tv Dan Wootton Tonight GB News February 23, 2023 9:00pm-11:01pm GMT
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gb news. westminster is only on gb news. westminster is going around in ever decreasing circles, followed by the media. britain is broken. how on earth did we get into this mess? but more importantly ? how do we get more importantly? how do we get out of it? join me at 7 pm. monday through thursday on farage here on gb news. we will have open, rational. we've got to work out how britain moves forward from this. join us here on the people's channel. britain is watching . no spin is watching. no spin, no bias, no censorship. i'm dan wootton . no censorship. i'm dan wootton. slippery starmer has set out five vapid blairite missions for britain. but on a day where leader is making bold political promises, don't forget , the promises, don't forget, the bloke changes his mind every he opens his mouth . mohammed% opens his mouth. mohammed% behind jeremy hope and jeremy
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take on this effective asylum amnesty . i'm cancelled later amnesty. i'm cancelled later with the authoritarian publishers of roald dahl doubung publishers of roald dahl doubling down on their vandalism of the great author's work. camilla has stepped up as the anti woke the country so desperately needs remain to show calling unimpeded those who may wish to kerb the freedom your expression or limits on nation . expression or limits on nation. but was the queen consort right to weigh in and do influential pubuc to weigh in and do influential public figures need to join in defending free speech? we'll debate that in the media bias. plus lady colin campbell and phil dampier get stuck into ben wallace's stinging criticism of prince harry's tale about revelation. i'll find out what the defence secretary had to say when my royal masterminds join me live . and on the eve joining me live. and on the eve joining gb news one of the country's most famous unique political leaders gives his most personal
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interview ever . leaders gives his most personal interview ever. children have me wrapped around their little finger. do they ? i've given you finger. do they? i've given you all self doubt . oh, you mean the all self doubt. oh, you mean the whole time? yes and does she need to be the authoritarian? no. nanny gives an easy job as quickly as i do. so that brother's a little . there's not brother's a little. there's not much my unmissable exclusive at home with the irrepressible rees—mogg, where he'll reveal the man behind the political caricature as guardian foghorn owen jones demands. the uk bnngs owen jones demands. the uk brings begum home. i'll remind you sensibly, starmer backtracked on repatriation. the terrorist on the left endangenng terrorist on the left endangering britons with their extra scheme open borders policy both sides will battle it out over begum in the clash. as always a first look at tomorrow's newspaper front pages and a new greatest person and union has coming up, too. this is let's go .
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thought about and sister and i love very much. it's so exciting to them here today and forgive me for not being here the next fortnight, but i'm going to be with them . but before we kick with them. but before we kick off the show tonight, hit the news with aaron . news with aaron. good evening. i'm out. armstrong in the gb news room. the former hollywood film producer harvey weinstein has been to 16 additional years in prison after being found guilty of rape and sexual assault in la. weinstein is already serving a 23 year sentence for separate conviction in new york, which is under appeal. the jury in the los angeles case convicted weinstein on against a single known as jane doe , who says the incident jane doe, who says the incident happened when weinstein appeared uninvited at. her hotel room dunng uninvited at. her hotel room during , a uninvited at. her hotel room during, a film uninvited at. her hotel room during , a film festival in 2013. during, a film festival in 2013. the film mogul maintains the
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allegations against him were a set up disgrace . singer kelly set up disgrace. singer kelly has been sentenced to additional yearin has been sentenced to additional year in prison on top of the years he's serving for an earlier conviction and he's received a 20 yearjail term on charges relating child enticement and producing images of children almost of that will be served simultaneously alongside his previous sentence. in june last year, kelly was sentenced to 30 years in prison , being convicted on racketeering and prostitution charges he'll be eligible for around the age of 83. men have been arrested on suspicion of attempted murder following the shooting of a high ranking in omagh . detective chief inspector omagh. detective chief inspector john was targeted by two masked gunmen while . he was with his gunmen while. he was with his son at a sports centre county tyrone last night . son at a sports centre county tyrone last night. he's in a critical but stable condition . critical but stable condition. hospital police say dissident group the new ira is the primary and they're now reviewing the
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threat level in the last half an hour or so, the united nations general has overwhelmingly chosen to isolate russia , voting chosen to isolate russia, voting for lasting peace in ukraine and the u.n. has once again demanded russia withdraw its troops. the known binding resolution was passed by 141 votes to seven, with 32 abstentions, which included now its president as the ukraine's president. that is has paid tribute to all those who've died since the war began . it is the eve of the first hour of virtually of russia's invasion at the moment. and tomorrow the us president is due tomorrow the us president is due to meet volodymyr zelenskyy and g7 leaders virtually as well as announce a new wave of sanctions against. moscow several nations are holding vigils this evening in tribute to ukraine. paris's eiffel tower has been lit up in the colours of the ukrainian flag while in london hundreds of people have gathered in trafalgar square to pay their respects with defence secretary ben wallace , actress helen
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ben wallace, actress helen mirren. among those speeches , mirren. among those speeches, one minute's silence will be held across nation at 11 am. tomorrow. tv and dab radio. this is gb news now. it is back to dan wootton tonight . dan wootton tonight. trust in apollo . a pledge from trust in apollo. a pledge from slippery starmer is like believing in the sincerity of jeremy celebrating hanukkah . but jeremy celebrating hanukkah. but today the man is coasting towards the prime ministership, even though it's impossible to know what he really believes about anything other than winning . launched five weasley winning. launched five weasley and actually pretty meaningless missions essentially , this was missions essentially, this was the new version of ed miliband disastrous ed stones . here they disastrous ed stones. here they are secure the highest sustained growth in the g7 make britain a
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clean energy superpower with zero carbon electricity by 2030, accelerating the rush to net zero build an nhs fit for the future. make britain's streets safe, bright down the barriers to opportunity at every stage so as vague as vague can be, no timelines, no specific effects other than on the economically ruinous march to net zero and not a single mention of the invasion , our southern border or invasion, our southern border or out of control . a clear out of control. a clear concession that labour's open borders remains alive and well. oh he's already conceded defeat by saying all of this could even be achieved in one term. any way. also, honesty enough to say that some of these issues are not going to be fixed within five years. they are longer term than that. i don't think . it'll than that. i don't think. it'll come as a surprise to anyone that some of these issues are going to be longer term. that's we've said a decade of national.
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i'm not getting ahead of . but i'm not getting ahead of. but the bigger point an issue of trust . how can we believe c'est trust. how can we believe c'est schama believes in these pledges will implement them when time and time again from brexit to corbyn to him to his leftie leadership pledges . the man has leadership pledges. the man has said what he needs for political expediency at the time only to reverse course later . 100% reverse course later. 100% behind jeremy pope and jeremy will not stand for labour at the next general election as a labour party candidate, our opfions labour party candidate, our options must include campaigning for a public vote and nobody is rolling remain as an option. i've said on a number of occasions that we are not going back to the eu. is it transphobic to say it? only women have a cervix? no, it is something that shouldn't said for the vast majority women. this is all about biology.
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for the vast majority women. this is all about biology . of this is all about biology. of course they don't have a penis. we all know that. climate change is the issue of our time. and as the extinction rebellion protests showed us this week, the next generation are not going forgive if don't going to forgive us if don't take action, up, go home. going to forgive us if don't takeopposed up, go home. going to forgive us if don't takeopposed to up, go home. going to forgive us if don't takeopposed to whatjo home. going to forgive us if don't takeopposed to what you're e. i'm opposed to what you're doing. it's the way to deal with the climate crisis. and that's why we longer sentences for those that are clearing and stuck on roads. the was by the home secretary was the wrong decision and i think it was a rushed decision . i want to ask rushed decision. i want to ask you about shamima begum in 2019. you said stripping of a british citizenship was the wrong decision. she's lost her appeal to regain it. should should be allowed to appeal again . i think allowed to appeal again. i think the court decision yesterday was the court decision yesterday was the right decision. national security has to come first . no security has to come first. no wonder the prime rishi sunak decided to starmer's mish adds this week . no change talked this week. no change talked about his plans. we have heard that tomorrow he's going to announce five missions, but we
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all we already know what they are. it's uncontrolled immigration. it's reckless spending . it's higher debt. and spending. it's higher debt. and it's softer sentences. and for the fifth pledge. the fifth pledge, mr. speaker, we know it's that he reserved the right to change his mind. on the other .even to change his mind. on the other . even the british fashion corporation couldn't stomach another set of lies . the another set of lies. the opposition leader on the today this morning. you many of the pledges you made when you ran for leader. so why should people trust? well, look, so far as the pledges i ran for leader are concerned, they are important statements of value and principle over the last two or three years across the country. so you just answer the question by asking a new question. you spent years advocating for him to be prime minister. well, look, single of the labour look, every single of the labour party a labour party campaign for a labour government election, government at the next election, there's is to there's not nobody is going to say that's you know say that's vague. you know something that's easily achievable. let finish achievable. just let me finish the and i'll come straight to your point. the mission needs to
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be ambitious. to be ambitious. it needs to obviously, and everybody wants to they've got to be prime because they've got to be prime because they've got to the country to be ambitious for the country and verbiage starmer and literally verbiage. starmer spent campaigning for jeremy corbyn to be prime minister. he's spent years campaigning for a second referendum on brexit to undermine the biggest democratic mandate in british history. he lied to his party about, a hard left programme only to reverse the moment he secured leadership. his missions are meaningless because cares about one thing and one thing only. securing power and then doing what? hell of the globalist political establishment him to do? be warned to respond. now my superstar panel political commentator dominique samuels, the top tory sean bailey, and the top tory sean bailey, and the author and broadcaster amy nicholl . shaun bailey. how can nicholl. shaun bailey. how can we trust any of missions? i failed to challenge flop in chief . the challenge he's going
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chief. the challenge he's going to have is about authenticity. do people believe this people will remember his staunch lead backed corbyn. he didn't back the labour party. he backed corbyn made it. corbyn was removed. he backed out of backing corbyn and he gave all these pledges. but where's the detail. i think what keir starmer shiny he actually starmer shiny is he actually hasn't in politics that and hasn't been in politics that and the more he speaks the more risk he's to take that he's he's having to take that he's giving these people giving these pledges, people could the could say, fine, where's the detail about net zero. detail you talk about net zero. you about power . you talk about wind power. sounds fine. who's going to pay for well, leads people's for that? well, leads people's experience been experience of that. it's been dominated actually . the only dominated actually. the only specifics were on net specifics today were on net zero, which to me means actually labouris zero, which to me means actually labour is going through ruinous financial before they even try and recover the companies. if they're trying to do this net zero schtick by 2030, we finished. dominic yeah, i think that was the most sinister pledge in my mind that. that was the most sinister pledge in my mind that . he wants pledge in my mind that. he wants to make britain a zero carbon soup with power. i mean, that's a pretty rubbish thing to be a superpower of . but by 2030, he superpower of. but by 2030, he even admitted that the people
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he'd spoken to were really quite sceptical of this plan because what will it mean? it mean higher taxes for people and a rise in prices , general. rise in prices, general. probably a rise in our energy prices, although he claims that it will bring them down. and also, i think what's concerning is that all of the major growing economies have said that they're not actually going to go along this net zero stuff. pakistan have said they're not going to do it. one mission is going to destroy the other mission. right. because he says he wants to be the fastest growing in the g7. to be the fastest growing in the 67. well, to be the fastest growing in the g7. well, i'm sorry, mission three to be net zero by 2050 is immediately to make that immediately going to make that possible. just fact. possible. that's just a fact. exactly. and that's why economies china's economy economies like china's economy are going as fast at this as are not going as fast at this as we which says to me that we are, which says to me that he's not actually that serious about, making our economy as strong it could well, strong as it could be. well, i mean, the other thing is right. it's no, i'm not going it's like, oh, no, i'm not going do in years. he's do this in five years. he's going need to terms that that going to need to terms that that shows how confident he can be because of the leads that he's
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got in the polls at the moment, he is going be prime minister and he's going to be prime minister for two terms. it's just going to happen. i think what actually shows he's prepared paid excuse , you prepared paid his excuse, you know, the magic two or three years in italy. but we're not the fastest growing economy. he will just turn around say, will just turn around and say, i gave him a window were you inspired by these missions? because, other than because, as i say, other than net right it bunch net zero, right. it was a bunch of vagaries. it a bunch of blairite rubbish. least blairite rubbish. but at least in 97, with his credit cards , i in 97, with his credit cards, i mean, they were very specific pledges, you know, reduce cost classrooms sizes. it was very specific. this is just like make the nhs better. yeah cal economy, but it's meaningless mumbo jumbo. i mean, they could have tory pledges really . it have tory pledges really. it wasn't without the same thing these days aren't they. did you find whistle blower and one i would have liked were saying we join single market for your join the single market for your child you're wonder child care. oh you're a wonder immediately specific pledges that we hold on we've got to talk about that sort of moment, sean, because look , you know,
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sean, because look, you know, i've criticised this sunak for a number reasons, but at the end of the day at least he genuinely does want stop the boats. that is one of his top five priorities for the country. starmer not a word about the invasion on the southern today. not a word i a labour administration mean a return to open borders . what you'll see is open borders. what you'll see is the pressure that starmer's on people on the left have spoken about very open borders. he cannot speak against that and still retain support. so therefore he decided not to mention it at all, but what he has remember, he has to win the whole country. and if you provide a plan for that the country, won't back with real problem lies. any he talks about immigration , illegal or immigration, illegal or immigrants or whatever is asylum seekers is branded as racist. so it means now he is himself from a large part of the electorate. he's going to have to find way of speaking to those people without accusing of being racist. that's going to be tncky racist. that's going to be tricky because they're not going away. mean, we've we've away. i mean, we've seen we've seen demonstrations . they've got
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seen demonstrations. they've got heated . people are concerned heated. people are concerned about this . it doesn't go away. about this. it doesn't go away. however, labour have been clear about their strategy. they haven't forward haven't been clear . they haven't forward haven't been clear. they certainly have. they've talked opening safe and legal . they've been doing that legal. they've been doing that throughout . the open borders , throughout. the open borders, legal routes have been closed . legal routes have been closed. so at the moment we can only certain countries across . africa certain countries across. africa you have way of seeking a maze , you have way of seeking a maze, correct. they have been clear that they can open those routes. but what they need to explain to people what does mean? people is what does that mean? does more or less, of does it mean more or less, of course, no question of and we know more because because i mean, the commons superstore panel are with me all night, but our royal are still to come to and with defence secretary ben wallace slamming prince harry's boasting over his taliban kill count. boasting over his taliban kill count . should the government count. should the government have more of a say ? the fate of have more of a say? the fate of the runaway prince and phil dampier up soon. but first in
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the clash, actress and presenter barnett goes up against commentator , former aide to commentator, former aide to maggie thatcher, nile gardiner on where left is like and on where the left is like and jones are endangering britain with their borders and the with their open borders and the fact that they want to return. shamima begum to britain. now let me know what you think. email me down at gbnews.uk. i'll poll running there too. we're in just a moment.
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stand for by royal masterminds, eddie colin campbell, phil dampier. but first, it's clash and common sense prevailed . and common sense prevailed. shamima begum was denied entry into the uk with the isis brides bid to regain citizenship with thwarted on security grounds up and now even though her legal have vowed to fight on. we should never forget that slippery starmer and his attack dog, emily thornberry , wanted to dog, emily thornberry, wanted to bnng dog, emily thornberry, wanted to bring the terrorists back, pushing british lives in danger. i'm sorry. could then have said, well about a prevention order, which limits what an individual do back in this country. so i actually have the interests of the child being taken properly into i think we would into account. i think we would see that this was a wrong decision and rush by the home decision and a rush by the home secretary. i think that the best thing to have done with shimmying would shimmying the bacon would have been back to britain been to bring back to britain and her face charges for and make her face charges for the she's obviously the crimes that she's obviously committed appalling. most of the
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left advocating for to left is still advocating for to happen open the happen which would open the doors other jihadis doors, a flood of other jihadis to the country. well, socialist pipsqueak owen jones made an impassioned plea for should be returned because it's, quote, the reasonable thing to do bring . begum home try your hair. find out exactly what happened and stop it from happening again . stop it from happening again. thatis stop it from happening again. that is the reasonable position i think to have and i don't think it's succour to her crimes . what she did to say hold you accountable as a british citizen. but what do you think? should shamima back and be back to the uk? let me know your thoughts by emailing dan at gbnews.uk tweet gb news gbnews.uk tweet me at gb news and bring you those and i'll bring you those shortly. but debate this now. i'm the actress and i'm joined by the actress and broadcaster barnet and the conservative commentator, former aide to margaret thatcher. nile gardiner. so nile owen jones says it's the reasonable thing to bring shamima back to the country. what do you think ? country. what do you think? well, thanks for having the show today. i have to say that owen
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really is living in some kind of parallel universe. if he thinks it's reasonable , a, to bring a it's reasonable, a, to bring a figure like this who's run off and joined isis who has no right to return to the united kingdom 7 to return to the united kingdom ? it's insanity. i think to suggest that she has the right to british citizenship , that she to british citizenship, that she has a right to return the united kingdom. she belongs, frankly, in the syrian camp where she is now. she has betrayed her own country. she run off to, join a brutal, monstrous islamist terrorist organisation. this idea of bringing her back to the united kingdom is complete and utter folly. i think it's very offensive to all the victims of , isis, a terrorism . and yet , isis, a terrorism. and yet again, i think owen jones is speaking and utter nonsense. yeah, it's interesting, though, isn't it, nigel? because up until today , starmer said baker until today, starmer said baker should be back in the country too. and we should never forget that if starmer were prime minister , bacon would be at back
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minister, bacon would be at back in the country. and that also nigel we would have had 160 other jihadi ees back in the country too. and i think that's why the labour government poses a security threat . yeah, a security threat. yeah, absolutely. once you know, keir starmer is a complete flip flopper and not long ago of course he was he was defending right of jihadis to come to the united kingdom. do we want to have these islamist jihadis running around the uk posing a security threat? we certainly do not. have to have secure borders and we have to take very firm and we have to take very firm and action against those who have betrayed their country those who pose a significant security threat to the british people . jenny barnett strongly people. jenny barnett strongly disagree. do you think it's the reasonable thing, though , begum reasonable thing, though, begum to come back because it doesn't feel reasonable to me . i think feel reasonable to me. i think it's humane. i don't think either of you are taking into account who this is. oh, i am
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no. for becky greene. have for the yes is bangladeshi . the yes is bangladeshi. bangladeshi bangladesh says . she bangladeshi bangladesh says. she does not have dual citizenship where she did go out then would execute. she is the daughter of a single woman from bethnal green and. she was radical ized and she was groomed and she was trafficked and she was taken out. that she wasn't. she chose to go . what do you what are you to go. what do you what are you talking about, jenny? that was a this was a very intel student who with her conspired to go and join the islamic state . by the join the islamic state. by the way, jenny, after after they had started behead brits, beheading aid workers, she decided to go there. after that, who trafficked ? what are you talking trafficked? what are you talking about ? i'm not defending about? i'm not defending certain. asp of who she is, but she's a british and today it was quoted today the governments
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have brought back families . have brought back families. terrorists recognise . it in terrorists recognise. it in their constitutional rights as well as implicitly admitting that such people are there responsibility. we are not doing that as humane , mature and huge. that as humane, mature and huge. this government who prepared, demonise and fearmonger everybody deserves to have somebody stand up on their behalf and fight for them. who is going to do it for this girl? no, she should not. i'll be standing, wandering around in a nonh standing, wandering around in a north syrian camp . she's 23. she north syrian camp. she's 23. she needs to stand up. she needs to be tried, she needs to land. but she won't be tried now, isn't that the issue? she won't be tried in this country because actually we don't have the evidence for the crimes that she committed in raqqa , including, committed in raqqa, including, by the way. so mean on the face suicide bomb is. by the way. so mean on the face suicide bomb is . you have a suicide bomb is. you have a very, very difficult is actually to control on trial in the
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united kingdom. she is not actually a british citizen anymore she she lost that right several years ago . she she's not several years ago. she she's not a she's not a british citizen. i think let's point out the reality that fact here and you know i think someone who runs off to join one of the most evil barbaric organisations known to man does not have the right some kind of trial here in the in the united kingdom here that's absolutely ridiculous the priority as i'm for you as a home secretary has made clear suella braverman make clear the priority is to protect the british people defend national security and indeed nato , i want security and indeed nato, i want you to respond specifically to that point, because what niall is saying is correct. am i five jd still say shamima begum poses a threat to british security. so. so why do like you believe that you know better than them? i not believe i know best i find this confusing . i find it this confusing. i find it heartbreaking . the first heartbreaking. the first question that comes to mind is
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she had three children. they died. she is 15. she's been manipulated . she's become manipulated. she's become a manipulator. manipulated. she's become a manipulator . we are now in this manipulator. we are now in this situation will never know the truth . and the question that truth. and the question that comes to my mind is if you believe do not believe in kind of god who magnanimity has to take place where we to be looking. i wrote down three words we have have tolerance, forgiveness and i think about this think about this has reported by the daily telegraph this week that jenny, just just hear me out and i'll let you respond. it's been reported by the telegraph week the daily telegraph this week that are now that more brits are now returning to syria to join terrorist organisations . what terrorist organisations. what message do you think sends to young teenage ears potentially sitting in bethnal green tonight thinking about going down shamima begum path, if know that we are a soft touch as a country where if it doesn't go well over with the terrorist organisation, they will be allowed back to
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this country. think about that . this country. think about that. that's what i'm saying. if child, she's young , if that child, she's young, if that young woman would to be stored in a dark don't shake your head. she's 23 yeah if she is tried legitimately over here , then she legitimately over here, then she stands and we see who has to see the error of their. but what we're doing is we're wiping the floor. nobody wants to know. and so the left, the demonised them, the right demonised. nobody is coming together . and i think coming together. and i think security challenge is are changing and so has to move on. we should not be saying well , we should not be saying well, sabre rattling we have to be more humane and that's that the actress and the broadcaster, jenny barnett . and before that, jenny barnett. and before that, the conservative commentator nile gardiner. so who do you agree with is letting she be moved again back into uk? moved again back into the uk? actually, the reasonable do actually, the reasonable to do as believes from
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as owen—jones believes from today on twitter. i think need today on twitter. i think need to take responsibility for her bnng to take responsibility for her bring back and lock her up from do cat on twitter . bring back and lock her up from do cat on twitter. no. bring back and lock her up from do cat on twitter . no. the do cat on twitter. no. the courts have ruled that her could pose a significant to our country's security and we should not question that and she says the manchester bombing victims and beheaded charity workers won't come home so she can stay in her beloved sierra and your verdict now in just 10% of you agree with jenny barnett that letting shamima begum back into the uk is a reasonable thing to do. 90% of you disagree with that. i would joan's statement, a statement by the way, backed up a statement by the way, backed ”p by a statement by the way, backed up by keir starmer until which i think we shouldn't forget coming up as boris johnson lays into rishi sunak over northern ireland protocol negotiations could pm be gone before the next election if he undermines breaks? will former tory minister ann widdecombe she was a force brexit party mep as well is going to join me for big
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witty style very shortly . but witty style very shortly. but first with defence minister ben wallace wading into prince harry's taliban kill account, row with lady susan hussey wright fully restored to royal dufies wright fully restored to royal duties , plenty for our royal duties, plenty for our royal masterminds to get their teeth into tonight filled mp and lady colin campbell join me .
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next in between the vicious attacks on his family prince harry a lot of personal and sensitive material and memoir spare. but the unnecessary revelation landed him in hot water the most this taliban kill count. landed him in hot water the most this taliban kill count . could this taliban kill count. could always say precisely how many enemy i killed . and i felt it enemy i killed. and i felt it vital never to shy away from that number. among the many things i learned in the army accountability was near the top of the list . so my number, 25, of the list. so my number, 25, harry has rightly faced plenty of for those grotesque revelations, with army chief saying he selfishly putting the lives of his fellow in danger and now the defence secretary wallace has extraordinarily echoed that condemned boasting about telling or talking about tallies . does two things it tallies. does two things it distorts the fact the army is a team game. it's a team
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enterprise for an infantry to go over the top. that person supported by hundreds of people behind them. it's a team. and so it's not about who can who can shoot the most or who doesn't shoot the most or who doesn't shoot the most . and i think if shoot the most. and i think if that's my personal view, if you start talking about who did what we actually doing is letting letting down all these other people to react to this sensational intervention from a cabinet minister, i'm joined by my royal mastermind slightly, colin campbell and phil dampier . lady c wow. i mean, this is ben wallace, one of the most respected cabinet ministers of his . lashing respected cabinet ministers of his. lashing out at harry. it's extraordinary . it. well, you extraordinary. it. well, you know, i was a few ago in a country house party with one of the former head civil and he was telling me that that harry his
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confession , bill, whatever you confession, bill, whatever you to call it, is such a breach of protocol and it is so outrageous and it it opens up the army to all sorts accusations of inhumane etc. all of which are unfounded. but harry has to sell a book. he has thrown all of the army under a bus . and i know the army under a bus. and i know the army under a bus. and i know the army has been tremendously upset about it because not only did this senior ranking army officer tell me, but i've heard it from more junior army officers as well. it's what he has done is such a betrayal of the protocols . all military life. you exaggerate how serious. this is . phil dampier. it's a big deal, isn't it , for the defence
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isn't it, for the defence secretary currently dealing with a war to decide to weigh in on a member of the royal family yeah, i slightly differ. dan, i'm reading . not sure it was wise to reading. not sure it was wise to find boris to particularly bring this up now. i mean, he was asked the question and he's quite a straightforward guy as politicians go and he gave a straightforward answer and i'm sure he's reflecting. he's been told a lot of people in the told by a lot of people in the forces they are upset forces that they are very upset with and some of the with what said and some of the points quite right but points he it quite right but i don't think king would be particularly pleased that this is its head and i think is raised its head and i think he would probably that he would probably hope that things starting to die down after book and after spare harry's book and he's now very looking he's now very much looking forward to you know, trying forward to the you know, trying to a coronation to organise a coronation and decide about whether decide what to do about whether harry's invited is harry's invited to make an is going to come. so you know, i can understand him expressing his but i don't think can understand him expressing his particularly i don't think can understand him expressing his particularly helpful think can understand him expressing his particularly helpful to nk it's particularly helpful to bnng it's particularly helpful to bring it all up again and to just the time when it dying just the time when it was dying down. it's certainly down. so it's certainly not helpful king charles helpful timing for king charles because be absolutely because will be absolutely reputable about . absolutely
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reputable about. absolutely right people know. the other big royal story today, lady susan hussey trusted servant to the late queen elizabeth, the great for 62 selfless years has made a sensational return to the royal fold after king charles and prince william really sort of draw under the proverbial box at the behest of anti royal. race baiting activists and go crazy for lani princess and boldly ignored the woke by asking lady hussey to stand in for her at dame frances preston's memorial service at the royal in chelsea on tuesday . now lady , what service at the royal in chelsea on tuesday. now lady , what is on tuesday. now lady, what is this show? what does this does it show that this is the royal family conceding that they were far too quick to judge when it came to ngozi fulani who we know has a lot of issues around her credibility . well but you need credibility. well but you need to remember that when they when
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they announced regarding susan hussey was made the this was in a very timeline after molly headley posing him goes see fuller on o. headley posing him goes see fuller on 0. made her accusations and before the assault prize and my understanding is that took savage shall cross and not have a repeat of william and catherine visit in jamaica where you know something that was to be positive became a whole political mess because of race because and race baiting outfit that susan hussey did the decent and the honourable thing and allowed them to let her superficially fall on her sword
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. but that will always going to maintain relations with her. and remember she stated sandringham she's been to with the king you know she she has and i made the point at the time that she was never going to be dropped privately that this was this was way salvaging a tremendously. but i don't feel i don't that i don't we should throw people under bus to appease the woke mob especially not when they have given loyal service, by the way, for free over decades and decades. way, for free over decades and decades . no, way, for free over decades and decades. no, i think way, for free over decades and decades . no, i think princess decades. no, i think princess was actually horrified when this whole thing up in the first place. and i think it's very significant that she's the person who's brought it back doing representing her out doing a job representing her out of i know she of fear. i know that she contracted terror after it happened and told to, you know, support it. so think very support it. so i think it's very good come out and made good that has come out and made it public , made something public it public, made something public that become what amazes that she's become what amazes me is that she's actually is the fact that she's actually willing come back and do
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something about it. i think most of the way she was of most just the way she was treated well, forget treated would say, well, forget it. saying go do it. i'm not saying go and do what? no good point, what? no very good point, because that shows what a wonderful woman she is. it does. it is. and that's it does. and she is. and that's what all found out. and it what we all found out. and it really exploded, i think, the really exploded, i think, in the face. ngos. look, quickly face. ngos. look, i quickly want to this meghan's to talk about this meghan's old blog post continuing to come blog post are continuing to come back and destroyed this back to haunt and destroyed this man abuse to the man accused of abuse to the image that she's manufactured for herself. and in father's for herself. and in a father's day message from 2014, it's emerged that meghan praised her supposedly selfish and horrible dad thomas for working 75 hour weeks and tirelessly himself to her future . this is worth her future. this is worth listening to, isn't it, lady c? she wrote. i think of so many moments with my dad, our club and fruit smoothie tradition post my and ballet class classes , which by the way he religiously took me to on saturday mornings after working 75 plus hours a week as a director, the blood sweat and tears this man invested in my futures that i could grow up to have much . oh, lady c her own
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have much. oh, lady c her own words yet again come back to haunt and reveal the truth . my haunt and reveal the truth. my darling john, you might have forgotten the call, but you read my . and i said in my book three my. and i said in my book three years ago. you did what? she to her father was going to come back , bite her because , what she back, bite her because, what she had said in tig and the working was abso lutely the opposite, and that she had committed two cardinal errors. and that she had committed two cardinal errors . one was she cardinal errors. one was she sold her father in the divorce and two she had put too much of her personal life, feelings, experience issues into the pubuc experience issues into the public domain on those blogs and that they would come back bury her because long thing completely disagreed with author and three years later
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everybody's waking up to the fact that yes every word out of her mouth no is contradicted a word out of her mouth . in the word out of her mouth. in the past, the woman has no credibility whatsoever . she is credibility whatsoever. she is half logical lawyer who simply cannot get her story straight and say anything to create an for herself to make more money or to people who are going to into fear with her narrative, she a total disgrace to humanity. and i don't know how anybody could ever believe that she has to say again. i mean the thing is feel family is so mean. at the top of the show tonight, i had my family in you know i love them so much they are everything to me nothing would everything to me nothing would ever come between me and my mouth or my dad or my sister. and what's so sad is that meghan
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admitted how amazing dad was. she only turned on him after. she only turned on him after. she became famous because she was embarrassed by him and i think lady c's write that says so much about her character doesn't it? or are we being too phil ? no, i doesn't it? or are we being too phil? no, i think it's doesn't it? or are we being too phil ? no, i think it's extremely phil? no, i think it's extremely sad . saddest thing about this sad. saddest thing about this whole harry and meghan thing is the way she's treated. that's all that i i mean all that i think. i mean especially as he's been ill. you may remember week dan i made reference to the fact that meghan at embassy in meghan worked at the embassy in buenos samantha buenos aires and that samantha markle in markle was actually get in contact and she said contact with me and she said that in fact she was on an internal and that was actually paid her father so that she paid for her father so that she another example of how he was trying support her a trying to support her in a career for and to now say that you know she no has a father and just completely ignore him even though just a few miles though he's just a few miles down the road in mexico and still not want to make out still not want to make it out with him. mean, it's very, with him. i mean, it's very, very indeed. i just very sad indeed. and i just don't that's never going to change. like he says, you change. but like he says, you know she's so many lies know she's made so many lies
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about in the and she about it in the past. and she always to praise him for always used to praise him for her fascinate you, too. her success, fascinate you, too. all the so much insight all the best. so much insight as ever colin phil ever from lady colin and phil dampier and we'll speak with her back a little break. thank back from a little break. thank you both so much. but coming up as good morning, britain's ray insists shamima has been insists that shamima has been treated because she treated differently because she is not white british. is he right or is this just now? this is just more sort of race baiting from the abc by supercell. people have their say on that plus the first of tomorrow's newspapers front pages to but first as former pm bofis pages to but first as former pm boris johnson makes a huge intervention to stop the brexit betrayal could fishy where she betrayal could fishy where she be gone before next election if he fails heed his warning. former tory minister ann widdecombe and of course next brexit party mep significantly to is going to join me on this straight right after the .
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break jacob rees—mogg the way at home and up close. but it's time now for big what style with former tory minister and ex brexit party mep and widdecombe and bofis party mep and widdecombe and boris johnson made a major intervention brexit tonight urging the prime minister to stick with the current northern ireland protocol. northern ireland protocol. northern ireland protocol. northern ireland protocol. i've always said that you would support your successor. will support any deal that he does on brexit in northern ireland. well you know, i think the best thing is to continue the northern ireland that that we that we agreed. and that's a it's a it's a very good and doesn't set any other problems in the economy the of the whole island of ireland so it's i'd go with that one but the by boris who still hopes to replace fisher where she comes amid the continuing threat of ministerial resignations if his negotiations with brussels permanently jeopardised northern ireland's place in the union
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including this not so subtle hint from true brexiteer home secretary suella braverman dunng secretary suella braverman during her exclusive interview with our very own liam . i know with our very own liam. i know the prime minister is absolutely committed to resolving this issue regardless of the implications it's absolutely essential that we get stormont back up and functioning , that we back up and functioning, that we restore a free flowing trade across the irish sea , that across the irish sea, that businesses in northern ireland and great can do . good can can and great can do. good can can carry out their commercial activities , but also that activities, but also that northern place within the uk is safeguarded . and sunak waking up safeguarded. and sunak waking up may be he said he would get a say on the final deal, but and when it came to me, from everything that i'm hearing from speaking to brexiteers within the tory party, it doesn't feel like sunak actually them anymore. he's . prepared to the
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anymore. he's. prepared to the er he's prepared to ignore the dup. what's going on. an well we've had a series of prime ministers including boris whose attitude has been pretty well summed up as . any deal will do, summed up as. any deal will do, any deal will. what. i was in fact we said very clearly all the conservatives said very clearly and then manifesto that britain would leave the eu as one united kingdom, that has been broken by, leaving northern ireland in the single market by creating a border between us and northern ireland would be unthinkable , and none of it was unthinkable, and none of it was necessary. now unless rishi simply says to the eu. look, nothing doing , no ecj nothing doing, no ecj interference , no border down the interference, no border down the irish sea. we'll do the whole thing with . technology on the thing with. technology on the existing border won't create a hard border unless he says all of that so that we can give state aid to our northern irish industries if we want to, so that we can trade this freely with them as we would trade with
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the isle of wight until we can do all of that, we haven't got a brexit and nobody wants to sign to yet another round of , to yet another round of, something that isn't going to work because the eu be won't accept it because . it's not accept it because. it's not brexit and anything but name and the impact on the conservatives will be enormous because once again no breakdown in angry division and frankly i think the pubuc division and frankly i think the public thought enough of it. well we have we absolute we have but and this is what i'm you from a political point of view why does sunak not understand i thought he was meant to be smart man. i mean what's he not getting? surely this would his premiership on the line . well premiership on the line. well what is getting is that the eu will not be content with anything that doesn't punish us for having the effrontery to leave. i mean, that is the baseline of it. i mean in 2017
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the eu itself said , you know, we the eu itself said, you know, we didn't need a hard border we could manage with technology . could manage with technology. well that's what we should have been working on ever since. there is urge to placate the eu , we do not need to placate the eu when . we join them as the eec eu when. we join them as the eec . all those years ago they accounted for a huge portion of global trade. now that's down to about 8. you know , we do not about 8. you know, we do not need and do not need to get on our knees. we need to tell them, get out of northern ireland. that's what we need to tell them. no, indeed . and can you them. no, indeed. and can you believe we're here ? i mean, believe we're here? i mean, look, actually left the look, you actually left the conservative you conservative party because you were so conservative. the fact that they were going to undermine thought undermine brexit, we thought those of theresa may were those days of theresa may were oven those days of theresa may were over. is the conservative over. how is the conservative party back here . well it's party back here. well it's almost unbelievable . i mean, almost unbelievable. i mean, first of all, the remainers didn't accept result of the referendum. no, no . it's all referendum. no, no. it's all built the strength of undeniably
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half. when he first was elected and came in with a huge majority, promised to get brexit, done if it maximised the strengths that he had and got proper brexit, we wouldn't be where we are now . any deal will where we are now. any deal will not, you know, be the right deal and wise words. i hope sunak is listening to. and when it came and thank you so much but coming as he prepares to launch his brand new show on this very channel on monday night. jacob rees—mogg gives me his most personal interview the personal interview ever from the comfort of his own home. you want to miss this? coming up in just a few minutes . also on the just a few minutes. also on the way as itv's adil suggests, shamima begum has been harshly treated due to not white british. do you agree or is he just looking for excuses . my just looking for excuses. my superstar panel has played tea to say on this one now back in just 2 minutes time.
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it's 10 pm. i'm dan wootton tonight as . soft touch sunak tonight as. soft touch sunak plans fast track 12,000 immigration applications , immigration applications, including those who arrived illegally on small boats. does this prove that the public's concern over invasion of our southern border falling on deaf ears . fleet street icon calvin ears. fleet street icon calvin calls the move and amnesty in all but name his own cancelled idea. this after a uk censored the beloved works roald dahl. we have new anti woke queen killer who will not for these literary . please remain true to calling unimpeded by those may wish to kerb the freedom of expression or impose limits on your imagination . yes camilla so ac
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imagination. yes camilla so ac write to go up against the woke melbourne harry and meghan by the way by making an impassioned defence for speech. that's the big debate . my superstar panel big debate. my superstar panel tonight i'm by dominique samuels. shaun bailey and nicole . on the eve of joining gb news, one of the country's most unique and irrepressible political leaders, gives his most personal interview ever for children . interview ever for children. have me wrapped around that little thing . do they? little thing. do they? absolutely. i give it to you. the self that. i the whole time. yes. and does she need to be the authoritarian? no nanny gives a new groom as quickly, as i do. so that there's a little . so that there's a little. there's not much . you are there's not much. you are ianed. there's not much. you are invited . the residence of jacob invited. the residence of jacob rees—mogg is the top tory. you've never seen him before. coming in just a few moments in the media vase as itv's leading race face, ray says that it's a fact that shamima they have and
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would granted return if she was quote white. does the terrorists skin colour really have a beanng skin colour really have a bearing on the court. we're going to discuss that . what going to discuss that. what i describe as an outright lie next. and in today's greatest prison in union jack as are local councils guilty of green tyranny and their plan for 15 minutes this is the first front pages will arrive mayor moments to right after aaron armstrong with the news headlines . good with the news headlines. good evening aaron armstrong here in the gb news from the united nafions the gb news from the united nations has overwhelmingly chosen to isolate russia condemning its invasion ukraine and demanding the withdrawal its troops. the non—binding resolution call for russia to end hostile at ease and for lasting in ukraine. china abstained amid suggestions its consider in supplying lethal weapons to russia . president weapons to russia. president vladimir zelenskyy says ukraine will hold moscow account for the terror killings and torture .
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terror killings and torture. he's due to meet western leaders virtually tomorrow out of a new wave of sanctions . russia in wave of sanctions. russia in line . meanwhile, several nations line. meanwhile, several nations are holding vigils this evening in tribute to ukraine. to mark tomorrow's one year anniversary of the start of the war. the eiffel tower lit up in the colours of the ukrainian flag in brussels. the european union building did the same and in london hundreds of gathered in trafalgar square , where the trafalgar square, where the defence secretary, ben wallace has been praising the strength the ukrainian people. you for everything you have done to not only for your freedom but for all our freedoms in europe , for all our freedoms in europe, for all our freedoms in europe, for all you, all of you here from ukraine. the bravery of your countrymen . women who have stood countrymen. women who have stood against aggression. this illegal war. there's a challenge to freedom, democracy and human rights should be incredibly proud of what you're standing for . and also , we should for. and also, we should remember, all these people have already their lives for your
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wonderful country . three men wonderful country. three men have been arrested on suspicion of attempted murder following the shooting of a high ranking officer in northern. detective chief inspector john caldwell was targeted by two masked men while his son at a sports centre in omagh last night. he is a critical but stable condition in hospital. police say dissident group, the new ira the primary focus. and they are the threat level . former hollywood film level. former hollywood film producer harvey weinstein has been sentenced to 16 additional years in prison after being found guilty of rape and sexual in los angeles. found guilty of rape and sexual in los angeles . weinstein is in los angeles. weinstein is already serving a 23 year sentence for a separate conviction in new york, which is under appeal . the jury in the under appeal. the jury in the los angeles case convicted weinstein on charges against a single victim known as jane doe , who says the incident happened when appeared uninvited at hotel room during a film festival in
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2013. the film mogul maintains the allegations against him were a set up . tv online and dab a set up. tv online and dab radio. this is gb news, but now it is back to dan wootton tonight . tonight. time for tomorrow's news tonight . now in our mediabuzz , the . now in our mediabuzz, the first front pages are in and the focuses on the estimated 100,000 civilian deaths since putin launched his invasion of ukraine with one year anniversary of the start of the war just hours . start of the war just hours. heroes give in is the headline in the metro as they to leave with the terrible anniversary ukrainian flags pictured on it the nation's dead at a cemetery in kyiv as ukraine stands defiant . my superstar panel with defiant. my superstar panel with me now, the political
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commentator samuels, former tory london mayoral candidate shaun bailey, and the author and broadcaster amy mcgowan. now it may have been our state broadcaster, the bbc , that broadcaster, the bbc, that launched a sick rehabilitation campaign for shamima begum , but campaign for shamima begum, but much of the rest of the left gmb's, sam, is now joining in. yesterday for the home secretary , british pakistani sajid welcomed back him losing . her welcomed back him losing. her appeal to re—enter the uk but woke itv adil ray lashed out, saying our parents huge sacrifices and work tireless to earn british citizenship. some lost their lives in war, fighting our rights, yet many have never been accepted. today you have helped make that citizenship condition new. today we and also all the same tragic sajid. but then this is where he really took it too far, he said. the fact if shamima begum white british she'd be here facing . british she'd be here facing. court but because she has bangladeshi parents, she is no longer considered british. i thought we kids of immigrants
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were required to be more british, not less . even in the british, not less. even in the eyes of the law and justice system . now, right was rightly system. now, right was rightly called for his deliberate rise spacing and for missing the glaring example that proves him wrong .jihadi jack, a brit wrong. jihadi jack, a brit radicalised terrorist who was stripped of his citizenship in 2019 because he was entitled to a canadian passport. so was beckham proven terrorist where he treated differently ? she he treated differently? she isn't white british. dominique samuels . well, obviously not. samuels. well, obviously not. and the people that seem so desperate to reverse this easy race baiting tactic are probably really to the actual facts. so we've actually been able to remove citizenship since 1914, andifs remove citizenship since 1914, and it's part of the british nationality and status of aliens act . it's also part of the act. it's also part of the british nationality act of 1981. and one of the caveats of that is that you can remove someone's citizenship for national security risks, acts of terror,
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or glorifying terrorism. to people that say , oh, you know, people that say, oh, you know, we've never done this before . we've never done this before. we've actually removed people, citizenship 667 times from 2010. since 2010 to 2021. and also in 2002, the removal of citizenship was actually extend it to dual nationals under , a labour nationals under, a labour government. so for the people that want to scream and shout, you know, we've never done this before. it's racism. they probably need to have a look at the facts. it's fascinating, shaun because feel shaun bailey, because i feel like there so people who like there are so people who look to things into an issue of race. adil ray being one of them. because i'm in exactly the same situation . shamima begum same situation. shamima begum and jack. if i were to and jihadi jack. if i were to defect to a terrorist regime because have dual nationality , i because have dual nationality, i have a new zealand passport as well as a british passport i would fully that i would be stripped of my british passport . that's nothing to do with race . i am white british. i think the point is he said it was conditional. i think the
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conditional. i think the condition the british government had this is a person had look at was this is a person who advocated the murder . who advocated for the murder. british citizens and government had a tough decision they needed to send a message internationally if, you attempt to we take steps to murder brits. we take steps to murder brits. we take steps to prevent that happening. but it is perfectly legal and there's a need for us to look . there's a need for us to look. the tough bit for shamima , she the tough bit for shamima, she was very young and she she she was very young and she she she was groomed and misled . lots of was groomed and misled. lots of people tell you. but also, i think old enough to think just about old enough to tell the difference between wrong and right. shouldn't you be don't use it . wrong and right. shouldn't you be don't use it. i be strong? just don't use it. i think you're with adil think that you're with adil guessing, which think you know guessing, which i think you know really what he was getting . the really what he was getting. the fact that her dual nationality is played a big part in how it was decided. i don't . he should was decided. i don't. he should listen to it as she says, because she said if he said that if she was white, british, she would be allowed back. that is a it's not a lie. he tried to unpack then into saying how it was more to do with the dual nationality leading the fact that children of immigrants are held by different staff. and
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that's something we think that's a misnomer . that's something we think that's a misnomer. so in that's something we think that's a misnomer . so in this that's something we think that's a misnomer. so in this country jack was a dual national that's why he was jihadi john. so is why he was jihadi john. so is why he was jihadi john. so is why he looked good. but he all he was saying is that it creates a tier system, whereas if have single moment, it doesn't if you have this british it's british citizenship it you are safer than if have dual nationality if that's true. i actually don't disagree with that. i think that's true. but isn't true is that's true. but isn't true is that it has anything to do with the colour of your skin . that's the colour of your skin. that's disingenuous . that's just. it disingenuous. that's just. it was all about the status that you have . if you are the child you have. if you are the child of versus no. but that's status. you don't go to syria and join isis. i would have to fully accept that i would not be allowed back britain if new zealand wanted to take me that be up to them. that is nothing to do with the colour of my. you and. i would be treated the same
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as bigots. exactly. but you beg what? you. should we all should be treated the same. because we should raise it. she was born here. she has never been to. she is a british. she has. she has dual nationality by descent. that's really important. she has never even visited bangladesh. so she is british and she should be treated as such . the bottom be treated as such. the bottom line is bottom line, the long game she got the ball. the bottom line is this. the bottom line is she was involved an organisation that advocates heavy lee for the murder of british citizen. the government had take action. was an had to take action. this was an action that was legally available to them so they took. i like to say why is she i would like to say why is she now serious problem why is syria. a no no she is a syria. it's a no no she is a serious problem because syria so serious problem because syria so serious decided she isn't a problem and they love her because she was a problem they would seek to deport as well. they haven't done that. she has gone away. we can have the debate about shamima begum and we've obviously debate we've obviously had the debate on about that before. on the show about that before.
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what am about now is a what i am talking about now is a very and present narrative very clear and present narrative that itv is to promote because we saw this from adil ray and that i was sent a clip from the peston show on itv last night hosted by stana , who in an hosted by stana, who in an interview with tom tugendhat , interview with tom tugendhat, also tried claim that was an also tried to claim that was an issue of race because she was british indian. the point that i make is that this is not about race because jihadi jack has also lost his citizenship . he is also lost his citizenship. he is also lost his citizenship. he is a british citizen. and if i were to do same, i would also lose my citizenship as a white british man. it's not about race and these racist should look at the facts. and i can have your facts. and i can also have your british citizenship . so it's not british citizenship. so it's not even just about those that it's about to catch. agrees. if you have committed fraud or if you're a threat to uk national security . and i think going off security. and i think going off to join the terrorist cult claiming you have no regret on referring to the bombing , tit referring to the bombing, tit for tat is a pretty good time because of you simply simply resolved only need to go back through the 600 plus cases we've
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had since ten and see if that's all right, of course. but look, i'm prepared for people to have the debate about shamima begum. there's a legitimate debate to have, you know, my views, it is strong but what there is not a legitimate to have is the legitimate debate to have is the fact that ray, who is an fact that adil ray, who is an employee journalist itv on employee journalist by itv on good morning said that good morning britain, said that this a fact of fact. the this was a fact of fact. the real me disciplined the real problem. the real problem is that it makes communities here on comfortable, dry. and he should think twice before doing that because he knows what he's trying to do. yeah that's what paid all on the basis things that are either because when you look at the facts you see it's been done course but look i want to be right because after witnessing the media pile on against kate forbes for saying she doesn't support gay marriage, it was hardly surprising that her leadership rival then said that he rival yousef then said that he felt the opposite . but that's felt the opposite. but that's despite the fact that yousef, a practising muslim , suspiciously practising muslim, suspiciously missed the key hollyrood vote on
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gay marriage in 2014, when he was finally pressed on this socially conservative stance of his faith . his answer ? well, it his faith. his answer? well, it sounded strangely familiar. jim, come on your programme endorses anything telling you that i'm able to change what islam says about gay marriage. 56 or what the mainstream view is. i can i would be lying to your viewers if i said, you know, everybody will know what the position of mainstream islam in that respect is. but the question is, well, do people use the basis of their faith as legislating ? i haven't faith as legislating? i haven't done so. i wouldn't so because i don't believe that's job of legislators, the policy policymakers so okay so try and spot the difference between that and what kate forbes said do people use the basis of therapy as legislating . i haven't done as legislating. i haven't done so wouldn't do so but i will not roll back on any rights that
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already exist in scotland . so already exist in scotland. so will the msm be sharpening knives for this candidate as or do they only do that to christians ? i mean, sean bailey christians? i mean, sean bailey , dominique samuels, do stand by because coming as queen camilla made an impassioned defence of free speech following a uk censoring the beloved words of roald dahl. once she right to go up against the woke mob, including harry and meg myself it's now panel will return debate that soon but next on the eve of joining gb news, one of the country's most unique leaders, jacob rees—mogg gives his most personal interview even his most personal interview ever. it's the top tory. you've never seen him before at his home. coming up in just a few moments time .
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welcome back from next week at 8 pm, every monday to thursday, the unique and, irreplaceable jacob rees—mogg will provide a brilliant lead in to this show. but before he get started, i want to know more about the man behind the political caricature. so he invited me into his home to find out. i thought i'd. show you this. oh, yes, please. i'm not sure. it's easy to write down because i'm not pleased
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with this. this is a handkerchief with c on it because . it belonged to charles, because. it belonged to charles, the first that was dipped his blood. you can see very faintly the blood after his execution by the blood after his execution by the statue coming to that colonel ruddock, who was at the execution and then did it and came up at auction, if remember rightly in an auction in gloucestershire a few years ago , there were so many fascinating artefacts like that just all around the. but when we sat down i asked him how he really feels about marriage. parents in money, fashion and, whether his prime ministerial ambitions have really gone away . jacob really gone away. jacob rees—mogg , thank you so much for rees—mogg, thank you so much for having me at your home. and i thought it was appropriate actually to do it this way because you going to be invited in our incredible gb news family to have you their living room every night monday to thursday
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so now we're in your home and i thought it was important actually to find out a little bit about the man behind what be a political character here, i guess. a political character here, i guess . well, first of all, i'm guess. well, first of all, i'm very much looking forward to being with gb news and very grateful to those people are inviting me into . their homes inviting me into. their homes through nightly broadcasts . but through nightly broadcasts. but i politically, i've never what is presented to me has been particularly inaccurate , not particularly inaccurate, not much different in private from the public view . so you feel the public view. so you feel you've always been a very broker in terms of what you on a personal . well people put this personal. well people put this to me before and think the answer is would anybody have adopted my image out of a creation confection? i think that's very unlikely they say i'd better be what i really am. so talk to me about what it was like going from that transition . i sort of have heard bachelor
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i guess, who for a long time had focussed much on business and making a fortune to set yourself up for life, to a husband and very a dad of six. well very lucky.i very a dad of six. well very lucky. i mean, i've got six marble ears, children and, a lovely wife. what more could anybody else for . lovely wife. what more could anybody else for. but you were careful when you were careful because i was looking to me, right? well, i was looking into some of your your early interviews and made the point that you wanted to be certain that you wanted to be certain that the woman who you settled down with was the one because you didn't want a woman who was going to end up running off with your coach. well i don't have much of a fortune, but i think that everybody wants that degree of certainty. so how you how did you know? we've good luck and. things worked and good fortune.
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and she a journalist or as a. that's right. that's right. she was she was. did you connect on an intellectual? no, we were introduced by my sister annunziata , who's also been on annunziata, who's also been on tv news. yes i know who introduced me to help them. we started talking and i'm afraid i mean, you talked about helen's ancestor, tom thomas wentworth, and how i thought, who's this old fellow who knows more? my family history. the night that's so . six children, you believe in so. six children, you believe in traditional upbringing . and one traditional upbringing. and one of the most fascinating sides, i guess, of your family life is the fact your nanny, who i believe is 80 years old now , was believe is 80 years old now, was also your nanny growing . so she also your nanny growing. so she has remained in the family. she's made in the family for , she's made in the family for, well, jolly, nearly 60 years now. i think 57 years. so it's an amazing lifetime and that
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she's been with our family and this has been marvellous for my children . when you say in children. when you say in traditional i think indulgent actually is probably more accurate word that you're lucky my children have me wrapped that little thing. do they ? little thing. do they? absolutely. i give it to you. you're the self, dad. oh, i've given you the whole time. yes and does she need to be the authoritarian? no. nanny gives an almost as i do. so lot of that. there's a little there's not much. so that's funny because i think some people might have thought that you were the strict. no, i given straight away before being asked. really i'm a complete pushover. you love a dad? oh, enormously , yes. love a dad? oh, enormously, yes. it's wonderful. i love seeing my grow and develop. it's very it's so interesting as well . harriet so interesting as well. harriet harman once called you a deadbeat dad because you admitted that you had never changed one of your children's nappies . yes, but she doesn't
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nappies. yes, but she doesn't talk to her opinion . how did you talk to her opinion. how did you feel about that ? give tuppence feel about that? give tuppence about that . people say things in about that. people say things in politics and mum shouldn't worry about them at all. do you think it's important for mothers and fathers to play traditional roles in the upbringing of children? no i wouldn't want to tell other families to operate their family. tell other families to operate their family . that's a matter their family. that's a matter for them . but i think family is for them. but i think family is very important. i think it's very important. i think it's very important. i think it's very important for the happiness and growth of children in a stable background . all the stable background. all the evidence just that a stable background for children , their background for children, their development and your children are impeccably presented , aren't are impeccably presented, aren't they? like you always , very they? like you always, very well—dressed. do you sometimes look around at where we're at in society in 2023 and worry ? i'm society in 2023 and worry? i'm very positive about and i actually my children dresses
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they want to dress so some of them dress more formally than than that they're they're individuals. and so not except when obviously very little forced to wear things that they don't want to wear. it's really a choice for them. you're famous for your sartorial standards . for your sartorial standards. talk to me about that i mean, how many suits do have? what type of double breasted suits? well i mean, i've got more than two, but basically only got two. i've got a dollop of blue one and dark grey one and one time it's one, one time. the other. my, my. do you ever dress down? no no, no, i don't. but. but my clothing is very boring. it's not particularly a sartorial style . it is just as i say. so style. it is just as i say. so you don't own a pair of jeans. what i do with a pair of jeans, sneakers, trainers now i've got a pair somewhere . i've got a pair somewhere. i've got a pair of green flash shoes, which
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i occasionally put on it, my children, believe me, and playing with them. but i've got ancient pair of cricket boots i had since i was at school, which i managed to get out last summer when i played in blagden father's against the andrew elevens . and is that the only elevens. and is that the only exercise take sport or do you use? oh you know i you i'm not a great one for taking exercise. no and so do you. watch what you eat? no. particularly no . but i eat? no. particularly no. but i don't . i eat? no. particularly no. but i don't. i hope i'm not. a glutton. now to me about growing old, because course you were born into a life great privilege. your father the editor of , the times, the editor of, the times, the newspaper record, of course, hugely influential . now but back hugely influential. now but back then on different scale. so you really had every opportunity, didn't to be a success. i've been very fortunate but the key
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good fortune was to be born into a loving family. good fortune was to be born into a loving family . and i think a loving family. and i think that's . the essence of . what has that's. the essence of. what has helped me through my life is that support, family and as i was saying earlier, we know how valuable is to everybody . so, valuable is to everybody. so, yes, indeed, there were other advantages. and my being at the times we constantly met. interesting people. and that was great privilege . but actually great privilege. but actually having that stability of a loving family is, i think, fundamental and something that society ought to do more to help . i agree. you were a political animal, though, from a very young age. some of must have been from your dad . oh, of been from your dad. oh, of course . the main topic of course. the main topic of conversation at home was politics. it was my father's great interest . and we might great interest. and we might talk about other things for a little bit, but almost always conversation we get back to politics. what do you think
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about? the scottish nationalists. well, he lost his deposit . do you think that that deposit. do you think that that is a good thing. deposit. do you think that that is a good thing . yes, i do. is a good thing. yes, i do. i don't approve. scottish nationalists in my father had a great quality , which is that he great quality, which is that he was always interested in his children's view. so say that if we were discussing politics, he would want to know what his children thought. it sounds to me like you were always very determined to get financial early in your life so that you would then be able pursue your interests in politics. i think that assumes too great a structure . i think being how structure. i think being how things happened more by chance than by long planning or design . do you think it's gauche when people talk about how much money you made to buy what the likes ? you made to buy what the likes? none of my business, but of course you after that time pretty march set for life when you to work and another in your
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life if you everyone has to work . that's what life is about. i think this idea that you can just rest on your laurels is false but it did give you the to commit to politics. i wouldn't overstate the importance of a city career and things i've read about my own was massively exaggerated . i wouldn't take exaggerated. i wouldn't take that seriously either. did you feel it was your destiny to be a tory mp ? destiny is overstating tory mp? destiny is overstating . it was certainly something i wanted to do and i felt it was very important to that. you know, you don't get what you want the first time you keep on. do you still want to be prime minister? deep down, no. i'm supporting the prime minister. we've got. i want rishi sunak to make success fit. i mean, i was a great supporter of boris johnson and thought was a terrible mistake to get rid of him. but i think the tory party
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must not change leader again. i think that would be a recipe for electoral . you're young. you're electoral. you're young. you're young, jacob , 53 on you and. young, jacob, 53 on you and. back when you were much, much younger , you said you be happy younger, you said you be happy to be prime minister by age of 70. so you've got another i think you've got another 17. yes, i think that was an interview i gave when i was about or something. so i that was quite a long time ago. i wouldn't so that genuinely is no burning ambition to lead the conservative one day i fully appreciate the right now you know what i'm looking forward to is my programme on gb news was night of the brexit referendum victory the best your political career . it victory the best your political career. it was victory the best your political career . it was the victory the best your political career. it was the most victory the best your political career . it was the most exciting career. it was the most exciting political career, yes. what's been the most exciting day of your life ? well, everything that your life? well, everything that kind of revolves around family and the birth of children is, i
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mean, the most remarkable thing that i've ever happens this sudden creation of a the appearance of new life is really very wonderful . and don't miss very wonderful. and don't miss jacob rees—mogg's state of the nafion jacob rees—mogg's state of the nation on gb news every monday to thursday at 8 pm. from next week . but to thursday at 8 pm. from next week. but coming up to thursday at 8 pm. from next week . but coming up in i'm week. but coming up in i'm cancelled as soft touch sunak plans to fast track 12,000 immigration applications . does immigration applications. does this prove that the public's concern over the invasion of our southern border is falling on deaf ears ? calvin mackenzie deaf ears? calvin mackenzie calls the move an amnesty and all name and he's up very the next in the media what's camilla made an impassioned defence of free speech following the publisher censoring the beloved works of roald dahl. was she right to go up against the woke mob ? her own relatives harry and mob? her own relatives harry and meghan? my superstore panel returned to debate that straight after the .
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break so some search engine bios do site now in our media bouts more front pages and in the daily mail leads with the queen consort camilla writers not to let anyone their freedom of expression at the clarence house reception today daily express also reports on that story we are going to be talking about in just a moment. let them eat turnips is the headline in the daily mirror as. the newspaper, i think quite unfairly fun at trace coffee , who spot ridicule, trace coffee, who spot ridicule, according to them by telling people to eat turnips, combat the fruit and vegetable shortage for the media. now with tonight's superstore panel, political commentator dominique samuel was top tory shaun bailey and the author and broadcaster amy nicholl. now as i just mentioned, the rewriting roald dahps mentioned, the rewriting roald dahl's classic children's books by woke sensitivity readers has divided lauded grown ups around
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the world. this week, forcing the world. this week, forcing the publisher of puffin the week publisher puffin, by the way , publisher puffin, by the way, pathetic publisher puffin to defend their decision by insisting they have a significant responsibility to protect young readers , and that protect young readers, and that the hundreds of changes were minimal. no, they weren't . minimal. no, they weren't. unfortunately, puffins attempts defend their book. butchering doesn't to have reached clarence house. yes with the queen herself wading into the rout earlier today i honestly let a little weep for camilla when i saw this. please keep doing so. please remain true calling unimpeded by those who may wish to kerb the freedom of your express or impose limits on your imagination . and enough say. imagination. and enough say. yes, guys, we have an anti woke
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queen. and look how proud the queen. the king. i mean, it's incredibly rare for members of the royal family to involve themselves in, these sorts of culture, war squabbles. but maybe highlights how seriously the country is taking puffins, rewriting of history. it also sets up our new anti—woke queen head to head with the prince and princess of woke. harry and. meghan. i think i know what side i'll be taking about. was queen consort write to weigh in and show us where she needs more pubuc show us where she needs more public figures who are going to stand for free speech after this disgrace from puffin. i think if you see the queen's comments, she was clever enough not to wade middle of it, wade right into middle of it, but actually important to but but is actually important to what doing she said, what she was doing. she said, enough been enough said. and it's been pointed out. but let me tell you what. get me to the wise, no matter side, the debate matter which side, the debate you this you fall on what made this country great freedom of country great was freedom of expression, to speak expression, the right to speak in way wanted to in a way in which wanted to speak very important. and speak is very important. and this monoculture that people are trying to design and trying to do, to design and change history is actually
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change our history is actually damaging that, the damaging to that, to the communities they they're communities they think they're defending. queen to defending. for the queen to gently make the point, look, don't let anybody your don't let anybody stop your freedom is freedom of expression is important, the only important, because the only reason people are cancelled is because only one side of debate is accepted ridiculous. nobody's being cancelled. if there's being cancelled. and if there's anyone down. words have been passing . many may have, and passing. many may have, and there have been hundreds changes every day. do you get there? there no. right to edit a author's book. that's kind of silly. well, there is. if they're. no not understanding . they're. no not understanding. oh, well, they might editing. oh i don't want to round all the books, burn them and do it. well, you know know , i mean, well, you know know, i mean, look, give me a second. give me a second. you know anything about dahl? i don't know about roald dahl? i don't know anything about. yes, it was very unpleasant. it was unpleasant. know it was anti—semitic. was known as anti—semitic. he was known as roald, rotten own wife. roald, the rotten boys own wife. do also know that is do you also know that he is probably the children's probably the greatest children's author time ? because none
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author of all time? because none of love him of us are allowed to love him was incredibly incredibly focussed . the minutiae of every focussed. the minutiae of every word in his book and come back mean scumbags who editing him sexually destroying literature and rewriting is just another. the point graeme what you have and you've spent time maybe you've made the point it's not free. it's not if you agree with what's in the book it's the rewriting of the book. where revisiting the old dominant left. the point is it's his book. you want to pick apart words and make them all flowery. invoke despite the fact that his work has sold 300 million copies worldwide, wide and. personally, for me, it was his books actually got me into reading. if you want to make a woke version, write your own books. stop picking apart all people's talent because you don't have half and doesn't need to protect kids from anything. puffin does
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not. so he's you see what puffin was protecting from. so instead of captain james of the giant page, instead cloud men. we've got cloud people . what do kids got cloud people. what do kids need to protected from cloud people ? it's really it makes any people? it's really it makes any sense. it's nothing that the books have been edited so . in books have been edited so. in 1971, they were edited roald dahl when he was no boy . 1971, they were edited roald dahl when he was no boy. his publisher was published by his uncle for the change change. they were originally, but which is know that the public reaction the time was very similar to what we're seeing over these edits . you know why not the end edits. you know why not the end the wage public saw it was a fitting end to the way they sold . it's a slippery slope which saw look, originally in 1971, it was about the depiction , the was about the depiction, the oompa—loompas as african pygmies, which is a fair. well and roald agreed to it. and the thing is what this is actually about, it's so disturbing to me because it's the sanitised ization of our culture. it's fact that we need use word
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black. we can't use the words white in any context that commercial driven change. i don't know that you . will don't know that you. will ideologically driven hold on roald dahl fan . yes. i never roald dahl fan. yes. i never heard you all this. well, you could have asked my earlier. i read every single work. i was saying, how do they stay in print? no. and they all i will be buying first edition, roald dahl and how disturbing that we now live in it. now, i'm serious that we now live in a culture. i mean, the price i imagine, is shot up, that we now live in a culture where we cannot even guarantee that buy a roald guarantee that if we buy a roald dahl or our separately kindle now trolled and released, that we're actually getting roald thousand. happening thousand. is it just happening to dahl books? this is to roald dahl books? this is happening universal of course happening in universal of course it's happening. if was happening . what? do not . and you know what? do not under this very significant intervention from the queen today can i say about that you had she didn't mention censorship . she didn't mention
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censorship. she didn't mention roald dahl . she spoke very roald dahl. she spoke very vaguely about free speech. i mean, she could have been talking about i mean, she could have been talking about the queen knew exactly she was doing. it has been to journalists. she was referring to roald dahl . significant. it to roald dahl. significant. it was a significant intervention backed up by king. and you know what? i actually have a bit of hope today. a bit of hope that we have an anti woke queen and thatis we have an anti woke queen and that is what need especially given the disgrace of her stepson . i mean , shaun bailey, stepson. i mean, shaun bailey, dominic samuels do stand because coming up local councils guilty green tyranny in their plan 15 minute cities find out. one of my superstar panellists about that and the crowning moment of the show is where you reveal tonight's greatest and you need jackass. but next in i'm cancelled as soft touch sunak wants to fast track 12th immigration applications , immigration applications, including those riding in small boats . does this proves that the
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boats. does this proves that the government taking the public's concern over the invasion of our southern border ? fleet street southern border? fleet street icon calvin mackenzie calls the move an amnesty. icon calvin mackenzie calls the move an amnesty . all but name. move an amnesty. all but name. he's up to explain why. straight after .
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the it's the wsfime the it's time now for and cancelled and this is where britain's top commentator is speak out on controversial issues without the fear of the cancel culture sweeping. the rest of the media rishi sunak facing more pressure tonight after it emerged that a new fast track scheme for 12,000 asylum seekers, including those arriving on illegal small boats via the will be launched to try and clear the massive backlog, according to the home office. migrants from libya, syria, eritrea and yemen will be granted refugee status after completing a single questionnaire with the vast of
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cases bypassing the crucial interview process altogether , interview process altogether, it's estimated that roughly 95% of the 12,000 claims will be granted based on current rights, allowing them to settle permanently and even sponsor relatives to join them. will police relation? kevin mckenzie joins me now kelvin with policies like these it's no wonder we've so much anger in local communities is it. no look so this the issue you're a smuggler . so this the issue you're a smuggler. you're making quite a lot of money. you're making hundred thousand a boat. lot of money. you're making hundred thousand a boat . you hundred thousand a boat. you just turn round to the migrants and say , don't take our word for and say, don't take our word for it. but can come to the uk and you're going to get asylum granted. look at this point to front page of today's times where they have leaked the details that you've just said and honestly, i see the numbers most even this year by a couple. what is to stop everybody from . what is to stop everybody from. afghanistan, eritrea , libya,
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afghanistan, eritrea, libya, yemen and coming here once they read in there face it clearly that the reason that they were was granted because they said that 95% of them would have been granted anyway. and the reason that they said that they were granting them was that, first of all, we can't the hotels. oh, really agree fosun come around our way of thinking and secondly we can do with the work force in a and in an environment we don't seem to have enough people to do ourjobsis seem to have enough people to do our jobs is that really the way forward are we going to invite the whole of africa and the whole of the middle east to come in, come on down and the smugglers being the middlemen in, all this will make an absolute fortune. we cannot afford this kind of policy and nor i agree with sonia , eric, nor i agree with sonia, eric, all the tories, the by the way, by 22% of the poll, 50% labour in the latest yougov poll a nightmare right nor i agree with
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them simply leaking it to the times in order to in some strange way diffuse this. it doesn't diffuse this. the adds to the concept to see that we have a government whether it is tory or labour who are actually working against the will of the people. if you said to the will said to ordinary people, they said to ordinary people, they said we're going to allow 12,000. and by the way, all they have to do is fill in the questionnaire. now the questionnaire. now the questionnaire english. questionnaire is in english. none a few of none of these what a few of these people the majority won't be able to speak english. this these people the majority won't be abletwo speak english. this these people the majority won't be abletwo thingsenglish. this these people the majority won't be abletwo things either. this these people the majority won't be abletwo things either. tlawyer means two things either a lawyer will fill in or a charity work will fill in or a charity work will probably it in. will probably fill it in. i don't believe that it will be filled in by a relative over here already. so there's a whole load people whose interest is load of people whose interest is for this to happen. the only people who's not in their interest is actually, strangely enough, the hotel owners who will lose out on some will actually lose out on some money. but is a to my mind money. but this is a to my mind a serious political mistake . but a serious political mistake. but i astonished that nobody i am astonished that nobody seems as aggravated as i do
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about it all. well, the thing is , the public are anti calvin. we're seeing it. we're seeing it. and don't you feel like the disconnect between the westminster establishment in the msm and the public , this story msm and the public, this story is just getting by the week. they simply do not get it. they do not understand . why? we're do not understand. why? we're mad , but they don't understand mad, but they don't understand political ramifications in this respect . what happens to our respect. what happens to our honestly laughable nature . honestly laughable nature. that's what happened. surely the volume grows. what to our education system ? already the education system? already the teachers be complaining the classrooms bursting at the same what happens to our what happens to our benefits ? what happens to to our benefits? what happens to any of this none of that is factored in in the financials , factored in in the financials, which are then shoved to us by a government that says, i'll tell you what the answer is. well, the way this will be true of
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labour as. well, i'll tell you what the answer is. disguise this really a tory government will upping our we're will say we're upping our we're upping tax why? upping our tax rates. why? because we've too because literally we've got too much public sector spending coming us in part in part coming at us in part in part because of the migrant issue. why doesn't why doesn't sonic say , i am going to i'm going say, i am going to i'm going stop this. we've got 160,000. now, if we had conversation three years time, gb news of your panel all sitting here, what do you think that 160,000 is going to look like? is it going to look like a million? is it going to look like a million? what does it become an issue that seems to embolden politicians to say we're not going put it up. i know it's pathetic. but that. no, no, it's absolutely pathetic . look, i absolutely pathetic. look, i just wanted to quickly ask you about this latest, gary lineker political adventures that we had. shamima and barred from returning to the yesterday . returning to the uk yesterday. so folk like and me were so while folk like and me were actually celebrating the news , actually celebrating the news, the beeb's golden boy, gary
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lineker tweeted , was a child lineker tweeted, was a child manipulated , outed and groomed. manipulated, outed and groomed. this feels very wrong , manipulated, outed and groomed. this feels very wrong, right so a lot tear up this contrast gets most of his money about a million and a half. now he doesn't work for bt sport right he makes a million and a half out of licence fee payers. we have pay this money whether no matter whether we want to or not. okay so . how does he have not. okay so. how does he have the right . because he not. okay so. how does he have the right. because he is famous as a bbc employee . okay. he as a bbc employee. okay. he claims to a freelance that by the way , now currently being the way, now currently being tested by, hmrc, which is what a battle going on in the background. half a million quid. okay. so you know it's not sure that he is actually afraid alex at all. how is it, that the half of us will say half of us, right . i reckon the number is probably 70% or 80% who don't agree with it. why do we to sort this out? and yet he paid in order to use his platform as a
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effectively a bbc employee to push your taxes right. the reality is that davie said that he is going to get balance by that i don't blame i, i don't blame lineker for his platform if that's what he wants to do. but why doesn't he do it for money? is he. i couldn't agree more. and he has made tim davie look like a weak fool because . look like a weak fool because. tim davie said he was going to get tough. it didn't matter how big you were, it didn't matter. you did. and he has failed. he's made tim davie look a fool made tim davie look like a fool . but kelvin mackenzie, thank you campbell, you so much. campbell, most ft. when from my break. but when i'm back from my break. but it's to reveal tonight's it's time to reveal tonight's great britain and uni jackass and superstar panel. they're going to return this, although we could only see calvin at the moment we will get them back very shortly. but can we hear dominique samuels? yes, you know. dominique savages, know. okay dominique savages, who is your greatest britain we go who is your greatest britain we 9° my who is your greatest britain we go my greatest britons are the
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protesters that took to oxford over the weekend to protest against the imposition of low traffic slush , 15 minute traffic slush, 15 minute neighbourhoods . good traffic slush, 15 minute neighbourhoods. good on traffic slush, 15 minute neighbourhoods . good on them, neighbourhoods. good on them, sean bailey. your nominee? my greatest britain is the queen consort who in a speech gave an impassioned defence of creativity and free speech to a group of orphans and said they must stick to their guns . an must stick to their guns. an important part of making this country great is free speech. and i mean to call your so minds and honour this week it's college swimmer from the us. oh great. it's so. no, it's. no, it's tone. it was okay. you've lost mood board . look, there's lost mood board. look, there's only one winner for me today. there's only one winner. it's shaun bailey. it's the anti woke queen camilla . camilla. good on queen camilla. camilla. good on you for actually standing up for what the country thinks rather than those of those weakling politicians you need jackass time now. dominique samuels, my union jack is oxford city
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council for their tyrannical approach to these low traffic neighbourhoods that nobody wants and all of the other crackpots that advocate for these disgusting anti—democratic schemes . shaun bailey, your schemes. shaun bailey, your nominee, my union cos is tony blair, who's trying to inflict a digital i.d blair, who's trying to inflict a digital id on all britons. this is something he failed to do when was pm and now he's tried to do it through the back door to do it through the back door to on many mine a's suella braverman for not ending they. oh my god this tunnel is. healthy. if it is ma'am, those for saying okay the because she said this let's have a look at what she said but it's important to make sure that we cherish the specialisms that we have in country a lot of people would be eating termites right now rather thinking necessarily about aspects of lettuce and tomatoes similar. but i'm conscious that
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consumers want a year round choice and that is what our supermarkets and food growers food producers and goes around the world trying to satisfy . the world trying to satisfy. thank you for that practical advice to me , today's hoodie and advice to me, today's hoodie and jackass is clearly the oxford council for their post to 15 minute cities dominic samuel shown by the amy the cow . thank shown by the amy the cow. thank you so much for your company. i thank you for being with me. i had my family with me. it was very exciting. i'm off for a couple of weeks to celebrate the big four. oh, can you believe dawn neesom will be here on the night.
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welcome back. i'm karen armstrong in the gb newsroom. the prime minister will tomorrow urge world leaders move faster and supply ukraine advanced weaponry to give it a decisive advantage on the battlefield . advantage on the battlefield. rishi sunak is expected to use a meeting which . president meeting which. president volodymyr zelenskyy will attend virtually to call for a longer range weapons to be sent . range weapons to be sent. ukraine now . earlier this ukraine now. earlier this evening, the united nations in a motion to call for moscow to end hostilities and they call for lasting peace in ukraine. it's a year on from when russia launched its invasion in the country and china abstained from that vote amid suggestions it's
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