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tv   Farage Replay  GB News  March 7, 2023 12:00am-1:01am GMT

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middlehurst. nigel, thank you and good evening to you. our top story on gb news tonight , former gb news tonight, former metropolitan police officer wayne cozens has been sentenced to a further 19 months in prison after pleading guilty to three charges of indecent exposure . charges of indecent exposure. the court today heard how he exposed himself to a woman on a country lane while on duty just months before murdering sarah everard. the 50 year old is already serving a whole life sentence for the murder of ms. everard in 2021. and as you've been hearing, everard in 2021. and as you've been hearing , charities are been hearing, charities are warning thousands of asylum seekers will be left permanently in limbo under new government plans to tackle illegal immigration. plans to tackle illegal immigration . the new laws would immigration. the new laws would ban those crossing the english channelin ban those crossing the english channel in small boats from claiming asylum or from returning to the uk. the
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government has promised to provide more safe routes . 3000 provide more safe routes. 3000 people have already made the journey so far this year across the english channel. that's nearly double the year before . nearly double the year before. specialist officers investigating the car crash that killed three people in south wales say they're still trying to piece together what happened. meanwhile tributes have been pounng meanwhile tributes have been pouring in on social media for 21 year olds. eve smith and darcy ross and 24 year old rafal john, who were all killed in the accident in cardiff . two others accident in cardiff. two others sophie rousseau and shane locklin, remain in hospital in a critical condition. police say the group went on a night out on friday and were last seen in the early hours of saturday morning . a cabinet office minister has accused labour of breaching impartiality rules in a civil service . that's after former service. that's after former senior civil servant sue gray, who led the investigation into partygate was offered the position of sir keir starmer's
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new chief of staff. paymaster general jeremy quin demanded labour publish a record of their meetings with ms. grey . there meetings with ms. grey. there are now serious questions as to whether labour, by acting fast and loose , undermined the rules and loose, undermined the rules and loose, undermined the rules and the impartiality of a civil service. why are they refusing to publish where they met with sue gray .7 why can't they tell us sue gray? why can't they tell us what they discussed ? where they what they discussed? where they met? how often they met? their refusal to do so begs the question exactly what is labour trying to hide ? well, time to trying to hide? well, time to wrap up warm tonight to a yellow weather warning for snow and ice is in place across large parts of the uk . the met office has of the uk. the met office has issued alerts for much of the south. the midlands , south south. the midlands, south wales, northern ireland from 9 pm. tonight until 10 am. p.m. tonight until 10 am. tomorrow morning. one's already in place in northern and eastern scotland and north—east england . tuesday is expected to be the colder night of the year in
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march as well. that's all for me. i'm back in an hour. now, his first . well, once again, the his first. well, once again, the government coming out with very , very tough words. mind you, we have heard them before, but they realise that the issue of the small boats in particular and the impact it's having on the impact it's now having on communities this communities all over this country is racing up to a very near the top of the political agenda. near the top of the political agenda . and it matters agenda. and it matters particularly with those voters that crossed over and voted conservative for the first time in their lives in 2019. so tomorrow it will be a double act between rishi sunak and suella braverman , the home secretary. braverman, the home secretary. their message will be if you come to this country illegally , come to this country illegally, you will not be allowed to stay . you will never get refugee status or citizenship. and once we've deported you, you'll be banned for life. now, on the
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face of it, i, of all people , face of it, i, of all people, should be welcoming this because i was saying back in the spring of 2020 that unless we say and do those things very much as tony abbott did when he was prime minister of australia, to stop the flow there. unless we do these things, the problem will get significantly worse. well, i wasn't wrong in my predictions, but i see huge problems here. whatever happens in terms of passing this legislation , we are still signed legislation, we are still signed up to a series of agreements with the united nations. some of them going back to 1951. when them going back to 1951. when the world was a very different place indeed . but the real place indeed. but the real biggie is our old friend, the european court of human rights. there to enforce the european convention on human rights. and that makes deporting people for a whole list of reasons very , a whole list of reasons very, very difficult. now, the government will argue that they will amend or change the human
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rights act. they'll make it more difficult for people to put down legal challenges. but but have to get all this past the british judiciary and i think all the while we're part of the eci. i believe none of this will work. that's my view. i haven't been wrong about this crisis so far. i will be one day, but i don't think just yet. but give me your view. will this work barrage at gb news dot uk now all over ireland for the last year. they've been increasing protests in particularly small rural communities where hotels get taken over and a whole lot of young men from all over the world get put in. there are also lots of allegations about compose nations that may or may not happen with underage girls. you know the story. we saw the protests in knowsley on merseyside. the other week and all those people that turned up accused of being far right. well, that doesn't stopping people tonight there is people because tonight there is a parish council meeting in keg
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worth and that's up in north—east leicestershire. and will hollis, our reporter , is will hollis, our reporter, is there for us right now. will good evening. tell us what's going on behind you . good going on behind you. good evening, nigel. yes, it's become quite a familiar story in the british dialogue right now. it's a conversation that's happening in communities up and down the country where hotels are being used to house asylum seekers. people that are often fleeing war torn countries. but they are often met with objection . and often met with objection. and you can hear that objection from behind me. you said that there is, of course, a parish council meeting. of course, the parish council has very little power to stop hotels being used for by asylum seekers. but the people here in kag, within north—west leicestershire have decided to come down to show the people that represent them, at least on that represent them, at least on that super local level, that they do have a concern. what i've been hearing from people today is that it's not
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necessarily the people that are coming here or where they're even coming from, it is the even coming from, but it is the numbers . even coming from, but it is the numbers. this even coming from, but it is the numbers . this town, a small numbers. this is a town, a small village of around 4000 people or so and 250 asylum seekers are supposedly going to be moving in here. maybe not straightaway, but certainly over the coming months . a few of them are months. a few of them are already here. i had a conversation with a gentleman from egypt earlier today. he said he was a refugee and he was fleeing country because fleeing the country because he was persecuted . but that was being persecuted. but that means that that hotel where people weddings planned, people had weddings planned, where people would train , teach where people would train, teach their children how to swim , their children how to swim, isn't to be used by the isn't going to be used by the community anymore. and i think that's why people that's really why people are quite we've also quite concerned. we've also heard a little bit of concern from leicestershire county council well as the council as well as the local north—west leicestershire district council because they say this doesn't seem fair when 200 or so people are moving in here and in neighbouring nottinghamshire there is less than a hundred asylum seekers that are being housed and i think that really is that comments whether this is comments asian, whether this is the place for a group of
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the right place for a group of people to be moved into a hotel . now, of course, the home office says this is a temporary decision. they don't want to house people in these sorts of hotels , but it costing people hotels, but it is costing people , the taxpayers, £6 million a day to do so. nigel no, absolutely. and will tell me you've been there for the day and you've been talking to people. i mean, after knowsley , people. i mean, after knowsley, if you listen to most of british mainstream media and much of our printed to media you would have thought that these were all far right, violent thugs. is that what you've seen today in kegg with no . no, i don't think so. with no. no, i don't think so. i'd say that the majority of people here seem to be concerned. parents i mean, i haven't been asking every single person what their politics is. i think that the majority of the people here are people from caguas, but it does seem maybe a few people have come from outside of kagawa. this is the second protest of this sort. it is a little bit smaller than
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last, where two people were arrested, two people have been charged, one of them was charged for assaulting police officer. a 26 year old, a 54 year old was also charged for obstructing a highway , but without people highway, but without people directly what their politics. i think this is just people that are concerned as to what might happenin are concerned as to what might happen in their village when large group of mainly young men come here. that seems to be what i'm hearing from people . well, i'm hearing from people. well, hollis, thank you for that live report from caguas in north east leicestershire out , of course, leicestershire out, of course, it's the usual story in kag worth. it means that the hotel won't be open, weddings will be cancelled. birthday parties will be cancelled. the local florist , who has a contract with the hotel lose that contract . hotel will lose that contract. in fact, that particular hotel has a swimming pool, and that's the one place the community can go for kids to have swimming lessons and all the of it. lessons and all the rest of it. so the knock ons from are so the knock ons from this are serious. well, we won't allow on this channel people who are genuinely concerned citizens all to labelled as far right
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to be labelled as far right racist thugs. it's simply right. and yes, of course , in any form and yes, of course, in any form of protest , you will always get of protest, you will always get those who come along and look for aggro. but i'm convinced as these protests grow number around the country, these are genuinely concerned citizens . genuinely concerned citizens. our amendment for migration joins me out . our amendment for migration joins me out. i our amendment for migration joins me out . i don't our amendment for migration joins me out. i don't think our amendment for migration joins me out . i don't think even joins me out. i don't think even or i two or three years ago would have imagined we'd be seeing scenes like this in small engush seeing scenes like this in small english villages . we well, i english villages. we well, i think that if the numbers were inevitably going to grow in the way that they have, frankly , way that they have, frankly, there was no alternative but to start putting them in places and around the country . it's the around the country. it's the government that didn't think of this as one of the concerns witnesses of the inaction and they're in ability to actually control the boats. and i think this labelling of who are genuinely concerned as right as fascist as racist as this that
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and the other is so hurtful to those people who have genuine concerns about the communities you know better than anyone, nigel, that when . in 2016 when nigel, that when. in 2016 when people voted it, one of the reasons that they vote it in the way that they did was because they were being ignored. they were told they didn't know what they talking about. they didn't underst stand and everything that was going on was in their interests as well. i'm afraid . interests as well. i'm afraid. yeah. the government actually is foolish enough to go that line again . there will be a big, big again. there will be a big, big price to pay. yeah. so course what they're doing this government is they're overpromising and under—delivering. you know, we're hearing big of we're hearing these big words of rishi sunak, know , newspaper rishi sunak, you know, newspaper article yesterday. there'll be a lot tomorrow, but lot of press tomorrow, but actually, we keep hearing don't we, from successive home secretaries and prime ministers. we're going to stop the boats.
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we've got to put an end to this. why? why should be why? why should this be different? i'm why different? this time? i'm why should it be different indeed , i should it be different indeed, i think that what they're going to tackle is actually necessary and they do need to tackle some of they do need to tackle some of the areas . priti patel, she made the areas. priti patel, she made a lot of promises. boris johnson made a lot of promises. a lot of promises. boris johnson made a lot of promises . exactly made a lot of promises. exactly what rishi sunak has said that if you arrive here as an illegal if you arrive here as an illegal if you arrive here as an illegal if you arrive here illegally , if you arrive here illegally, you will be treated as such and you will be treated as such and you will be sent back. well bofis you will be sent back. well boris didn't keep his word . you will be sent back. well boris didn't keep his word. i hope that rishi does. i have a feeling that he does mean it, and he's giving suella braverman the support that she needs . the support that she needs. whether in the end, the legislation that makes its way through parliament is going to be mould. frankly, it's going to moored not only in the commons but in the law, in the lords as well, and particularly in the lords . if what ends up is very lords. if what ends up is very little, very , really, pretty
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little, very, really, pretty much the same as the legislation that we saw going through last year. that we saw going through last year . then frankly, it will be year. then frankly, it will be time wasted . i hope that this time wasted. i hope that this time wasted. i hope that this time and i am hopeful that the legislation that makes it onto the statute, statute books is actually going to have some sort of effect. what it won't do is have any effect this year. of effect. what it won't do is have any effect this year . it'll have any effect this year. it'll be by the end of the year, at the present rate. we're going to reach something like 90,000 and more people coming across illegally . where are they going illegally. where are they going to put them? there's only hotels and there's going to be more communities that react to that. and are concerned about that . and are concerned about that. you don't really believe this can work there because basic clear, we are still part of the eci. the prime minister's made it clear we're going to stay of the job and british judges are always going to rule in favour of our international obligations . yeah, they probably are,
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nigel. it isn't just the eci, although there are a lot of rules and a lot of discretionary decisions taken that have nothing to do with the legislation or our commitment to international treaties. it really depends whether the government having got the legislation through that is now being proposed eased then they actually implement and act on it. it won't solve the problem completely, but it will have an effect or i out. thank you . effect or i out. thank you. well, out minute. they're trying to be optimistic, but i've heard him on this program before trying to be optimist. him on this program before trying to be optimist . we all trying to be optimist. we all want to be optimistic. we all want to be optimistic. we all want to be optimistic. we all want to believe that the government will get a grip on this. but i haven't changed my view ever since. there's really started properly in 2020. we're stuck with the hhr. it ain't going to work. hold your breath folks. as my advice intimidates will talk about those locked down leaks about the role of
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matt hancock, the abuse of power. but the government, their desire to lock me up because they weren't sure that i quarantined for 14 days, which we were told was all about the science . i'm not so sure. now, science. i'm not so sure. now, the recent revelations back that up see in a minute.
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some of your reflections on whether you think the latest initiative by sunak and brave women is actually going to work .john women is actually going to work . john says what if the tories are dragging their feet are illegals so they can so they so they console up for the election which they currently look like they're bound to lose. could this be yet another single subject general election ? subject general election? sorting it would give them a huge electoral boost. no, i tell you what, john, i tell you what's going to happen. they're going complete and going to make a complete and utter it. and then at utter mess of it. and then at the general election, say , the next general election, say,
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vote for us and we'll leave the hhr. might mean it. they hhr. they might mean it. they won't probably won't believe it. they probably won't believe it. they probably won't do it. but suspect won't even do it. but i suspect that's where going. i'll make this prediction . hhr will become this prediction. hhr will become a big general election issue on twitter. i get . of course it twitter. i get. of course it won't. it's yet another laughable scheme aimed at pulling the wool over our eyes like the new northern ireland deal like the new northern ireland deal. what a full on, full on sceptic there on twitter and morris says if the government don't stop the boats, the government will lose the next general election . yes, morris general election. yes, morris probably by quite some margin. now, a little bit of light relief on gb news last night on one of our late discussion shows, steve and alan was in the chair and he was interviewed by a man who had been matt hancock's lawyer . gosh, he must hancock's lawyer. gosh, he must have been kept quite busy . but have been kept quite busy. but please look and listen this clip and it will make you smile . and it will make you smile. then, media and crisis pr lawyer jonathan code, who was actually
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recently asked to act for matt hancock. thank you for joining me . yes, i have to say, that's me. yes, i have to say, that's because i made it absolutely clear to your programme . i asked clear to your programme. i asked them not to disclose that and thatis them not to disclose that and that is very, very poor journalism. i've just been given the email that you sent to my producer, which they'd like me to read out as a courtesy. the lady who approached me to ask for matt hancock. i would be grateful if it was mentioned that he asked me to act for him . oh so it seems that you are. you're absolutely right that it's my mistake. i missed out the. no, i take all of that fact and i apologies . i have to say, and i apologies. i have to say, i think that apps be brilliant and it says so much about matt hancock. if that's who he picks for his lawyer. no wonder. we're learning what we are about with all the things that happened
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dunng all the things that happened during lockdown , including during lockdown, including wilfully trying to frighten us. yes wilfully setting out to terrify the country and having said they would follow the science, insisting on the 14 days quarantine which is when they were after me. remember, can we lock him up? is farage a pub hooligan? interestingly the medicos at the heart of this were saying no quarantine for between and seven days would be plenty. well, one of the people that took a fair bit of abuse , that took a fair bit of abuse, one of the leading covidiots i think, during the whole saga, was alan miller, co—founder of together . now, anybody that together. now, anybody that opposed any aspect of government policy found themselves having a very tough time on social media. but also a fair bit of abuse. alan was at you. well, i think what happened was that the government succeeded in terrifying the nation. as it was said , scaring the pants off said, scaring the pants off everyone. and then there was this culture , very pernicious.
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this culture, very pernicious. one of being nasty to our fellow citizens, as though somehow we were abdicating responsibility , were abdicating responsibility, were abdicating responsibility, we were putting people in danger rather than the very dangerous precedent which was the undemocratic suffocation of society , as well as all the society, as well as all the consequences is that we pointed out at the time would occur in terms of health concerns, in terms of health concerns, in terms of health concerns, in terms of the economy , families terms of the economy, families and businesses all of which we have seen to come true. so this code, this environment was created using nudge, using obfuscation. and now, as we know , using lies terrify the population. some with they have to take responsibility for that, for a fool, for heckling and shouting, swearing , but also the shouting, swearing, but also the government . i think what's so government. i think what's so concerning is that the government, dcm and others had spies units. this whole idea that we had citizens , that we had citizens, journalists, medics and people that were concerned about our body politic, about , you know, body politic, about, you know, where we were going , were where we were going, were treated as though we were terror
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based, in fact. yeah and yet that building behind us in the house of commons, they were happy to vote for the coronavirus to give sort of almost mediaeval king like powers to people at hancock. and i think david davies and about two others objected. let's hope we can all learn some lessons from this, but i'm worried . we can all learn some lessons from this, but i'm worried. i'm worried whether we do learn lessons from this. let's say there's another pandemic in a few years time. i am told, could be a conspiracy theory, but i'm told that the world health organisation, that rather controversial or overtly chinese influenced organisation , i'm influenced organisation, i'm told that drawing up plans for how we should all deal with pandemics. well is true. so, you know, there was a time when member states had much more of an influence on the world health organisation of an influence on the world health orgtchanged, of an influence on the world health orgtchanged, as of an influence on the world health orgtchanged, as you of an influence on the world health orgtchanged, as you say. of an influence on the world health orgtchanged, as you say. and has changed, as you say. and they have actually amendments they're making to the international health regulations that see happen that they want to see happen universally of pandemic universally in terms of pandemic preparedness strategy as they would present it. and that would
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impact that would be legally binding on 196 nations. now, it should be repeated remember that we've got a pandemic preparedness strategy . it was preparedness strategy. it was just that it was jettisoned by the government, but that was also championed by the so—called opposition and the actually anyone who's concerned about that has an ability and a right and a duty. i think , to insist and a duty. i think, to insist upon our own pandemic preparedness strategy here, that we do not have rules made elsewhere, that then just made and imposed on us. now at the time we did the campaign and sagittarians said , well, it's sagittarians said, well, it's definitely the case that we will maintain our sovereignty in all of this, but you can see that the point he was making was we are quite trigger happy with all these things right now. anything could happen the next 18 could happen over the next 18 months, years. we don't know months, two years. we don't know who's going be in government, who's going to be in government, what situation saw what the situation is. we saw that opposition, if it can that the opposition, if it can be we're even more be imagined, we're even more wanting and impose wanting to lock down and impose and suffocate longer, and suffocate for longer, further but further and harder. but together, we keep making the
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point that in order to protect and maintain our fundamental paramount paramount rights, we need to hold all the elected accountable here in our sovereign nation, britain, as opposed to signing up to anything. world health organisation level. well, that's one that we're going to watch very, very closely. but are our liberties freedoms are liberties and freedoms are not just impinged upon by what just being impinged upon by what happened pandemic ? i happened in the pandemic? i mean, you know, again, 50 minute cities talked cities that are being talked about now, a lot of the press say nothing to about. it's say nothing to worry about. it's all . how do see all hysterical. how do you see it? well, what we've seen is a situation where they not situation where they said not only are they saying nothing to worry about, they're smearing anyone questions worry about, they're smearing any(whether questions worry about, they're smearing any(whether it's questions worry about, they're smearing any(whether it's the questions worry about, they're smearing any(whether it's the mayor ons worry about, they're smearing any(whether it's the mayor of; and whether it's the mayor of london, saying that london, sadiq khan, saying that anyone raising questions london, sadiq khan, saying that an doing raising questions london, sadiq khan, saying that an doing anything;ing questions london, sadiq khan, saying that an doing anything isg questions london, sadiq khan, saying that an doing anything is faruestions london, sadiq khan, saying that an doing anything is far right»ns or doing anything is far right or doing anything is far right or whatever a vaccine denier is. i'm not sure this or whether it's oxford, oxfordshire county council that is suppressing reports that goes against what is actual traffic study is purporting to be doing. what we're seeing is a similar thing that matt hancock has done
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across the board. right, which is treating citizens and residents, voters with contempt, saying we know best we're going to do this to you regardless. we're not going to listen. if we do cancel, we're not going to listen to the responses. and that's oxford we've got that's why in oxford we've got a town event this thursday town hall event this thursday night. the councillors have not agreed attend, the public agreed to attend, but the public are to be there and we're are going to be there and we're doing that. we're doing that in various cities around the country both. been country and both. that has been a in cambridge and a big purchase in cambridge and of the uk. what's of course the uk. nigel, what's happening is people are saying we're to up with we're not going to put up with this that's really this anymore. so that's really good from point view of good from the point of view of holding accountable. but holding people accountable. but i think we've got a technocratic class are just class basically who are just used the ones, used to saying we're the ones, the ones we best the bright ones we know best either nasty way, like matt either in a nasty way, like matt hancock and cavalier either in a nasty way, like matt han�*treating and cavalier either in a nasty way, like matt han�*treating us and cavalier either in a nasty way, like matt han�*treating us with d cavalier either in a nasty way, like matt han�*treating us with contempt, and treating us with contempt, or a that's a bit more or in a way that's a bit more condescending they behind condescending by they behind closed doors in a different fashion, but treating fashion, but always treating sidelining us. that's also why we're launching a cabinet together where we're saying that the public has to be at the heart of all these considerations and in a range of
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areas, we're going to have spokespeople going spokespeople that are going to put representatives put good elected representatives under say, under pressure. i have to say, i'm a big supporter of your work . do.and i'm a big supporter of your work . do. and thank you . i think i do. and thank you for joining me. i do think we've forjoining me. i do think we've learned that lockdown was a disaster weren't always disaster and they weren't always following they were following the science. they were often politics. and often just playing politics. and i don't need to give balance to that argument. just read matt hancock's texts and it's hancock's texts and tweets. it's perfectly clear. in a moment, we're going to have an exclusive interview with steve bannon back interview with steve bannon back in a of minutes.
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steve bannon was a hugely influential figure in 2016. in the election of president trump. he worked next to him in the white house for a few months. he now runs his own daily podcast, bannon's war room, and he is highly influential in american conservative circles . very, very conservative circles. very, very controversial. a hate figure of
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much of mainstream media and the left . and i got the first left. and i got the first exclusive interview with him on british television for many, many years. but think about this on the day we learn we're planning to have a big concert rather like live aid at wembley in order to raise money for ukraine and ukrainians. a painting in america about funding ukraine is changing very, very quickly. the americans have already put in $140 billion, dwarfing anything . the rest of us have done . . the rest of us have done. here's steve bannon and listen out in particular for what he has to say about ukraine. steve bannon. has to say about ukraine. steve bannon . we've not seen much of bannon. we've not seen much of you in the british media for a long time , but you are portrayed long time, but you are portrayed when they write about you. that's because the british the british media is dumb and lazy. if you read the guardian, at least the us. edition, you'll catch a lot of what we stand because we're at the tip of the spean because we're at the tip of the spear, populist nationalism spear, the populist nationalism movement. course what the movement. and of course what the tories and the british tories stand for and the british politics disaster right tories stand for and the british politithe disaster right tories stand for and the british politithe toriesaster right tories stand for and the british politithe tories standight tories stand for and the british politithe tories stand for: now. the tories stand for
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absolutely nothing. they're going to get smoked. i've going to get smoked. as i've been the great smoked been saying, the great smoked when the election when the when the next election comes there'll be comes up and then there'll be some formation of true some reform formation of true british i think british politics, i think are more populist nationalist more of a populist nationalist mentality , i.e. the reason that mentality, i.e. the reason that we're not covered as much is very i don't the very simply, i don't think the british political press , they british political press, they understand they're dumb, they're lazy and they're bought off. they want to continue to push the narrative that's out there. and quite frankly , the united and quite frankly, the united kingdom, from the kingdom, as you saw from the financial you had last financial crisis you had last year , is in it now. i say year, is really in it now. i say really bad. yeah, we're not we're not in a great place. not a great place for a terrible place. so not a great place. it's too nice. a terrible place. roubini came out today. the professor, think is up professor, i think is up at harvard. it talks the harvard. it talks about the global capital markets. the british british got the british got the british got the preamble last summer. when preamble to it last summer. when you have, you know, tax you try to have, you know, tax cuts really unfunded tax cuts are really unfunded tax cuts, fine, but you cuts, tax cuts are fine, but you can't cuts, tax cuts are fine, but you cant you cuts, tax cuts are fine, but you can't you have the can't do that when you have the social spending. you've got to get control of your budget and actually look at where the space should your should come from and your pensions exposed. pensions were totally exposed.
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remember? your remember? right now, your pensions, this as a pensions, you know this as a capital guy, so capital markets guy, there's so much hinky this much hinky stuff in this pension, derivatives to pension, so much derivatives to try juice the returns and try to juice the returns and zero rates. whole zero interest rates. the whole pension, whole all the pension, the whole all the pensions uk could get the pensions in the uk could get the bottom out. we're in bottom could blow out. we're in a economic crisis a financial economic crisis that's going get worse. that's only going to get worse. now, very interested to now, i was very interested to see ron desantis. haven't see ron desantis. we haven't heard desantis heard much from ron desantis about but a big in about the uk, but a big piece in the times newspaper, desantis saying to play golf saying that going to play golf as andrews is of the as an andrews is one of the great of his life. great moments of his life. analysing that is he analysing that brexit is he compared founding compared them to the founding fathers usa because this fathers in the usa because this was the first brexit after all. but also desantis being very critical of the conservative government. so they've not delivered brexit properly. it's left people disappointed . does left people disappointed. does desantis get this stuff ? first, desantis get this stuff? first, i've looked at this talk about the times. it's a rupert murdoch. i mean it. let's be honest. the fox is totally blacked out of fox. trump you're getting softball interviews. you're getting t—ball interviews . you're getting infomercials for those candidates. ron desantis is a good man. he's a
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patriot. he served his country. he's been an excellent governor. yeah but the problem is he still looks at the framework of all the republics, from nikki haley to tim scott. they're all good people, but they have this people, but they still have this construct of neocon neoliberalism, right ? that neoliberalism, right? that worldview cannot survive. we can't finance it . the people in can't finance it. the people in this audience are the ones going to have to write the checks, their pension their tax their pension funds, their tax money, sons and money, and their sons and daughters going to go on daughters are going to go die on foreign battlefields. the foreign battlefields. and the people have to people of england have to understand right now, if you continue this path, your continue down this path, your sons are going to sons and daughters are going to be in ukraine, fighting sons and daughters are going to be the in ukraine, fighting sons and daughters are going to be the ukrainians. 3, fighting sons and daughters are going to be the ukrainians. take 1ting sons and daughters are going to be the ukrainians. take back for the ukrainians. take back crimea if that's what the british people want, then continue neoliberal neo continue to back neoliberal neo cons. lot more cons. there's a lot more scepticism here, isn't scepticism ism here, isn't there, about ukraine? money, zero it off . you zero money. cut it all off. you got you got zelenskyy they got it. you got zelenskyy they have to go to the negotiating table figure this thing out. table and figure this thing out. there's 40,000. the defence there's 40,000. what the defence department 40,000 department says is 40,000 dead women and they're women and children and they're fighting russian fighting over the russian speaking border of speaking eastern border of ukraine talking about this ukraine and talking about this crazy thing that biden said, oh , the ukrainians get to decide. they decide american they get to decide american
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foreign to and foreign policy to go. and they want take they want want to take they they want a return all the territories, return of all the territories, including and want including crimea, and they want $1,000,000,000,000 in reparations from the russians. and importantly, they're reparations from the russians. and we're portantly, they're reparations from the russians. and we're going tly, they're reparations from the russians. and we're going to. they're reparations from the russians. and we're going to have're reparations from the russians. and we're going to have war saying we're going to have war crime if i remember my crime trials. if i remember my world history correctly , world war ii history correctly, churchill on fdr, montgomery and patton, we beat the first, and then we had the war crime trials. we beat the japanese imperial army first, and then we had the war crime trials. don't tell a guy who's going to be a war he's going to war criminal. he's going to fight bitter end. you fight to the bitter end. so you think american public think that american public opinion to force biden opinion is going to force biden into zero? first off, the maga movement republican movement and the republican minority in the house is minority of maga in the house is going funding. that going to stop the funding. that source going to come from. source first going to come from. i some of the i think i see some of the populist stuff we can't populist stuff join us. we can't afford we're talking about afford it. we're talking about right now. you talk about spending. talking about spending. we're talking about to $1,000,000,000,000 in cuts on medicaid medicare, medicaid aid, not medicare, social next social security over the next ten talking about ten years. we're talking about other social other social network, social safety net cuts. we're talking about significant cuts in the defence budget. you're going defence budget. if you're going to american citizens to do that to american citizens and for all cutting and i'm for all cutting medicaid, you can't be given
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$200 billion to the ukrainians right putting $5 right now. we're putting $5 billion pay their billion a month to pay their pensions, to their and to billion a month to pay their pen�*their to their and to billion a month to pay their pen�*their health their and to billion a month to pay their pen�*their health care. and to billion a month to pay their pen�*their health care. people in pay their health care. people in the states don't have the united states don't have pensions. our pensions. people in our state don't health care. you don't have health care. you expect working people expect that working class people in audience are going to in this audience are going to write going write write checks, are going to write checks? that ukrainian checks? are that the ukrainian government 10% government will just take in 10% of top. now, like for your british understand that british audience understand that we're fight no we're going to fight this. no money ukraine make the money to the ukraine make the ukrainians the negotiating ukrainians go to the negotiating table it out. no more table and figure it out. no more killing. no more killing fields in more dead women in ukraine. no more dead women and fighting over this and children fighting over this border dispute that's going to get focussed. going to get get focussed. it's going to get i mean, in the i tell you, when i mean, in the uk at the there is almost uk at the moment there is almost unanimity, view that we're unanimity, a view that we're doing right your doing the right things in your comments. okay, fine. okay okay. look last summer. look back to last summer. first off, it. it's off, you can't afford it. it's a fantasy for first off here, the guy runs common the armed guy that runs common the armed services committee a commons told day that the told us the other day that the british military could last five days in a conflict. you're not a nato bloke, the best ally we've got is great britain. and quite frankly, you could put up one combat division coming combat division that's coming from defence secretary.
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from your own defence secretary. you've massive from your own defence secretary. you've cuts, massive from your own defence secretary. you've cuts, you're1assive from your own defence secretary. you've cuts, you're notive defence cuts, you're not prepared. the british people are not something not prepared to have something and understand the and they should understand the days of the united states having europe a vassal state europe as a vassal state militarily are over and we're not paying for any more. i was the one, the tip of the spear for president trump to say you've got to put up the 2% of gdp. and people laughed my gdp. and people laughed in my face. said, well, we face. the germans said, well, we can't to by can't do that. we have to by constitutional law, we have to have a balanced budget. said, have a balanced budget. i said, dude, that bite your dude, we wrote that bite by your constitution. i said, we wrote that constitution you after that constitution for you after we so tell me we beat the. so don't tell me that the american people don't have have health have pensions, don't have health care, and you do because we're paying care, and you do because we're paying defence, your paying for your defence, your past, and the past, understand. and the british greatest british people, our greatest ally, the ally, have to understand the days united of days of the united states of america, underwrite these ridiculous forever wars. we just got our afghanistan, iraq got to our afghanistan, iraq after 20 years, $9 trillion on our budget, on a balance sheet, nitrate us, plus there's like 12, 15,000 dead and another 50,000 wounded. we're having 25 veterans a day kill themselves with ptsd those days are over .
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with ptsd those days are over. love it or hate it? there's more of that. a full interview on gbnews.uk. quick thought . boris gbnews.uk. quick thought. boris johnson's father, stanley, is apparently in the honours list. he's going to become a knight help, he says. stanley i don't know what the citation will read. i'd have thought most appropriate it would be services to the chinese communist party . to the chinese communist party. in a moment, talking points , in a moment, talking points, i'll be joined by former gold medal winning sprinter derek redmond .
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it's talking pints. i got derek redmond with me today. derek, welcome to the program. thank you very much. well now, you were there at the top of athletics for a long time. yeah after year after year. and i bet
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there are loads of kids , members there are loads of kids, members of athletics clubs thinking what a glamorous life it is at the top of athletics. but i bet it was no the easiest way to explain that when we got on the plane to go to internationals, we turned right, not left, number one. no it was. it was it was a tough slog, but i enjoyed it. you know, it was once you sort of made it on an international level, the aim was to stay there. you became a target. people knew who you are . you had to train, you know, train and dedicate yourself to everything. and i hesitate when i use that word dedicate because people say to me, oh, you must have been so dedicate to the i actually don't believe i was dedicated. i loved what i did. okay and it was it was my life. if hated it and did it, maybe if i hated it and did it, maybe that dedication. but that was dedication. but i absolutely loved it. i don't feel i out on anything in feel i missed out on anything in life. people that i trained life. the people that i trained with, the people i competed with, the people i competed with, the people i competed with, the people i were good with, the people i you were good at it and i wasn't about it. you were going to. but it wasn't
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just that good at it. we just you that was good at it. we had lots mean, 400 metres had lots i mean, 400 metres i mean it's a heck of a tough race isn't it. yeah it's, it's a is it a long sprint. it's a controlled sprint. it is a long sprint the longest. you can't sprint is the longest. you can't run it flat out. so it's a controlled sprint. yeah but we had other people were very had other people who were very good you, you know you good at that. you, you know you won set records, but won titles and set records, but the one that really lives with people, course, 1991 people, of course, is the 1991 world against world championship up against the the americans the favourites the americans the americans we americans and you guys. we didn't it, did you? you didn't just win it, did you? you smashed it. well. well, we didn't smash it. we won. it was only a few times . but we only a few times. but we defeated americans for the defeated the americans for the first time in 56, 57 years. they hadnt first time in 56, 57 years. they hadn't been beaten. the international standards, not world or olympic level . and, you world or olympic level. and, you know, the last minute we changed our order , the team management our order, the team management one us want a certain order we said we think this would be the right order took a little bit convincing but they let us do it and basically we might actually look good. we gave them the position that you could lose it
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from . we'll tell you the other from. we'll tell you the other way round this time you said was an it was it was a very good time the time. it was a time at the time. it was a british open commonwealth record. but interestingly enough , actually run , the americans had actually run quicker that year than the time that weren't really. yeah, that we weren't. really. yeah, absolutely. it was out of absolutely. but it was out of a win. but the thing is, derek, we all get defined in life sometimes for things we wouldn't necessarily plan on our way. this is how i, i mean, i'm quite friendly with my guessing period. my guessing is defined by the sheinwald ball of the matter. the gap was a great cricketer, county player, cricketer, great county player, england captain , but none of england captain, but none of that defines him. yeah what defines is a very, very defines you is a very, very famous moment, which we're going to on the screen now for to play on the screen now for those watching on television. but listening radio but for those listening in radio will explain what happened in 1992. olympics, one of the favourites for a medal, won the first round semi—final going down the back straight, pulled a hamstring , down the back straight, pulled a hamstring, and i decided to get up and finish the race. and with 100 metres to go , i just once
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100 metres to go, i just once describe a portly gentleman. join me on the track to assist me and it was elegant. it was my dad and we finished the race. the race together . let's have the race together. let's have a look at those pictures . i look at those pictures. i haven't been official one time in 24.5 . in 24.5. it was , i guess that was hurting it was, i guess that was hurting in lots of ways, wasn't it? yeah obviously physically i'm pulling a hamstring at the speed i was gary. that wasn't quite around the back. right. approximately about 10.2, 10.3 seconds. i was pretty quick for the hamstring. yeah. and obviously mentally to go for all that had injury go for all that i had injury problems the whole problems before the whole medical team of team gp at the time worked round the clock to get me on the track. and it wasn't hamstring problems, it wasn't hamstring problems, it was achilles tendon problems . i was achilles tendon problems. i was achilles tendon problems. i was in shape. my coach done a fantastic job and yeah, for that
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to happen, just crucified me . to happen, just crucified me. did you know that was the end ? did you know that was the end? no i really, really didn't. did you know that was the end? no i really, really didn't . even no i really, really didn't. even after pulling my hamstring , after pulling my hamstring, people ask me, what made you get up? because i still thought i could qualify, which obviously i'm never going to. but now i tried to make a comeback for 18 months. i ended up having lots and lots and lots of surgeries because of the problems. and then after 18 months, i was told i'd never compete for my country again, which is quite funny because i then sent that same surgeon a photograph of me playing basketball for him. i got that over the got to come to that over the ever competitive derrick, but i can't do that at the moment . ever competitive derrick, but i can't do that at the moment. but amazingly, that clip and it's i mean i guess your dad coming through security and doing that there's an incredible human side to that . i guess that's what to that. i guess that's what that's the way it was, what really makes it work. i think 100. mean, know , it's one 100. i mean, you know, it's one of it's gone as of the it's gone down as a third. you know i don't third. my you know i don't popular. yeah you know olympic moments great olympic moments
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and the thing that makes and i think the thing that makes it me getting up and it is not just me getting up and running. it's my coming off running. it's my dad coming off onto track. my wife once onto the track. my wife once said few years, guys, said to me a few years, guys, she goes, if it your coach, she goes, if it was your coach, if it was a team mate, if it wouldn't have had the same. like the that was used dad the fact that it was used dad and actually makes a lot and that actually makes it a lot more realistic. and i and can kind of try to think the right word, you know, people get it because they can compare it completely , you know, because completely, you know, because they see olympians as superhuman. yeah but that made it human. and 30 years on, it never goes away, does it? no, it doesn't. it still comes back. it still comes on my timeline . i still comes on my timeline. i mean, my dad, god rest his soul, he passed away last october. he he passed away last october. he he was still surprised when we used to get asked to be interviewed. and he said, they still talk. yeah, i know. it's going to be with you forever. yeah, it is. but you the competitive side and so that you are slight so that his are slight clearly so that his basketball . well yeah went to basketball. well yeah he went to basketball. well yeah he went to basketball i did couple years basketball i did a couple years of basketball got an international then i tried to be
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the first to compete for the first person to compete for their in three sports. their country in three sports. i quit basketball, into rugby, quit basketball, got into rugby, played out played professionally, tried out for sevens, didn't for england for sevens, didn't make got into racing make it. then i got into racing motorcycles, i had a motorcycles, a team i had won, a national then i got into national title, then i got into kickboxing, a national title kickboxing, won a national title at that, and now i'm involved in boxing. so career was that boxing. so career was it that i watched every and watched the telly every now and then ? yeah, now i'm just, you then? yeah, now i'm just, you know, someone who enjoys getting out there sport and, you know, and compete still. it's and want to compete still. it's about it ? yes, about competing, isn't it? yes, absolutely. 100. i love competing . i love putting myself competing. i love putting myself in those situation is where the guns about to go the is about to go . whatever is the buzz. yeah go. whatever is the buzz. yeah i love it. yeah yeah, it's the buzz. absolutely and it's but it's also getting there so. well are you like this other kid ? are you like this other kid? yes, but i didn't really recognise it back then. i mean, i had i don't think from a sporting point of view from training and competing, i've ever changed. i'm recognising that now. but as a kid i did it just because it was natural and something that i wanted to, you know, want do. but now i look
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know, want to do. but now i look at it. yes, i was excuse me. on top of the sport, you're doing motivational speaking now. i find that really interesting. who are your audiences smiling? the corporate world. so i've been speaking now for 26 years. yeah. and also what's known as a business performance coach. i basically take what i've learnt from world of sport and from the world of sport and transport a lot of transport that into a lot of business, know, sport a business, you know, sport as a business and business as a sport, which is a title of a book that i write. and book that i that i write. and that's pretty much what i advocate. so i would say 90% of my audience is in the corporate world, i do quite lot world, is it? i do quite a lot of with some students. and, you know, high schools and universities. the of universities. but the bulk of the in the corporate the work is in the corporate world. how much of sport is mental? if you're talking about an hour before a final 100% mental, you know, you can't do any more training just before you go and perform, you know, half an hour, an hour before if there's nothing else you can do, it's a pure mental game. but i would say a lot of it is more mental than it is, is physical. you can almost say 5050, but
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there's a mental aspect to there's a huge mental aspect to it. with training , it. even with your training, even attitude, your even with your attitude, your mindset, i mean, as i say now, if you think you can or you think you can't, you most probably right. know, probably right. you know, i'm that thing i that one true thing that i advocate of people, advocate for a lot of people, whether in sport or in whether it's in sport or in business, you've to believe business, you've got to believe in of hearts that you in your heart of hearts that you can achieve whatever it is that you. know, you want to you. yeah you know, you want to achieve. so a hell of a lot of is mental the most important muscle your yeah. muscle in your body? yeah. i think maybe of people sort think maybe a lot of people sort of and watch listen of sit and watch sport, listen to sport at a top level. perhaps they realise how important that whole things is. whole mental side of things is. yeah enormous. yeah, yeah absolutely enormous. yeah, yeah. derek, on top of all yeah. and derek, on top of all that, doesn't charity work. that, he doesn't charity work. you've supported several charities. yeah, quite charities. yes yeah, quite a few. so i do stuff a sports aid foundation. they gave me a grant when i was a young lad. i do a lot for rainbows charity. a hospice in loughborough, and i do quite a lot of auctioneer and charity auctioneer. and so i do a lot through there and i think already today, this year, i've possibly raised about £120,000 alone. in march . so i'd like to
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alone. in march. so i'd like to get over a million, you know, if i can this year. i love it, you know, why not? he's never backwards in coming forwards. our guest talking pies the our guest on talking pies the night. how's the boxing going? okay undefeated so far . sara, my okay undefeated so far. sara, my fight won't be until next. next fight won't be until next. next fight won't be till next march because i'm having some work done on the nash's. yeah, so i've got to them looking i've got to get them looking good. certainly don't want good. and i certainly don't want anybody once . anybody knocking them out once. but thank you so much for joining us. thank you very much. thank you . well, that was fun. thank you. well, that was fun. now it's time for barrage. the barrage. let's see what you've got for me today. mary asks me, do you expect the small boats to stop coming ? now the government stop coming? now the government have shown determination to ask them to go away . mary we need to them to go away. mary we need to just sort of get our memories working here, you know? david cameron . if you come to britain cameron. if you come to britain illegally , you will be deported. illegally, you will be deported. bofis illegally, you will be deported. boris johnson . if you come to
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boris johnson. if you come to britain illegally, you will be deported the same from deported much the same from priti patel and others. and now we're hearing it from rishi sunak. we're hearing it from rishi sunak . it's never going to sunak. it's never going to happen. sunak. it's never going to happen . all the while we're happen. all the while we're signed up to the eci and all the while we have the current british judiciary. while we have the current british judiciary . that has been british judiciary. that has been my view since the start of this crisis back in the spring of 2020, and it hasn't changed now. ryan says is great confirmation that the civil service have been infiltrated by tony blair's cronies as well . joining me cronies as well. joining me early is jacob rees—mogg . early is jacob rees—mogg. interesting, wasn't it, today in the house of commons it was the labour benches looking and feeling very embarrassed. yes, they were pretty much empty and it was conservatives are it was the conservatives who are saying, we trust the civil saying, can we trust the civil service and my view is service anymore? and my view is that we can't actually that what has been a wonderful constitu tional success for us, the north travelling an independent civil service, has now has now gone and we've got to recognise that question. our question actually
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is right, that actually it was in blair's time that we saw the beginnings of the politicisation of something which since gladstone . that's right. that's gladstone. that's right. that's absolute spot on. you're right. your view as so often has great wisdom in expressing it so clearly. well, absolute . the clearly. well, absolute. the people's channel properly evokes day exactly what they knew. it was weighty without well over to you day by. thank you very much yeah, right. jacob rees—mogg is up next. jacob, tell us what you got. well, we've got a fun filled programme and lots of things going on. we're talking about the prevents strategy of why work, what some why that didn't work, what some of the were. even of the problems were. even people were considered people like me were considered to risk. you must to be at risk. i'm sure you must have on the list well. have been on the list as well. we're going talk about some we're going to talk about some of hong kong issues. tim of the hong kong issues. tim stanley's coming an excellent stanley's coming in an excellent column the telegraph. so column and the telegraph. so we're go into some we're going to go into some of the greater details of that as
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to what was going on and whether the actually wanted it. to what was going on and whether the i'm actually wanted it. to what was going on and whether the i'm not tually wanted it. to what was going on and whether the i'm not surey wanted it. to what was going on and whether the i'm not sure they |ted it. to what was going on and whether the i'm not sure they did.it. to what was going on and whether the i'm not sure they did. i'm well, i'm not sure they did. i'm not sure they did. but before all of that, we better have a look at the weather. i think. hello there. i'm to greg her. welcome to our latest broadcast from office. it stays on from the met office. it stays on the cold side over the coming few days . the risk of snow and few days. the risk of snow and ice widely frosts overnight as well. looking at the bigger picture, arctic air plunging south across the uk, bringing snow showers to many northern areas across the south. we will see weather fronts bringing see some weather fronts bringing some rain , sleet some outbreaks of rain, sleet and some snow at times, too, over next few days, lots over the next few days, lots playful to stay playful with the details to stay tuned the forecast turning tuned to the forecast turning icy we head into the early icy as we head into the early hours tonight . further snow hours of tonight. further snow showers for northern ireland. scotland cloudier across central parts of england, wales and southern england where we will see outbreaks of rain, see some outbreaks of rain, sleet and met office sleet and snow met office warnings and ice cover warnings for snow and ice cover quite parts the uk to quite large parts of the uk to take us into tuesday morning. temperatures starting well below freezing across scotland, northern england, northern ireland, snow showers from the
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word here, plenty of word go here, but plenty of sunny spells to cloudy skies across parts of the midlands. seven wales outbreaks of rain for seven counties of england with snow mixed with some sleet and snow mixed in there to some slushy accumulations . possible lots accumulations. possible lots places sunshine in an places seeing sunshine in an afternoon on tuesday but very cold temperatures below average 3 to celsius generally some 3 to 5 celsius generally some places in scotland staying below freezing all day forever . icy freezing all day forever. icy stretches possible quite widely as we move into tuesday evening and overnight, further snow showers for northern scotland. temperatures plummeting well below freezing. five. a weather system is moving in southern parts england as well. some parts of england as well. some uncertainty placement uncertainty, the placement of this, could lead to some this, but could lead to some accumulating snow across the higher ground here. so do stay tuned forecast. warnings tuned to the forecast. warnings already in force across southwest england. take us into wednesday so stays quite wednesday here. so stays quite grey. the risk of some rain, sleet snow across seven sleet and snow across seven counties england. counties of england. but elsewhere wednesday, looking counties of england. but else a 1ere wednesday, looking counties of england. but elsea cold,\lednesday, looking counties of england. but elsea cold, sunny day, looking counties of england. but elsea cold, sunny day. looking counties of england. but elsea cold, sunny day. plenty| like a cold, sunny day. plenty of sunny spells still the risk of sunny spells still the risk of a few snow showers across northern and eastern scotland. down into northeast england . so
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down into northeast england. so cold, days to come . cold, few days to come. temperatures generally below average for this time of year. widespread frosts and easter. take care. see again .
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easy it's 11:00 with gb news. easy it's11:00 with gb news. in a moment, headliners but first, let's bring you the very latest news headlines and our top story on gb news. tonight, the metropolitan police has apologised for not arresting the former officer, wayne cousins before he murdered sarah everard . cousins has been sentenced a further 19 months. today pleading guilty to three charges of indecent exposure. the crimes happenedin of indecent exposure. the crimes happened in the months before he kidnapped, raped and killed ms. everard in march 20, 21, the 50 year old is already serving a life sentence and the force his behaviour should make everyone in policing hang their heads ,
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in policing hang their heads, shame . well, our other top story shame. well, our other top story tonight on gb news charities are warning thousands of asylum seekers will be left permanently in limbo under new government plans to tackle illegal migration . the new laws would migration. the new laws would ban those crossing english channelin ban those crossing english channel in small boats from claiming asylum and from returning to the uk. the government's promised provide more safe routes . 3000 people more safe routes. 3000 people have made the journey so far this year. that's nearly double the year before. the shadow home secretary about cooper says the government isn't doing enough. we need action to stop the dangerous boat crossings that are putting lives at risk and also undermine border security. that's why we've called for new cross border police unit to go after the criminal gangs that are really this as well as a new with france and an overhaul the asylum system to end hotel use police in south wales investigating a fatal car crash at the weekend have referred themselves to the independent
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office for police conduct

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