tv Farage GB News February 6, 2023 7:00pm-8:01pm GMT
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good good evening, rishi. sunak suggests we might even leave the aca jar . it suggests we might even leave the aca jar. it could be in the suggests we might even leave the aca jar . it could be in the next aca jar. it could be in the next manifesto, but the conservative party. but is he actually serious .7 liz truss has broken serious? liz truss has broken her silence after a hundred days.is her silence after a hundred days. is a contribution a valuable part of the conservative debate , or is she conservative debate, or is she going to split the party even further? i will explain to you a link, a potentially strong link between the taliban and the traffickers and that should worry all of us. and joining me on talking pints, the voice of dodds 180, russ bray . but before dodds 180, russ bray. but before all of that, let's get the news
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with polly middlehurst . nigel, with polly middlehurst. nigel, thank you and good evening to you.the thank you and good evening to you. the number of people killed in the turkey earthquake now stands at more than 2200 people. the 7.8 magnitude quake hits in the early hours of the morning and was followed by dozens of aftershocks, including one that measured 7.5. the epicentre was near the border with syria, causing widespread damage. thousands of people have been injured in both countries . and injured in both countries. and here the foreign secretary james cleverly said the uk government is sending help, which should arrive this evening . so we have arrive this evening. so we have deployed a large search and rescue team with state of the art lifesaving equipment . they art lifesaving equipment. they will be deploying to turkey very soon. at this stage we are not aware of any british fatalities , but of course it's too easy.
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it's far too early for us to say that would be the case. in scotland, a man has been jailed for killing a mother and her young daughter before burying them under his kitchen floor. andrew innes was found guilty of murdering 25 year old ben lindbergh and two year old janika. the 52 year old was also convicted of sexually abusing the toddler and raping another child at his home in dundee in 2021. he was sentenced to life in prison with a minimum term to serve of 36 years. the partner of the missing mum, nicola burley, says it's been a tough time for her daughters in a statement released today. paul ansell has said it's been ten days now since nicola went missing and i have two little girls who miss their mummy desperately and who need her back. desperately and who need her back . meanwhile, a private back. meanwhile, a private underwater specialist team has joined the search for a missing mother of two, focusing on the river wyre in lancashire . police
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river wyre in lancashire. police believe the 45 year old may have fallen into the river, but her family and friends say there's still no evidence to support that theory . tens of thousands that theory. tens of thousands of nurses and ambulance staff in england have been taking part in the biggest walkout in the history of the nhs today. the royal college of nursing is staging two days of strikes in a dispute over pay. ambulance crews and call handlers will return to work tomorrow but will resume industrial action on friday. the general secretary of the royal college of nursing, pat cullen, said the government is punishing nurses. nurses but the health secretary, steve barclay , says a resolution needs barclay, says a resolution needs to come through the independent pay to come through the independent pay review body , that there's pay review body, that there's been ongoing pressures on the nhs. inflation has been higher since last year's pay review body process than was originally forecast . for example, in the forecast. for example, in the spending review 2021. and that's why we've got the evidence in terms of this april that we're
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working with the trade unions on that will reflect the inflation to reflect those circumstances, but it should be done through the pay review, the the independent pay review, the process look at both process that can look at both what nhs needs , but also the what the nhs needs, but also the wider needs of the economy and the pressures that many wider needs of the economy and theif pressures that many wider needs of the economy and theif viewersssures that many wider needs of the economy and theif viewers are as that many wider needs of the economy and theif viewers are facing many wider needs of the economy and theif viewers are facing .nany of, if viewers are facing. that's the latest news. you're up to date on tv, online and dab+ radio with gb news is back now to ferret . now to ferret. good evening. well, it was one of rishi sunak's big five pledges and the fifth pledge was the clearest start up the boats. rishi sunak says he's going to stop the boats and boy does it matter because in the red wall and among 2019 tory voters, they are not happy that 45,000 people across the english channel last yeah across the english channel last year. they are not happy that
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even net legal migration is running at half a million. they're enraged that the hotel bills are up to £7 million a day. but i'll tell you later in the program , given what's going the program, given what's going on in sweden about the potential links between the taliban and some of the traffickers , it will some of the traffickers, it will worry you. yet further. so this matters for the survival of the conservative party at the next election. this issue matters as and particularly on the red wall and particularly on the red wall and no one knows those voters better than me because they were the old labour voters that went to ukip, brexit party and then to ukip, brexit party and then to the conservatives. i was the gateway drug in many ways for boris, his big majority . so boris, his big majority. so rishi yes, that he says maybe in the next conservative manifesto there could be a pledge to leave there could be a pledge to leave the isa, h.r, the european convention on human rights. of course , policed by the european course, policed by the european court of human rights. course, policed by the european court of human rights . and this court of human rights. and this is a deeply contentious issue in
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some ways, it's more emotive than eu membership. that court was formed after world war ii to act as an early warning system to stop what happened to the jews in austria and germany in the 1930s, and indeed winston churchill was one of its big, big supporters in the early days . those of us that are its critics would argue that it's not even meant by judges. it's man by some weird eu concept of jurists that it's way outstretched, its use and that now in brexit britain to have an unnamed judge at 10 pm. decide a plane can't go to rwanda means we need to have a rethink. i'm for all leaving the jha . i think for all leaving the jha. i think without doing that, we'll never complete brexit or get a grip on what's happening in the channel. but what i think here is not directly relevant. it's what rishi sunak's things is rishi serious with this pledge or is he doing what tories do at every
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general election because they pledged in 2010, 2015, 2017 to reduce net migration to tens of thousands a year. and yet millions have come since the tories got to power . millions have come since the tories got to power. is rishi serious about eci? let me know your thoughts, farage at gb news dot uk now. the deputy chair of the london assembly, andrew barr , long time member of that august institution, joins me in the studio . andrew leaving the the studio. andrew leaving the european union was a terribly difficult issue for the conservative party to get to gnps conservative party to get to grips with and argue , but it grips with and argue, but it took a very long time for the party to come to terms with the fact the party had voted to leave. this issue of hhr is even more difficult, wasn't it? i don't think so, because it's not the same thing as you pointed out. the guys got nothing to do with the eu at all. what it does, especially in directly know well, i could as an mep . as
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know well, i could as an mep. as an mep. yeah, i could walk from the european parliament straight into the european court through a corridor . yeah, that's because a corridor. yeah, that's because our restaurant was better in the streets. the strasbourg on the. but no , there's no link between but no, there's no link between them apart from the fact that they're in the they're in the same city. the link is very clearly copied in union. but see, the chance is that you can't be an eu to be an eu. yeah, yeah. but you could take a signature. you know, leavers like ourselves were. we're looking forward to a time when we could leave the eu and fully take up our international responsibilities , fully take up responsibilities, fully take up our sovereignty with regards to how we trade and who we deal with in the world. and that's been the brexit benefit . the eci been the brexit benefit. the eci is a completely different body. it was , as you so rightly said, it was, as you so rightly said, it was , it was forged in the it was, it was forged in the wreckage of a europe, ripped apart by a war. and they put
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that court together on because what they did is they analysed what they did is they analysed what actually brought about that appalling cataclysm and what it was , was individual infractions was, was individual infractions of people's right, small infractions. they started off as and in the end that ended up as being people herded onto cattle trucks to concentration camps . trucks to concentration camps. and i'm all i'm very aware of godwin's law, but this actually is actually what you and i totally understand where this court comes from . but i court comes from. but i understand why it was set up and i get why churchill and british lawyers were behind doing all of that. but with respect to that argument that was 75 years ago . argument that was 75 years ago. we are now living in a very different world. you yourself talked about we aren't, are we, nigel? we are living out from world where we are situations. you know, we've still had horrible situations in europe where, where the equivalent of holocaust have been taken place
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or the equivalent of ethnic cleansing. well, in in kosovo, in the ex—yugoslavia, these these all happened years ago . these all happened years ago. yes, years ago. those horrible thing. you know, the ones the ones you know, the you know , ones you know, the you know, history is if you don't learn from history, if you say it'll never happen again, because it was in the past, never happen again, because it was in the past , then your sins was in the past, then your sins certainly condemning yourself to recreate this country's problems . this country. recreate this country's problems . this country . you said . this country. you said yourself a moment ago. so the point about brexit was to get benefits right . and you know as benefits right. and you know as well as i do what are the main reasons for brexit was getting back control of our borders. now when an elected government with an 80 seat majority proposes i don't proposes sending people to rwanda and an unnamed judge probably without legal training in strasbourg at 10 pm. at night stops that flight going thatis night stops that flight going that is not a sovereign
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sovereignty. when i vote tonight . it's not without legal training . you know that the training. you know that the judges in the european court for human rights are qualified judges. not so much. not so much in the european court of justice, which we now conceive that many of the judges are jurists, not judges, but that's a technical point i want to do the big picture with you. the big picture is we voted brexit. you were a brexiteer, the conservative party in the end got it. won the big majority of it. if we cannot control our borders because judges in the ecj job, we should control our borders and we need to put in laws. how can we do that? what we can put in place laws that do that. and if you cite that example of that particular person who was told they couldn't go to uganda. yeah that wasn't because they said the policy was wrong. it was because that person hadn't had the rights for a legal process for a legal process. that's been a established in this british. why
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should anybody in our british constitution since magna carta why why are we doing that ? why why why are we doing that? why should anybody that crosses the channel by dinghy illegally have any legal rights ? well, one of any legal rights? well, one of the things well, any legal rights? well, one of the things well , first of all, the things well, first of all, genuine asylum seekers have a right to come. we let in huge numbers of asylum seekers in the last two years. we've let them in far, let let them in from virtually any other country in europe. no, no, no, no , no. europe. no, no, no, no, no. we've allowed them in from hong kong , from from ukraine. kong, from from ukraine. afghanistan is what all decisions of the united kingdom government . and as i remember, government. and as i remember, that had to consider support amongst the british people because they didn't want people who had been supportive of us to be effectively . so they don't do be effectively. so they don't do language. what they don't shame. that's what they don't want. unnamed young men who throw their passports into the english channel who could come from any background or a load of legal redresses to this. the only time
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they want, well, they are allowed to things that the government can do to make sure that those borders in was best controlled in europe . but they controlled in europe. but they choose rather than choosing to do that rather than to the difficult job of making sure we have legislation in place that can do that . what they do is can do that. what they do is they cry foul , blame someone they cry foul, blame someone else and european convention on human rights. there is an absolute right, an absolute right under the european convention for countries to determine who and who should not be in their country. but it has to again, when somebody becomes before a judge in this country , before a judge in this country, they claim article eight of the ecj of a right to a family life in the deportation. so they don't a small minority. and if you actually look at the number of cases that have gone to strasbourg of the 250 that were sent last year, the vast majority of those were ruled out of order. only four went to
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legal address and two of those just turned out so why was deporting more people ? because deporting more people? because we the problem we've got is that the processing the government has recognised that the process of people as they come into this country needs to be improved and it's been underfund it. well the processing frankly they know the case virtually every person who claims to be afghan is now being allowed to stay. that's but that's how the processing but that's how the processing but that's not the case. let's move on that's not the case. no no, no. i'm not let you get away with that. nigel that's true. i know it's not talk every day because in the last a large quantity of those cases, those people are told they can't they can't be in this country. they have no valid claim for asylum . have no valid claim for asylum. then they're not. then they were deporting the fact that they're not. know deporting them. not. but we know deporting them. the they're not the fact that they're not deporting them isn't administrative problem. it's not deporting them isn't a
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its manifest i leaving the its next manifest i leaving the eci job you'd be root and branch opposed to that absolute 100. i do not want to join a club that only belarus and russia are currently members of . okay. currently members of. okay. andrew , thank you very andrew boff, thank you very much. well, andre, he believes in that very, very strongly. i disagree with him, but we have civilised debate. please, civilised debate. but please, folks home don't take rishi folks at home don't take rishi sunak seriously when he talks about leaving hhr. mr. buff and other senior members of the conservative party. why going to wash it? it won't wear it. isn't going to happen . it'll be about going to happen. it'll be about as truthful as the last manifesto i was telling you. they'd reduce net migration to tens of thousands a year. the conservative party have no desire to do any of this at the moment. liz truss returns after 100 days of total silence is what she's saying. a positive contribution to conservative debate in britain or divisive .
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she's back. yes 100 days of silence. and liz truss went and yesterday for a thousand word piece in the sunday telegraph admitting some fault but basically saying the things that she fought for were the right things for the country. today, a big interview played out at 5:00 tonight on spectate , a tv tonight on spectate, a tv question is by talking about reduction of the size of state, by talking about reducing taxes , by talking about the international community, the imf , the white house, everybody ganging up and regulars on the show. well, no , i thought i'm show. well, no, i thought i'm being put in as chancellor. was a globalist coup . but is liz a globalist coup. but is liz truss making a positive contribution to the future debate? the conservative party are they now hopelessly split
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between boris ites , trotskyites between boris ites, trotskyites and sunak ites? and gosh, not just once blip, but two enormous splits . well, joining me, james splits. well, joining me, james heil , doesn't just write for the heil, doesn't just write for the spectator . he's also the co spectator. he's also the co biographer of liz truss . so biographer of liz truss. so she's emerged. she's back three months of silence. are you surprised? no, not really . i surprised? no, not really. i thought she would come out. you know, she's always believed in these things. she was a policy wonk for being prime minister. she very passionately believes in much more so in free markets, much more so than and think she than boris. and i think that she thought this the right time thought this was the right time before mini—budget. thought this was the right time beforesaying,ini—budget. thought this was the right time beforesaying, look,jdget. thought this was the right time beforesaying, look, no et. else she's saying, look, no one else is these things about is saying these things about growth. to get back and growth. i want to get back and join the political debate. the, the one part of her testimony that people struggle with that that people struggle with is about these financial instruments. caused instruments. ladies that caused such the uk bond such a run on the uk bond market. and from what i can make out, these are uk pension funds who've been so constrained with low interest rates that they're basically punting with, with half retirement money, said
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nobody briefed her. is that a reasonable defence? i think it's i think it's going to be something is going to be teased out, frankly, and it's going to be probably the line from these two interventions, which is going the one that going to be the one that dominates the next couple of months. what do bank of months. what do the bank of england what are the england know? what are the treasury know? in treasury know? i think in defence those institutions, defence of those institutions, i think and a team try think liz truss and a team try to too many fights at once to pick too many fights at once and it very and they always made it very clear the start that they clear from the start that they wanted to do things in a certain way the problem was they way and the problem was they pick many people at once, pick on too many people at once, someone said you know, someone said to me, you know, she did weeks of she did seven weeks of thatcherism seven years of thatcherism in seven years of thatcherism in seven weeks. and that the of problem. that was the kind of problem. but it's a question but i do think it's a question to be asked. think lot of to be asked. i think a lot of allies liz truss been quietly allies of liz truss been quietly asking and saying, have we simply allowed the bank of england, the regulators, to get away and of away with this? and the imf, of course, yeah. all these institutions, high institutions, they get too high behind government behind the truss government and say her. well, say it's all on her. well, actually it's not. and what really worry thing for this country problems go country is that the problems go much deeper than any political mistakes. now mistakes. she made herself. now she is challenging. yeah and it's much the but
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it's not so much the sunak, but the hunt philosophy. have got the hunt philosophy. we have got on april this year, on the 1st of april this year, corporation by 30. corporation tax going up by 30. we've tax again we've got dividend tax again on small shareholders small business shareholders going quarter% going up by one in the quarter% we've got no thought of relaxing ir35 in a way . what she's ir35 rules in a way. what she's saying is a big challenge to sunak, isn't it? yes i think so. and i think that was a key vote. one the last year's one of the last year's leadership contest, which was about and corporation tax. about tax and corporation tax. she didn't wasn't she wasn't she didn't she wasn't she the membership quite she won the membership quite convincingly, 15 points. and i think that that shows really that it's a lot of people in the country the party. country picking the party. perhaps we should say, who think that resonates with that message resonates with them. that's them. and i think that's probably because probably the real danger because you're about people you're talking about people for prime ministers you know, boris's loyalty. boris's personal loyalty. but trust agenda. and trust is a policy agenda. and in some be more some ways that might be more interesting, term interesting, a longer term challenge, of money challenge, the kind of money that the orthodoxy that sunak and the orthodoxy that sunak and the orthodoxy that espousing as well, that hunt is espousing as well, that hunt is espousing as well, that out again today. that she comes out again today. she's done an interview with the spectator. telegraph spectator. so the telegraph front again was on china. spectator. so the telegraph front you again was on china. spectator. so the telegraph front you know was on china. spectator. so the telegraph front you know ,was on china. spectator. so the telegraph front you know , freshn china. spectator. so the telegraph front you know , fresh from 1a. spectator. so the telegraph front you know , fresh from the yeah. you know, fresh from the spy yeah. you know, fresh from the spy bloom scandal in america. but she says that, you know, sunakis but she says that, you know, sunak is too soft on china . i
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sunak is too soft on china. i don't know how many are more of these volleys. she's going to come out with, by the looks of come outwith, by the looks of it, there's a few more days of this left. that's at least how it feels to me . this left. that's at least how it feels to me. is this left. that's at least how it feels to me . is this, this left. that's at least how it feels to me. is this, in your view , making a positive view, making a positive contribution to the debate about what conservatism ought to be? or is she splitting the party over ? fancy you. i was having over? fancy you. i was having this conversation with someone for number 10 and they points out with the they were noting the fact that, for instance, on the fact that, for instance, on the 98 days when it was in office, they lost his office, that they had lost his trust two. so to let this but trust by two. so to let this but i think more broadly i think actually more broadly local saying local mp will be saying look we've an overcorrection, we we've had an overcorrection, we have moved in the way of have moved too far in the way of orthodoxy . we gone orthodoxy. we have gone from being of an anti tax sorry being sort of an anti tax sorry taxpayert being sort of an anti tax sorry taxpayer t to being a pro—tax party and not really question the the past decade . the orthodoxy. the past decade. so think will be some so i think there will be some conservatives saying, conservatives quietly saying, you a balance? you know, is there a balance? perhaps sunak and perhaps we rishi sunak and there's i also make there's trust. i would also make there's trust. i would also make the point that i think that the reason having this reason why we're having this discussion truss is discussion about liz truss is
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because gap which because there's a gap which is just telling. but james, because there's a gap which is just notlling. but james, because there's a gap which is just not about3ut james, because there's a gap which is just not about3ut jamerthis this is not about balance. this is philosophy and it is is about philosophy and it is the conservative policy, a high tax , high spend , a big state tax, high spend, a big state policy , or should it move in the policy, or should it move in the opposite direction ? there's no opposite direction? there's no compromise that that is the party debate, which has been playing out since 2019, where, frankly, are the red wall constituencies, where the ps want to have more public spending in their seats and those traditional low taxes in their as well? i their southern areas as well? i don't they've got the don't think they've got the answer you see answer by now. i think you see that being played that tension still being played out going on throughout the party. think they'll party. i think probably they'll come tax party come back to a low tax party bill, probably much bill, probably even a much smaller opposition smaller party in opposition after the next election. and bofis after the next election. and boris low taxes boris johnson now for low taxes , having spent time as , having spent all his time as prime putting them prime minister, putting them up. is credible? i mean, is that credible? i mean, i don't think so. i mean, that puts us endlessly when he said we're a low tax policy and we were corporation tax. and were hiking corporation tax. and i perhaps i think it's probably perhaps is because what tory because he knows what the tory party and i think party like to hear. and i think that's much in the mood of that's very much in the mood of the moment and yeah, and that's one interventions. so
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one of his interventions. so can bofis one of his interventions. so can boris leader? i'm boris come back as leader? i'm sceptical, of sceptical, particularly out of election well lose election and he may well lose his well. the his seat as well. with the majority and can liz majority of 7000. and can liz truss big player again truss become a big player again in british politics? i think there be some the party there will be some in the party who as a kind of on the who see her as a kind of on the baptist figure, keith joseph to a maybe she was saying a thatcher. maybe she was saying the things. in years the right things. in a few years time there'll an mp and a time there'll be an mp and a leader with and leader who agree with her and try take that forward. try and take that forward. i have folks, i actually, have to say, folks, i actually, even though thought bit even though i thought it's a bit of becoming prime of a joke becoming prime minister philosophically, i actually think she's saying many of the right things and unless the conservative party becomes that, what is the point of it? if they all become social democrats, there was nothing to choose rishi choose between, frankly. rishi and starmer. why do you have ? and starmer. why do you have? it's taken them six and a half years , six and a half years is years, six and a half years is to start to even consider getting rid of eu rules. i mean, it drives me bonkers , but it drives me bonkers, but currently we have a piece of legislation going forward to get rid of 4000 pieces of eu law.
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we're told tonight there is an unholy alliance in the house of lords of liberal mcgrath's labour and thatcherite. yeah who was saying actually government shouldn't decide what laws we keep. what laws we get rid of parliament should debate this and decide this . what are the and decide this. what are the prospects , this piece of prospects, this piece of legislation getting through ? i'm legislation getting through? i'm sceptical for the reasons you've laid out by the fact that there are some conservatives as well who have doubts about this piece of legislation. of course, the big fear the back of big fear in the back of everyone's mind is it's going to be election year, think be election next year, i think october, 2024. the october, november 2024. the concerns going to get a concerns are you going to get a labour government with the support who wants support of people who it wants to the eu and you've to be back in the eu and you've got have rules got going to have these rules pred got going to have these rules ripped i think what was ripped up and i think what was the point of brexit? seven the point of brexit? six, seven years basically you can years ago then basically you can rejoin the single market. no problem far problem at all. we'll be far less to less divergence. david carvin to get into the get those barriers back into the single you say, single market, as you say, that's the real concern. that's what driving forward
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what is driving forward this piece the piece of legislation in the commons. it's to big commons. but it's going to a big fight lords it. fight in the lords over it. there i did. james hill, thank you very much indeed. some of your coming asked your thoughts coming in. i asked the earlier, rishi the question earlier, is rishi serious leaving the aca serious about leaving the aca and want to see and shaun says, i want to see him saying it seriously , but i him saying it seriously, but i don't think he is no sure, nor don't think he is no sure, nor do i. one viewer says sooner jack will stretch this out until late 2023, blaming judges and h r lawyers . it's funny, isn't it? r lawyers. it's funny, isn't it? you know boris and others when he was prime minister, will leftie lawyers will stop this? will of course they will. they can use a c, h r again and again and again . christopher says not and again. christopher says not in the slightest, paul says , in the slightest, paul says, nope. if sunak's said the sky was blue, i'd go outside to check out what i love that there's a bit of scepticism and cynicism amongst gb news viewers. please, folks at home do not take the prime minister seriously when he says he might contemplate leaving aca job.
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there's not a cat's chance in hell of him doing it. his own party will oppose it. hell of him doing it. his own party will oppose it . the hell of him doing it. his own party will oppose it. the only way we will get aca are actually on the national agenda is if we have a political insurgency, a ukip style political insurgency that frightens the pants off them. i very much hope that will happen and a moment i will tell you about links between the taliban jihadi extremists and the smuggling gangs in dunkirk. hold onto your hats back with you in 2 minutes.
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one of the most peaceful, lovely countries on the planet, stockholm , the most amazing stockholm, the most amazing place. i used to gather on business 30 years ago. it was the safest place you could ever be. there has been a gun shooting in stockholm every single day since christmas. the port of malmo became a couple of years ago the rape capital of europe. a number two for murder . and that's because sweden , . and that's because sweden, with an ultra liberal policy , with an ultra liberal policy, allowed a vast number of young men from all over the world, many from unknown destinations into their country . and the into their country. and the result has been gang warfare on the most astonishing and extraordinary scale . if that's extraordinary scale. if that's not a warning for what is happening in this country , i happening in this country, i don't know what is now . if we go don't know what is now. if we go to afghanistan, there is a group called badri 313. why the number 313? well, it refers to the number of soldiers who fought
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with mohammed, the founder of islam, in a battle. many many centuries ago . going to show you centuries ago. going to show you now some footage of battle. three, three, one, three from kabul three, three, one, three from kabul. to explain to you who they are . now, these guys are they are. now, these guys are dressed up as if they're kind of an elite special force. their connection to the taliban government is indirect rather than direct. but that they are a jihadi violent out murdering terrorist organisation is absolutely beyond doubt. but here's the worry . here's the here's the worry. here's the worry . groups associated with worry. groups associated with that are now of the north coast of europe . we know who they are, of europe. we know who they are, what they do in kabul. but the worry is , what if these people
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worry is, what if these people are in some way getting involved with smuggle across the english channel? well we know the al—salam 313 is a well known gang operation across europe with ties to muqtada al—sadr's mahdi army. they take part in activities ranging from human trafficking to intimidating muslim citizens living in the west who are not living in accordance with islamic principles that we know as a fact. principles that we know as a fact . now, in principles that we know as a fact. now, in dunkirk , which is fact. now, in dunkirk, which is one of the main trafficking centres for young men to come across the english channel, what we know for a fact is one of the biggest gangs is run. no question, no debate , no argument question, no debate, no argument by afghans. here's a little video they put out. the other day of people leaving the beach at dunkirk to come to the united kingdom . the fact is that when
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kingdom. the fact is that when i'm a look at them. okay so it's all very noisy , very similar to all very noisy, very similar to the videos that we show you that come from albania . but here they come from albania. but here they all are, dozens of young men rushing off of the boat. but have a look at the screen. it's got a number on it. the number is three, one, three. now, a quick look at this video of people who have now arrived in london , how they get out at a london, how they get out at a time . again, you will see. there time. again, you will see. there it is, three, one, three out of the bottom left out of the side of those watching on television. a very nasty looking machete style knife . whether 313 in style knife. whether 313 in dunkirk who are trafficking young men to the united kingdom, whether they are directly linked to the group in kabul, whether they're mimicking and aping them, i don't know . but they're mimicking and aping them, i don't know. but i think
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we can now say with some high degree of certainty , there is degree of certainty, there is a link between the two. there is a group of people in dunkirk, a jihadi gang , who are trafficking jihadi gang, who are trafficking people to the united kingdom, who want nothing less than the destruction of the west. please, everybody , wake up and do it everybody, wake up and do it quickly. now i want the our moment chat . you've heard all moment chat. you've heard all about it. artificial intelligence is genius. there'll be no need forjournalists intelligence is genius. there'll be no need for journalists or kids writing essays. you just tap into chat. and they do it all for you. well, that's all. well and good. until you realise . and the papers have been full of how marvellous it is. and that you tap in and find out what they're really all about. so ask chat. jpt to write something about how great white people are . and you will get. people are. and you will get. i'm sorry , but it's not i'm sorry, but it's not appropriate to write a poem about the superiority of one
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race over any other but tap in to chat gpt . write a poem about to chat gpt. write a poem about how great black people are and you'll get. you'll get black people a community so bright with strength and beauty shining so bright. their talents and abilities are a source of pride. their resilience in the face of adversity. a guy died and you can do the same . write a poem. can do the same. write a poem. about the positive attributes of donald j. trump and jack. about the positive attributes of donald j. trump and jack . cheap donald j. trump and jack. cheap t will say i'm donald j. trump and jack. cheap twill say i'm sorry as a language model developed by openai. i'm not programmed to produce content that is partisan, biased or political in nature, but tap in. write a poem about the positive attributes of joe biden. oh that's very different. joe biden, a leader with a heart so true. a man with empathy and kindness in view. with decades of experience. he
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stands tall, bringing hope to all. no matter how great or small. so please , folks, do not small. so please, folks, do not be taken in. but this idea, that chatis be taken in. but this idea, that chat is somehow this marvellous thing that will revolutionise the world. it is probably the most extreme case of hard left liberal bias i've ever seen in my life . in a moment, talking my life. in a moment, talking points , i'm going to be joined points, i'm going to be joined with a voice. the voice of dodd's 180. yes russ bray joins dodd's180. yes russ bray joins me in a couple of minutes.
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became not just a game that was played in the pubs, but a game for mass audiences. and of course, the big one. the big one is when they get those three triple twenties and you know what the call is. my guest tonight here on gb news is has called out these numbers of youth times. here he is in action for looking for the vet. tonight's field needs velma. he met all the doctors and i tried . one unionising. russ brain welcome this whole carefully . welcome this whole carefully. you know . good to see you here. you know. good to see you here. now as i say, suddenly in the eighties, darts becomes massive on television , the crafty on television, the crafty cockney , eh? you know, and he cockney, eh? you know, and he was quite a character. and john lowe , the cool eyed, steady lowe, the cool eyed, steady opponent, and he's a jockey . opponent, and he's a jockey. wilson and of course , they were
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wilson and of course, they were all drinking and smoking on tv. that's changed a bit as the world's changed totally. but dance became huge, didn't it ? in dance became huge, didn't it? in the eyes. this was massive . it the eyes. this was massive. it was absolutely fantastic . you was absolutely fantastic. you know, every time me you sort of looked on the tv, you know, that was darts on the television. you know, the pubs all at the dartboard in, you know , and you dartboard in, you know, and you suddenly rachel was, you know, wrong going to go down at 12:00 on, you know , go down pub, on, you know, go down the pub, have couple of beers, play have a couple of beers, play a game, adults going from a dinner at so and that the sort of at so and that was the sort of style then very much a british invention absolutely invention. absolutely yeah yeah yeah. throw complete yeah. throwing throw complete yeah. throwing throw complete yeah. pubs yeah. british invention, pubs and yeah, i get the and clubs and yeah, i get the feeling we've exported it to quite a few countries in the world. we have now. well i see like what i see but does fine. it was every year. there's it was every year. yeah. there's now mean all over the now players i mean all over the world literally literally and since it's each had to split in adults which was back in the early because darts early nineties because darts came off the tv . so there and came off the tv. so there and now the guys, the 16 of them
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split form is now the pdc . yeah. split form is now the pdc. yeah. with of course , phil taylor with of course, phil taylor became the next big star, big name one year after year by need it darts on tv. this is what the guys with moaning about it was only a couple of events on you know the eighties sort of dwelled out and it's of course with british being took over like that darts and became back on tv come on sky and it got bigger and got more and more torn it's more tournament. so of course then you start hitting worldwide. then matchroom came in home and they in with barry home and they really took over everything the hands do , everything the hands hands do, everything the hands do . they just seem to turn it to do. they just seem to turn it to go. don't like salute . they sing go. don't like salute. they sing darts whatever it is you name it like you name it. that pole you name it. they absolutely do. and barry taken it with the context that he had throughout the world, you know, with the various tv channels , which what, various tv channels, which what, you know, you need, don't say very so, you know, everyone could see it. and that's exactly
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what's happened, you know, is now full goes to the club you know my trip to australia know my next trip to australia is month. liberal loving my is next month. liberal loving my 36th and i yeah ross you you know essex boy yeah and you did a bit of time as a copper. i did a bit of time as a copper. i did a traffic warden . traffic. no a traffic warden. traffic. no traffic will not drive track traffic will not drive track traffic please . we saw very much traffic please. we saw very much with the elevated. yeah. can you explain to me why the embankments now 20 miles probably because there's no you that how the hell do you go from being a copper that to being the voice . 182 it was a half of voice. 182 it was a half of purely by accident. i mean, i say the voice . you're actually a say the voice. you're actually a referee, aren't you? yeah, i you're far more than just calling up a numbers. you are refereeing a darts, iron or darts run up to make sure the rules are being obeyed and all the right. exactly. exactly what you do. but from that, i mean, i'll come at a place in 1999 and
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i'm very lost jobs. i may not be in the photo of all things, and i was i was scoffing at the time. and my boss got crabby by who actually sponsors what cross and a few other lads. he said to me, it's scotland's, it's, it's me, it's scotland's, it's, it's me, rusty, i really need a week, five weeks work because i was doing little bits of dark tea there and everywhere and you could play. so i'll play that card. wasn't a bad player , so card. i wasn't a bad player, so i was reasonably so. ideas as such and of course then i gave up scaffolding to become a colt . but i've become a cooler by accident because i was playing candidates for office here and the call never turn up. of course they smiley the regular column in the soap and everything and possible and i'll call a couple of games and help out and i called a couple of games and walked off, took a second minute. i signed it. all right. and i really enjoyed it because it was sort of dull. so i really say, oh, i've i didn't really say, oh, i've been involved with such, you
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know, you've your mark is on know, you've got your mark is on the you've got your the stage and you've got your say your referee. yeah. and say or your referee. yeah. and all in front me all items went up in front me those called and really, those so called and i really, really enjoyed. so basically like, you a caller in darts like, you know a caller in darts is just exhibitionist is really just an exhibitionist really isn't they. your show off on shape absolutely . for the on shape absolutely. for the last 20 years i love it. 140. you got it. but the 180, this is the big one, isn't it? is this what everyone's striving for? you know , the big finish is but you know, the big finish is but i want it is what is what really makes. but the big finish is even better, isn't it? sammy said to a non darts audience. what's the big finish? the biggest finish can have is 170, which is triple 20 treble joint in the bullseye. the biggest finish. and you know , the finish. yeah and you know, the more awkward ones where you go different places like you've got to treble 20, treble nine tables or under the 67, which is, you know, a lot . and you've got to know, a lot. and you've got to do that your head. yep. as do that in your head. yep. as we're going to come back to that. yep in a moment. but
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you've also managed to get yourself in the guinness book of records. you we would say losing blackpool. and i turned around and said, own a few, let's go down on the north pier, scott, i'm going to film it. just throw some all up old and see if anyone can get in the guinness book of records, basically. so we staying there on a north bay, it an absolute it was blowing an absolute absolutely i'll there it absolutely and i'll sit there it was james white slave was my james white slave painting. was a few painting. there was a good few other lights in that. and i stood there. no, my third door from 1040, even banks in the book was all of course would it be filmed and everything else? it becomes official record it becomes an official record and realise at the time and i didn't realise at the time but didn't . i and i didn't realise at the time but didn't. i think freddie , but didn't. i think freddie, please don't buy it, see? so a i think so he's he's an over our spokesman a credit 0 value and call us you know i, i have to say the other week richie sunak our esteemed prime minister, suggested that all kids do mathematics at school until the age of 18. so i thought,
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crackers, there's plenty of 15, 60 year olds that hate maths , 60 year olds that hate maths, don't want to do it. they'll be truancy. see, i said , get them truancy. see, i said, get them all playing dah said. i really meant it definitely. but nowadays you're playing darts and we'll come back to the papen and we'll come back to the paper. the minute we played darts in the pub, the machines doing it all isn't it. well you've, you've got. yeah we've got the thing that you compress on side there you've got on the side there or you've got electronic was that. electronic darts which was that. what automatically. what does it automatically. but you use the work at what you still use the work at what you still use the work at what you got for you know, i mean you got in for you know, i mean you got in for you know, i mean you still got to know what you got for. is darts good for mental? absolutely it is isn't big yeah i it's times big time. yeah i mean it's times table is times table table which is times table times five yeah, of course five isn't it. yeah, of course it is. and you've got more than that isn't it. because we've got trebles, doubles singles trebles, doubles and singles so you you've takeaway, you know you've got takeaway, you've more, play as the you've got more, we play as the old, not the 9:00 news joke was trebles double doubles. that was that that was that was just the drink that was just a trick bring the guy no just a trick to bring the guy no go. but tell you know, go. but russ, tell me, you know, we associate darts with the pub
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. yeah. and the pub was a community hub, and a place that people went and they played darts and they played music , and darts and they played music, and they sang and did other things. theni they sang and did other things. then i will restaurants who got wine bars, restaurants is what returned it but. but then the whole world it changed it a hole in a lot from our ideas to this generation now they look slightly different . the thing is slightly different. the thing is with the darts lorcaserin and live, you know you've got that in the pub, you have a couple of games, adults, you know, you go on for your dinner. well we got academies now, so your kids of nine, ten, younger than that playing darts in the academies, a yeah. and you a tweak really? yeah. and you got ten, millions, got kids of ten, 11 millions, you know , it honestly, it's just you know, it honestly, it's just incredible the talent that is out there. so i knew was so despite the fact that the pub game i do you know what i would say it's not a pub game anymore. yeah i think the pdc i've taken
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my head literally taken it away from the pub , you know, it's, from the pub, you know, it's, it's effectively is, is a pub garden. i'm contradicting myself anyway. effectively is a pub game but the guy's been took quite a pub though you know you don't see drink in or smoking or anything like that at all. and you've got young out there you've got young kids out there that actually playing darts. you've got young kids out there tidon't actually playing darts. you've got young kids out there tidon't meanally playing darts. you've got young kids out there tidon't mean to' playing darts. you've got young kids out there tidon't mean to drink ng darts. you've got young kids out there tidon't mean to drink in darts. you've got young kids out there tidon't mean to drink in them. you've got young kids out there tidon't mean to drink in them or i don't mean to drink in them or anything like that. and i thought i was getting him into it, getting him it, and it, was getting him into it, and the say very the coverage the would say very the coverage they see on tv, they say the big crowds, everyone's in the jungle mode want jump in the ap mode and want to jump in the ap and that and that is what eventually broke their interest and russ you yourself you know being the great extrovert you it's you are and you've got all of course you know you've done adverts for all sorts of different companies on tv spin off i you now known as the voice i am it's a spinoff of the dogs.
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you know, it's there's nothing better than tv for coverage and a lot you say if you all some extrovert then if that guest is then they lovely you know it puts you in the right place and then you get people ring up. and so it's how can you do this can do that yeah voice for this going to do the voice of it and that. yes, yes, yes yes. and actually we spend all shallow andifs actually we spend all shallow and it's just solely focussed for you. done. thank you for you. well done. thank you very much. i thought we finished now, it's now, you know. yeah, it's trouble my dreams. yeah. trouble 20 in my dreams. yeah. and say it's treble 21. oh oh. are they. see they got russ right. thanks for joining are they. see they got russ right. thanks forjoining by. thanks very much. thank you . thanks very much. thank you. i tested we've got a little bit of time left for barrage . the time left for barrage. the barrage. what have you sent me today, mary asks me. the tories are displaying fractures from
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top to bottom . right now it's top to bottom. right now it's trust versus johnson . and who trust versus johnson. and who would you back , mary? they're would you back, mary? they're split three ways. as i said earlier , you've got the rich earlier, you've got the rich shiites who think sunak brings stability , say, after complete stability, say, after complete and utter chaos, the johnson knights, who rather like the jacobites , who used to take jacobites, who used to take their glass of wine over a glass of water, the king across the water body , prince charlie. they water body, prince charlie. they think boris is coming back and you've got the trust sites and it's not based on her personality. well, it couldn't be really, could it? but it's based on her policies. is that the government's too big and taxes must be cut . the tories taxes must be cut. the tories are split three ways. i don't think boris has got any chance of coming back. it's always a fantasy . i think sunak will lead fantasy. i think sunak will lead the conservatives into the next election to defeat mary. that is my view. time for one more quickly. mick asks the government are publishing
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figures for the number of migrants crossing the channel in small boats? do you believe the data they're providing? well, mick, we have the model doing the figures for the last year or so i pretty did believe so and i pretty much did believe of numbers the mod were of the numbers the mod were giving were giving us, we've now had a couple of weeks of the home office, giving us the numbers . they seem to be quite numbers. they seem to be quite tardy with the response. let me promise you something . if promise you something. if they're telling us porkies , i they're telling us porkies, i will be on their case. make no mistake about it. we need to know the truth , however ghastly know the truth, however ghastly and awful it is. and by the way, the forecast for the next six, seven days is calm conditions in the channel. i'll be back on this migrant story in the next few days, but that's it. i'm done. it's over for tonight. back with you at seven. right now, over to patrick now, it's over to patrick christys . white. ladies and christys. white. ladies and gentlemen, in the next hour, we've got jonathan joiner. he's going to be talking to me about
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whether or not the tories really mean it when they say they're going to get tough on what's happening in the channel. i'm also going to be talking about the fact that we be the fact that we might be witnessing end nicholas witnessing the end of nicholas sturgeon, to bring sturgeon, who's going to bring it as you it down? women. now, as you weather speaking weather evening i'm speaking here latest weather here with your latest weather update. temperatures are dropping out there across england frosty england and wales. a frosty start tomorrow some fog start tomorrow morning. some fog also north. frost also likely further north. frost and such a problem and fog not such a problem because is going be cloudy because it is going to be cloudy this big area of high pressure has been dominating weather, has been dominating our weather, but edging away to the but it's just edging away to the east, allowing this weather front into the front to come into the northwest, outbreaks of northwest, bringing outbreaks of rain western rain across the western isles through also through this evening. and also the breeze picking up here that's wetter . weather will just that's wetter. weather will just creep into the mainland of scotland midnight. for scotland by around midnight. for most, dry and sunny in the most, it's dry and sunny in the south. skies until the south. clear skies until the folk thickening up in folk forms thickening up in places right now and temperatures dropping below, freezing down to minus three in towns cities by morning, towns and cities by morning, maybe minus six in maybe as low as minus six in rural much milder further rural spots, much milder further north because of the blanket of cloud. start here. cloud. a great start here. a little bit of rain in the west
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of scotland, the west of northern ireland. but that rain kind of fizzling out through the day actually northwest day and actually northwest scotland brighter day and actually northwest scotlancthe brighter day and actually northwest scotlancthe day brighter day and actually northwest scotlancthe day in brighter day and actually northwest scotlancthe day in the brighter day and actually northwest scotlancthe day in the south.3r day and actually northwest scotlancthe day in the south. it through the day in the south. it should brighten once should brighten up once that folk has cleared, it may take much of the morning. some spots, particularly somerset, wiltshire, clear wiltshire, but it should clear and we'll have sunny and then we'll have sunny conditions, in the conditions, temperatures in the south, further south, seven or eight further north, nine or ten celsius. so a touch above average for the touch above average here for the time but probably time of year, but probably a cloudier end to the day across northwest england, the odd spot of most places dry of drizzle. but most places dry again the south. look how again in the south. look how quickly the frost comes back through tuesday evening and into wednesday morning fog again likely to be a hazard for wednesday morning's commute. and then the winds really start to pick up in the north. and another band rain comes another band of rain comes in here. , though, the here. those winds, though, the greatest cause for concern. we have office yellow warning have a met office yellow warning in place for north—west scotland for winds during wednesday for those winds during wednesday afternoon evening for those winds during wednesday aftern elsewhere evening for those winds during wednesday aftern elsewhere at evening for those winds during wednesday aftern elsewhere at most/ening for those winds during wednesday aftern elsewhere at most places, again elsewhere at most places, dry fine and once the folks dry and fine and once the folks cleared, temperatures up to seven or eight celsius across the south. the outlook for the
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a welcome along, everybody is patrick christys head covering the 8 pm. show today and tomorrow and tomorrow as well. anyway you won't want to miss it. we've got a compelling and cutting show for you this evening. now, over the weekend , evening. now, over the weekend, the times reported that a government are preparing immigration legislation which will bring britain's laws to the boundanes will bring britain's laws to the boundaries of international law. and if it's rejected by the h r, then sunak will happily withdraw. basically will we able to will we be able to deport migrants
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