as donald trump to the campaign trail and his egregious social media ban is lifted, could the former president make a lazarus style return star. us journalist megan kelly joins me stateside straight after the .
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trump is officially back after . trump is officially back after. he formally launched his campaign an extraordinary second term in the white house making appearances in the all important primary states of new hampshire and south carolina. the donald was top form, tackling was on top form, tackling everything illegal everything from illegal immigration protecting immigration to protecting women's sports. and in a week where matter, that's like the crew behind facebook reinstated trump's instagram and facebook accounts was back dropping those truth bombs about his rival ron desantis. watch . nine and they desantis. watch. nine and they said he's not doing rallies he's not camped maybe he's lost that's we are more angry now and i'm more committed now than i ever was , just as we did two ever was, just as we did two years ago. we're going to stop cold invasion on our border today in our southern border. and coming from prisons. and they're coming mental institutions and they're coming from a lot of bad places is that
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it's going to cause us a lot of problems, ron? would it not be governor if it wasn't for me and. okay. and number one, he wouldn't have gotten the nomination . and number two, he nomination. and number two, he have been the democrat opponent . so then what i hear might run, you know, i consider that very disloyal, but it's not loyalty. but to me it is it's always about moving. a lot of people back and he's back surging in the polls you know, a lot of the punst the polls you know, a lot of the pundits wrong to write a trump off just a few weeks ago . yes off just a few weeks ago. yes absolutely they were wrong. they wanted to take those lacklustre midterm results for the republicans , turn it into an republicans, turn it into an albatross around donald trump's neck , saying he was done neck, saying he was done politically. how many times do they have to do that before they will learn? that is a dumb mistake bet against trump in republican party at your own peril , we can republican party at your own peril, we can talk about the general, but in the republican they love him . and the
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they still love him. and the fact ron desantis has a lot fact that ron desantis has a lot of too, doesn't mean that of fans, too, doesn't mean that trump is not going to secure this nomination. and fact, this nomination. and in fact, what seeing in polls now what we're seeing in polls now is it's a head to head is that when it's a head to head matchup, trump , desantis, trump matchup, trump, desantis, trump sometimes wins often loses . the sometimes wins often loses. the most recent poll has him crushing ron desantis more than twice. desantis is numbers , but twice. desantis is numbers, but that's where trump starts to get vulnerable when it's a two man race for the republican primary nomination. but trump versus desantis plus anyone , trump desantis plus anyone, trump wins. he wins every time. desantis plus anyone, trump wins. he wins every time . if the wins. he wins every time. if the non—trump the vote is split out at all, trump and so all these people who hate trump want to do head to head matchups in these polls . they know desantis is polls. they know desantis is likely come out ahead. they like desantis , you know, the desantis, you know, the anti—trump republicans are still very powerful, very loud . but if very powerful, very loud. but if you put anybody else that race, which is reality, it's going to be just desantis taking on trump. trump is the republican
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party still loves him. they are not the mainstream media. and i think the more he gets out there , if he can stay on message and stop griping about 2020 and how he's secretly won, the more he's going to consolidate that yet because going be because there's going to be a massive field, isn't there? there's going be a huge field of contenders. certainly not going to desantis versus. trump. to be desantis versus. trump. the noted at the megan the thing i noted at the megan is was , you know, he is trump was, you know, he pretty much stayed on message . pretty much stayed on message. we sort of seen a new type of campaigner or. we sort of seen a new type of campaigner or . was this just campaigner or. was this just a one off? we are seeing new type of campaigner. we saw it in his campaign announcement as well. but there's no way he can maintain it. he can't. it's know it's the thing that made people fall in love with him was when the clark kent pulls the shirt open and the superman comes out. you know like the one who says all the terrible things and inches all the terrible things and incites people and drives the media crazy left crazy media crazy in the left crazy you see it even in new you could see it even in new hampshire and iowa this past week he was campaigning for week when he was campaigning for the two
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the first time, those two critical early states , he on critical early states, he was on message and just a little bit about 20 and how he secretly did win and then back on message was like, okay we haven't i suppose we about it. think we talking about it. so i think that's probably it's going that's probably how it's going to go. i think his voters will be fine with that. they actually do believe he won . and this is do believe he won. and this is where ron desantis rivalry where the ron desantis rivalry becomes relevant to . you heard becomes relevant to. you heard his soundbite there saying . i his soundbite there saying. i think disloyal, right . that think it's disloyal, right. that desantis would not have won in florida governor had it not florida as governor had it not been for donald trump. true true. desantis does. how so much of his political success to trump and the trump diehards ? trump and the trump diehards? they're mad that they don't think it's ron desantis this time . they think trump got time. they think trump got screwed out of his first term. then he gets screwed of then he gets screwed out of a second and that ron second term. and that ron desantis needs to take a seat so that trump can have a real term as president without the media trying him down the trying to tear him down with the left, double left, giving him double impeachments, without him getting the getting fake loss in the election and let him have the stage . and desantis have stage. and desantis will have his turn later because he's a
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young. his turn later because he's a young . exactly. he's a young man young. exactly. he's a young man . i sort of understand that . . i sort of understand that. megan, how do you feel personally about a third trump president campaign? i mean, we'll all remember 2016 where obviously you were sort into that narrative and became a target of trump. is this something that person you're looking forward to or personally ? well, i mean, i'm very much over happened between me and trump back in 15, 16, you know, as as bizarre and big as that was in my life, i moved on from that pretty quickly. this is the problem, by the way, a lot of the reporters that he attacks, you have to remember, you're not the story even he makes you the story. owe it to your story. you owe it to your viewers and your readers to take yourself that's know, yourself of it. that's you know, that's called being a professional. too many won't in any what my main any event. so what my main thought it, dan is that as a thought on it, dan is that as a reporter , as a commentator and reporter, as a commentator and news analyst , i love it like . news analyst, i love it like. don't you want to see it ? oh, don't you want to see it? oh, yeah, i'm salivating . i have to
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yeah, i'm salivating. i have to be honest . salivating totally . be honest. salivating totally. i'm not going to lie. i'm salivating over the idea of another trump campaign. and i'm glad that are, too. i guess it's the it's always going to be in a journalist state now. but megan kelly , lots on this. and of kelly, lots on this. and of course megan is the host of the bridget megan kelly show which you can find on sirius xm youtube as a podcast. great shows the suite. megan i have been listening is still to come as we celebrate three years of independence. how can we stop deranged msm and establishment to destroy the brexit dream ? and to destroy the brexit dream? and for all former tory minister prominent brexiteer sir john joins me live at 1050 time. but next, as jacob rees—mogg warns we shouldn't be so flaky. have the aims have too quick to condemn dominic over his bullying allegations , which bullying allegations, which apparently amount to sort of being a bit abrasive and rude by simply panel? back with that in just 2 minutes time.
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it's 10 pm. i'm dan wootton. tonight it's . three years to the tonight it's. three years to the day since glorious exit from the eu , but does the brexit dream eu, but does the brexit dream remain under threat from the political established giant blob and to save it, not be more honest to acknowledge that? brexit is fighting on its own terms for business. essentially, the gig up three years in and
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not really is pretending that things are going to get better. well, former conservative minister prominent brexiteer sir john redwood reveals , what the john redwood reveals, what the government needs to do to neutralise his an imminent ramona coup. his unmissable analysis from inside westminster this independence day coming up at 1050. ahead of teacher strikes tomorrow , a shocking new strikes tomorrow, a shocking new ad campaign from the eu shows . ad campaign from the eu shows. actual kids being used to peddle their propaganda. so parents invoice for the cost of extra child care and lost wages caused by the strikes. calvin speaks for furious parents across the country as he takes on the union barons in cairns at 1040. the pressure mounted on the turf, i mean, sorry , minister of mean, sorry, minister of scotland nicholas sturgeon after her close told gender bill whereby else to leave the snp . whereby else to leave the snp. so has queen nick destroyed , her so has queen nick destroyed, her party and herself by pandering to this woke trans lunacy plus
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eggs hurled at the king and now this director the princess of wales . i delve into both wales. i delve into both those stories with my superstar panel in the media buzz tonight. i'm joined by a man of little calvin and rebecca reed . as dominic and rebecca reed. as dominic raab bullying allegations for being randomly rude abrasive is jacob rees—mogg right to warn about a rise of the snowflakes in high pressure work environments. that's how big debate next. and finally watch the jungle wrap. matt hancock tries to wriggle out of being pai d £320,000. you the truth paid £320,000. you the truth when you say that it wasn't your primary solution ? absolutely. of primary solution? absolutely. of course. so did negotiate over the fee . of course, there was the fee. of course, there was a discussion and a negotiation over the fate . he won't be over the fate. he won't be smiling after my vote when i
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crowned today's greatest person and you needed jackass at 1050, we'll have the first newspaper front pages that are arriving in just moments , hot off the press just moments, hot off the press right after your news at ten with polly middlehurst . dan, with polly middlehurst. dan, thank you and good evening to you tens . of thousands of you tens. of thousands of teachers in england wales have joined the uk's largest education union to take part in a nationwide strikes tomorrow. the national union says 40,000 school staff signed up for the move in a fortnight. school staff signed up for the move in a fortnight . tomorrow is move in a fortnight. tomorrow is the first of seven days of strikes by the union during february and march , amid february and march, amid a dispute over pay . the education dispute over pay. the education minister, nick gibb describes the strikes as disruptive. it is disappointing that the new, you know, has decided to go ahead with strikes when we are still discussing issues of pay and
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working and other issues very constructively. even yesterday we were having those discussions and strikes are disruptive children's education particularly after the two years of disruption , the covid of disruption, the covid pandemic and its disruption disrupting to two parents and families as well . a new report , families as well. a new report, the international monetary fund, is predicting a negative outlook for the uk's economy . it for the uk's economy. it forecasts that the uk's gross domestic product, or gdp will shnnk domestic product, or gdp will shrink by 0.6% over the coming yeah shrink by 0.6% over the coming year. even though in october the had expected a growth of 0.3. however, the chancellor jeremy hunt says britain outperformed many other financial forecasts last year despite higher interest rates and tighter government budgets . but the government budgets. but the shadow chancellor rachel , is shadow chancellor rachel, is blaming the imf stance on 13 years of conservative economic policy . the uk economy has got policy. the uk economy has got a huge potential and yet
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government is failing to seize initiative and we see today with these forecasts from imf, with these forecasts from imf, with the uk now at the bottom of the league table for growth both this year and next, the government needs to be doing so much more to fulfil the potential of the uk economy. let's just bring you some breaking news we're receiving the last few minutes. police in milton keynes are telling that a four year old girl has died , four year old girl has died, after reports of a dog attack. apparently, officers were called to a house in the netherfield area shortly after 5:00 this evening. they say they found the little girl in the back garden and she died at the scene. no arrests have been made and we understand the dog has been humanely destroyed . that news humanely destroyed. that news just in to us concerning a death in milton keynes . now it is from in milton keynes. now it is from home. the actor alec baldwin has been officially charged with involuntary manslaughter over the fatal shooting on the set of the fatal shooting on the set of the film rust cinematographer
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helena was killed during rehearsals . the us state of new rehearsals. the us state of new mexico 2021 when a prop gun baldwin was using fired a live round. baldwin he never pulled the trigger and that it was a tragic accident he could face, though up to five years in jail if he's convicted . it and just if he's convicted. it and just lastly from me tonight, the princess of wales says essential to know what's needed to help the future generation become happy, healthy adults . launching happy, healthy adults. launching her new early years campaign called shaping the princess says she hopes to help people understand just how important early childhood affects later life and into adulthood . life and into adulthood. kensington palace says the importance of early years development will be key. focus for kate for the rest of her life . that's it for me. now back life. that's it for me. now back , dan .
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, dan. tomorrow, as you see. now, in our mediabuzz , our first front our mediabuzz, our first front pageis our mediabuzz, our first front page is straight metro, actually, which says you still don't get it . matt hancock as , don't get it. matt hancock as, the disgraced former health secretary, is slammed for claiming over secretary, is slammed for claiming ove r £300,000 claiming over £300,000 of resign, slick gig claiming it resign, a slick gig claiming it was about the money. i'm was not about the money. i'm going tell you more about that and show you this encounter. actually at actually in the media buzz at 1030. the guardian reports that half a million people are set to strike tomorrow with serious disruption predicted on railways , in schools and, at airports. the eye reports that angry tories anti—growth low on high tax. jeremy hunt over his refusal to cut taxes . the refusal to cut taxes. the chancellor is currently holding firm to his economic plan despite tory grandees who would lay pleading for tax cuts before
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2024. and a fascinating revelation on the front page of , the independent, which quotes her late majesty the queen, as telling prince andrew, do charity work to clear your name and find redemption. my superstar panel back with me now , top daily mail columnist amanda patel, conservative commentator , the reverend calvin commentator, the reverend calvin robinson , and the author and robinson, and the author and journalist rebecca reid. habits die hard for the mainstream media. just a day after the sacking of nadhim zahawi, a new witch hunt has begun against a senior conservative politician. this time , the deputy pm, this time, the deputy pm, dominic, searching for their next tory target, the type pm's deemed reports about robin randomly rude and abrasive as worthy of making their front page today . worthy of making their front page today. now rob is facing eight formal complaints of bullying. rishi sunak has commissioned an dependent investigation by employment law expert . but as the woke investigation by employment law expert. but as the woke mob
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already to get him the chop future gb news starjacob rees—mogg was on hand to give the commons view . i think we've the commons view. i think we've got to be slightly careful about the bullying allegations. go to wait and see. you didn't quite quite rightly . but also, we quite rightly. but also, we mustn't be snowflakes about it. people need to be able to say this job has not been done well enough and needs to be done better . i'm enough and needs to be done better. i'm in forjacob rees—mogg and that's what you're going be getting on gb news very soon. but imagine but i think he's completely right. obviously i wasn't in the room, but from everything i've read and from everything i've read and from everything i've read and from everything i've heard, this is not bullying by rob. this is actually been a tough boss in a very difficult situation trying to do every thing you can for the country and you've worked in the country and you've worked in the cut and thrust of high level tory politics and imagine it sometimes gets a bit abrasive . sometimes gets a bit abrasive. it is brutal. first of all, i love like i say, i love dominic
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raab.i love like i say, i love dominic raab. i mean, not in a kind of familiar if i say, oh i do, i told you i'd tell you i fancied, but if you had to do which one, if you had to. i know he'd be up there anyway. he's a brilliant politician. he's really tough. he's forensic of the work he does and remember, he was a true to his core brexiteer . and to his core brexiteer. and that's one of the reasons that they're out to get. that's why they're out to get. that's why they hate him just like they booed and after after zahawi political death, there's blood in the water and then you get the mainstream media circling because they want another scalp. do not let be dominic raab. and he you know, i've worked those circumstances. if don't if someone shouts at you, you know, the snowflakes coming health or mental health is really, really terrible. someone says actually that work isn't good enough . and that work isn't good enough. and dominic would say that. he'd say , that's not up to it. and let's not forget behind his back, he has the of the civil even the
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permanent secretary. this out to get him. they want to get don't let them get him. if these people can't cope in that situation, part of my underlings, when i worked at a conservative central office, were priti patel and penny mordaunt. they went through . we mordaunt. they went through. we all went through. it's high in politics. it's boiling and it's really exciting and it's a privilege to be there. and you've got these kind of, you know, snowflakes is true is this pretty sandwich in the independent? it gave me traumas three days to just go out . yeah. three days to just go out. yeah. you know, go out and work at pret i totally agree. oh, yeah. go and get a job at a library or a florist or that's going, oh, excuse me, florist. very skilled . oh, no, no, no. i know it's skilled, but it's not a bully. no the thing is, what they're doing is they're conflating bullying what is normal in bullying with what is normal in any important organised any really important organised where you hold people to account for their work. and if it's not good enough for people don't want to be held to account. no
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issue isn't and kelvin issue isn't it. and kelvin moments slippery slope moments this a slippery slope because and this exactly because now and this exactly what the media wanted him to do. they've cornered sunak they've said have to have the said you have to have the toughest most stringent standards and anyone who isn't cleared by the independent investigation will go. i'm sorry what is the definition of bullying? i you could probably find 20 claims of bullying against any minister doing a goodin against any minister doing a good in westminster. yeah, i've spoken to of my friends who've worked with probably you say he's not the nicest guy. he's firm, he's strict, but he's good at his job. he it done. and like amanda says that's what politics and abrasive. last time i looked around offence indeed around sackable offence indeed no. he's more stubborn other politicians. i don't think he will let the mainstream media take his head like we've seen with other politicians. what just this week, actually. but who ministers who say who selects ministers who say that be right he that it would be right if he gets rid his deputy people? i gets rid of his deputy people? i mean, stock by him. yeah. mean, rob, stock by him. yeah. throughout the entire summer he stuck him even when trust was
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stuck by him even when trust was in post. if sunak is prepared to throw rob the bus, i think it's finished . at that point we're finished. at that point we're saying the mainstream media chooses the government. yeah, and that's they sort of already do. look look at, chairman hunter's i mean, rebecca hunter's chance. i mean, rebecca reed, you know, you are reed, i guess, you know, you are a snowflake. do you do a little snowflake. do you do you do you feel like do you feel single week? i i think that's why i said little bit snowflake because you are brave enough to because you are brave enough to be on the stuff which i have huge for common being rude and abrasive . i mean that should get abrasive. i mean that should get you sacked as deputy prime minister. no, i won't. my prime minister. no, i won't. my prime minister actually to have high of people working high of the people working high standards but everyone standards. sure. but everyone keeps oh , piece of keeps saying like, oh, piece of work wasn't good in a work wasn't good enough in a very that's fine. very flat tone. that's fine. nobody's you can't do nobody's saying you can't do that. years. that. i worked for two years. work is strong word. no one's work is a strong word. no one's ever kevin shouted at ever apart from kevin shouted at me. i never. no, no, i've never. maybe you have . i've never. but maybe you have. i've never. but if we on our it stays on. if we do it on our it stays on. okay. but dan i have never shouted at you on that. yes. on air you shouted last week when my off . anyway, very
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my mike was off. anyway, very naughty. point is a this naughty. but my point is a this descends . my point naughty. but my point is a this descends. my point is i've worked with you for a long time. ihave worked with you for a long time. i have never heard of you shouting anybody ever. you might say piece work, what say oh, a piece work, what didn't whatever. but you didn't work or whatever. but you are control. what if i was are a control. what if i was rude, shouldn't my job rude, abrasive? shouldn't my job read simply? i think you should tweet this thing . but my chair's tweet this thing. but my chair's collapse . this is the latest you collapse. this is the latest you want your job. one of the reasons i can't believe i'm saying this is one of the reasons you're good at your job is because you are not horrible people. you are perhaps fun, but you do not lose your temper. and that's you what i think now that's you get what i think now and in a very high pressure story, we've an abrasive story, we've been an abrasive who knows how bad . what are who knows how bad. what are those words mean? what is ? yeah, those words mean? what is? yeah, you know , one person's just, you you know, one person's just, you know , sandwich at somebody or a know, sandwich at somebody or a tomato. he's going through a boy with the boss theme should never throw at me. it would be like that. saw it threw it in the bin and one cherry tomato was
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released from the sandwich it became projectile and they're saying he appeased. i mean when naomi campbell threw her phone, she got cancelled like i'm saying is that we have like the people saying a threat is someone's face. i i think someone's face. i i don't think rob is a grown up and i think there are i think there are many clever people who able to in clever people who are able to in office without shouting at people, everybody. and in politics, completely politics, i would completely disagree. shouted disagree. i've shouted with the shouts been shot shouts in the and i've been shot of yeah, exactly now after of that. yeah, exactly now after netflix wisely pearl, remember that markle's woke that meghan markle's woke cartoon for kids ? kate middleton cartoon for kids? kate middleton has been busy getting her projects over the line the princess of wales shaping campaign was launched alongside her animation. this is the first time i've seen this, actually. 0h time i've seen this, actually. oh creepy down that looks we're back with the goal of raising awareness the importance of a child's early years when it comes to their development. however at the launch event in kirkgate market in leeds got a bit saucy kate was whistled by a member of the public in attendance. watch . now the
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attendance. watch. now the egoist and kate might have had anidea egoist and kate might have had an idea to speak about that ordeal in a podcast all about her perhaps released spotify but something tells me she will stick directly improving the lives of young people instead . lives of young people instead. rebecca read calvin robinson. amanda puts out do survive because coming out with a close ally of nicholas telling gender rebels to leave the party has the snp's supreme sparked a civil war in her own party, mysuper ? a panel debate that at mysuper? a panel debate that at 1030 next is three years to the day since how glorious exit from the eu happy independence day . the eu happy independence day. but are the political establishment and the msm on destroying the brexit dream? former conservative minister top sir john redwood reveals what sirjohn redwood reveals what the government must do to stop the government must do to stop the remainer coup . he's live the remainer coup. he's live straight after the break .
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break now, with three years to go to this very day, the conservatives, led by boris , conservatives, led by boris, officially got brexit done even as he announced our glorious departure from the european union. the most important thing to say tonight is that this is not end, but a beginning . this not end, but a beginning. this is the moment when the dawn
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breaks and the curtain goes up on a new act in our great national drama . i know that we national drama. i know that we can turn this opportunity into a stunning success, but since then the spectre of a remote blob continues to trail the halls of westminster. and if keir starmer's installed as pm, these dark forces will do all they can to undermine the biggest democratic mandate in our history . while joining me on history. while joining me on this independence is the former conservative minister course a prominent brexiteer , sir john prominent brexiteer, sir john redwood . sirjohn, sir, look, redwood. sirjohn, sir, look, today should be a day of great. you know, we should probably be looking back and thinking what an amazing three years we've had. isn't this brilliant ? had. isn't this brilliant? embraced all of these brexit opportunity . this hasn't really opportunity. this hasn't really turned out that way, has it . turned out that way, has it. i still feel great today because . still feel great today because. i'm very proud of what the british about it for. absolutely i think it's great that we do have a parliament that can now
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change our laws, could change our taxes , could spend our money our taxes, could spend our money wisely . but i'm still looking wisely. but i'm still looking for that parliament to seize the initiative. it's extreme me frustrating that so employees in the civil servants behind them resist every opportunity for an improvement . a change in the improvement. a change in the law. why haven't we got that optimistic feel already ? why optimistic feel already? why aren't we driving for a much bigger industry as we take of our fishing waters? why aren't we using the freedom to put some money behind growing more food? in britain, we lost huge amounts of market share in the common agriculture policy and we should now be reversing that. i'm full ofideas now be reversing that. i'm full of ideas on how brexit can be and i need more mp and government ministers who would just get with it. absolutely oh my goodness, i couldn't agree more. what an inspiring message. i mean, look, the problem , john, i mean, look, the problem, john, you've obviously got the political established i mean, the blob, the massive they are seizing the opportunity to do down brexit. they don't take
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into account what happened with the lockdowns. they want to blame everything on brexit. so you're right, this has to come from within the conservative party sunak obviously was a brexiteer. he voted brexit, but he seems to have gone a bit soft. do you think we can trust the prime minister, especially he has a remote runner in chief as his chancellor well, i want to do well and i will continue to do well and i will continue to public and private advice them to do better. but it's quite obvious we're missing so many of the opportunities and those of us who are impatient for country to succeed and prosper to a much greater extent would urge him to leave brand and get on with it and think sometimes, yes, he takes too gloomy advice treasury officials and i think of england and we haven't even break free from the austerity type economics which was mandatory under rules of the european union. we still hung up on debt figures and silly
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forecasts usually get it hopelessly wrong instead of going for growth in a sensible way and having tax cuts but actually pay for themselves . actually pay for themselves. because if you grew faster , the because if you grew faster, the deficit will come down. well indeed. deficit will come down. well indeed . and i want to talk to indeed. and i want to talk to you about the financial in just a second. but before i do, rishi sunak has sent an email to conservative party members tonight and i've had a lot of response from . your members, who response from. your members, who are this show so now are viewers of this show so now very at the top of the very angry at the top of the email sunak claims to have taken control of our borders . so it control of our borders. so it feels very difficult to say that, doesn't it, john, when got 80,000 predicted to stream across the channel what so i'll approximate and i agree has described as an illegal invasion of this country so yes could take back our borders . it take back our borders. it involves leaving the eu . you involves leaving the eu. you know, we haven't taken control of our borders yet, have we now? indeed and i thought the prime
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minister fully understood that because i was very pleased when he made his statement of the five things he wished to do. number i think when he was number one, i think when he was ordering the priorities , he had ordering the priorities, he had to get on top of the small boats and make sure people didn't. those unsafe crossings then expect to be put up in hotels when they arrived in the united kingdom. it's not good enough. it's not sensible people it's not what sensible people want. not what voted want. it's not what voted for. and so would urge the prime minister again tonight get on with because you've got to with it, because you've got to do you've studied it . you need do you've studied it. you need to change the law because . the to change the law because. the lawyers, so many of them, get lawyers, as so many of them, get big fees to try and thwart the wishes british people. so wishes of the british people. so parliament has got to make even more clear. the more crystal clear. the willpower , this government to willpower, this government to stop the boats, get on with it . stop the boats, get on with it. such a good message. no i look, i want to talk to you about the financial situation . yesterday financial situation. yesterday in the daily telegraph, said in the daily telegraph, you said that become that jeremy hunt has become a slave treasury groupthink , slave treasury groupthink, writing that his aversion to costing tax rates is stifling growth and to get growth and failing to get inflation. the deficit down a just clockwork today, mr.
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just like clockwork today, mr. read with the imf predicted that the uk be the only major economy to shrink year. as we look to enter a recession. so i'm sorry, john, and i know this is an unpopular thing to say, but surely it begs the question was truss actually right? all along in her mission focus on growth ? in her mission focus on growth? well, of course she was and i supported her unfortunate knee she and her chancellor went too far and upset the establishment of the bank of england and treasury and the bank of england , i think was we should take considerable responsibility the way that the bond market, which was what was meant to have been caused by the chancellor, but actually started with the of england hiking interest rates and threatening to sell an awful lot of bonds at cheap prices, which was clearly destabilising to the market. so none of that was helpful. i mean the good news is we can share tonight the chancellor himself says he wants a great budget and the prime
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minister's made growth one of his five aims. but my challenge to them is if you're sarah, it's about that you cannot do it without lower tax rates . and if without lower tax rates. and if you go for a lower tax rates, particularly on business, you collect more money every time , collect more money every time, cut the corporation tax rate , cut the corporation tax rate, more money came in every time we the top rate of income tax, more money came in. more rich people stayed and more rich people ventured money here, more rich people created more jobs here and they more tax. what's to not like totally agree. it's only more conservative. cameron conservative ministers had your verve enthused casm and passion for brexit. i think we would be in a good place. but you have made me feel more positive nonetheless this independence day. so john redwood, of course. well, we can do it, but we got to wait the way we do. just do it. recede. come on, david. we have keep giving in. thanks. what dave and dave. thank you so much, john. happy independence day . now much, john. happy independence day. now coming up in i'm
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cancelled as unionists use children their sick propaganda campaign should parents invoice the extra child care and lost wages caused by their striking kelvin mackenzie's up for furious parents up and down the country. he's live with me at 1040. but next as the snp's few supporters of women's rights are told to resign by key sturgeon ally has quit. nick destroyed their own party pandering to this woke trans extremism myself our panel back to discuss that plus more of tomorrow's newspaper front pages do with .
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us let's return to tomorrow's news tonight now in our mediabuzz mediabuzz more front pages been delivered. the sun leads with the really terrible news fears are growing over. the really terrible news fears are growing over . mother of two, are growing over. mother of two, nicole pooley after she vanished
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on friday morning the daily express reports that there has been staggering 16.7% rise in food prices as cash strapped families face the steepest increase in grocery shopping costs since records began . more costs since records began. more in the media whilst out with . in the media whilst outwith. tonight's superstar panel , top tonight's superstar panel, top daily mail columnist amanda patel , the conservative patel, the conservative commentator, the reverend calvin robinson and the author and journalist rebecca reid. now the snp and scheming sturgeon are still from this car crash interview during which the fumbling first minister admitted the transwomen will be treated differently to biological women . you know, real women, after all. my question is are all trans women women they haven't answered that question. well that's not the point that we're deaung that's not the point that we're dealing with. the question about trans women are women in the present contain . there is no
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present contain. there is no automatic rate a trans woman or context where a trans is not a woman. no. that is. look, we're talking here about trans. when i'm no asking about women born as women. i do think that circumstances there . so after circumstances there. so after heanng circumstances there. so after hearing their leader embarrassingly admit that she's actually at birth to a group of people who i'm proud to associate with but who sturgeon long demonised. let's not forget the crisis in confidence is now spreading through the snp . spreading through the snp. separatist mp like alan smith now find themselves to answer bafic now find themselves to answer basic questions on women's safety . what's your take on safety. what's your take on that? do you think trans people who are convicted of crimes like that should be in women's jails? i've nothing say on that . smith, i've nothing say on that. smith, a close ally , sturgeon has also a close ally, sturgeon has also threatened to spark a civil war by demanding that any asset politician who opposes their gender reform bill should resign and stand as an independent . and stand as an independent. sturgeon's arch enemy jk rowling
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perfectly summed up the ridiculous that the snp has painted itself into tweeting . i painted itself into tweeting. i don't know about you and excluding women from women's prisons just because got penises male pattern baldness and have committed a couple of rapes seems awfully tough to me. so was scheming sturgeon's embrace extremist woke ideology the of the end for her and the snp because similar battle when comes to shove sturgeon is a tough and i the fact and i did it on the show yes i'm going to tonight being at her for that that's not a bad thing know we have to reclaim this word we do. but she's clearly not reclaiming it. is she done? i mean, i've been forced into it. what she's doneis been forced into it. what she's done is as nicholas sturgeon as i to refer to as that i like to refer to as that overstuffed little haggis , i'm overstuffed little haggis, i'm not sure if that is a male or a female . i just put that there. female. i just put that there. no, i did say that. oh, and
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stuff that'll haggis. is that male or female or is it transitioning. i don't know. anyway the point of this is her policy was that she was she reduced the voting age in scotland to 16. she even said in an interview two weeks ago that she thought the legal age for drinking scotland should be 16. given they've got twice the mortality rate for alcoholism, it was bit of a weird choice. it was a bit of a weird choice. she's pursuing pursuing the youth vote because she thinks that's going to save her because the polls are plummeting , the polls are plummeting, labour's resurging in scotland and then she thought, i've got this great policy going to and i'm going to get all the young people on board and then and i mixed up with the name stands. so i've got to refer, to my notes. and then along came adam crane or is it all the bryson? a double rapist and her whole strategy for appealing to young and saying this is a wonderful new world was totally blown apart and she's in smithereens the moment she doesn't know where go she's she's contradict
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herself and god i just of love it i do too but rebecca you're very angry about this this discussion why ? because i don't discussion why? because i don't think that the part of the discussion is being had good faith and i so when we talked about last week i felt like i didn't necessarily i didn't feel like represented myself the way i wanted to. and subsequently, having looked it. the having looked into it. both the victims of the past the rapist question and the former pilot isla or i can't remember they were i didn't grab on i call him adam take your pick. i the problem is that you try and have a sensible discussion, then you end up talking about what you should call them rather discussion. so anyway, that person, this column, a double rapist. rapist, two rapist. the double rapist, two things. they're things. first of all, they're former that they're former partner said that they're actually this is actually trans, that this is just and. so think just a play and. so i think that's probably likely to not. the thing is you say it's not important will you finish important will let you finish your but the gender reform your point but the gender reform recognition bill would actually force does actually force the
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victims of rape to refer to their rape. yeah. the penis the right in court as she or her or whatever new name is. and there was an opportunity , sturgeon, to was an opportunity, sturgeon, to actually overturn that part of the bill and say while you're on trial for rape you cannot self i.d. trial for rape you cannot self id. and she personally against that amendment it went through as a result i think the mad thing to about what sturgeon did is that she decided that really this is a isn't really about trans stuff for her it's about scotland and this this was the vehicle chose for her eyes. yes independent thing but also she's she's made trans people the point she has but also what i don't understand if you were going to use one single hero figure to fight for this discussion why would you pick a double rapist who, it turns out, probably isn't even trying of the work into it? i do. she didn't do the reason didn't see the officer she was told to come home and she's done that. was
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she was she basically the recognition bill allows who self—identify as 16 it's all about six and it's all about getting right so charged with and we and she was warned and told time and again and you know what's so despicable of why so angry about what state is screaming said not only did she ignore that advice and she denigrated folk like nicholas like jk rowling she allowed her mps to protest where these horrible vile people were holding up signs saying decapitate terfs the number of trans people in scotland would fit in this room. she's used them as a weapon. yes, i agree with all her election campaigns and she hasn't through the consequences that all been consequences that we've all been talking about for months on end and the to come home. what and now the to come home. what what's but the what's the phrase but the chickens chickens come home to her. she's had to she was stumbling through that interview because she sees the of her direct policies is has resulted in damage to women and harm to women recently. so we're making
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you know are you prepared to say that it's no longer put down to call someone to her trans exclusion? i mean, i've been called to task multiple times. i've the language. i've missed the language. i think would never i would think i would never i would never i've been been that kind of terminology finds me a moment east that that terminology east it that that terminology you've system to be you've into the system to be fair but i'm just woman who doesn't have a penis so what it actually means about women is it's i think it probably should be used the same that swg be used the same way that swg is, which is sex work excuse exclusionary radical feminist, which means. there are feminists who don't believe . that sex work who don't believe. that sex work is legitimate work and is a school of feminism. it's not one that i share, but it is one that i comprehend. we should able to have conversation. have a grown up conversation. i've say, i'm completely i've got to say, i'm completely here. just i'm i have to say here. i'm just i'm i have to say no, because prostitution is when you have sex for money, whereas sex work umbrella term sex work as an umbrella term which things this. which includes things like this. all right now, all all i can see right now, all i can see right now is how fantastic. rebecca looks tonight and how gorgeous her bosom is. i'm i'm all these i'm afraid i'm lost in all these terms. so what is that really?
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sex know. but we apologise. we take long because despite of attending his constituents for a sordid appearance on i'm a celebrity, get me out of here, matt hancock's, do you remember this? that it was for a good cause with his a enormous fee going to charity just when you think he couldn't stoop any lower come to light that of his £320,000 in campaign from itv the little weasel donated just £10,000 of it to charity a measly 3% earlier today , the measly 3% earlier today, the disgraced former health secretary made yet another shameful tv where he was banged to rights for his watch . are you to rights for his watch. are you telling the truth when ? you say telling the truth when? you say that it wasn't your primary ? that it wasn't your primary? absolutely. of course. so did you negotiate the fee ? of course you negotiate the fee? of course there was a discussion and negotiation over the fee. there always is. you've only given thousand pounds to two charities, which is a tiny fraction of the fee. so if the money important to you, why do
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you to on of it? well, you held to on of it? well, i did absolutely give. some of the money charity , £10,000. and money to charity, £10,000. and there are brilliant there are two brilliant charities now 10,000 about the amount not charities amount not the charities £10,000. if you didn't do it for the money, why not give money to the money, why not give money to the which i the causes which need it? i i didn't primarily do it for the money, also, know, if money, but also, you know, if you're to in £10,000 on you're going to in £10,000 on charity and you've kept 320, it would to most people you would seem to most people you can arithmetic that you can do basic arithmetic that you did for money. and i'm did do it for the money. and i'm not that that's well not saying that that's well i just want a clear and honest answer. yeah, that's what i'm giving didn't primarily giving you. i didn't primarily do money. i primarily do it for the money. i primarily did try to who i really did it to try to who i really am. oh, know you really am. oh, we know who you really are. we know who you really are . now, look, matt, however much you , slither this you try, slither out of this hole. we all know why you went on show. pure vanity and a on the show. pure vanity and a chance. line your own pockets . chance. line your own pockets. so put an end to this and charade . rebecca reid, calvin charade. rebecca reid, calvin robinson. amanda how do stand by because coming up oh that great in which angle right he's going to be under the microscope when we crowned today's gracious and
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union jack has a 1050. but next in on cancelled as the any you exploit young children their twisted propaganda campaign should invoice for the extra care and lost wages caused by their walkouts. fleet street agent calvin he's angry about this and he's got to make a stand. hard working parents, students common sense live after
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break it's break wsfime break it's time now for an cancelled show. and this where britain's top commentators speak on controversial issues without the fear of the cancel culture sweeping, the rest of the media and a shocking new union ad campaign has exposed the lengths the mobs will go to support for strike action . on the eve of strike action. on the eve of walkouts , will see half of walkouts, will see half of schools in england and wales close the national education union posted this photo of young schoolgirl holding a teacher is worth more placard id the despicable propaganda part of a twisted support drive that's exploiting children by encouraging in them to make banners and strike boxes to picket lines. now the selfish action has left millions of parents scrambling for last minute childcare at great personal cost. but these union barons don't give a about hard working brits or the children still recovering from the
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pandemic do they . so pandemic disruption. do they. so let me bring kelvin mackenzie now. so, calvin, you've got an idea . you've got an idea here idea. you've got an idea here and you think parents should be able to invoice the eu for all of costs that they're going to have to pay . well, there will be have to pay. well, there will be parents who have to have extra child care tomorrow because their children would have been in school and there will be other who who who don't the ability to get a relative or friend or somebody look after their child and they're going to have to take a day off. now, this will cost them money. i'm sure many employers will be helpful. look, can i just say one thing. can i just reiterate how the teachers are doing so we mustn't lose, mustn't drop tears for the teaching starting salary . as of september 30,000 40,000 a year. average earnings employee to pensions 23 and a
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half % against a commercial half% against a commercial average of 3 to 5. six months sick pay . so if you go sick, sick pay. so if you go sick, you're on a 100% by the six months and then 50% for the next six, which is fine tastic compared to normal . no night compared to normal. no night work, no weekend work that drives the teachers mad, by the way, and the chance of being fired if . you're hopeless as fired if. you're hopeless as a teacher are zilch . and that's teacher are zilch. and that's why the left is all pile into teaching, because you can't be dismissed no matter almost how inept you are. have you ever heard of a teacher being fired for being in that ? now i have in for being in that? now i have in my wider family had teachers in in the family. my wider family had teachers in in the family . am one of them in the family. am one of them quit because of head teacher never supported the ordinary teachers when that when children were vile if you get a 15 or 16 year old at a comprehensive big kind of guy and telling you to f
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off right instead of that kid being kicked out of a school or being kicked out of a school or being sent on detention, the head teacher comes to you and says, look, i understand that toby went a bit too far. can you just a him this time and you say, no, that doesn't . the head say, no, that doesn't. the head teachers are a kind of liberal left elite at comprehensive school. there's very tough ones. in fact, there's been there's a brilliant academic lady who's who's a tory, and she is almost unique in the head teacher world. there nobody has to babble saying who is fighting for that. but for many of the teachers who some kind of strength but the worst aspect of that of that of that tweet that i saw on on nea national education union site is the fact that who is that daughter really is that little girl does she know she's being used is she the daughter a union official? we should be told. is she the
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daughter of teachers? we should be told, don't you think that they should. and what it also made me think was this final point . do you believe that in point. do you believe that in fact the teachers look upon , are fact the teachers look upon, are there lots of leftie teachers out there who look upon the class room as a way of putting forward their political views and their views ? organised and their views? organised labour? yes to these these minds? yeah, i think hold . oh minds? yeah, i think hold. oh you know my teacher is being or my parents are being expelled too and we need to rise up . and too and we need to rise up. and how do you know that in 15 years time they don't turn to be some rather leftie political figure? i it's carry a little bit too far but have you ever have you ever those national education conferences the union conference every year you look down one of the things that they're trying bnngin the things that they're trying bring in these people all of the way left of the way left and they are right now schools are we see what's going on now. they
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call themselves a profession totally a profession is , highly totally a profession is, highly skilled. i'm not saying the degrees aren't worthwhile . degrees aren't worthwhile. right? i'm not saying that degrees worthwhile, but actually constant learning profession . constant learning profession. are they a cultural learning profession ? and when did you profession? and when did you last see when did you last see the lawyers? so the accountants go on strike. nobody no, they professionals do. professionals go on picket . well, the thing go on picket. well, the thing is, they go on picket lines. and the thing is, i think good teachers do professionally value. i mean look, i'm actually incredibly fond teachers because both of my parents are and my dad was ahead i don't feel the same about you that. oh ha i'm very chair of . oh, totally very chair of. oh, totally untrue. but what would say is that what is me is about the political i mean, you point to that tweet from the national education union. they say, if you as made your own placard wednesday, please send it to us and we will it. they are almost encouraged . young students and encouraged. young students and
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the union boss is actively encouraging students to support their teachers. encouraging students to support theirteachers. now encouraging students to support their teachers. now i think that's disgraceful. that's not something my parents would ever have done because is imparting your politic views on students, which is to utterly inappropriate. i think any teacher doing that is but we know it's happening . yes my know it's happening. yes my issue is this as. know it's happening. yes my issue is this as . well, you're issue is this as. well, you're the head teacher right now. honestly, they are hewn out of the kind liberal liberal left world. so i haven't got a lot of time for them. what, what, what? my like to a teacher are you going on strike or they basically probably know whether they come to go strike or not but but the idea that they because they're not telling me plans they can't make any plans about this case and it's not about this case and it's not about it's not about school plans. i don't give a stuff the school i don't give a stuff about the teachers. all i care about the teachers. all i care aboutis about the teachers. all i care about is parents who are
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strangely paying their wages and going to be penalised because they don't know when they turn up. tomorrow morning is school open or not? right now there's a very good chance the headteacher will have a good pat for , but he will have a good pat for, but he or she cannot be sure i it's a massively frustrating thing and i know from my twitter feed right if you want to read you want to read a straight to faith read what it's all there's tens of thousands on who are absolutely appalled by what's going on i'm sure they quite like their teachers they don't like their teachers they don't like them for what they're doing now. they are acting like thugs from the it is shocking . it is. from the it is shocking. it is. and it's been allowed to happen . and i think the indoctrination of pupils in particular needs to stop . and actually this is stop. and actually this is something that folk in government like kemi badenoch have been very good on when it comes to critical race theory. but it's not just about race.
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it's left wing it's about a left wing indoctrination, whole range of indoctrination, a whole range of issues. and i think this strike in, england, tomorrow is in, england, wales tomorrow is going absolutely going to be absolutely disgraceful. you for disgraceful. thank you for calling the shocking calling some of the shocking behaviour national behaviour by the national union out. mackenzie out. that's calvin mackenzie move next week. come on, move speak next week. come on, give. now to give. but it's time now to reveal tonight's greatest person and jackass my superstar and union jackass my superstar pattern . amanda patel who is pattern. amanda patel who is nominee for tonight's greatest person. i'd like to nominate the 17.5 million brits voted brexit although i think probably won't win because i was one of them and i can't nominate myself. oh, you can. in this course you can. i'm nominating myself. and actually we don't have any rules about nominate yourself every week. i thought you want to look egotistical, calvin . calvin egotistical, calvin. calvin mackenzie. is roman? said mackenzie. how is roman? said red nigel farage because brexit would not have happened if it was not for that man good choice. and he was brilliant on the tonight and rebecca, the earlier tonight and rebecca, i presume another brexit related nominee, no abortion , my other
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nominee, no abortion, my other thing . sorry, calvin. bpi bpi, thing. sorry, calvin. bpi bpi, the british pregnancy service, who was the final part of getting the anti—abortion and buffer zone legislation through today went through the house of lords. right, right. and you women fantastic news. newswoman great news for murdering babies. fantastic so you're very opposed on that one. but i'm actually going to go for a double winners tonight. we don't do this often, but i can't. between amanda and calvin because of course, nigel farage yep. outbreaks, heroin . farage yep. outbreaks, heroin. he's made so many strides that actually would we be here without the campaigning by farage. you said earlier in the show saw him treated as worse than a walker by the british media. we also wouldn't be here without 17.5 million. media. we also wouldn't be here without17.5 million. incredibly brave who ignored their evil choice and their facebook . i choice and their facebook. i don't want a joint decision . you don't want a joint decision. you know what a shocker. joint he would have joined history is made another run actually calvin
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from the view this time. now amanda, you might have a chance to win this one. go on. who are you going for? okay, rishi sunak and all of the members who never voted brexit never support it. and it's done everything they can to sabotage it. so the graphic there, it says, tory, wait , so now i can't bear graphic there, it says, tory, wait, so now i can't bear tory waits, but can you just explain to folk who might not know exactly means, exactly what that means, who they simple terms, they okay. and in simple terms, they okay. and in simple terms, the wit is someone who is the tory wit is someone who is not tory on this. so to the left that they don't even belong in the party and taking it over. jeremy hunt included. indeed, he's of the biggest where it's come from. robinson your nominee jordan walker . come from. robinson your nominee jordan walker. this is the fisa director who was caught on camera by james o'keefe of project veritas saying that vies are manipulating curvy to make it more potent to make more money. karl sorry . and the uk money. karl sorry. and the uk press has not covered this yet, so we are breaking it now . this so we are breaking it now. this was this was a fascinating investigation, actually. i've
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looking into it. what do you think about the methods that project veritas use? calvin because of course was an undercover recording this bloke from pfizer didn't i think he was on some form of date. right. and he was filming. i think it's fantastic. i think leo would be great at, this kind of stuff. and it's getting the news out there. that there. the funny thing is that jordan walker i'll never jordan walker was i'll never trust anyone ever again. well, what about all us or what what about all of us or what about people who took about the people who took the jobs were good jobs thinking they were good news? they have people's news? it was they have people's best it's best interests heart. it's outrageous he's the one outrageous that he's the one who's the victim in all of this i know i've definitely been doing work. doing some very good work. veritas rebecca read you veritas and rebecca read you a nominee everyone's matt nominee on everyone's matt hancock his fee. i hancock for the 3% of his fee. i think agent probably took think his agent probably took more charity did, and i more than the charity did, and i don't think he's cured. dyslexia with that appearance, which i'm pretty to do . well, pretty he was going to do. well, of course he claims he doesn't have a showbiz agent. matt hancock. i didn't know that. but in a good list nominees, i have to be honest with you, i've to go with matt hancock because that interview early so well
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done rebecca. great that interview absolutely made cringe the fact that this guy told us all he was going on i'm celebrity because he wanted to donate the money to charity and he donated 3% st what makes the snake an absolute snake . thank snake an absolute snake. thank you so much. well done rebecca. great. well done, campbell holmes and well done. amanda oh, we've got work because you're we've got to work because you're all tonight. i don't believe in that by. the i'm back again that by. the way i'm back again tomorrow from next tomorrow night from 9 pm. next up headline as though happy up it's headline as though happy independence .
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