tv Bev Turner Today GB News February 7, 2023 10:00am-12:01pm GMT
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everything. the big signing, of course, will be tory party chairman after nadhim zahawi. he lost that job a couple of weeks ago. so who would you like to see in that role.7 let me know. gbviews@gbnews.uk. the scam gbviews@gbnews.uk. i'm the scam of the year for me. we've had a week of energy giants reporting, you guessed it, record profits while we get stung with massive bills. this morning, bp announced that they earned bills. this morning, bp announced that they earne d £23 announced that they earned £23 billion in profits last year while shell made a whopping 32 billion. i'll be getting angry about that with howard cox from fact fuel uk and former special adviser to michael gove, charlie rowley will be alongside author amy nicol to discuss all the other big news stories of the day. that's all coming up after. look at your latest news with tamsin. don't go anywhere . beth, tamsin. don't go anywhere. beth, thanks very much. good morning . thanks very much. good morning. from the gb newsroom, it's 10:01. the prime minister is expected to announce a mini reshuffle of his cabinet today . reshuffle of his cabinet today. rishi sunak has to appoint a new
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tory party chairman after he sacked nadhim zahawi over a breach of the ministerial code last month . the times newspaper last month. the times newspaper reports the prime minister is considering separate ing the department for business , energy department for business, energy and industrial strategy into separate ministries. and industrial strategy into separate ministries . a cabinet separate ministries. a cabinet meeting will be held at number 10 later today eastern turkey has been struck by a third earthquake measuring 5.7 this morning as the number of people killed across the country and syria has risen to more than 5000. the first 7.8 magnitude quake hit in the early hours of yesterday morning with second major earthquake measuring 7.5 a few hours later. almost 6000 buildings have been destroyed in the tremor and aftershocks that followed . the world health followed. the world health organisation says the number of people killed from the earthquakes could pass 20,000 into national development . mr. into national development. mr. andrew mitchell told gb news uk search and rescue is expected to
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arrive today . the british arrive today. the british support , which is very support, which is very specialist and very technically strong, it will land in daylight today. i hope later this morning and it will immediately hit the ground running and i hope that they will be able to save lives because as i say, these first 72 hours when it really comes . hours when it really comes. britain supports the white helmets, which were civil defence group, but they are actively engaged . we've given actively engaged. we've given them money before and we will give them money again to support them once we know precisely what their requirements are . their requirements are. journalist iona saku farkas told gb news about the rescue efforts in the turkish town of adana. adana this city is one of the most affected ones. it's one of the ten most affected cities in turkey right now . if you can see turkey right now. if you can see behind me right a second ago, the actually found someone . the the actually found someone. the teams here that just managed to get someone out. we and they're
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just taking him to the to the ambulance . an underwater search ambulance. an underwater search for missing mother nicola boli is still underway in the river. wyre it's been 11 days since ms. foley went missing after taking her dog for a walk in st michaels on wyre in lancashire. the search follows a fresh appeal by her partner , who said appeal by her partner, who said her two daughters desperately miss her and need her back . miss her and need her back. forensic search specialist peter folding says they need to rule everything out . somebody could everything out. somebody could have put the phone on the bench, somebody could have found it and put it on the bench just on the nearest bench. we don't know this. nobody knows this is a complete mystery. this whole thing. normally if somebody thing. and normally if somebody falls if nicola falls in the water, if nicola went body would went in here, her body would have straight to the have gone straight to the bottom. would remain there . bottom. it would remain there. and would have and police divers would have found that day . shadow found her that day. shadow climate secretary ed miliband is calling on the government to bnng calling on the government to bring forward a proper windfall tax on energy companies after bp announced its biggest yearly
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profit in history. the energy giant has more than doubled its earnings from the year before, earnings from the year before, earnings from the year before, earnin g £23 billion in profits earning £23 billion in profits in 2022. after energy prices surged due to the war in ukraine. bp chief executive bernard says stronger plant reliability and a lower cost of production helped with profits . production helped with profits. the bbc chairman will face questions in the commons on his involvement in boris johnson's financial affairs prior to being chosen to lead the broadcaster . chosen to lead the broadcaster. richard sharp will appear before a cross panel party of mp this morning. it's after it was revealed he was involved in mr. johnson's securing a loan of up t 0 £800,000 before the then to £800,000 before the then prime minister backed his appointment to the top role at the bbc . his selection appointment to the top role at the bbc. his selection is currently under investigation . currently under investigation. the shadow defence secretary is to argue cuts to the british army must be halted to show the
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uk is a leading european member in nato . uk is a leading european member in nato. in uk is a leading european member in nato . in a speech at the in nato. in a speech at the royal united services institute today, john healey will outline labour's plans to ensure the uk's duty to the alliance are fulfilled in full. it follows defence secretary ben wallace conceding the armed forces had been hollowed out and underfunded . nurses are staging underfunded. nurses are staging industrial action again today in an ongoing dispute over pay. it follows what was called the biggest strike in nhs history yesterday with a royal college of nursing, gmb and unite. paramedics and ambulance workers walking out . health leaders have walking out. health leaders have described this week as incredibly disrupted . unions incredibly disrupted. unions have urged ministers in england to offer a new pay deal to prevent further action. but ministers say they want to look forward to next year's pay . they forward to next year's pay. they this is gb news more for me shortly. now, though, it's back to beth .
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to beth. barry. good morning. welcome to bev turner. today on gb news tv and dab+ radio . here's what's and dab+ radio. here's what's coming up on the show this morning. prime minister rishi sunak has been looking for a new party chairman for over a week now after the sacking of nadhim zahawi. he's going to announce his reshuffle later this his mini reshuffle later this morning and reorganise some government departments. let me know you'd like to as know who you'd like to see as the new party chairman. gb the new tory party chairman. gb views gb views. .uk. it's been announced this morning that energy giant bp has made . announced this morning that energy giant bp has made . £23 energy giant bp has made. £23 billion in profits in 2022 after energy prices surged due to the war in ukraine. this is in the same week that shell announced that they earned £32 billion in the same year. labour are now calling for what they call a
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proper windfall oil tax. i'm going to be discussing that with howard hughes. howard sorry, from fuel uk in just a moment. and the former adviser to michael gove, charlie rowley, and author amy nicholl will be in my studio looking at the biggest stories of the day. on the panel this morning, i'm going to be reflecting on this developing story an developing story that an international effort international aid effort is being in southern being stepped up in southern turkey syria turkey and northern syria following huge earthquake following that huge earthquake which has killed now more than 4800 people. and of course, you are my third panellist. i would love to have me this morning. email me gb views at gb news dot uk or tweet me at gb news to have your say . so. rishi uk or tweet me at gb news to have your say. so. rishi sunak is set to announce a mini reshuffle later this morning, including a new party chairman. this is, of course, after the pm sacks nadhim zahawi over his tax affairs more than a week ago. let's cross live to westminster to speak to our political editor darren mccaffrey . good morning, darren mccaffrey. good morning,
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daryn . just explain to us what daryn. just explain to us what exactly is a mini cabinet reshuffle like this and why now it's moving a couple of decks, i suppose so. chairs. i should say, on the decks, if you like, in the sense that governments , in the sense that governments, prime ministers like to in any organisation like to assert their authority. that means moving people and things around. now clearly this has been brought about in part because nadhim zahawi as the former conservative party chairman, is no longer in place, having had or having been sacked , frankly, or having been sacked, frankly, a of weeks ago . and so a couple of weeks ago. and so there was always going be an there was always going to be an effort to try and find a replacement for him ahead of those crucial elections just a couple months time. couple of months time. and indeed, general election indeed, the general election probably certainly next probably almost certainly next yeah probably almost certainly next year. now, in addition to that, there's been much talk about kind of trying to impose the prime minister's authority and his preferences and his ideological stint, if you like, on government . and that is why on government. and that is why we're likely to see falls the
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department of energy being recruited at it again. at the moment it is inside the business department. you like, department. if you like, involving standalone involving the standalone department on the people like david and theresa may. david cameron and theresa may. that's again . that's likely to return again. maybe not a surprise given the fact are energy securities fact there are energy securities in pretty at the in a pretty bad place at the moment . and then you add on to moment. and then you add on to this. i focus, i think, on science and technology , too, science and technology, too, with creation probably of with the creation probably of a separate ministry focusing on those two, maybe with the incorporation of digital as well . again, this is something that the prime minister has talked about an awful lot in the past, trying to make the uk a science powerhouse . but then there are powerhouse. but then there are further questions about where does example, at does that leave? for example, at the department media the department of culture, media and sport . are there to be and sport. are there going to be changes there and who will the personalities who are going to be charge of these be in charge of these departments? there's of departments? so there's a lot of speculation was to speculation. cabinet was due to meet around. no, actually in downing street. that is being pushed back to 3:00 this afternoon as we await the announcements to find out
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precisely what is happening . and precisely what is happening. and darren, we heard about this this situation with boris johnson, the chair of the bbc , didn't we? the chair of the bbc, didn't we? is that so ? richard sharp is his is that so? richard sharp is his name. he's going to be grilled today. is he on a on a commons committee? do we know what we're expecting then to basically look for in that interview ? you yes. for in that interview? you yes. so it's just started actually today. so it's just started actually today . and richard joffe is the today. and richard joffe is the current chairman of the bbc, is in front of employees and raising questions. now, this in part will revolve around, as you say, those allegations of precisely what his role in helping boris johnson secure effectively an £800,000 loan when he was prime minister. now, richard torbay has said effectively he's not really been involved in boris johnson's financial affairs at all, though he did introduce the person who effectively gave him or allowed him access to that amount of money. the reason that this is interest , steve, is the reason interest, steve, is the reason it's controversial , i may
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it's controversial, i may suggest, is because this was the time in which richard chope was trying to become chairman of the bbc. the decision that ultimately was in the hands of the prime minister boris the then prime minister boris johnson, people, johnson, and people, frankly saying not good . saying it does not look good. now, has denied now, richard chope has denied any of this, as is boris johnson suggesting. both of them are suggesting. both of them are suggesting that there was due process involved in this, process involved in all this, that rigorous process. that it was a rigorous process. but there are questions but clearly there are questions to about what to be answered about what precisely his role may well have been. and he, i'm sure, use this attempt this morning in front of employees set this the record employees to set this the record straight. i think in that regard , also talk about that , but also to talk about that rigorous to talk rigorous process, to talk about his . in essence, his appointment. in essence, trying to dampen down those allegations , those allegations, those controversies, that controversy around his appointments . okay. around his appointments. okay. thank you very much, darren. no doubt we will let you know how that hearing goes with richard sharpe this morning, see what comes out of that, and let me know what you about this know what you think about this cabinet reshuffle . gb views cabinet reshuffle. gb views at gbnews.uk . cabinet reshuffle. gb views at gbnews.uk. is there cabinet reshuffle. gb views at gbnews.uk . is there anybody that
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gbnews.uk. is there anybody that you would particularly like to see being chairman the see as being chairman of the conservative party? i just stop myself from when darren talked about there were about the fact that there were moving chairs, i thought, moving deck chairs, i thought, well, a famous saying well, there's a famous saying about on the about moving deck chairs on the titanic. it? it titanic. doesn't it? does it matter you you might matter where you sit? you might be going down anyway. they're going have to have awful going to have to have an awful lot of to do. the lot of work to do. the conservative party, between now lot of work to do. the constheative party, between now lot of work to do. the consthe next party, between now lot of work to do. the consthe next election tween now lot of work to do. the consthe next election to sen now lot of work to do. the consthe next election to win now and the next election to win people over. keep watching people over. so keep watching this we let know this space. we will let you know when hear anything on the when we hear anything on the cabinet moving cabinet reshuffle. right. moving on. giant has more on. the energy giant bp has more than its earnings from than doubled its earnings from the before. earne d £23 the year before. they earned £23 billion after energy billion in profits after energy pnces billion in profits after energy prices because of billion in profits after energy pricwar because of billion in profits after energy pricwar in because of billion in profits after energy pricwar in ukraine. because of billion in profits after energy pricwar in ukraine. shadow.e of the war in ukraine. shadow climate secretary ed miliband is calling on the government to bnng calling on the government to bring proper windfall calling on the government to briron proper windfall calling on the government to briron energy proper windfall calling on the government to briron energy companies ndfall calling on the government to briron energy companies after. calling on the government to briron energy companies after bp tax on energy companies after bp announced yearly announced its biggest yearly profit in history. howard cox is the founder of fat fuel uk . good the founder of fat fuel uk. good morning, howard . i've spoken to morning, howard. i've spoken to several times over the last few months and when we've been raging about these massive pnces raging about these massive prices that we're paying at the pumps , you and i have both said,
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pumps, you and i have both said, let's just wait and see what their profits are like, because i'm sure , i'm sure in the i'm sure, i'm sure in the current climate , they won't current climate, they won't cream off any profit out of this situation. oh, guess what? that's exactly what they've done. what's your response? well, people are filling up bp and shell carries its moaning and shell carries its moaning and saying the headlines will be second because what we're seeing again, it is profiteering on the bafis again, it is profiteering on the basis of no incredible business acumen, no creative marketing, no product development or new product introductions from these big oil giants is simply they control what we pay at the pumps and what we pay in terms of energy around the world. they are ripping them, freezing motorists dry and it's ridiculous. i'm not a great fan of windfall taxes, but i'm moving towards that direction. but what i would like to see is more in control of how they price fuel. and that's why yesterday spent a little time yesterday i spent a little time in parliament talking to people like priti craig mckinlay like priti patel, craig mckinlay , and others . we , jonathan davis and others. we should introduce a thing called pump watch i've spoken about
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pump watch and i've spoken about this to before. yep i think this to you before. yep i think it's a great idea. what was the response then at westminster ? response then at westminster? what were those very influential people saying to you? do they do they get it? how do they understand why people are so angry? yes, they do. and i have to say, i was encouraged. to say, i was very encouraged. i've about 46 backbench mps i've got about 46 backbench mps have letters to jeremy have signed letters to jeremy hunt also to grant shapps hunt and also to grant shapps the business secretary, to say please , can we get something in please, can we get something in place to stop this opportunity profiteering. and that's the bafis profiteering. and that's the basis of it. i've my since the announcement shell and bp , i've announcement shell and bp, i've had double the amount of emails coming through the coding coming through saying the coding for pump watch is this funny sort of thing looking at their profits. i've done a quick back of a packet calculation if they actually had made 2 billion less profit, we could actually see pump prices down something like 10 to 15 people later. that's the sort of thing we could do. and the dividends would still be the same for their shareholders. well, the bp chief executive, bernard says that it is not going to save determinism.
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perhaps it says that it is their plan, reliability and the low cost of production that helps them generate strong returns. so you know, they're just smart businessmen , not loonies at all. businessmen, not loonies at all. we shouldn't be angry at them. doing what apparently . now i'm doing what apparently. now i'm all for profit. i'm just against profiteering. it's a cliche , profiteering. it's a cliche, maybe, but that's the facts of life . but what i do see in the life. but what i do see in the small print of his statement, this is all going to be invested in green energy at the moment, where the cost of living crisis people can't afford to heat their homes or fill their cars up small businesses. and up and small businesses. and we got driver got so many anti driver legislations going through what with and the wonderful with the us and the wonderful undemocratic things going on in london at the moment. we need to all come together and get some sense in terms of what we're paying. if we cut fuel duty and if we actually import pump, which would which in place inflation would rocket and we would rocket downward and we would have a cost of living crisis much lessened. and that's what we could be doing. yesterday, the mp i spoke to was right behind what said. well, that
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behind what i said. well, that is really encouraging, howard, to this plain to to just take this plain to people. how what would work? who would be in control of that? i'm guessing you. i want you in charge of the whole industry, frankly . thank you. but very frankly. thank you. but very kind of you . yeah, there are kind of you. yeah, there are several employees i've actually recommended. andrew leadsom, for one, wants me to go the watch commissioner, which quite commissioner, which is quite funny , but way it would funny, but the way it would work, i, i'm not a great believer in legislate and controlling the bodies . i mean controlling the bodies. i mean ofgem, ofcom, ofwat haven't been a successful set of bodies have they, with what's happening recently. but what would work is what asking for is what we're asking for is garages. when go in every garages. when they go in every morning, said. so i think two morning, he said. so i think two or three numbers into a database which what the which would tell you what the current they're charging current prices they're charging on calls for petrol, on the phone calls for petrol, diesel, lpg and that will go to a central database where we could actually build in the oil price changes local regional variations of cost of variations in terms of cost of rent slice of garages because rent a slice of garages because the real estate cost of a garage in london in westminster is more than something, say, in cumbria.
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so there would be certain things and will put and then we will put a recommended . what it recommended price. what it should be based on a fair profit levels that we're not talking a profit capping or profit control, we're simply fighting information transparent, fair and at the moment, and honest. and at the moment, if that works, that would be a voluntary scheme they don't voluntary scheme. if they don't adhere this , then we would adhere to this, then we would move both to a full blown process . do you think so? the process. do you think so? the uk, the government already introduced this windfall tax. didn't this energy profits levy to help fund a scheme to lower gas electricity bills is that that's just not working is it? no, it's not. and i think what we're not doing is we're not getting to the root cause of the problem. what we're doing is uncontrolled pricing and uncontrolled pricing and uncontrolled control of how our energy is priced to the end. use our drivers or people heating the homes and businesses, etc. and even garages their energy in terms of actually electricity charges of rocketed to deliver petrol being pumped into our cars but some of them are going
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up four or five times incredible figures. the whole thing has got to be assessed by government. they need to put controls. i'm not a great of pricing not a great fan of pricing control, profit control, but i do believe we it honest do believe if we make it honest and transparent, then consumers do believe if we make it honest and makeiarent, then consumers do believe if we make it honest and make a'ent, then consumers do believe if we make it honest and make a choice en consumers do believe if we make it honest and make a choice of consumers do believe if we make it honest and make a choice of where ners do believe if we make it honest and make a choice of where they can make a choice of where they go. with the people being fair and honest. yeah, absolutely. well set up pom well howard, when you set up pom , what want somebody on , what if you want somebody on your board knocking heads together , give me a call back together, give me a call back everything you're doing, 100. so thank you for everybody watching this who's struggling to fill up their cars at the moment. keep up the great work. right. let me know what you think about that. vaiews@gbnews.uk makes my blood boil. now, after the break, a huge earthquake killed more huge earthquake has killed more than now parts than 5000 people. now in parts of turkey and of syria and turkey and international aid effort has been stepped up to help. the pictures incredible , pictures are incredible, shocking. we're going to be discussing all of this after the
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break good morning. welcome back to bev turner. today it is 1021. i am delighted this morning to be joined by writer and broadcaster amy to help me and former special adviser to michael gove, charlie will charlie rowley. rowley will rowley rowley rowley boss, i've been called lot firstly by been called a lot firstly by general munro, we can do it wrong. well, we have a new chairman of the conservative party and it is greg hunt's. tell me about him. i don't know anything about greg hunt. well this is a new pair of hands. he is a make it already. he is a brilliant pair of hands. and he's the best pick for the party. i think he's an ally of rishi. he's been a minister in the parliament. what does he do at the moment? so he's a minister in the department of trade, which is one of the departments which along with the reshuffle ministers, reshuffle of moving ministers, we're within we're now seeing a change within the departments. it seems the three departments will emerge by the day, well as a
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the end of the day, as well as a new role for from mr. new role for full from mr. hands. just just been hands. it's just just been announced is we're announced so there is we're looking looking looking we're looking at a picture of hands there. is picture of mr. hands there. is that in his fluorescent that him in his fluorescent jacket? the jacket? is that him? the fluorescent well, mean, fluorescent bunny? well, i mean, look, if he's if he's an mp that can wear a fluorescent coat and a hard hat is in the right right now it is. yeah. at a high now if it is. yeah. at a high vis to be to build vis ready to be able to build back better for the conservative party. oh we learned anything from also from matt hancock. it's also good conservative party good in the conservative party to good pair of hands. to be a good pair of hands. exactly well, sorry. well exactly well, i'm sorry. well we're being very try be we're being very we try to be serious here. this is a new chairman conservative chairman of the conservative party. lot to do. party. he's got a lot to do. charlie he still to win to charlie he still to win over to bnng charlie he still to win over to bring the party together, get charlie he still to win over to bri|of the party together, get charlie he still to win over to bri|of the trust together, get charlie he still to win over to bri|of the trust backbenchers rid of the trust backbenchers causing trust aligned causing trouble trust aligned backbenchers support rishi sunak in what is going to be the toughest couple years up to the election. that months. election. if that 18 months. tell about him. do you know tell us about him. do you know what he's like? well, he's been a former whips. he's been the deputy chief whip as well. so he'll know about partridges, then he'll know exactly sort then he'll know exactly the sort of, when things of, you know, when things are going people are going wrong. and people that are currently investigation
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currently under investigation for being for whatever they're being investigated for. he will want to quickly to keep to see those quickly to keep them. it's a bit that that's his experience, keeping them in line and misbehaving, but he'll know how to do it and party discipline is absolutely key. and if there's one thing that the conservative party does know, how to do, it's win elections, but it only wins them when united and not when they are united and not divided. bring a lot divided. they help bring a lot of that particular of expertise in that particular area. london mp, he's area. as a london mp, he's obviously a tough labour obviously facing a tough labour opposition and so he'll know exactly how take the fight to exactly to how take the fight to laboun exactly to how take the fight to labour, something to labour, something that needs to be replicated across the be replicated right across the country. the conservative country. if the conservative party are going to hang on to power. he ticks all the power. i think he ticks all the boxes ministerial has boxes ministerial experience has done knows the done a lot of media knows the party a of view and party from a point of view and within, i say, as local within, as i say, as a local conservative against the labour opposition, exactly opposition, you'll know exactly what to. and think what is needed to. and i think as a former business minister he'll know how to run the party effectively. business management back party back in control, get the party up in terms being up to speed in terms of being a well—oiled machine that it usually it comes to usually is when it comes to election times and get the party on an election footing to out on an election footing to go out and one in the locals and
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and do one in the locals and then hopefully general then hopefully the general election an election in 2024 was an excellent sales from charlie excellent sales job from charlie rose the browns. can rose rolling the browns. we can cross fingers that that cross our fingers that all that that come pass first do that will come to pass first do you think people care amy. no, i think people have lost all faith in the tory government and now they're just trying to break up all they can to try and renew some faith . but i think it's too some faith. but i think it's too late. it's too much water under that dirty little bridge. well, he has to clear the water. what did that dirty little british. really, really difficult job, charlie. he's got i mean, the whole party has got a heck of a mountain to climb now. it does . mountain to climb now. it does. and i think we can talk about the changes in government. we can talk about the different departments that might emerge, the that are the different people that are going in whatever jobs. going to be in whatever jobs. but reality is, i think but the reality is, i think people just want see delivery people just want to see delivery and there's a question about whether know, too whether it's, you know, it's too late. it isn't. i and late. i hope it isn't. i and greg will certainly think that it prime minister it isn't. the prime minister certainly think too certainly doesn't think it's too late. what people want to late. but what people want to see in constituencies across the country the prime
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country is that the prime minister, he set in the minister, as he set out in the start of this year, delivering on priorities, that's on his priorities, that's deaung on his priorities, that's dealing economy. dealing with the economy. three of were of those five priorities were economically focussed, say halving debt, halving inflation, cutting the cutting debt, growing the economy, the issues economy, tackling the issues that we see in the nhs with the backlog of cases and dealing with plates crisis, with the small plates crisis, which think will add a bit to. which i think will add a bit to. but people see that but when people see that delivery, people delivery, then i think people start to see that restored faith in politics and in the conservative and him conservative party. and give him a is that they a second. charlie is that they need clean their mess need to clean up their own mess . well, the economy is something thatis . well, the economy is something that is global impacts have impacted on everybody. so we're one under russia. well there are lots of forecasts and i know if there was a conservative member of parliament sitting here, they would sort of disagree with the imf. we've got it wrong in the past, but it's about the past, but it's all about the future it's about seeing future and it's about seeing what can delivered what what can be delivered and what the conservatives do to turn the conservatives can do to turn it i your it around. i think your optimism. well, derek, i just feel like on this show, we need it we're going to it most days. we're going to cross live to westminster space.
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hopefully darren hopefully it's a darren mccaffrey only mccaffrey who is there. i only spoke a few moments ago, spoke to you a few moments ago, darren. this has broken darren. and this news has broken greg what's your greg hands. what's your reaction? looks reaction? yeah, it looks like he's to the next chair he's going to be the next chair of the conservative party. someone who's been an mp in west london actually since 2005. actually, he's been a trade minister for quite a lot of his ministerial career , but now ministerial career, but now taking over from nadhim zahawi, it seems as i say, is sort of conservative party chairman. now this is interesting in the sense that the conservative party could do with a german, frankly, at moment, guys have at the moment, as you guys have just been talking about, they're not doing terribly well in the polls. at very, polls. they're looking at very, very local elections in very tricky local elections in may indeed a very tricky may and indeed a very tricky general election next year, unless something changes, what is interesting, though, is normally the chairman of the conservative party, in effect , conservative party, in effect, is like the ceo, if you like, of the party. he's someone to or some person to bring in money, donations to the party. and we believe that the finances for the conservatives is not terribly great at the moment.
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someone who gives up the membership, who goes around the country to get people to country trying to get people to knock on and to campaign knock on doors and to campaign in byelections , etc, etc. in those byelections, etc, etc. but also the someone that works on the strategy of how to win elections. how does the conservative party as a political entity try and beat its political foes in difficult systems around the country? now, greg hines , while being a very greg hines, while being a very capable minister, it will be a very , very big change in role, very, very big change in role, will be interesting to see whether he'll be up to the task. it must be said this role, there's not been many people frantically knocking down the doors to try and take over as chairman of the conservative party of anything. people seem to be taking to twitter and to all sorts of media to say that they weren't terribly interested in it. so i don't think richard sunak had many choices, frankly, but this is the start of this mini reshuffle we're going to see today. we thought greg hunfs see today. we thought greg hunt's was going take over hunt's was going to take over the had been speculation about other in the frame. but it other names in the frame. but it will big job be in no doubt will be a big job be in no doubt about that. bev yeah, absolutely
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. what well liked . and what boycie well liked darren within the an whip charlie was saying but is he well liked amongst the party and amongst the members in the backbenches. amongst the members in the backbenches . yeah i think he is. backbenches. yeah i think he is. i mean, he's someone who, of course voted to remain a he was in positive of cameron's team back in 2016. so kind of part of that government, collective responsibility . but yes, he's responsibility. but yes, he's seen as being a very solid minister . he seen as being a very solid minister. he was demoted, though it must be said. i think when theresa may was prime minister out of the cabinet, to down being a senior minister , rather being a senior minister, rather than to run the cabinet table . than to run the cabinet table. but yes, i mean, he is seen definitely as a competent minister. there's no doubt about that. i just think i mean, no that. ijust think i mean, no matter almost who took over, it's going to be a very, very difficult try and change difficult task to try and change the of the conservative the fortunes of the conservative party the moment. and he party at the moment. and he frankly doesn't have much time. those elections, say, those local elections, as i say, are in a matter of months. are in just a matter of months. the may and that will the start of may and that will set the tone , i think, for the
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set the tone, i think, for the next year, depending on how the conservative do. at conservative party do. and at the moment, i say, it's not the moment, as i say, it's not looking terribly great and this is part of a kind of wider reshuffle , let's say, that was reshuffle, let's say, that was seen within government bad potential to government potential changes to government departments. whether is in departments. whether that is in base, the current business department we're expecting energy actually to be a separate ministry again like it was under david cameron and addition to that, potentially the i a new ministry if you like a new depart. it's based around science and technology. one of the areas that rishi sunak seems to be focussed on. we all expecting those details to rip out. we've already got the first name it seems now this morning to drive out in the next couple of hours ahead of the cabinet meeting, the new cabinet meeting, the new cabinet meeting, if like, at 3:00 meeting, if you like, at 3:00 this afternoon. okay thanks so much, darren. bring us all the news. what new as it breaks this morning darren mccaffrey in morning darren mccaffrey that in westminster the westminster right after the break. notice of taking industrial action again in industrial action again today in an dispute over pay. an ongoing dispute over pay. i'll one the nurses who i'll have one of the nurses who was striking after your
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was not striking after your morning's all my morning's news. i'm all for my kind of . it's 1030. morning's news. i'm all for my kind of. it's1030. i'm tamsin roberts in the gb newsroom hair the headlines. the prime minister is expected to announce a mini reshuffle of his cabinet today. rishi sunak has to appoint a new tory party chairman after he sacked nadhim zahawi over breach of the zahawi over a breach of the ministerial code last month. the times newspaper reports the prime minister is considering separating the . department for separating the. department for business, energy and industrial strategy into separate ministries. a cabinet meeting will be held at number later will be held at number 10 later today. will be held at number 10 later today . the bbc chairman has today. the bbc chairman has denied giving boris johnson financial advice before getting the job at the broadcaster richard sharp has appeared for questioning before a cross panel party of employees this morning. it's after it was revealed he was involved helping secure mr. johnson a loan of up to £800,000 before the then prime minister backed his appointment to the role at the bbc. his selection
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is currently under investigation . easton turkey has been struck by a third earthquake measuring 5.7 this morning as the number of people killed across the country and syria has risen to more than 5000. the first 7.8 magnitude quake hit in the early hours of yesterday morning, with the second earthquake measuring 7.5. just a few hours later , 7.5. just a few hours later, almost 6000 buildings have been destroyed in the tremor and aftershocks have followed. the world health organisation says the number of people killed by earthquake rocks could pass 20,000. international development minister andrew mitchell told gb news uk search and rescue is expected to arrive today. and rescue is expected to arrive today . the british support, today. the british support, which is very specialist and very technically strong, it will land in daylight today. i hope later this morning and it will immediately hit the ground running and i hope that they will be able to save lives because as i say, these first 72
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hours when it really comes to britain supports the white helmets, which were civil defence group, but they are actively engaged . we've given actively engaged. we've given them money before and we will give them money again to support them we know precisely what them once we know precisely what they are . shadow they requirements are. shadow climate secretary ed miliband is calling on the government to bnng calling on the government to bring forward a proper windfall on energy companies after bp announced its biggest yearly profit in history. the energy giant has more than doubled its earnings from the year before, addin g £23 billion in profits in adding £23 billion in profits in 2022. after energy prices surged due to the war in ukraine. bp chief executive bernard says stronger plant reliability and a lower cost of production helped with profits . tv online and dab+ with profits. tv online and dab+ radio . this is.
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gb news. welcome back . its best kind. welcome back. its best kind. stay on gb news tv under abc radio. thank you forjoining me. radio. thank you for joining me. you've been getting in touch about the cabinet reshuffle. we've just heard the greg hams is the new chairman of the conservative nicholas conservative party. nicholas today parties. you today it's for all parties. you just the name just enter the choices name followed by the words scandal into web search engine and into any web search engine and voila. departments. voila. and more departments. this a creation of a new this is a creation of a new department of science, innovation and technology that innovation and a technology that we about from more we heard about from darren. more departments ministers departments means more ministers and ministers, plus more and junior ministers, plus more civil more civil servants and a lot more money and carroll says let's hope he gets rid of jeremy. i have no confidence in him at all. will never the all. they will never win the next election with him as chancellor. only kind chancellor. the only bit of kind of memorable history of greg hands was racking my brains hands i was racking my brains was that he resigned over the plan not to plan to expand plan not to the plan to expand the heathrow third runway. he opposed heathrow's third runway in 2018 and he resigned . but in 2018 and he resigned. but then boris johnson returned him to trade policy minister, and
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then promoted to then he was promoted to business, and clean business, energy and clean growth minister. so let me know what you think about that. right. today, nurses taking industrial action again in an ongoing dispute over pay . this ongoing dispute over pay. this comes as yesterday saw the largest strike nhs history with members royal college members of the royal college of nursing, unite nursing, gmb and unite paramedics and ambulance workers walking out. joining me now walking out. so joining me now is one nurse who voted against the strikes, a psychiatric nurse ,juua the strikes, a psychiatric nurse , julia taylor. good morning, julia. good to see you again. i was really hoping . don't take was really hoping. don't take this personally, but i was hoping i wasn't going to have to talk to you again because i was hoping the strikes would have come to an end. here we are. come to an end. but here we are. how are you feeling it now how are you feeling about it now as strikes drag no as these strikes drag with no sign resolution incites ? i sign of a resolution incites? i just don't think the strikes are going work. i said that from going to work. i said that from the very beginning and all it's going to happen we're going going to happen is we're going to looking greedy. and to end up looking greedy. and it's ppi and it's not just about ppi and i still don't think we should strike, although i do support the nurses that do strike. i can't do it. i just can't i
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can't do it. i just can't i can't bring myself to do it. but it's so difficult working in the nhs right now. it's it's so hard and i know that, pat cullen said that reduced the demand to 10. but then to me that just does make it about pay and it's not about pay, it's about attracting people to the actual nhs to work . a nurse we've got 50,000 nurses shortage and the pay is as good as it used to be. when i started my job a long time ago and i got 20% more in real terms as pay and people are now saying, well, you knew what you were going into. you knew it was badly paid, but i didn't then and a lot of nurses are leaving , but i still don't think we should strike. i think we should do mass protest, you know , like do mass protest, you know, like what they did in paris recently because of the pensions. and there was hundreds of thousands of people that really hit home
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for macron. why can't we do something like that instead of going on strike? because sadly, the patients are going to suffer more, are already suffering now. and that's why the governance strike, because we haven't got the staff , we haven't got the the staff, we haven't got the resources and people i mean, the waiting list is nearly a million. and i mean, i know we've had the pandemic in supply , but prior to the pandemic was already 2 million anyway. the waiting list. but it was getting bad . and i would see over the bad. and i would see over the last ten years we've been trying so hard to get the government to listen and i mean, seen that nurses should do a degree now and now you'll not get a bursary . £60,000 worth of debt to come and be a nurse and then pay for your parking and then work and in conditions where there's no staff, what's the incentive , staff, what's the incentive, juua? staff, what's the incentive, julia? what's it like for you on the days when your colleagues are on strike out on the picket line and you're still there on
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the psychiatric ward working? is it is it tough from those days because you so sort of short staffed more than usual ? well, staffed more than usual? well, to be honest with you, the trust, our workforce voted not to strike. only 30% of people voted to strike. so i can't answer that question . but i do answer that question. but i do know some of my friends, you know, i know a lot of nurses, obviously , it's very difficult obviously, it's very difficult because the kind of look, john is a bit of you remember the scabs and that in the 1980s and then the strikes with the coal miners. yeah it's kind of you know looked upon like that. and some of my colleagues because i voted not to strike and they voted not to strike and they voted to strike the still can't get over the fact that i said i wouldn't strike. but it's just it's not going to work and it's going to us look greedy, but it's not just about pay and it's very potent. and i get that message out . it's about the message out. it's about the conditions we work in because we're short staffed , because we're short staffed, because there aren't enough nurses and there's not enough beds and
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there's not enough beds and there's reduced personnel on the floor . it's really difficult floor. it's really difficult enough. floor. it's really difficult enough . i've actually had some enough. i've actually had some experience myself on the other side of the fence recently . my side of the fence recently. my father sadly died last monday , father sadly died last monday, but prior to that my thank you pnor but prior to that my thank you prior to that he was diagnosed with motor neurone disease, but he's actually had it since 2015. and because there's not enough nurses, nobody knew about it until eight weeks before he passed away . and that was quite passed away. and that was quite frustrating because i knew there was something wrong . and i kept was something wrong. and i kept asking and asking and the appointments were miles ahead . appointments were miles ahead. miles ahead. he ended up in hospital and mean the poor nurses there were run off their feet. on one day there was two nurses who had to come from another hospital to help on the ward to make sure that the patients got the care that they needed and that's the kind of thing that's happening when you get moved as a nurse to an area, they get unfamiliar with. it's
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quite a horrible feeling you know, because you don't know what the routine is. you don't know what medication they're on. you everything's different to what know . and it's very what you know. and it's very stressful and you have no choice. i know that's really, really hard. it's really hard . really hard. it's really hard. julia, thank you for joining really hard. it's really hard. julia, thank you forjoining us julia, thank you for joining us again. thank you for your hard work. and i'm really sorry to hear about your dad and that experience. so that's really rough. a lot of people will relate it the moment. relate to it at the moment. psychiatric nurse julia taylor there. me there. thanks, julia. let me know thoughts on what know your thoughts on what you've then as well. you've just heard then as well. his sympathies running thin for the nurses, particularly if you've hospital. you've got somebody in hospital. it hard to it can be really hard to sympathise. now moving on tonight go up against tonight wrexham go up against sheffield united and their fourth round replay with a tie against tottenham hotspur up for grabs. now you are still watching the same channel. this isn't a sports broadcaster. bear with me . but isn't a sports broadcaster. bear with me. but this isn't a sports broadcaster. bear with me . but this is this isn't a sports broadcaster. bear with me. but this is this week marks two years since the hollywood axis . ryan reynolds hollywood axis. ryan reynolds and rob mcelhenney bought the
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nonh and rob mcelhenney bought the north west football club. in that time , wrexham has gained that time, wrexham has gained city status as well as being the star of its own documentary. our reporter jack carson has more . reporter jack carson has more. it's almost two years since two stars of hollywood bought one welsh football club. now wrexham are facing the prospect of playing premier league. tottenham hotspur if they can beat sheffield united in tonight's cup replay , as tonight's fa cup replay, as well as huge investment and on the pitch off it . the the pitch off it. the partnership of ryan reynolds and rob mcelhenney is putting wrexham firmly back the map . wrexham firmly back on the map. i met up with wrexham afc superfan kevin jones, who describes the change in the atmosphere around city. well we get a 10,000 fans a week, we're taking an hour. thousands in coventry like this tuesday, 5000 fans are going to sheffield united. it'sjust bringing fans are going to sheffield united. it's just bringing more and support to the club. and more support to the club. now kids , it's all wrexham, now the kids, it's all wrexham, wrexham, wrexham . honestly, the wrexham, wrexham. honestly, the challenge is positive. it's absolute deposit like impact absolute deposit like the impact on, you know, financially for the whole . it started to the whole. it started to brighten up about a little bit.
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but we do need more shops coming in and things like which in and things like that, which hopefully does, but more hopefully it does, but more support also cause more support can also cause more issues. mcdonald's in the issues. this mcdonald's in the town centre behind me i started playing classical music on a match day to try and calm down fans away from the football. global exposure has proved good for business, but palmer property firm fye real estate management have increased their investment into the area since the football club was taken oven the football club was taken over. but what they've done is just supercharge the entire area andifs just supercharge the entire area and it's been a real fight to a good feel factor . and if you good feel factor. and if you look at what local authorities doing by way of regeneration and the rest of it, of course it matters just, you know , want to matters just, you know, want to buy more land . we bought 46 buy more land. we bought 46 acres. we've actually just recently bought another 47 acres. so we've got huge plans there. and if you look at the plans we've got, it's 1 million, 800,000 square feet of new build
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that effectively is another 800,000 square feet of new build that effectively is anothe r £140 that effectively is another £140 million with i have investment on top of what we already invested. looking forward , local invested. looking forward, local mp sarah atherton hopes to win financial support for the city from round three of the government's levelling up fund . government's levelling up fund. we unfortunately did not get it this time round. i'm a little miffed with the government for not doing that because wrexham really needs this big. we need to level up sport in north wales. the gateway bid is more than just a stadium. it's about the whole entry into wrexham. we need to get that over the line, we need to get that built so people when they come into wrexham can see that we are optimistic, we're aspiring, we're going forth, we're looking forward whilst holding onto our heritage on all backgrounds . but heritage on all backgrounds. but you know, we're wrexham, we're here to stay. hollywood seems to have secured wrexham stability for years to . but tonight that for years to. but tonight that tookit for years to. but tonight that took it to an fa cup fifth round tie against spurs. still needs to be secured. lights camera. action. wrexham jack carson gb
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news. that was a great package, jack carr said . but amy and jack carr said. but amy and i have only one complaint. there were not enough pitches of ryan reynolds in that video where they're never that they can't be such a thing is enough pictures of ryan reynolds that claim that was the reason i really was the only reason i really wanted watch that package. wanted to watch that package. he's i love him. i can he's perfect. i love him. i can tell. we will have put up tell. we will have to put up with now. just me . sorry to with me now. just me. sorry to disappoint you. sorry. you'll know that the similarity venn diagram you very speech with the lights off . exactly. but yeah, lights off. exactly. but yeah, i think . it's such lights off. exactly. but yeah, i think. it's such an interesting story, isn't it? i'm not bothered about football, but i would to watch that would quite like to watch that match now. awful match this evening now. awful story. will have woke story. you will have woke up this morning to more devastating pictures of the earthquake has killed than people killed more than 5000 people now on border of turkey and on the border of turkey and syria . the latest on this , i syria. the latest on this, i mean, more shocks this morning . mean, more shocks this morning. 5.8 magnitude quakes , a depth of 5.8 magnitude quakes, a depth of 1.2 miles. it puts our problems into perspective. doesn't it,
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when you say. yeah, totally. and especially after 11 years of civil war in syria and now this and the other devastating thing is that they're even struggling to get aid to the people who needit to get aid to the people who need it because it's damaged so much of the infrastructure, the roads that also the humanity and work has been stalled in that way it's just my way as well. just it's just my heart goes out to them really . heart goes out to them really. it's terrible. i mean, it's really terrible. i mean, we're some of the images we're seeing some of the images here just here of entire buildings just just collapsing to ground. just collapsing to the ground. charlie, extraordinary , charlie, is this extraordinary, isn't it? very, very isn't it? yeah, very, very moving images. and as you say that we're seeing and i that we're seeing now, and i think a as amy's point, a right to point out that it's very, very difficult to get aid into particularly syria, where there's only one in the northern provinces any access area is provinces any one access area is available. international available. the international development secretary andrew mitchell this morning very mitchell this morning was very good help is good to outline what help is being and it is just awful being given and it is just awful because turkey in particular is such a densely populated area that these impacts of is why the impact of this earthquake is impacted on so many people because of the as i say , the
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because of the as i say, the densely populated area and the conditions the weather conditions the weather conditions are making it even more difficult for people to get aid into a turkey and be then to the areas that need it the most. and the numbers shocking, and the numbers are shocking, isn't know there's more isn't it? we know there's more than 5000 dead and no doubt than 5000 dead now, and no doubt that will increase . at that number will increase. at least people trapped scores least 5000 people trapped scores more under the rubble , a depth more under the rubble, a depth of 1.2 miles with the quake in central turkey. 8000 people have so far been rescued . more than so far been rescued. more than 5000 buildings destroyed. and again, that will increase just just absolutely mind boggling, right . closer to home now , boris right. closer to home now, boris johnson continues to be a thorn in the side of rishi sunak, and he is urging the prime minister to forge ahead with the controversial plan to deport migrants to rwanda. amy nichols, go . well, not only is this go. well, not only is this completely impractical and massively expensive , but it also massively expensive, but it also doesn't make logic sense for bofis doesn't make logic sense for boris johnson to suggest that
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this about rwanda . oh, people this about rwanda. oh, people have no idea about rwanda , he have no idea about rwanda, he said. the whole is wrong to condescend and disparage rwanda in the way that they do. well, i'll give you some ideas about rwanda. they murder their political opponents. people go missing. have very limited missing. they have very limited women's rights. they torture people detention. and the key people in detention. and the key here that is no access here is that there is no access to fair trials in many, many cases. and the reason this is worrying is because people to worrying is because people go to rwanda . they innocent rwanda. they would be innocent people that haven't been processed they be processed yet. so they would be processed yet. so they would be processed in theory in rwanda, a place where fair trial is not always possible, hardly ever possible. so it's really worrying because we're going to be deporting potentially innocent people before they go to they will probably to trial and they will probably end up not having a fair trial based on the history of this country. well, what boris johnson would say to he said that those who oppose the uk, rwanda migration partnership have no idea about rwanda, have probably never been there are wholly condescend wholly wrong to condescend and disparage the country in the way that do. i mean, they are
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that they do. i mean, they are one digital hubs for the one of the digital hubs for the fourth industrial revolution. they've money put they've had a lot of money put into the world economic into them by the world economic forum to make them a centre for it technological it and technological development. all bad, it and technological deit? opment. all bad, it and technological deit? charlie. all bad, it and technological deit? charlie i all bad, it and technological deit? charlie i think all bad, it and technological deit? charlie i think that'siad, is it? charlie i think that's right and think i'm. there right and i think i'm. there is a separation of rent and a separation of the rent and legal system and yes, there are cases that we've had to move around that are less than viewing, particularly amongst the government. but this the rwandan government. but this is government and is about the uk government and its rwanda. so its operations in rwanda. so it is legitimate . anybody is perfectly legitimate. anybody that into this country that comes into this country illegally, not for refuge or not seeking refuge or asylum, but has no real right to be here and a real reason to be here that they will be deported to rwanda. it will be overseen by uk officials that processing that takes place out there and. of course, if you do have a right to assignment, then of course the whole point of the plan is to the number of people to increase the number of people that processing, that are doing the processing, increasing patrols that take increasing the patrols that take place the channel to prevent place in the channel to prevent people in the first place. so you do end up with, even though you've is to you've just said it is to
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prevent people, be prevent people, it's to be a deterrent. but the patrolling, rent, then how can you say rent, then how can you then say they'll fabulous life in they'll have a fabulous life in rwanda ? and the moment, 200 rwanda? and at the moment, 200 children went missing from the hotels that we're currently housing, the migrants and. one of the reasons that in the uk people believed that this was happening is because people were saying if you saying to the children, if you stay they're going to send stay here, they're going to send you to rwanda. so being actively used as a ploy by human trafficking within, trafficking gangs within, the uk, to leave the uk, to get people to leave the hotels it doesn't the drink hotels so it doesn't the drink doesn't exist. for me that's rwanda's great, but it's a deterrent . so see, the deterrent deterrent. so see, the deterrent that i was talking about was the patrols that take in the patrols that take place in the channels would be channels in that would be uk force. also the force. the deterrent is also the work we're doing in france work that we're doing in france to make sure that people don't take that crossing in the first place. processing place. but the actual processing of people do into this of people that do into this country that don't of people that do into this countright that don't of people that do into this count right or that don't of people that do into this count right or don't at don't of people that do into this count right or don't seek n't of people that do into this count right or don't seek refuge have right or don't seek refuge or don't a right to be or don't have a right to be seeking refuge, deported seeking refuge, will be deported to their claim will to rwanda and their claim will be out there. but be processed out there. but isn't this the point? it's a deterrent, because deterrent, not because it's a terrible to go and live terrible country to go and live in, but that it isn't great
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britain. and that's where lot britain. and that's where a lot of migrants want to i of the migrants want to be. i think when boris johnson think that when boris johnson said, here we have a plan and labour don't, that's actually incorrect because the correct plan here is to address the push of why these people are coming here and give them the dignity that they deserve. so labour's plan would be to create safe routes for people which the conservative government have systematically closed off over the last ten years. and charlie, you can't disagree with that. so at the moment there's a there's at the moment there's a there's a vast swathes of people who just don't have the ability to apply them for safe asylum here . and that's the problem. if we leave the european convention on human rights in order to make it easier to conduct these to rwanda, what does the uk look like to you in your eyes if we're no longer in the eu? for me it always comes back to the fact that the child was created after world war ii to stop any anti anti—democratic goings on in europe and i think what
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message does that send if we cannot stay within the european court of human rights? what does that say about us as a people? well, i suppose it says we can determine our own human rights. we don't have to be part of the european convention on that. charlie oh, yes, yes. i might say and, and they do look, say that. and, and they do look, i personally wouldn't at this stage leave the ecj. joe, i think people voted to leave this country. we've left the european union, we've left all legal stature as far as i can see it. we make our own laws in this country. i think that's enough and i think that's fine. but i think, look, people see think, look, people will see actually this country how actually in this country how generous the uk has been when it comes people seeking asylum, comes to people seeking asylum, the we've been the refugee system, we've been very, open very, very right to open our hearts and aims the people of hearts and aims to the people of ukraine that the suffering there was same with the was the same with the afghanistan scheme is the same in syria . so it is it is it is in syria. so it is it is it is perfectly right to say that actually when it comes to people seeking that seeking refuge and people that need that the uk need to seek asylum, that the uk is number one that's not leading and ultimately leading the
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international league tables. i think that to help people, which is right to do, but is the right thing to do, but when comes to people that when it comes to people that fundamentally do not have a right to be in this country and are that illegal crossing are taking that illegal crossing that rwanda that they are deported to rwanda and welcome in this country, and not welcome in this country, what would you say? these what would you say? why do these people to people not have the right to claim asylum here when 86% of them were to have genuine them were found to have genuine refugee when were refugee status, when they were finally say finally processed? when you say that high, i think that seems high, i think particularly the albanians don't end 86% of them aren't end up 86% of them aren't allowed to well, the allowed to stay. well, the majority them have been majority of them have been found. that those found. and when that when those that incident recently that tragic incident recently where sank, where the boat actually sank, they mixture of syrians, they were a mixture of syrians, afghans, iraqis. i think this nofion afghans, iraqis. i think this notion that these are all economic migrants is not the case at all. i know it is not the case at all. and i know that we are 90 per capita in the in europe for taking refugees. we do our fair share is do not take our fair share is incorrect to suggest that we do well. i mean look we've got how much are we spending taxpayers money? about money? i think it's about 5 million a day at the last million quid a day at the last estimate on putting people up in total. ls i'm not okay with
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that. i'm not okay with that. but you need to process the people, find out who are, people, find out who they are, give right to stay and give them the right to stay and work contribute to our work and contribute to our society. how find out who society. how do you find out who they are though? they bring they are though? if they bring no documentation? you no documentation? well, you absolutely processing absolutely start with processing more than maybe get an more than 4% to maybe get an idea of who they are . is the idea of who they are. is the will there to push through these application process quicker? so totally. and that's why i think i said at the start an increase. there's going to be an increase in the number of people that take place, take part in take place, that take part in that of individuals. that processing of individuals. it case, as rightly it is the case, as you rightly said, that i think a large majority of people that aren't sure country sure coming into this country illegally . i say illegally are young. i say young. they're in their thirties. that's me, too. but young albanian men now, they are economic migrants or seeking to chance their own to come into this country. of course, if you are a vulnerable young , are a vulnerable young, unaccompanied minor, then of course the uk will after you. thatis course the uk will after you. that is looking at the not thousands have gone missing, haven't they. that's that's part
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of the problem. well that is a problem and that is something that home office absolutely that the home office absolutely needs to look and rectify. needs to look into and rectify. but point remains that but the point remains that if you're country you're coming to this country seeking, be processed seeking, you will be processed properly fairly. if you properly and fairly. if you do not a to be in this not have a right to be in this country, you will deported . country, you will be deported. and that's right thing to country, you will be deported. anc right. right thing to country, you will be deported. ancright. i'm right thing to country, you will be deported. ancright. i'm goingthing to country, you will be deported. ancright. i'm going tong to country, you will be deported. ancright. i'm going to move on do. right. i'm going to move on and of our first hour, guys. okay former adviser to uk secretary state international secretary of state international trade will trade shanker singham will be giving thoughts on giving me his thoughts on today's cabinet reshuffle and liz saying does liz truss saying that she does not want to stand for pm again saying a few minutes, hello, i'm alex and this is your alex deakin and this is your latest update from met latest update from the met office. sparkling winter office. sparkling in winter sunshine quite a of sunshine for many quite a bit of cloud of the north cloud across parts of the north and little bit rain and a little bit of light rain into across parts of southern scotland. this scotland. that's from this weather it's weather front, but it's weakening time as it weakening all the time as it bumps up against this area of high pressure. another one will arrive tomorrow arrive during tomorrow and the ice squeezing together, ice of our squeezing together, it's ice of our squeezing together, ifs bnng ice of our squeezing together, it's bring some strong it's going to bring some strong winds of scotland. winds across parts of scotland. the one today, though, is bringing more cloud, a bringing a bit more cloud, a little bit of rain and little bit of light rain and drizzle and there across drizzle here and there across the northern the east of northern ireland, southwest sunny
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southwest scotland, sunny spells in northwest, but it is in the far northwest, but it is turning breezy here for england, where foggy starts where it's been a foggy starts that taking a while clear that fog is taking a while clear away, revealing plenty of away, but revealing plenty of sunshine for this afternoon . sunshine for this afternoon. temperatures about average generally 89 degrees, but ten or 11 across parts of north—east england and eastern scotland, so quite mild here. it'll turn pretty cold pretty quickly again this evening across the cross, taking hold rapidly and that will thicken up once more overnight. some dense patches of fog, which will again be around for tomorrow morning's rush houn for tomorrow morning's rush hour. cloud increasing across scotland and northern ireland. so again , not as cold, not as so again, not as cold, not as frosty here in the south, another sunny one wants that focus cleared , but it will be focus cleared, but it will be around for the morning rush out and then the winds really picking up during the course of wednesday, according. but the winds, the greatest cause is here as well . most places, here as well. most places, again, having a dry day , a sunny
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again, having a dry day, a sunny one in the south. once that focus cleared, more cloud further north, we will see this rain sweeping in as we go through wednesday evening across the of scotland . northern the parts of scotland. northern ireland's followed by a little bit of snow the hills bit of snow over the hills pushing into northern england. but again , as it pushes but again, as it pushes southwards, rain will tend southwards, that rain will tend to fizzle out and the outlook is generally dry fairly cloudy over the course of the second half of the course of the second half of the week and slowly turning mild
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another cabinet reshuffle with rishi appointing new rishi sunak appointing a new tory party chairman. we're also going to look how much going to look at how much support being offered to support is being offered to families people. now, families of missing people. now, as 11 days since the as today marks 11 days since the mother of two, nicola polly, went that's all coming went missing. that's all coming up a look at the latest up after a look at the latest news . good morning. i'm tamsin news. good morning. i'm tamsin roberts in the gb news room. it's 11:01. the prime roberts in the gb news room. it's11:01. the prime minister is expected to announce a mini reshuffle of his cabinet today . reshuffle of his cabinet today. rishi sunak has to appoint a new tory party chairman after sacked nadhim zahawi over a breach of the ministerial code last month . the times newspaper reports the prime minister is considering separate ing the department for business energy and industrial strategy into separate ministries. and industrial strategy into separate ministries . a cabinet separate ministries. a cabinet meeting will be held at number 10 later today . eastern turkey 10 later today. eastern turkey has been struck by a third earthquake measuring 5.7 this morning as a of people killed
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across the and syria has risen to more than 5000. the first 7.8 magnitude quake hit in the early hours of yesterday morning with a second major earthquake measuring 7.5. just a few hours later , almost 6000 buildings later, almost 6000 buildings have been destroyed in the tremor and aftershocks that followed . rescuers continue to followed. rescuers continue to dig through the rubble in search of survivors . the world health of survivors. the world health organisation says the number of people killed could pass 20,000 international development minister andrew mitchell told gb news uk search and rescue is expected to arrive in the country today . the british country today. the british support , which is very support, which is very specialist and very technically strong, it will land in daylight today i hope later this morning and it will immediately hit the ground running and i hope that they will be able to save lives because as i say, these first 72 hours when it really comes , hours when it really comes, britain supports the white helmets, which were a civil defence group , but they are
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defence group, but they are actively engaged. we've given them money before and we will give them money again to support them once we know precisely what their saw . their requirements saw. journalist iona saku farkas told gb news about the rescue in the turkish town of adana, adding to this city is one of the most affected ones. it's one of the ten most affected cities in turkey right now . if you can see turkey right now. if you can see behind me right a second ago, they actually found someone that's the teams here that just managed to get someone out. we and they're just taking him to the to the ambulance . and the to the ambulance. and underwater search for missing mother nicolette boulay is still under way in the river. wyre it's been 11 days since ms. pooley went missing after taking her dog for a walk in. st michael's on wyre in lancashire. the search follows a fresh appeal by her, who said her two
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daughters desperately miss her and need her back . forensic and need her back. forensic search specialist peter folding says they need to rule everything out, but he could have put the phone on the bench . somebody could have found it and put it on the bench just on the nearest bench. we don't know this. nobody knows. this is a complete mystery, this whole thing. and normally somebody falls if nicola falls in the water. if nicola went in here, her body would have straight to the bottom. it would remain there and police divers have that divers would have found her that day . the bbc divers would have found her that day. the bbc chairman has denied giving boris johnson financial advice before getting the job at the broadcaster after calling their relationship broadly professional . richard sharp has professional. richard sharp has appeared for questioning before across a party panel of employees this morning. it's after it was revealed he was involved in helping secure mr. johnson a loan of up to £800,000 before the then prime minister back to his appointment to the role at the bbc. his selection is under investigation . shadow
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is under investigation. shadow climate secretary ed miliband is calling on the government to bnng calling on the government to bring forward a proper windfall tax on energy companies after bp announced its biggest yearly profit in history. announced its biggest yearly profit in history . the energy profit in history. the energy giant has more than doubled its earnings from the year before, earnings from the year before, earnings from the year before, earnin g £23 billion in profits earning £23 billion in profits in 2022. after energy prices surged due to the war in ukraine. bp chief executive bernard says stronger plant reliability and a lower cost of production helped with profits . production helped with profits. the shadow defence secretary is to argue cuts to the british army must be halted to show the uk is a leading european member in nato . uk is a leading european member in nato. in uk is a leading european member in nato . in a speech at the in nato. in a speech at the royal united services institute today, john healey will outline labour's plans to ensure the uk's duty to the alliance are fulfilled . full. it follows fulfilled. full. it follows
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defence secretary ben wallace concede the armed forces had been hollowed out and underfunded . nurses are staging underfunded. nurses are staging a action again today in an ongoing dispute over pay . it ongoing dispute over pay. it follows what was called biggest strike in nhs history yesterday with nurses and ambulance workers out. members from the royal college of nursing as well . gmb and unite unions are taking part. health leaders have described this week as incredibly disrupted . unions incredibly disrupted. unions have urged ministers in england to offer a new pay deal to prevent further action. but ministers say they want to look forward to next year's pay . and forward to next year's pay. and some news that we've just been receiving in the last few minutes, the government has announced the new names in, the cabinet reshuffle with greg hands appointed the new conservator of party chairman grant shapps has been appointed
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secretary state for energy security and kemi badenoch has been appointed as secretary of state for business and trade . so state for business and trade. so those updates we're just hearing for you now, we will, of course, have more on this for you shortly. that's all for me for now. back to back . now. back to back. very good morning . welcome back. very good morning. welcome back. steps how to stay on gb news. you're just joining us. where have you been? but fear not there is still lots to come. prime minister rishi sunak has just shuffling his just finished shuffling his cabinet to four new departments and a host of new appointments. stay here to find out who stay right here to find out who has got the top jobs and more importantly, why will this be enough to save the tory party? let me know. gb views at gbnews.uk . and as today marks 11 gbnews.uk. and as today marks 11 sad days since nicola bailey has
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gone missing, we're looking at the wider problem of missing people . you won't believe how people. you won't believe how many people actually go missing in the uk every year. we're going to be finding out a little bit that it might bit about that and how it might be the family at time. be for the family at this time. i'm going be joined by the i'm going to be joined by the former adviser michael gove, former adviser to michael gove, charlie the author charlie rowley and the author amy for some the amy nicholl for some of the day's stories. of day's top stories. and of course, to all my third panellist, get in touch. panellist, do get in touch. email me, gbviews@gbnews.uk or tweet to have your tweet me at gb news to have your . so it's a day in politics. the prime minister has announced his cabinet reshuffle in the last couple of that's crossover live now to westminster and speak to darren mccaffrey . good morning, darren mccaffrey. good morning, daryn. what else we heard in the last few moments ? well, we've last few moments? well, we've all had it in one go, if you like, downing street in the last couple of minutes, issuing a statement with details of those new departments and indeed the ministers that will lead them. let me talk through them.
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let me talk you through them. first all, a grant shapps first of all, a grant shapps news from the business department that no longer exists to a new department. the secretary of energy secretary of state for energy and net zero a reflection i think there of clearly the situation the uk finds itself in in terms of energy prices and a reliance particularly foreign gas. so energy security for that but so too net zero rishi sunak making it clear that he's determined to that commitment of being net zero by the middle of this century. and michelle donelan is the secretary state for science , innovation and for science, innovation and technology . again, a new technology. again, a new government department. it clearly the prime minister has talked in the past about trying to make the uk a science superpower. this is an effort to do so, to have a ministry effectively devoted to that. kemi badenoch was the trade minister effectively remains in that post, but consumers also in that post, but consumers also in that new department is business. so she will be secretary of
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state for business and trade . state for business and trade. she remains president of the board of trade and also the minister for women and equalities. so effectively her remit to a large degree has in creased, if you like, at lucy frazer will be the secretary seat now for culture media and sports. that's the old simsek department if you like that michelle donelan had been and greg hands we talked about this last hour is the new conservative party chair and what an uphill struggle he has to try and get the conservative party on a firm footing going into those local elections a little later on this year and almost certainly a general election next year time, election next year to time, which the party, of course, is in a pretty terrible position in the polls, in which members seem frankly quite depressed about where they're at and what there's an awful lot of division and the lack of money for the conservative party. so that's the mini reshuffle that seems to have gone pretty smoothly. it must said, for rishi sunak this morning. many will ask what
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difference is this all going to make. as you know, changing government departments moving certain bits around. is it really going to fundamentally change much ? i think what rishi change much? i think what rishi sunakis change much? i think what rishi sunak is trying to do here is send a signal about his priorities beyond the he's announced at the start of the yean announced at the start of the year, whether that's on energy security or whether on security or whether it's on science . but in the end, there science. but in the end, there will be criticism that is essentially just trying to reorganise some desks. deckchairs on the will not deckchairs on the decks will not actually really fundamentally probably going to change the conservative idea of the government's electoral reform . government's electoral reform. it's let's get more now from my panellists this morning but. you've been promoted charlie rowley thank you. well, you all ring the bell, you'll. that was lucky, wasn't it ? any standout lucky, wasn't it? any standout appointments there? that surprise you or that you think looked like a really good fit a couple of things, actually. and i thought what i was just saying is right on the money the first thing is these kemi badenoch i
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was there's a slight promotion. yeah, it's a bump for business with the department for international trade. she has international trade. so she has assumed the business as well as international trade. i think that's a good because you that's a good move because you now economic department, that's a good move because you nov1treasury, economic department, that's a good move because you nov1treasury, setting|ic department, the treasury, setting out its economic growth forecast and what does for government what it does for government spending but also spending as a whole, but also having department. now, having real department. now, that to looking at that is going to be looking at growing businesses as well as getting investment into getting inward investment into the increase in the country is a an increase in the country is a an increase in the powers that they've also given her a little bit of a side job haven't they've made a minister for women and equalities. is a role equalities. yes, she is a role that i think she's had previously. it's that role in particular that seems to get shuffled around, whether it's in the office at the the cabinet office at the centre. but she's, she's maintained people maintained that then some people say just give the say that would just give her the bit women, just give bit about the women, just give her bit as well. her the women's bit as well. that's not very important. but well, she's been very hot. you know, and she know, she's a tough talk and she gets very well with the gets down very well with the conservative grassroots because of on of her stance, particularly on equalities. well equalities. and she's very well liked the only other stand, i think a couple of things is lucy frazer becoming the new
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secretary state. a secretary of state. that's a promotion think right in promotion i think i'm right in saying me. i'm saying somebody correct me. i'm sure plenty people sure there's plenty of people that got access that are got access to correcting think she's correcting people. i think she's very currently currently sitting in levelling very currently currently sitting in department. levelling very currently currently sitting in department. i levelling very currently currently sitting in department. i waslevelling very currently currently sitting in department. i was formerly the department. i was formerly in. i think she might have been the housing minister, so we might frazer. might need lisa frazer. lucy frazer need another frazer so we may need another housing that is something housing and that is something that's is that's housing and planning is something that's hugely important backbench important to backbench tory and bs getting these bs in particular, getting these planning absolutely bs in particular, getting these planniwhere absolutely bs in particular, getting these planniwhere absolut
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haven't because they've started this new department, you say, for science, innovation and which sunak has at heart a technocrat. he will be loving this. he loves this. he doesn't it. he loves the technological move towards the future. so that in not really a surprise in a way not really a surprise that that new that we've got that new department. of our view got department. one of our view got in say, know , in touch to say, you know, departments, more civil servants, more money, tax. servants, more money, more tax. but to looking at these, but i have to looking at these, they quite quite smart they seem quite quite smart decisions as a layperson looking at this . exactly. and i think at this. exactly. and i think you're right. these these new departments, the way that the set up, it reflects ricci's priorities is and grant shapps just going to the department for energy security net zero that's something that i know a lot of people a lot of views about people have a lot of views about recently zero. but it shows recently net zero. but it shows the ambition conservative the ambition of the conservative party to be a compassionate conservative party that takes the decisions the tough decisions on the economy migration, is economy, on migration, but is also committed to net zero and making sure that we have new technology in to make sure that we are energy efficient and we are more energy efficient and we are more energy efficient and we the energy we have the energy sustainability country and sustainability this country and we're on places we're not reliant on places
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russia of all crises russia because of all the crises that response to energy that seen in response to energy pnces that seen in response to energy prices in ukraine, is prices in ukraine, it is controversial though. the net zero, agenda 30. it is controversial and grant shapps is going to have to have some quite difficult conversations, isn't he? and also a lot of pressure from the fossil fuel industry ? exactly. so and i industry? exactly. so and i think you need the reason why it's in a page in that grant is in that role is because he's a brilliant media performer. we've seen him when he was at the department for transport having tough negotiations with the transport going to transport unions. he's going to have and sell net zero for have to go and sell net zero for all of the benefits that it provides. and that's not just insulating it's insulating homes, but it's investing new technology to investing in new technology to make sure is cleaner make sure where is cleaner greener we possibly greener country as we possibly can be in order to get bills down and order to make sure that we're not as energy reliant as we're not as energy reliant as we have been the past on we have been in the past on places like russia. okay right. thanks, go thanks, charlie. don't go anywhere. back in the anywhere. you can be back in the day in just a moment with amy. but joining me now for more on this is the international trade expert government adviser expert and government adviser shanker good morning.
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shanker singham. good morning. shanker singham. good morning. shanker you . morning. shanker to see you. morning. what did what do you think? i know it's only broken the last few moments. you may not have had an awful lot of time to look at the change is but in terms of the conservative and moving it forward did these like positive and possibly popular decisions . and possibly popular decisions. yeah i think , i think clearly yeah i think, i think clearly energy is a huge issue and in breaking it out of the broader department and the focus on energy security , net zero, i energy security, net zero, i mean, sometimes don't always necessarily go together very consistently but the idea of energy security, lowering the cost of energy, energy policy, regulated changes that are necessary to make the energy market more efficiently. and that's what i think that's very important. so i think that's quite a good focus. i think we science and technology department is sort of recognising that data . in recognising that data. in a sense, data is almost new currency. i mean, data flow movement is incredibly important
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. it really is about business and regulation . it's not it's and regulation. it's not it's not sort of add to on a media and culture ministry. so i think that that makes sense . the that that makes sense. the interesting one, i think in terms of how it plays out is going to be business. and the trade department merged . we've trade department merged. we've really back to the old really gone back to the old department of trade and industry in a sense , but there will be in a sense, but there will be cultural issues there because typically it has been very liberalising type of . department liberalising type of. department commerce, ministries around the world generally , business world generally, business ministries around the world tend to favour incumbents. they tend to favour incumbents. they tend to be a little bit more protectionist. there will be a little of cultural battle little bit of a cultural battle there. but because kemi badenoch is the sector state to the whole department she was drc secretary of state. i she drives a liberalising agenda. one hopes that she will drive it liberalising agenda through the whole department. so i think broadly speaking these are
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sensible moves and they prioritise think what needs to be prioritised . mm. i can't have be prioritised. mm. i can't have here shankar without asking you to reflect a bit on what liz truss wrote in the papers on sunday with her enormous 4000 word article , with her word article, with her explanation as to why she didn't stay in number 10 for longer. and she blamed an entrenched culture that she had underestimated when it to how to run the economy. what are thoughts on on her and her take on events that she depicted in the paper ? well, i mean, first the paper? well, i mean, first of all, i think it is important that she sets out her take on what happened . and i think it's what happened. and i think it's it is very important that the ideas that she tried to push in government, which essentially not particularly controversial ideas or the ideas of open of pro—competitive regulation of making markets more efficient and of property rights protection and low taxes. these are not controversial ideas. and
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it would be a terrific shame. i think , if the result all of this think, if the result all of this was that those ideas lost were these are the ideas that frankly have lifted hundreds of millions of people in world out of poverty and created enormous amounts of prosperity around the world. and we shouldn't we shouldn't sight of that. shouldn't lose sight of that. and i think that's one thing that i think she she wanted to set out. i think if she's guilty of anything, it's certainly of underestimating the entrenched incumbent interests that are out there. i mean, for example . the there. i mean, for example. the market that sort of calls the initial crisis, the orchids , my initial crisis, the orchids, my fear is that there are lots of financial services , product financial services, product markets out there which have relied for far too long artificially low interest rates and artificially cheap money. and there's quite a lot of moral hazard in the system. in other words, people doing things that are risky that they wouldn't do if it was a sort of market
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interest rate, if you will, but with artificially low cost of money. they do do it. and this unwound the energy markets and that's what caused a lot of problems for her in particular. but there's a lot blame to go around there. and i do hope that there will be some sort of investigate action of the role that the bank of england played that the bank of england played that the bank of england played that the regulators played in this market in the run to, because has been building because this has been building for time, i hope we can for some time, i hope we can learn some lessons from what actually in market actually happened in ldi market to apply it to others because you know interest rates are going be high than they were. going to be high than they were. they have to be because we're deaung they have to be because we're dealing with these inflationary pressures and that is going to cause some effects in a lot of these markets and, it is imperative that we deal with distortions. but part of what liz truss was trying to achieve, i think is a market in the uk thatis i think is a market in the uk that is less distorted . it that is less distorted. it currently is just so. it's to
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you. but i want to ask, do you think interest rates have peaked now? do you think they're going to go up even further? i don't think they will go up necessarily . a lot of it this necessarily. a lot of it this depends on the inflation environment that we're in and how the bank of england reacts to that inflation modelling. so how the federal reserve in the us does with an inflationary environment in the. so i don't think we know the answer to that yet, but i mean i think the problems that have with problems that people have with interest up is their interest rates going up is their mortgages. and i think, you know, other countries people know, in other countries people have ability to have rate have the ability to have rate mortgages for the lifetime of the mortgage. and think one of the mortgage. and i think one of the mortgage. and i think one of the you know, the things that you know, truss's premiership was trying to challenge people is to to challenge people to do is to ask, don't we have that in ask, why don't we have that in the why do i to fixed the uk? why do i have to fixed for specific of time and then for a specific of time and then ihave for a specific of time and then i have to flirt when in other countries you don't have to do, there's choice . if i may there's more choice. if i may have just one last question . have just one last question. what do you think about these massive profits that these energy companies have announced this bp and shell over
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energy companies have announced this week? bp and shell ove r £30 this week? bp and shell over £30 billion are billion when people are struggling their struggling to pay their fuel bills the moment. struggling to pay their fuel bills the moment . well, bills at the moment. well, i generally i know that there is a big push for windfall profits, taxes , so forth. but what people taxes, so forth. but what people don't always see is that there is a cycle here and there is enormous amount of investment that these companies have to make in infrastructure installed in development that actually doesn't yield anything. and you know, the oil price can be very, very low for long periods of time. so they have to deal with that fluctuating . so i don't that fluctuating. so i don't think it's a good instinct at the moment know, we see the price and the and the results and profitability . we then and profitability. we then attack the profitability by all right. positive demand in these i mean they're already paying a 75% windfall profits tax. so it's already quite high. i think a need to do more now. the only the only caveat i would make to thatis the only caveat i would make to that is if that profit is arising from a distortion of the
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market in favour of those companies , for example, if companies, for example, if they're subsidised or something like that, then i think it's a different question then i think a legitimate argument for so that kind of practise. but i think that's what's happening here. okay all right. thank you so much, shankar , that now after so much, shankar, that now after this short break, we are going to be talking to my panel, going to be talking to my panel, going to be talking to my panel, going to be back here. we're going to look at the biggest news stories of the day, including talking about the shocking number of dog bites, which hospital? britain's every year . bites, which hospital? britain's every year. don't go anywhere. you want to watch that ? hello. you want to watch that? hello. i'm alex deakin and this is your latest weather update from the met office. sparkling winter sunshine for many quite bit of cloud across parts of the north and a little bit of light rain interest course, parts of interest of course, parts of southern that's from southern scotland. that's from this but it's this weather front, but it's weakening the as it weakening all the time as it bumps up against this of bumps up against this area of high another one will high pressure. another one will arrive during tomorrow. the ice of squeezing together . it's of our squeezing together. it's going bring strong winds going to bring some strong winds across scotland. the across parts of scotland. the one though, is bringing one today, though, is bringing a bit cloud and a little bit
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bit more cloud and a little bit of and drizzle here of light rain and drizzle here and could east of and there could see east of northern ireland, southwest scotland, sunny spells the far northwest, turning northwest, but it is turning here england, where it's here for england, where it's been starts. that fog is been a foggy starts. that fog is taking a while to clear away, but revealing plenty of sunshine for most this afternoon. temperatures average generally 89 degrees, but ten or 11 across parts of north—east england and eastern scot and so quite mild here . it'll turn pretty cold here. it'll turn pretty cold pretty quickly again this evening across the south of frost , taking hold rapidly. and frost, taking hold rapidly. and then the fog thicken up then the fog will thicken up once more overnight. some dense patches , fog which will again be patches, fog which will again be around for tomorrow morning's rush hour cloud increasing across scotland and northern. so again, not as cold, not as frosty here in the south, minus five, minus six in rural spots . five, minus six in rural spots. another sunny one wants that focus cleared, but it will be around for the morning rush out and then winds really picking up dunng and then winds really picking up during course of wednesday across far . some during course of wednesday across far. some rain coming across the far. some rain coming in here later. the winds, the greatest for concern that greatest cause for concern that could cause some disruption . could cause some disruption. certainly issues
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certainly some travel issues with ferries being affected and, some of the bridges here as well. most places again, having a dry day, one in the a dry day, sunny one in the south. once that focus cleared, more further north, we more cloud further north, we will see this rain sweeping in as we go through wednesday evening across the of evening across the parts of scotland , northern ireland, scotland, northern ireland, followed little bit snow followed by a little bit snow over the hills pushing into northern england. but again, as it pushes that rain it pushes southwards, that rain will tend to fizzle out and the outlook is generally dry fairly over the course of the second half of the week and slowly turning mild .
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adviser to michael gove, charlie rowley . and guess how many rowley. and guess how many people per year you know this because we've looked at it, but how many people end up in hospital each year in the in the uk because of dog bites 9000 people. that is a huge number charlie. and we've had these two very high profile cases recently haven't we? there was the 28 year old woman in a case room. she was a dog walker, had eight dogs, lost her life. a poor little four year old girl in milton keynes was also mauled to death a dog. and it's death by a dog. and it's starting to sort of make its way into the headlines against these stories whether should stories of whether we should have more restrictions on dogs. what think ? yeah, and two what do you think? yeah, and two very cases. cases that very tragic cases. cases that you highlighted and you you you highlighted and you there are certain things that there are certain things that the do. think, the council can do. and i think, for example, in the first instance the year old, instance of the 28 year old, i think the local council issued licences for a certain number of dogs. you can walk. i think it was six at the time and that individual was walking a couple of more but you know the point remains that attacks seem remains that these attacks seem to the up my only with
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to be on the up now my only with dogs delivering leaflets and dogs is delivering leaflets and you knocking on doors or campaigning and you you do get your fingers sort of you know, nip a few perhaps that are nip by a few perhaps that are sort of waiting behind the door. and the post is very conservative well, you . oh, yes conservative well, you. oh, yes , they do that to you, charlie. you're so lovely. that's very kind. very kind . but if a pasty kind. very kind. but if a pasty and, you know, you hear about these almost always all the time, it just sort of and so i don't know quite what the answer, but there does need to be more work. i think in terms of making sure that in owners are particularly responsible for looking dogs, they looking after dogs, that they are the lead and in are kept on the lead and in pubuc are kept on the lead and in public places where some think dunng public places where some think during dog during lockdown. i think dog ownership of ownership increased because of loneliness you know there is loneliness and you know there is a role dogs that you know a role for dogs is that you know these seem to domestically and i think we brought up an interesting point there because you council limits you you said the council limits you to dogs, but we all know to six dogs, but we all know there's big difference between there's a big difference between six jack russells and six rottweilers. yeah. and the situation is that the dangerous
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dogs act passed in 1991 and it banned certain breeds. but now people are breeding crossbreed eating. so one of the cases here, it was a pit bull crossed with a husky and that's not in this legislation . so what this legislation. so what they're discussing now is whether we need to bring back the idea of a dog licence. yeah because to me, having a dog with a certain dog, i used to have a belgian, i have no idea what that looks like. it's just a bit like a police. oh, right. a powerful i think dogs that dog massive dog that in the wrong handsis massive dog that in the wrong hands is a seriously dangerous one though. i think we need to take more seriously the what these dogs are capable of, if in these dogs are capable of, if in the wrong hands. i'm scared of all dogs . i the wrong hands. i'm scared of all dogs. i don't mind admitting it. i literally was brought up in a family where all the women scared dogs and the men scared of dogs and all the men love dogs. i don't know whether found the gene being scared found the gene for being scared of but i clearly have it. of dogs, but i clearly have it. i've of dogs, but i clearly have it. pve get of dogs, but i clearly have it. i've get better because i've had to get better because my dogs. my children love dogs. but i definitely in recent times have been bit more like, well, most been a bit more like, well, most people that, you
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people look after that, you know, teach not know, probably not teach not wanting pass my fear and wanting to pass on my fear and therefore not teaching my kids actually to be mindful dogs . actually to be mindful of dogs. the person , a delivery the delivery person, a delivery man, the delivery post. men and women . these numbers are really women. these numbers are really shocking. two and a half to 3000 dog bites happen every year to delivery people . and in the past delivery people. and in the past five years, a thousand of them have had their fingers amputated. as a result, have had their fingers amputated. as a result , attacks amputated. as a result, attacks through letterboxes . it's i've through letterboxes. it's i've meaning to think that they need be. well then how you can have a licence the dog. maybe it would still do that. well people say don't they? there's no such thing as a bad dog, just a bad owner. so i do think it comes back to handling of the dog. back to the handling of the dog. yeah. behaviour is based on yeah. the behaviour is based on what from the owner. i what it learns from the owner. i think onus definitely on think the onus is definitely on whoever's the dog whoever's keeping the dog and the as said charlie the numbers. as you said charlie , absolutely boomed , numbers have absolutely boomed since lockdown . the number of since lockdown. the number of dogs were there were 13 million in the uk now compared to 7.6 million in 2012. so ten years
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they've you know , kind of they've you know, kind of doubled. so be careful with your dogs and be careful probably with your kids around dogs as well right now. maybe get a cat . yeah. now, coming up, well right now. maybe get a cat . yeah. now, coming up , today . yeah. now, coming up, today marks 11 days. awful story . all marks 11 days. awful story. all of us can't stop thinking about it since the mother of two, nicola polly, went missing. we're asking, is there enough support provided of support provided to families of missing we're to missing people? we're going to from as well after the from an expert as well after the morning's news. good morning from the gb newsroom at 1133, here are the headlines . rishi here are the headlines. rishi sunak has revealed his new cabinet following a reshuffle morning whilst creating new departments . greg morning whilst creating new departments. greg hands takes over as the new conserva tive party chairman after the dame zahawi was sacked . the business, zahawi was sacked. the business, trade and culture departments have been broken down into separate units with grant shapps now secretary of state for a new energy security and net zero department aimed at securing
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long term energy supply and bringing down bills. can we build noc as the new secretary of state for business trade? lucy frazer become the culture secretary taking over from michelle donlan , who has been michelle donlan, who has been made a new science and technology . secretary eastern technology. secretary eastern turkey has been struck by a third earthquake measuring 5.7 this morning as the number of people across the country and syria has risen to more than 5000. the first 7.8 magnitude quake hit yesterday morning where the second major earthquake measuring 7.5. just a few hours later . almost 6000 few hours later. almost 6000 buildings have been destroyed in the tremor and aftershocks . the tremor and aftershocks. rescuers continue to dig through the rubble and. search for survivors below . the bbc survivors below. the bbc chairman has denied giving boris johnson financial advice , johnson financial advice, calling their relationship broadly professional . richard broadly professional. richard sharp has appeared for questioning before mps it's
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after it was revealed he involved in helping secure mr. johnson a loan of up to involved in helping secure mr. johnson a loan of up t 0 £800,000 johnson a loan of up to £800,000 before the then prime minister backed his appointment to the role at the bbc. his selection is under investigation . shadow is under investigation. shadow secretary ed miliband is calling on the government to bring forward proper windfall tax on energy companies after bp announced its biggest yearly profit in history. announced its biggest yearly profit in history . the energy profit in history. the energy giant has more than doubled its earnings from the year before , earnings from the year before, adding earnings from the year before, addin g £23 billion in profits in adding £23 billion in profits in 2020 to after energy prices surged due to the in ukraine. bp chief executive bernard says stronger plant reliability and a lower cost of production helped with profits . tv online and with profits. tv online and disney plus radio . this is.
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gb news. welcome back. it's best to stay. my welcome back. it's best to stay. my guests, charlie and amy will be back with me to discuss stories in just a moment. but first of all, every year, more than 200,000 missing person reports made to the police. reports are made to the police. in the uk alone, leaving an emotional effect on families left behind. the case of 45 year old mum of two, nicola, who's been days now. been missing for 11 days now. further emphasises how traumatic the ordeal can be for families of missing people. so joining now to help understand this complicated , sad and emotionally complicated, sad and emotionally traumatic experience is the head of help lines and reconnections at missing people. paul joseph. good morning, paul. one important job you do, i think people will be shocked to realise how many folk are missing in the uk. every that number is enormous. 200,000 yes , it is. and of course, as you
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said, is every time that happens this families and people who care after worried about those people a, lot of cases are resolved relatively quickly . but resolved relatively quickly. but even during that time, it's an incredibly traumatic thing to be going through . do you know , out going through. do you know, out of those 200,000 who are reported missing, how many eventually return to their families ? so the majority and families? so the majority and towards the high 90, 90, i think. but by monday it will be resolved within 24 hours. whether that's a positive or negative outcome and then there's still the a considerable amount that remain missing after amount that remain missing after a week . and then a proportion of a week. and then a proportion of that missing even long. so yeah, it's a lot of people, a lot of families dealing with that unknown, not knowing what's
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going on, the kind of panic which obviously can then move fears about what's happened , fears about what's happened, kind of disbelief . so lots of kind of disbelief. so lots of people really needing and not necessarily knowing to where go or or getting help, help with what's going on. you would think, wouldn't you, that with technology and that we're all walking , paul, with effectively walking, paul, with effectively a tracking device in our pocket, that it would become easier to find people who who go missing out of our lives. is that is that the case? because it doesn't sound like the numbers are necessarily that . i think , i are necessarily that. i think, i think obviously technology can can in many ways. but of course , if you're thinking about go missing, you're having to look at knowing exactly where, you know, where they went missing from. if you can track that back, you can have more information. obviously, with the investigation that's going with nick at the moment, they you know, they have a lot of information about where was information about where she was and narrowed it down to and have narrowed it down to very specific time. but
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obviously, if is a case where someone left work time, someone may be left work time, that's last time they that's the last time they someone and then it someone saw them. and then it wasn't until 4 hours later they didn't were didn't turn up where. they were supposed so i think i supposed to be. so i think i think it's almost like if you think it's almost like if you think about all the different for different things that can happen , it's whether whether the happen, it's whether whether the police know about a missing case quickly enough whether they can access things quickly enough, whether they have the resources to yeah it is surprising. to do so. yeah it is surprising. we do feel like our lives are being monitored in many ways, but i think if don't have a starting point for tracking someone, then then that is a lot harder. what's the first kind of route of inquiry that that most people will take when someone that they love is as apparently vanished. what the first thing that you advise people to do? yes. so mean people will normally check with where the person was. so maybe that might be with friends they were out with or with work . make the with or with work. make the relevant calls and different
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things. obviously try try their phone. try social media or whatsapp the different things. and then obviously if that doesn't doesn't this there's no answers that then people should consider going to the police . consider going to the police. people always think you have to wait 24 hours before reporting people to base, which isn't true . if you if the disappearance is out of character, you're worried about would always say to contact the police and we'd say us a call. we've got a helpline. one, 16000. that's here every day by phone, text and email . we day by phone, text and email. we can talk people through what to do . a website also has lots of do. a website also has lots of information about different things can because if you things you can do because if you think sort of panic think about the sort of panic and chaos when you're worried about someone, there might be small thought small things you haven't thought about. to about. and actually having to bounce really bounce ideas off might really help. we would always say, you know , don't don't hesitate in know, don't don't hesitate in going to contact the police if you've done all the other things and are still worried about someone, it doesn't feel appropriate to . speculate about appropriate to. speculate about what's happened to nicola bully.
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everyone is just their fingers crossed that she turns up safe and well . but give us an crossed that she turns up safe and well. but give us an idea of what her family might be going through now, particularly the children as professor knowles, what would your advice be to the family and the children ? yeah, family and the children? yeah, having someone missing can be an incredibly isolating thing because we all have certain things that we go through in life. maybe that's kind of shared with people such as bereavement, illness, loss other things. so at least you often connect with people and kind of maybe maybe get some support in that way. but of course not many people have someone missing in their don't about their lives and don't know about it. also, well as dealing it. also, as well as dealing with being that with a personal being that you're with, not not not you're dealing with, not not not knowing what's happened, we'd always know, out always say, you know, reach out to support an to get support from an organisation and of organisation like us and of course, in a situation like this things are very high profile . if things are very high profile. if all this lots of media, lots of speculation. so that makes it very hard for people to cope. any of the normal things would do in their routine anyway. so
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yes, i'd say situation where someone's missing it can just be very , very isolating, very very, very isolating, very worrying. people are worried about their routine. people might feel it. they don't want to leave the house in case the person comes back every every phone call they make . so we'd phone call they make. so we'd always say, you know, get support for them. it's support for them. like, it's nice to what resources nice to see what resources you've around you terms you've got around you in terms of family. and of friends and family. and sometimes say actually, sometimes people say actually, well, will be well, maybe this friend will be the who keeps an eye on the person who keeps an eye on this part of the social media. this friend can do something this friend can can do something else. could in touch else. person could be in touch with this family been in with media. this family been in touch with police. so on touch with police. and so on also bit of a break from also gets a bit of a break from doing of the activity of trying to find them and have a bit of time to actually deal with the emotions of what's going on as well. okay. thank you . really well. okay. thank you. really interesting insight, though. i mean, do the little known world really of who go missing really of people who go missing every day missing people, every day from missing people, paul joseph, the panel all about with me this morning. right. broadcaster amy nicole and former special adviser to michael gove, charlie rowley .
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michael gove, charlie rowley. right. just two reflections on that, amy shouldn't say sort of as a mum , as mums, there is as a mum, as mums, there is something deeply, deeply sad and moving about that story isn't there. of course because it almost makes you think of that moment in the supermarket where you look behind you and they're not there yet feeling that you get by. only this case she get by. only in this case she didn't have . the relief of didn't have. the relief of realising they just didn't yeah that yeah i know and we just you know we worried about those kids, aren't we? and just just really sad if you've got any information about nicola, we just just keep spreading it. spreading on social media. tweet it, there, get aware. it, get it out there, get aware. you might have driving down you might have been driving down that right , you might have been driving down that right, charlie ? we are that road right, charlie? we are going to be talking now. oh want to talk about the cabinet reshuffle, right . loads of reshuffle, right. loads of you've been getting in touch, right, i don't right, ollie? you said i don't care the mini reshuffle. care about the mini reshuffle. if our prime minister doesn't show backbone a steel, show some backbone on a steel, i'm case of i'm afraid it'll be a case of rishi out soon. and this one from kevin. michelle donelan, who a history in politics
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who has a history in politics degree, now science degree, is now science secretary. i give up. are secretary. i give up. tories are finished. just that because we non—politician and often look and think how can you from being in charge of transport to suddenly be in charge of the nhs and expect you to be an expert on these? one of rubbish on these? now one of the rubbish i said it's a legitimate i said oh well it's a legitimate question i think answer question but i think the answer is that you can have a bit of both in india in, the team and they'll be people that, you know have experience in a have the experience in a particular and particular field that can in and demonstrate huge knowledge in that particular area . but that particular area. but actually sometimes there are departments where you do need a fresh pair of eyes, where you do need somebody that might be from a business background to come into, department it into, a department that and it might be bit clunky isn't might be a bit clunky isn't operating or isn't firing all cylinders. your cylinders. and with your experience turn experience you can actually turn that turn your that experience and turn your hand a department where you hand into a department where you can make progress, can actually make progress, an area been made progress area that has been made progress . progress hasn't been made previously. probably previously. so you probably need to listener . to be a really good listener. you have accept what the team you have to accept what the team is telling you with their wealth of experience. you have to have
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amy sufficiently little amy nichols sufficiently little ego that you can listen and on board what the people in that particular industry wants to do , whilst also being a good decision working with a team. i'm just thinking about the skills that you need to be one of these. i feel like by listing out skills you've out all those skills you've eliminated candidates eliminated all the candidates that were going to that i know you were going to say that and you think the labour the labour lot would be better? absolutely why? because they solutions and they they have solutions and they listen . but do they have the listen. but do they have the skills that i've just been describing? do they have those dynamic , forthright ambitions dynamic, forthright ambitions and vision for the nation? i think there are certain candidates within the labour. i really admire that. cooper wonderful . great of very wonderful. a great list of very compassionate with all the policies that comes out policies that she comes out with, thornberry as well, with, emily thornberry as well, also sense of humour, also got a good sense of humour, which i like in politician in which i like in a politician in without having that massive of the of maybe the the likes of maybe the conservative frontbench which i respond to that charlie . well if respond to that charlie. well if the labour vulnerable, if labour got answers on all of these
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issues , i and ollie and everyone issues, i and ollie and everyone in the country looks forward to heanng in the country looks forward to hearing them because we haven't heard anything since i don't think. okay now another story in the today. headteachers the papers today. headteachers will be warned not to keep parents in dark over. trans parents in the dark over. trans lessons. is department of lessons. this is a department of education told heads that education who've told heads that they material sensitive they must material on sensitive topics. education secretary gillian cagle . keegan urged to gillian cagle. keegan urged to clarify her definition of a woman. of course . what do you woman. of course. what do you think about this, amy? very good on the trans issue. i know you feel very strongly that trans people get a bad. yeah and i think this is another example of some good fashioned fear mongering because , really. the mongering because, really. the story is ministers are reminding them to share lgbt teaching and rc their rc policy know that's already a given rc policy would be available on your school's website for across the board in relation ship. that's been mandatory for the i think since it changed in 2020. so this is all a bit of a non—story to kind of parents into fairy egg that their children are going to be
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converted into being trans children because that's what all us woke is one which is actually quite ridiculous because to it is not woke to understand what trans teens need and the understanding and the attention comes with that. sorry, sorry . comes with that. sorry, sorry. we've got to go to a bit more breaking news. it's been one of those days, a full moment. police officer david carrick is being for crimes on sexual offences. let's get more from so the status you have the crown court status you have the crown court status you have the for you the prospect of a difficult time in custody for many years . you joined the many years. you joined the metropolitan police in 2001 that put you in unique position with exceptional powers to and control you will have sworn the oath taken by all police constables, which includes the promise i will to the best of my power , cause the peace to be
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power, cause the peace to be kept and preserved , and prevent kept and preserved, and prevent all offences against the persons and properties of her majesty's subjects . in summarising the subjects. in summarising the facts of the offences , i will facts of the offences, i will not use names so that none of the victims lose the legal protection they are entitled to . you know who they are, and so do they they . nor is it do they they. nor is it necessary to repeat detailed recital outline signed by mr. little king. his counsel in court this week . sir, to the court this week. sir, to the themes emerge . firstly, this themes emerge. firstly, this violent sexual offending against women commenced almost immediately after you became a police constable and you referred to your job when offending . just over year, after offending. just over year, after gaining the office while you were working in merton borough , were working in merton borough, you met a 22 year old. i will call in a bar . you invited her
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call in a bar. you invited her to a housewarming party, which you said would be taking place your flat nearby . you told, her. your flat nearby. you told, her. you were the safest person she could be with because you were a police officer . she went with police officer. she went with you reassured by this reasoning . there was no party you held her against her will for hours. you raped her vaginally and anally, using violence . hold her anally, using violence. hold her down as she struggled. was a black handgun to her head. it real ? but of course, she does real? but of course, she does not know if it was actually real. and it has not been recovered . she froze , believing recovered. she froze, believing were going to rape and then kill her. so that was the judge at southern. southern crown court sentencing . police officer david sentencing. police officer david carrick for multiple sexual
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offences . we will bring you offences. we will bring you actual sentence as it happens. we've we're not the end of the show. yes my panel is still here. we will go back to that when we when we need to write. okay, guys, we were talking about trans story. this is teachers and you were saying, amy, this is teachers saying that they have to tell parents if that's going to be material in the classes and you in the classes and that you think this an unnecessary think this is an unnecessary statement make. so would statement to make. so why would education secretary ? gillian education secretary? gillian keegan be making this statement . what is she trying to do? charlie well, i actually don't think a negative tone. i think it's making sure that parents know this education is know that this education is taking place. and don't think taking place. and i don't think there'll disagreement , there'll be much disagreement, me and amy, on this, because i'm look, want in this country look, i want in this country because of the british that we are with liberty , equality, are with liberty, equality, people should be able to feel the to live the lives as they they should. and i hate this debate always gets reduced to what changing when people are going to be using what prison
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going to be using or what prison place going bang place we're going to bang them up and heard , up in. and we've heard, obviously, the terrible case in where it is absolutely right not to have a sexual predator, a sexual attacker who is biologically a male, who has used his body as a weapon against women to then be sentenced to a women's prison . sentenced to a women's prison. thatis sentenced to a women's prison. that is wholly inappropriate in scotland , and it's right that scotland, and it's right that they're addressing that. but is a issue in sense of the a small issue in sense of the wider problem , which is that wider problem, which is that people who are trans do not have the access education, they don't have the access to health care that they need in order to make sure that their lives are as free and as able and as they are able to live their lives as freely and successfully as the rest of us, i may. my concern, so much support for so much support for trans people. let me rephrase as i've rephrase that because as i've said people who said before, i think people who are troubled that way are genuinely troubled that way and the to and they see the solution to that depression in their happiness is to change their gendenl happiness is to change their gender. i think the problem is we not normalising what should be given a lot more time towards
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what is a mental decision what is a mental health decision function. well, i refute that being trans is at all a mental health dysfunction i think is just an innate characteristic that. do you, though? yes you do. however, amount of trauma . a do. however, amount of trauma. a lot of cases though. and the solution to change my gender. yeah so one of the findings of the cas report that looked into this really thoroughly this really really thoroughly was often can be was that quite often it can be misrepresented and it can be that the person isn't trans at all and is suffering from something else. and it's important they have access to the health care that charlie mentioned to differentiate and find out what's really going on with that young person before any wrong interventions are made . and unfortunately, because debate, debate , this subject has debate, debate, this subject has got so , so toxic and stories got so, so toxic and stories like this really, really don't . like this really, really don't. it's led to a lot of the parents mentioned this story, having assumptions about this subject , assumptions about this subject, ect, which means that the stigma
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of the stigma that is affecting people has increased so much that there is also a for space children to be able to tell their teachers in confidence because going home and telling their parents will have really negative repercussion . but they negative repercussion. but they must, if they're going to talk to their teachers that they must, the teachers must a responsibility to go to the parents. i say this is what your child has said. i don't agree. i think some cases it's think in some cases it's important in the way some important in the way with some parents attitudes to sexuality , parents attitudes to sexuality, if they tell their teacher in confidence , there is a place for confidence, there is a place for that confidence to be kept for the safety and risk to the child. yeah, yeah. but i totally disagree. i think if they were under 16, it should always be the responsibility guys the parents responsibility guys who we've had a of who we've had a lot of interruptions. you've done very, very up and very well. we buckled up and we made end charlie made it to the end charlie rowley, amy nicole, thank you so much. i'll see you both again. coming next is news live, coming up next is gb news live, mark longhurst. have mark longhurst. he'll have all the all the political the fallout of all the political shenanigans going shenanigans that have been going on i'm bev turner. on this morning. i'm bev turner. i'll you tomorrow ten.
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i'll see you tomorrow at ten. hello i'm alex deakin and this is your latest weather update from the met sparkling from the met office. sparkling winter many, quite winter sunshine for many, quite a cloud across of a bit of cloud across parts of the north a little bit of the north and a little bit of light rain and across parts of southern from southern scotland. that's from this but it's this weather front, but it's weakening all the time it weakening all the time as it bumps up against this area of high another will high pressure. another will arrive the arrive during tomorrow and the ice squeezing together. ice about squeezing together. it's bring some strong it's going to bring some strong winds scotland. winds across parts of scotland. the one though, is the one today, though, is bringing bit more cloud bringing a bit more cloud and a little bit of light rain and drizzle and could see drizzle here and there could see east of northern ireland, southwest scotland, sunny spells in but is in the far northwest. but it is turning here england, turning breezy here for england, where a foggy starts. where it's been a foggy starts. that while to that fog is taking a while to clear away , but revealing plenty clear away, but revealing plenty of sunshine for most this afternoon. temperatures about average generally 89 degrees. but ten or 11 across parts of north—east england, eastern scotland, so quite mild . it'll scotland, so quite mild. it'll turn pretty cold pretty quickly again this evening across the south of frost, taking hold rapidly and then the fog will thicken up once more overnight, some dense of fog which will again be around for tomorrow
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morning's rush hour. cloud increasing across and northern ireland. so again , not as cold, ireland. so again, not as cold, not as frosty here in the south, minus minus six in rural spots , minus minus six in rural spots, another sunny one. once that folk cleared , it will be around folk cleared, it will be around for the morning rush out and then the winds really picking up dunng then the winds really picking up during the course of wednesday across the northwest. some across the far northwest. some rain here later. but rain coming in here later. but the the greatest for the winds, the greatest for concern that could cause some disruption and certainly some travel with ferries travel issues with, ferries being and of the being affected and of the bndges being affected and of the bridges here as well . most bridges here as well. most places to get having a dry day, sunny south once that sunny in the south once that folk cleared more cloud folk is cleared more cloud further north. we will see this rain sweeping as go rain sweeping in as we go through wednesday evening across the scotland , northern the parts of scotland, northern ireland, followed by a little bit of over the hills bit of snow over the hills pushing into northern england. but again , as it pushes but again, as it pushes southwards, rain will tend southwards, that rain will tend to fizzle out and the outlook is generally dry fairly cloudy over the course of the second half of the course of the second half of the week and slowly mild . i'm the week and slowly mild. i'm camilla tominey join me on gb
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channel very good afternoon. it's 12 noon. you're with gb news live. i'm mark longhurst. i'm coming for you. this are sunak has reshuffled his cabinet and also reorganised whitehall's departments . tory reorganised whitehall's departments. tory member favourite cammy leading a new business and trade department while grant shapps heads up a new standalone department covering net zero. but plenty more numbers for michelle donlon as she gets a new science, innovation and technology
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