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tv   Patrick Christys  GB News  March 20, 2023 3:00pm-6:01pm GMT

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by yes. good afternoon, everybody is patrick christys here on gb news three until 6 pm. and i have got a massive monday show lined up for you. here's what's coming up in the first hour. could be lift off for rwanda now suella braverman are home sick is currently talking in the house commons. she thinks to
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thing she thinks that european are going to back down and let those take off. she also thinks that who oppose the rwanda scheme are just virtue signalling snobs . what do you signalling snobs. what do you make of that? but in other news as well, it is indeed some big news and it indeed breaking. news and it is indeed breaking. bofis news and it is indeed breaking. boris johnson has just submitted his dossier of evidence the his dossier of evidence and the old partygate he thinks it will vindication completely and exonerating completely . we'll exonerating completely. we'll bnng exonerating completely. we'll bring you more detail on that as . when get it, some other . and when we get it, some other big well. that just big breaking as well. that just dropped hour is, of dropped about an hour ago is, of course, they have struck course, the rmt they have struck a deal which could the strikes. is this another win for rishi sunak just to finish this all off this hour, we are going to be talking about whether or not we are indeed in nation of shoplifters. that's right . shoplifters. that's right. apparently shoplifting cases have people have become have soared people have become addicted do . to know addicted to it. i do. to know what is the most pathetic thing you've ever in your life? we've got of coming your way got all of that coming your way and more. don't go and much, much more. don't go anywhere anywhere . yes. okay. so
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anywhere anywhere. yes. okay. so couple of email shout outs for you today, ladies and gents. gbviews@gbnews.uk. the first one is, do you think people who the rwanda deal are just snobs of snobs ? is that what you think it snobs? is that what you think it is? and also as well, i do want to know a little bit like how what is the most pathetic thing you nicked probably as a kid? gbviews@gbnews.uk get those views coming in thick and fast, but right now headlines it but right now the headlines it him . patrick thank and good him. patrick thank and good afternoon from the gb newsroom it's 3:02. the dupe says it will vote against the government in this week's first parliamentary vote on the new brexit. the prime minister rishi sunak agreed the new windsor framework with eu last month. it aims to resolve some of the concerns unionists hold around the northern ireland protocol. party leader. sir donaldson acknowledged significant has been made , but said the new been made, but said the new proposed deal doesn't resolve fundamental problems . boris
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fundamental problems. boris johnson is written defence against claims he lied to parliament. the partygate scandal has been handed to the privileges committee the former prime minister will give evidence to the committee on wednesday . it will publish its wednesday. it will publish its findings on whether mr. johnson committed a of parliament and make a recommendation on punishment. the house of will make the final decision . a make the final decision. a spokesperson for boris says his position will be vindicated . the position will be vindicated. the un chief calling on rich nations to accelerate their shift to net zero by committing to the earlier date of 2040. it's a new report by the ip warns emissions must be halved by the mid 2030s if the world to have any chance of limiting temperature rise to one and a half degrees. this is a key target from the paris agreement the report which antonio gutierrez has branded
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the survival guide for humanity . he says there is little time to lose . china's president has to lose. china's president has called vladimir putin a dear friend as the pair sat together in moscow . president xi friend as the pair sat together in moscow. president xi jinping is in russia . in moscow. president xi jinping is in russia. his in moscow. president xi jinping is in russia . his first in moscow. president xi jinping is in russia. his first visit to the country since the start of the country since the start of the of ukraine. downing street says it hopes president xi urges , president putin to stop the war. he has called for pragmatism but acknowledged solutions aren't easy. russia's president says open to a negotiating process . ukraine, negotiating process. ukraine, but warned he , will not accept but warned he, will not accept any ultimatums . meanwhile, any ultimatums. meanwhile, justice ministers from around world are meeting in london to discuss increasing support for the international criminal court . on friday, the icc issued an arrest warrant . russia's arrest warrant. russia's president on charges of war crimes. deputy prime minister dominic raab says 40 nations are unhed dominic raab says 40 nations are united behind one cause to hold
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those response rebel atrocities in ukraine to account. president vladimir putin is accused of ordering the kidnapping and deportation of thousands of ukrainian . the kremlin has ukrainian. the kremlin has called allegations outrageous and, unacceptable . the home and, unacceptable. the home secretary has spoken exclusively to gb news about the government's migration policy , government's migration policy, insisting it's the right way solve the small boats crisis . it solve the small boats crisis. it comes after suella braverman said migrants could be sent to rwanda by the summer. the agreement between the two countries has been expanded to include all illegal migrants , include all illegal migrants, not just asylum seekers . this not just asylum seekers. this province, as she's held, construct tive talks with the european court of human rights over possible to the injunction that halted migrant flights to the country . our approach in the the country. our approach in the united kingdom to stopping the boats is both some and robust . boats is both some and robust. our legal migration bill will make clear that if you arrive in the uk illegally. you will be
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detained and you'll be swiftly removed. and at the same time it's humane and compassionate and people who are to rwanda will a safe and reception . and will a safe and reception. and i think those two elements robustness with our legal processes in the uk combined with compassion is the way solve this problem . members of the rmt this problem. members of the rmt and network rail have voted to accept an offer covering paid jobs and conditions as staff will receive a pay rise of between 9.2 and 14.4% and increase back pay . the union increase back pay. the union says its 20,000 members voted 76% in favour of . the new deal. 76% in favour of. the new deal. downing street says it's confident the uk banking system remains safe and well after the state backed rescue of suisse ubs to buy its swiss rival in a deal worth more than two and a half billion pounds. this
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morning, the ftse 100 fell by 1% to its lowest in more than four months. but the markets have now steadied . shares in credit steadied. shares in credit suisse dived by more than 60. this is more for me shortly. now though, is back to . though, is back to. patrick yes. happy monday, everybody. right now . there's so much to right now. there's so much to get through tonight. let's get and start, of course, with and we start, of course, with the latest government's the latest on the government's plans migrants rwanda. plans to send migrants rwanda. could be left off? could it actually be left off? now, in the last half hour, home secretary suella braverman has defended the proposals in. the house of commons problem within , the rwandan capital, kigali, over weekend. and we'll bring you exclusive interview with you an exclusive interview with her little bit later in the her a little bit later in the houn her a little bit later in the hour. but there are so many fast moving to this story? we're going to struggle , keep up with going to struggle, keep up with all of them. but today, she
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pointed to the government's achievements the last. she achievements in the last. she said there's been agreed said there's been a deal agreed with french that we know with the french that we all know about introduction the about the introduction of the illegal bill and her illegal migration bill and her trip rwanda that trip to rwanda just that illegal migration shortly going to migration bill shortly going to have a legal expert on. we're going to talk about this because i point was whether i think a big point was whether or not it was just going to get held up in the european courts. what's the news today? well, held up in the european courts. wha news; news today? well, held up in the european courts. wha newsz nev potentially ell, that news that potentially european down european judges might back down and planes take off so and allow the planes take off so we could stay in the echr and also protect our borders and get those flights taking off. if the happens. would be a massive happens. that would be a massive for government. but we'll for the government. but we'll delve that very, very shortly as well. the president has returned from rwanda, gb news is home from rwanda, but gb news is home and editor mark white and security editor mark white missed plane is still out missed the plane is still out there, believe. joins me there, i believe. he joins me now. fantastic stuff. mark now. mark, fantastic stuff. mark wise think us in, wise think is with us in, rwanda. there he is. okay, good . i mean, the weather looks absolutely lovely, but what have you learned? what do been you learned? what do you been doing that ? weather has doing over that? weather has been terrible, actually . it's
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been terrible, actually. it's here. but you've caught us in between the so there you . it's between the so there you. it's been really a jam visit for the home secretary two days of being whisked around to different locations to projects that are connected with . the policy she connected with. the policy she did ever get off the ground to take seekers. a them here to rwanda for processing and during that two day visit she saw how complexes some them funded by the uk taxpayer in partnership with the roma want in government but they know really how many asylum seekers they will have to house there because really what they're aiming to do , the policy they're aiming to do, the policy is to yes , relocating to people is to yes, relocating to people to rwanda, but their hope for in short order that that will prove a deterrent factor, that it will break the people smuggling model
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. and in doing that, they would to send any more people to rwanda if it doesn't break the people smuggling model, we could be looking at many thousands of people being relocated to here. the rwandan government patrick says it is absolutely geared up to be able over the course of this partnership agreement, which is five years. they are going to be able to accommodate many thousands of people, but not necessary sadly, right away. interestingly what's going to happen to them for the first 3 to 6 months is that they are going to fill up rwanda's hotels and be in these hostels in a bit like . the situation that's like. the situation that's unfold over the last couple of years in the uk. unfold over the last couple of years in the uk . look, mark, years in the uk. look, mark, thank you very, very much. and i know that you want to sit down with suella a couple of days ago yesterday. in fact, we're going to later on in the to play out later on in the show. thank you very much. show. so thank you very much. mark white, our homeland
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security who's in rwanda security editor who's in rwanda for us, bring you the on for us, bring you the latest on the fascinate stuff that the ground. fascinate stuff that isn't because, again, of isn't it, because, again, lot of people, saying, people, i think, were saying, well, it isn't well, what if it isn't deterrent? well, clearly the defence to that now be defence to that now would be well, keep taking well, rwanda will keep taking people is kitted people then and there is kitted out for potential these thousands people . well, as thousands of people. well, as i said short ago , suella said a short time ago, suella braverman answering braverman has been answering questions the house commons questions the house of commons this afternoon. i've got a couple of clips you. this is couple of clips for you. this is i believe she's still in the commons. actually, this was a few ago. here's what she few moments ago. here's what she had the last ten had to say. in the last ten days, the prime and have days, the prime and i have secured a big deal with the french to increase cross—channel cooperation. i've presented and we measures detain cooperation. i've presented and we swiftly measures detain cooperation. i've presented and we swiftly remove res detain cooperation. i've presented and we swiftly remove illegalietain and swiftly remove illegal migrants. and this weekend , i migrants. and this weekend, i met with refugees who have six says safely been resettled in and seen the accommodation that will be what's what's the will be using what's what's the labour policy done. well, the shadow secretary been on shadow home secretary been on twitter. she's very on twitter. she's very good on twitter. she's very good on twitter. tweeted in the last twitter. she tweeted in the last ten days labour's paltry excuse for a plan of it stuff. we're already doing the. other half is that plan for borders and
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unlimited migration. what i suggest do is get off twitter , suggest do is get off twitter, get to rwanda, and i'll show them how to stop the pirates . them how to stop the pirates. oh, it's punchy stuff, isn't it? it's stuff from suella braverman. but i said earlier on there has been a massive sticking point ahead of people wondering how on earth are we going get around this? it's going to get around this? it's all having an all very and good having an illegal migration bill. it's all very saying we're very well and good saying we're not allow anyone to not going to allow anyone to reapply asylum this country. reapply for asylum this country. we're people we're going to get people shipped or flown over shipped over there or flown over there really to rwanda. but what about those european judges, are they be able to just they going to be able to just block here we again block it? and here we go again in vortex of misery in some kind of vortex of misery when, nothing actually happens. in some kind of vortex of misery when, beenng actually happens. in some kind of vortex of misery when, been before|ally happens. in some kind of vortex of misery when, been before|ally htimes.. we've been before many times. well potentially the well this is potentially the breakthrough. the line on breakthrough. and the line on the front of a lot of newspapers today. and it's one that we're going which is going to discuss now, which is or judges are or not european judges are actually back the actually about to back do the old ferret and allow us old reverse ferret and allow us to get the planes off the ground. i'm joined by ivan sumption, who is an immigration lawyer. thank very, very lawyer. ivan, thank very, very much. now what could this really
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mean? was big mean? because this was big sticking point. there is the old adage, of, know, adage, isn't there of, you know, foreign the of foreign judges, the dead of night getting involved , stopping night getting involved, stopping us, control us, being able to control our borders . well, man borders. well, a brave man clearly feels though she's clearly feels as though she's managed to find a way around that. don't that yet. that. we don't know that yet. and the rule 39 is an important safety net to stop the abuse power by member states of the european convention. so an important piece of piece of law that must be protected . but it that must be protected. but it could be. well, it could be that they may amend the procedures to make it difficult, make last minute applications, judicial reviews was suspended once you made a judicial review application removed will be stopped. will the government change that to make it nonsense, pensive so it could be that they injunctions would be non suspend any application in pensive and you'd have to challenge this really from wherever you get a break and break it down for idiots. me so from the way i was looking at we were able to pass
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things to our own courts who are able to put people on plane on the runway with the lights on, and all of a sudden that and then all of a sudden that we'll know who's possibly we'll never know who's possibly never been to britain says never even been to britain says no, can't that at no, you can't do that at the last will be last minute and will that be able to stop a rule ? so until we able to stop a rule? so until we see what the new rules are, we don't know. but look, the european court of human rights is very important for this country. now, your views are wonderful. how does it affect me? i at impact will will this have to my life . well let me have to my life. well let me tell you the reason that we have lbgt community in the armed forces is because a european ruling the reason that homosexuality is decriminalised in northern ireland is because of a european court ruling . so of a european court ruling. so andifs of a european court ruling. so and it's really important that as a citizen of this country if i'm challenging own country i want to make sure that i can challenge it in a court outside of this country. it's a protect
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opfion of this country. it's a protect option for you and me, patrick. i get that. that is relevant when it comes to gay people who want join the military or gay people who want to be gay. northern ireland. i'm just trying drill down on trying to drill down how on earth relevant to, earth this might be relevant to, let's a criminal trying to let's say, a criminal trying to cross the channel illegally and living next to you. so living next door to you. so would mean that person would this mean that that person would this mean that that person would to rwanda would find his way to rwanda quicker than they would previously, because we managed to negotiate a deal with the with the echr european judges where we can say this rule 339, which is the rule that essentially has been causing the last minute to this, there can be this. and so that be a way this. and so that doesn't because. doesn't happen because. that appears only gripe the appears to be our only gripe the echr the minute really and. echr at the minute really and. it would mean that we could just stay in it and quite happily in it as long as that didn't exist. well, it's not just about the rule. 39 just the flight. well, it's not just about the rule conflict the flight. well, it's not just about the rule conflict between e flight. well, it's not just about the rule conflict between thisjht. well, it's not just about the rule conflict between this bill the conflict between this bill becomes law and the european convention is article three. that's the right to life . and we that's the right to life. and we they can't that the courts are
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not satisfied they've been when i say the high court granted permission to go to the court of appeal on the run the policy whether it's legal or not. yeah not satisfied that the government have made adequate inquiries and we it's not just about rule 39, it's about article three and it's also about the refugee convention . about the refugee convention. and so if this it onto the statute , it doesn't mean it's statute, it doesn't mean it's unlawful any law with kings a sentiment is lawful but is going to conflict with our international treaty obligations . what i don't understand is how the eu members themselves were allowed to strike deals with places like rwanda and they were allowed to send people over there and they were allowed do similar things that what we're talking about doing now but it's such a massive issue for to want to do it. well what the courts have brought that have brought is that the government haven't property government haven't done property work. they haven't made the proper enquiries discovered me work. they haven't made the prckeen nquiries discovered me work. they haven't made the prc keen to uiries discovered me work. they haven't made the prckeen to gets discovered me work. they haven't made the prc keen to get thiinscovered me work. they haven't made the prckeen to get this across'ed me work. they haven't made the prc keen to get this across the ne so keen to get this across the line that they're willing to do deals . a country who has got
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deals. a country who has got a history of killing political opponents. look if a refugee goes to rwanda publicly, voices, opinions . goes to rwanda publicly, voices, opinions. the leader, paul kagame is a very good likelihood at that personal end up in prison and. the very good likelihood that pows will end up dead because that's what's happened to. opponents of the leader of rwanda. now that leader of rwanda. but now that sort of problem is gone there and has done some due diligence , met people and tried to get a better handle on exactly what the situation is going to be out. that we think that this this be now why and i'm reading it of numerous it on the front of numerous different i've got different newspapers, i've got the of here. the mail in front of me here. you're judge is set to back you're a judge is set to back down on rwanda. they might feel more we've our more content that we've done our due rwanda due diligence and that rwanda actually safe . a great place actually is safe. a great place to go unless. well, that depends on the evidence they provide. but what the government have doneis but what the government have done is put all eggs into this one basket. this deterrent . if one basket. this deterrent. if it doesn't work right, if the don't if the flights go to and the numbers don't down, what
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next? okay all right. look, thank you very, very much, ivan. a great to have you on the show as i've offered something that look, it is potentially quite a big break. do this. a lot of people were wondering whether or not going to able to not we were going to be able to stay the echr at the same stay in the echr at the same time as actually getting flies off ground. sir, one day, off the ground. sir, one day, clearly, they all satisfy clearly, if they all satisfy find them to find that we're sending them to a safe, that is perfectly okay for people go and that for people to go and live that our doing due our government is doing is due they it might be best they don't see it might be best of both worlds because we could stay with them we wouldn't stay with them echr we wouldn't have a massive have to create such a massive uproar. the tory infighting could potentially over that could potentially over that could the same as could stop at the same time as being able to offer a visible, serious who serious deterrent. people who want over illegally in want to come over illegally in channel it doesn't offer want to come over illegally in cha services. it doesn't offer want to come over illegally in cha services. wellioesn't offer want to come over illegally in cha services. well the n't offer want to come over illegally in cha services. well the otherer the services. well the other benefit as well. the problem at the is what she's saying, the moment is what she's saying, which is that rwandan government the moment is what she's saying, whiciand:hat rwandan government the moment is what she's saying, whiciand abletwandan government the moment is what she's saying, whiciand able toindan government the moment is what she's saying, whiciand able to take government is fit and able to take people as well. do you make of all as well. what do you make of all of this, ladies gentlemen, of this, ladies and gentlemen, is this sizeable development? i'm also keen to views i'm also keen to your views on a clip we're going to play clip that we're going to play later so we're to hear later on, so we're going to hear directly suella braverman exclusively news part
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directly suella braverman exiwhately news part directly suella braverman exiwhat she news part directly suella braverman exiwhat she had news part directly suella braverman exiwhat she had to ews part directly suella braverman exiwhat she had to say part directly suella braverman exiwhat she had to say that part directly suella braverman exiwhat she had to say that iart of what she had to say that i think is fascinating. she was talking fact that talking about the fact that a lot people, her view who were lot of people, her view who were against scheme are against the rwanda scheme are people never been to people who've never been to rwanda who really know rwanda who don't really know what actually they what it's like and actually they are snobs. we're to are snobs. we're going to be talking of that. and talking about all of that. and i am inclined to agree with that. this i think a lot of people who are against the rwanda plan are people maybe their kids people who maybe send their kids to a nice posh boarding school somewhere in the middle of nowhere aren't nowhere so that kids aren't affected by day to day affected by maybe day to day life, really, were. they life, really, as it were. they live a lovely house and potentially rural area potentially quite a rural area or gated or a nice secluded gated community or just based off the beaten track where again, they're not really anywhere near some migrant or asylum some kind of migrant or asylum seeker hotel, maybe . actually, seeker hotel, maybe. actually, they're rather well off and they're rather well off and they're not actually touched or impacted upon by the real world impacts people coming over in impacts of people coming over in small being put up in small boats and being put up in hotels and for what it's worth as well, there's been a fascinating report into this. we're going touch that we're going to touch on that recently. some three of 50 asylum seeker hotels in england alone , that is absolutely alone, that is absolutely staggering that that's 350 parts
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of england alone are impacted upon as a result of having these asylum seeker hotels. and when you look at it in that context, do you not think that it's about time that something was done about it? gb views gb news uk a reminder that we will bring you an exclusive interview with suella braverman a little later this, you may remember the this, but you may remember the shocking of the asylum shocking story of the asylum seeker the uk seeker that entered the uk illegally and posed as a schoolboy before fatally stabbing an aspiring royal marine death in a about marine to death in a row about an e—scooter. well on gain. abdulrahim xai. well to life imprisonment with minimum of 29 years in january. well now being reported the 21 year old benefited from almost £40,000 of legal to fight his case being in this country illegally . so the this country illegally. so the cash was for a barrister at trial and a solicitor. previous interviews. with me .ispolitical interviews. with me .is political commentator dominique samuels, who joins me. dominique, thank you very great to have you on the show. so think it's worth
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while just highlighting stories like light of been going like this in light of been going on in the house of commons today in, lords of the rwanda scheme, etc. mean, this guy supposedly etc. i mean, this guy supposedly the out of pocket the taxpayer, is out of pocket to tune around £40,000 just to the tune around £40,000 just to the tune around £40,000 just to prop off his legal base . when to prop off his legal base. when a lot of people have been in the country to begin with dominique. well, exactly . common well, exactly. common sense would he shouldn't have would say that he shouldn't have been the country in the first been in the country in the first place. if our rules weren't place. and if our rules weren't so lax if our borders were virtually open this couldn't have come into the country been able to go to school under a fake age and wouldn't have been going on to kill another person. i mean, common sense would say that was a normal thing. but sadly, this case isn't rare. it's happening of the time. it's happening all the country and the act . this is happening all the country and the act. this is just happening all the country and the act . this is just bury happening all the country and the act. this is just bury the head , the sand. it's not head, the sand. it's not important to them and look why we highlight stories like this. we're not saying that every single asylum seeker is a triple
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killer as this illegal migrant is . but we're killer as this illegal migrant is. but we're saying that you open the door to these sorts of dangers. we don't in a world of flowers flowers and daisies and, people do take advantage of the fact that we aren't protecting our borders properly and. the question is, why would you invite more of a potential problem into the country, especially when illegal? it makes no sense. dominique, i'm just going to put to you now i get what you're saying about the extent of the issue when it comes to public safety. okay. look, it is important to say that in this particular case, jane abdul rahim triple jane abdul rahim is a triple posing as a schoolboy gang , 40 posing as a schoolboy gang, 40 grams worth of taxpayers cash in legal it is legal aid. well, yeah, it is exceptional just in itself, that one. i get point absolutely one. but i get point absolutely about issue about about the wider issue about pubuc about the wider issue about public just on the public safety. just on the suella braverman as we're going to hear from her shortly, was alluding the fact that she thinks that the people who opposed rwanda plan really are kind virtue signalling snobs kind of virtue signalling snobs whose lives really not actually be impacted by the true the
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shocking extent of asylum seeker hotels in this country and the that they face. do you agree with . i do agree with that with. i do agree with that because . the reality is most of because. the reality is most of the people that are advocating for this continued influx of illegal migration or they're opposed, they want the scheme because apparently inhumane . because apparently inhumane. they don't live in the that are most affected . this influx of most affected. this influx of illegal migrants or illegal migration or genuinely just might high levels of migration. they aren't affected by it. they don't live . in the areas where don't live. in the areas where pubuc don't live. in the areas where public services stretched. so therefore when you're not exposed to the stark and really quite miserable reality of something is easy just to put on rose tinted glasses and make out like not an issue. and look, you know our genuinely do believe some of these people are coming from a place of compassion. they think they're doing the right thing. they think they're being humanitarians. there humanitarians. and look, there are many people that come over
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here different that do have here from different that do have genuine need . but we're genuine need. but what we're saying is that we are noticing a trend of our being gamed and we quite don't have the capacity for so many people . secondly, for so many people. secondly, for so many people. secondly, for the people that really critical of the government they the tories, they acknowledge the tories on funding public public services correctly. why then you invite more people to put more pressure on a system that already acknowledge isn't working logically, that doesn't make sense either. yeah. look, dominique, thank you very much . dominique, thank you very much. ever dominique samuels, our political commentator . just political commentator. just reacting to a couple of things, which is course that first case about individuals who frankly should really in should never have really been in the at all. triple the country at all. triple murderer as a kid, then murderer posing as a kid, then up grand in legal fees. murderer posing as a kid, then up grand in legal fees . but up 40 grand in legal fees. but legal to the taxpayer funded legal aid to the taxpayer funded as well, which is rather shocking. i'm just read you shocking. i'm just to read you very something here very quickly something here about. the amount of private firms that are making an absolute out of these absolute fortune out of these asylums , hotels and don't show asylums, hotels and don't show that one booking agency used by
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home office trebled its tax profit , its pre—tax profits from profit, its pre—tax profits from 2.1 million to £63 million in the 12 months, up to february 20, 22. there are 363 migrant hotels in england alone, 20 northern ireland, ten in scotland, two in wales. and when you look at it like that, all of a sudden the rwanda scheme i think is puts into focus isn't and say that's really why we're doing this it's. not in my view any way, because the government hates coming over on hates people coming over on small because this small boats is because of this cost and this massive, massive use of hotels and moving away from that for a little while, it seems to have been going for on even seems to have been going for on ever. but there are fresh developments in the gates saga today. i close to boris johnson, has said his on partygate has been submitted to the privileges committee. today , committee. that was today, moments ago. apparently a former prime appear prime minister will appear before committee before the committee on wednesday himself wednesday to defend himself against that, he lied to parliament. johnson was photographed a number of events in downing street that , broke
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in downing street that, broke lockdown rules last year. he said in the commons that lockdown he lockdown were followed and he does believe, or at least his legal representatives do, that he be vindicated and he will be vindicated and exonerated by this dossier. i do want to know a little bit from you, though. do you actually care more about the policy care any more about the policy guy or not? do you want the truth out there me now is truth out there for me now is olivia utley gb news is political reporter great political reporter olivia. great stuff. brand with stuff. i'm very on brand with the gb news brolly. you the gb news brolly. well, you love so what's going love to see it. so what's going on here? will boris johnson be vindicated? it'll be vindicated? yeah, well, it'll be very what very interesting to what happens. essentially, what committee looking into isn't committee is looking into isn't whether boris johnson broke the lockdown rules. we know that he did. he's admitted that they're not into whether he not even looking into whether he misled parliament. he has admitted that he misled parliament by setting the record straight . parliament, what straight. parliament, what they're looking is whether he deliberately misled parliament, whether in fact he lied to parliament. now, boris johnson today submitted this 60 page dossier, which essentially lays out three defences as to why he
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didn't deliberately mislead and why he be found innocent as it were, of this charge. one of them is that harriet harman , them is that harriet harman, chairing the committee, a labour mp, veteran labour mp, boris johnson will argue that she is biased . now that johnson will argue that she is biased. now that is johnson will argue that she is biased . now that is based on biased. now that is based on tweets that harriet harman tweeted out last year, suggesting that boris johnson knowingly lied, is the phrase that harriet harman used. so bofis that harriet harman used. so boris johnson will use that to say that that shows that the whole inquiry is too biased and shouldn't be allowed to go through his other defence is that what mp said what the mp and the committee are judging is not whether he knowingly misled, which we know is a resigning . which we know is a resigning. he's to parliament is a he's lying to parliament is a resigning they've resigning offence. they've changed wording . they're now changed the wording. they're now saying or now reckless saying knowingly or now reckless is lowering the bar on boris will argue that that's unfair. he'll say that they've moved the goalposts to look into whether he lied deliberately is fair enough he'll say but looking into whether he recklessly misled well what exactly does
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that mean and his third argument is that he was by his own officials that he was within the rules when he spoke to parliament, when he said that he didn't break the rules. he will say that he was acting on the advice of his officials. so those are his three defences and his only team is sounding very very bullish about this. but be very bullish about this. but be very interesting what the committee of it just in terms of timing he has submitted the report to committee now but the committee now gets to decide when it will release the information which has given them it thought that it could take a few hours up 24 hours. we could be seeing this tomorrow , but be seeing this tomorrow, but they're mocking his homework now . and we'll be very interesting to see what they make of it. yes, indeed. look, olivier, thank very much olivier thank you very much olivier there, political underneath there, our political underneath there, our political underneath the gb news broke out in what looks like very looks like a very wet westminster. well, today , westminster. well, look today, believe not, is believe it or not, is international day of happiness but this one cheer you up? we could be on the brink of another global banking . yes, that's
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global banking. yes, that's right. we're keeping it long here on gb views. people are keeping alive. but seriously, keeping it alive. but seriously, this it this does affect you all. it affects in your pocket affects the pound in your pocket and. to what on and. we need to know what on earth is going with the banking crisis is even a crisis. i'm maybe the thing to make maybe that's the thing to make you it's not a crisis. you happy. it's not a crisis. i'm christys. this
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all right, wonderful people. there's loads more still to come between now and 4:00. don't forget, i'm going to bring you an exclusive interview with suella braverman about the government's rwanda plan. she thinks who oppose it thinks that people who oppose it are signalling are just virtue signalling snobs. do you agree? and is donald trump really about to be arrested? i will ask a leading republican about all of that. i've got all of that coming your way and much more, including are we a nation of shoplifters and a little bit on international happiness day. whoa let go. all right. this see right. but first this see headunes right. but first this see headlines with . tamsin patrick
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headlines with. tamsin patrick thank you. it's 332. here are the headlines . the thank you. it's 332. here are the headlines. the dup thank you. it's 332. here are the headlines . the dup says it the headlines. the dup says it will vote against the government in this week's first parliamentary vote on the new brexit deal . the prime minister brexit deal. the prime minister rishi sunak agreed the new windsor framework with the eu last month. it aims to resolve some of the concerns unionists around the northern ireland protocol. party leader sir jeffrey donaldson acknowledged significant progress has been made, but said the new deal doesn't cover some funding . doesn't cover some funding. mental problems . members of the mental problems. members of the rmt network rail have voted to accept an offer covering , pay accept an offer covering, pay jobs and conditions. accept an offer covering, pay jobs and conditions . staff will jobs and conditions. staff will receive a pay of between 9.2 and 14.4% and increased back pay. the union says 20,000 members voted 76% in favour of the new deal. voted 76% in favour of the new deal . this morning the un chief deal. this morning the un chief is calling on rich nations to urgently accelerate shift to net zero by 2040. it's after new
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report by the intergovernmental panel on climate change warns emissions must be halved by the mid 2030s. if the world is to have any chance of limiting temperature rise to one and a half degrees this is a key target from the paris agreement. the report which antonio guterres has the survival guide for humanity says there is little time to lose . china's little time to lose. china's president has called vladimir putin a dear friend as the pair sat down together in moscow, president xi jinping is in russia on his first visit to the country since the start of the invasion of ukraine. downing street says it hopes president xi urges president putin stop the war. vladimir says he is open to negotiating process on ukraine but warned he will not accept any ultimatums . on tv accept any ultimatums. on tv onune accept any ultimatums. on tv online dab+ radio on tunein this is gb news now it's back to .
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patrick yes well downing street and the bank of england are assuring that the uk's banking system remains safe and sound. this followed on from this morning as european bank shares dropped sharply again in the wake of the of troubled bank credit suisse by rival ubs markets in london have steadied . but it follows have steadied. but it follows a turbulent days. so money markets and banks the globe following the collapse . silicon valley the collapse. silicon valley valley bank is meeting in the united states . well at least united states. well at least just but what does all of this really mean for you normal man and woman out that the money, your pocket, your mortgages, the price, everything. joining me in the studio right is our economics and business editor liam on the money . so liam halligan on the money. so let me throw it liam. it does seem really otherworldly, doesn't that trick the gnomes of
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zunching doesn't that trick the gnomes of zurich ing over their lunches and, their expensive suits about the state of their banking system, and yet this really matters. it doesn't give me any to say we all or , many of us to say we all or, many of us will remember the financial turmoil that followed 2008. then there was more turmoil in 2011 12 with that eurozone crisis. and then quite a lot of angst after that. liz truss kwasi kwarteng budget tacular last autumn and the trust kwarteng financial turmoil and this financial turmoil and this financial turmoil and this financial turmoil are all related because banks have bought over years lots of government bonds . they've almost government bonds. they've almost been told to by the regulators because they are meant to be very, very safe assets. but when interest rates go up and of we've seeing the bank of england raise rates from half raise interest rates from half a % ten rises in a row. % to 4, ten rises in a row. we've federal we've seen mighty federal reserve us raise interest reserve in the us raise interest rates that those bonds on the banks sheet are worth less their balance sheet is weaker that means the loans that they've
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extended , the investments that extended, the investments that they've made look riskier . they've made look riskier. that's what happened with silicon valley in america . silicon valley in america. course, you'll remember hsbc u.s. british bank bailed out uk arm of silicon valley bank and silicon valley bankers as well . silicon valley bankers as well. small bank. what's been happening in recent days. is that a massive swiss bank credit one of the top 30 banks in the world what we call systemically important banks . there's been important banks. there's been lots of investor nervousness again about the impact on them of rising rates. so over the weekend , swiss authorities came weekend, swiss authorities came in and said csfb, credit suisse , you are being sold to your arch ubs , 160 , you are being sold to your arch ubs ,160 odd years of arch ubs,160 odd years of banking history wiped out overnight. this is not a joke . overnight. this is not a joke. and i'm i'm just mesmerised, by the way. he's always it because it just seems so massive. but the man and woman on the street then if people are looking at getting mortgages and things like i mean does that like this, i mean what does that mean them really in here mean to them really in the here and now. let's say that
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and now. right. let's say that it remains relatively calm. and as the beginning as you rightly at the beginning and panic people to and we mustn't panic people to the financial have the financial markets have stabilised this morning and this lunchtime aftermath that lunchtime in the aftermath that massive engineering massive financial engineering over top of the over the weekend on top of the failure of silicon valley bank a couple of weeks ago if it stays stable i think that this wednesday when the federal reserve makes next interest rate decision, it will keep interest rates on hold despite the fact, they still want to try and stamp on inflation. and that will mean our own bank of england on thursday then keeps interest rates on hold at, which is good news if trying to get a mortgage. not so good for savers , but i do think those interest rates will will be held on the other hand. on the other hand , other hand. on the other hand, if you are trying to get a mortgage, if you're trying to take a business loan or whatever you variable rate loans , you got variable rate loans, then i do think the fact that there is more instability knocking about will anyway push market interest rates up, not the base rate of bank of , the base rate of bank of, england and the fed, but i think market interest rates could
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still go up. look this is a this should be a million miles from everyone's life, right? we just go we and pay our go to work. we try and pay our bills . we try and keep house and bills. we try and keep house and together, right. and do our best ourselves and our families . and ourselves and our families. and yet the danger is here. patrick i really worry about this. if have yet another financial collapse way. we have one in 2008 we haven't really recovered properly . 2008 the world economy properly. 2008 the world economy has never really got going again. never really got out again. it's never really got out of second gear growth been slow. the damage that was done the massive damage that was done to global banking systems 2008 after years of massive financial excess, not nearly the right kind of regulation . if it turns kind of regulation. if it turns out that the post 2008 regulation, which a lot of the banking fought tooth and nail, which diluted again and again and again only really came in in this country . yeah, it's 2018, this country. yeah, it's 2018, 2019, if we're honest if it turns out that that regulation wasn't enough to stop these collapses , which impact everyone collapses, which impact everyone spreading , what we call spreading, what we call contagion across the financial
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system, everywhere , i really system, everywhere, i really worry about will ordinary punters are going to think about the clever people in the banking industry , in the government and industry, in the government and industry, in the government and in the media who have meant to get these things. liam, thank you very much. as liam halligan very columnist and business edhon very columnist and business editor, just picking you through the very, very latest. we will, of course be keeping you bang up to date on of that but to date on all of that but moving to pull week found moving on to pull week found that 6% of people would vote for reform. uk get a lot of emails in about this gbviews@gbnews.uk. a lot of people saying oh, i'm going to vote reform and i'm going to vote for reform and i'm sick of everything else. if a general was held tomorrow, 6% of people vote reform. uk people would vote for reform. uk and the party has nigel farage as honorary , enjoyed major as its honorary, enjoyed a major boost today when it announced 11 former brexit party meps are joining so reform uk held news conference this morning and our political reporter catherine forster was and she joins me now. catherine thank you very much. okay. so what's going for ? on reform then and what should we ? well, they saying that
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we care? well, they saying that they have 10% of the vote and announced today that 11 former brexit party meps are joining reform. that includes people like former conservative ann widdecombe, people like ben habib . they say that they are habib. they say that they are going to be standing in about 500 constituencies in the local elections coming up in may that they're going to standing absolutely in the general election . and they're saying election. and they're saying they offer a real save to labour and conservative that richard the leader says all socialist sides of the same coin that say that the conservatives have forgotten what it is to be conservative. that labour have no coherent policies and that they offer a distinct choice. they are very unhappy about brexit. they feel it's been portrayed . they feel that
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portrayed. they feel that leaving northern ireland partly in the european union, as boris johnson's deal did as the windsor framework, argue of leaders in the eu single market is a betrayal . and they also is a betrayal. and they also have a different offering on other policies too. they're saying they want low tax is low state, but also know waiting lists for nhs treatment . so some lists for nhs treatment. so some policies that sound wonderful but how would actually be delivered practise that's not entirely clear. yes indeed . now entirely clear. yes indeed. now we're getting two for one for me today, catherine, because you were initially talking about reform and then there some reform and then there was some big news before big breaking news shortly before we the rmt. so we came on about the rmt. so rail strike could now be a thing of past. i believe that an overwhelming of ramsey's members network rail anyway have agreed to a deal. what we know about that. to a deal. what we know about that . yes is a big breakthrough.
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that. yes is a big breakthrough. this isn't it. these rail strikes about a year since . the strikes about a year since. the dispute first start at the rmt have reached a deal this afternoon . soon. it was a 90% afternoon. soon. it was a 90% turnout, 76% voted in favour. these are signal workers and maintain staff agreed to deal with network rail that they say between 9% and 14% pay rise over two years. so that's great. however, the rmt workers that work for the 14 train operating companies they have yet reach a deal companies they have yet reach a deal. so at the moment are still currently scheduled strikes for the 30th of march and the 1st of april. but mick lynch of the rmt is claiming victory in this and he's basically waiting to see the right offer now for the train workers. so it does seem this is one of the longer running it feels to have been
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interminable. the last one was just on saturday just gone that the end may be in sights for the rail strikes and potentially other strikes though ones seem to be popping up all over the place at the moment, too, don't they like the possibility of workers? yes indeed. yes. look, as we thank you very much catherine forster, our political reporter in westminster for us looks some pretty good out looks some pretty good news out potentially all, which is potentially for us all, which is that rmt might be about to that the rmt might be about to stop strike action. stop that strike action. apparently some 70% of the 90% of people who voted that of people who voted in that particular ballot, they particular ballot, that they were terms . were going to accept the terms. bad news for mike lynch, who's won in all of as well. this won in all of this as well. this is what i find fascinating, because sides can because i think both sides can claim and that probably claim victory. and that probably means and we means there's a good deal and we can up and, go home, can all pack up and, go home, because the unions will clearly look without the strike action on we caused. on the misery that we caused. then no way on that then no way on earth that we would been to get would have been able to get a better the government at better deal. the government at the same time can legitimately say we didn't give in to the winter discontent. maybe winter of discontent. so maybe it's both sides. but it's best for both sides. but look, i come back, home look, when i come back, home secretary a provision is
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secretary is when a provision is given news annexe exclusive given gb news annexe exclusive interview got interview and well she's got some harsh words for some very, very harsh words for gary she's accused him gary lineker. she's accused him of snob. and i want of being a snob. and i want to know from you, you think that the of who that the majority of people who that we and who don't we want to deal and who don't people to be to just people to be allowed to just come live they've come here and live they've crossed there illegally in the channel are actually virtue channel are actually just virtue signalling channel are actually just virtue signa dog channel are actually just virtue signa do make of all of that? gb what do make of all of that? gb views and gb news dot uk. i'm patrick and this is of course gb news
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there's help for households. are you over state pension age? if your weekly income is below £182.60,
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or £278.70 if you live with a partner, you could be eligible for pension credit, even if you own your home or have savings. it's worth, on average, £3,500 a year and you could get help with heating bills and more, plus up to £900 in cost of living payments. drop missiles in for our big exclusives review with suella braverman now if you've been on social media in the last few, you might have seen that not everyone was happy the gb news were invited to join the home secretary in. well, if you weren't happy, guess what? we don't really care because . don't really care because. suella spoke to gb suella braverman spoke to gb news. is security and news. his home is security and it's mar she it's at mar y and she challenged, gary lineker and other critics her rwanda policy to the country see the to visit the country and see the opportunities for asylum seekers there. in fact , well, she
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there. and in fact, well, she accused them of being less of it . home secretary . we're at this . home secretary. we're at this incredible cricket ground participating in the programme to promote community integration through one of the many programmes that you've seen here in rwanda . is the gear up to in rwanda. is the gear up to take a seekers from the uk eventually . are you convinced eventually. are you convinced that they can have good life here in rwanda ? yes. what we've here in rwanda? yes. what we've seen this weekend in rwanda is that our partners here are ready to they're ready support the uk in our work to stop the boats and to fix our challenge of illegal migration. we've seen accommodation and construction projects which are well advanced and which will be completed very soon. so that accommodation will in part b be there to accommodate in the long term
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people who will be resettled to rwanda , the uk, people who come rwanda, the uk, people who come to the uk illegally will not have the right to settle in the uk and what our legislation proposes and working with our friends in rwanda the people who come here will be resettled to live a safe and secure life that's human humane approach , that's human humane approach, and that's the compassionate approach . the policy still approach. the policy still course has its critics. gary for one, opposition politicians , one, opposition politicians, would you encourage them actually to come here and see for themselves what rwanda has to offer those who would come here and settle absolutely, i think there has been far too much prejudice, frankly , much prejudice, frankly, snobbery amongst the critics who most of most of whom haven't even visited rwanda. this is my third visit to rwanda this is a welcoming country it's a dynamic economy. there they have a proud track record in and resettling
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refugee fees in the region. i've just met several refugees from eritrea, from burundi , from the eritrea, from burundi, from the democratic republic , congo, who democratic republic, congo, who found sanctuary here in rwanda and they have nothing but gratitude for rwanda. so to all of those critics who display a gross against rwanda . i tell gross against rwanda. i tell them to visit first and then judge , is it tantamount to judge, is it tantamount to racism ? i think there has been racism? i think there has been a there's been knee jerk reaction and from the usual suspects , and from the usual suspects, let's let's be honest , the let's let's be honest, the reality is very different . how reality is very different. how the critics would rwanda rwanda is dynamic. rwanda is welcoming rwanda has a tradition of providing humanity in support of a high quality . and the housing a high quality. and the housing project that we visited is one
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such example of where who are resettled refugees will be able to be accommodated a sustainable and quality accommodation . but and quality accommodation. but how do you answer that central charge that the uk is abdicating its central responsibility here to offer refuge to safe haven to those asylum seekers who end in the united kingdom . well coming the united kingdom. well coming to rwanda , being resettled to to rwanda, being resettled to rwanda via the uk. if you've come to the illegally will be a blessing you will be provided with humanitarian support. it will be a humane provision you. but i also that ultimately we need to stop the people smuggling gangs and that's why rwanda is important the people smuggling gangs are exploited thousands of they are receiving
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people are paying thousands of pounds to take an illegal journey to take sometimes a tragically fatal journey to. break our laws to undermine our rules in vain, hope that they might have a life in the united kingdom by working with our friends here in rwanda we are, we break the business model upon which these gangs are operating . isn't there a fundamental contradiction here in the sense that you see this policy will be a deterrent to those crossing the channel, yet you're also and you're showing what's in many respects is incredible opportunities . those coming opportunities. those coming here. what i'm trying to show is that our our our approach in the united kingdom stopping the boats is firm and robust . our boats is firm and robust. our illegal migration bill will make clear that if you arrive the uk illegally, you will be and you'll be swiftly removed and at the same time it's humane and compassionate and people who are
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to rwanda will a safe and reception . and i think those two reception. and i think those two elements robustness with our legal processes in the uk combined with compassion is the way solve this problem. i given what your colleagues oliver dowden has said in terms of being regretful that this policy is in place, how does that square with a partnership that you see is very important for not just helping to solve the asylum seeker issue the uk but also to help support rwanda , to also to help support rwanda, to help ensure that countries like rwanda can take refugees from their own rather than them embarking on the journey. how you square that it is regretful it is regretful that we had 45,000 people arrive in the uk last year . 45,000 people arrive in the uk last year. it's regretful that
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we're spending £6 million a day a accomodating, many of them in throughout towns and, cities in the united . it's regretful that the united. it's regretful that we spent £3 billion last year to service our asylum needs that is what is regretful. we have a and very difficult problem that we need to fix the prime minister has made it one of his core pledges to stop the boats. but you don't regret this policy but the policy a of our new bill the illegal migration bill combined with our world partnership with rwanda , is the solution that is rwanda, is the solution that is our approach that we all putting forward to fix this problem . i forward to fix this problem. i do believe it will will work. i have huge confidence in this partnership. i have huge confidence in in rwanda and i believe that it will be modelled by other countries in due course . are you in talks with other countries to see whether there is a possibility , similar
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is a possibility, similar partnerships or do you that actually rwanda is the one partnership that will end the small boats crisis? well, actually , on the back of our actually, on the back of our victory in the high court at the end of year, where our partnership rigorously tested by seniorjudges partnership rigorously tested by senior judges in court partnership rigorously tested by seniorjudges in court as partnership rigorously tested by senior judges in court as to whether it was lawful , in which whether it was lawful, in which the uk government was successful in proving that our partnership is lawful, that rwanda is a safe country, that our partnership with all of our international and human rights laws on the back of all of that, we have beenin back of all of that, we have been in discussions with other countries, but let me be clear. our first and foremost priority is to operationalise the partnership that we have with rwanda . and as you can see, we rwanda. and as you can see, we are making very good progress in rolling it out . i know you want rolling it out. i know you want this bill to work, you want this policy to work. if you're still met with these legal challenges, it doesn't progress anywhere.
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you still have thousands of people coming across the channel will you commit to pulling out of the echr . well, i'm confident of the echr. well, i'm confident that our package measures will work . that's why we're a prime work. that's why we're a prime minister i are working very hard at passing out. we now introducing that we've introduced the bill hope that parliament it so it can get through to royal assent quickly . but let me be clear, nothing ever off the table and we have to consider every option as the events pan out. okay on. thank you very much for talking to us in gb news. i don't think there's been a six score to day, but a good game by the looks of it.thank but a good game by the looks of it. thank you . right. well we it. thank you. right. well we go. what do you make of that, ladies and gents? well problem in talking exclusively to our own ma why it did certainly ruffle few feathers that gb news is one of the pack invited
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is one of the press pack invited to to rwanda with the home to go to rwanda with the home secretary wonder why secretary and i wonder why now we anyway. look, people we but anyway. look, people lost. are getting in touch? lost. are you getting in touch? gbviews@gbnews.uk lineker gbviews@gbnews.uk the lineker residents , the m25. residents and crew, the m25. i've no one just running about illegal migration does to our country don't crowded country that don't see crowded classroom doctors rooms. classroom doctors wasting rooms. another overstretched services. and why asking you and that is why i'm asking you you people who you think that people who disagree the rwanda scheme disagree with the rwanda scheme are just snobs. but yes, this is the best place for coverage of the best place for coverage of the government's plans for the migrant soon i find migrant crisis. and soon i find out nigel farage thinks out what nigel farage thinks about sending migrants to rwanda. will join me live on rwanda. he will join me live on this very, very shortly. this show very, very shortly. i've got all that coming your way and much, much more as well. i'm patrick christys on this is
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gb news. yes aboard everybody is patrick christys on gb news i'll be with you all the way through until 6
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pm, but in the next hour here's what's on menu. is it lift off? it's a massive day potentially for the crew. one migrant scheme suella braverman who's been talking exclusively gb news, thinks that european judges going to back down and they're going to back down and they're going to back down and they're going to let the plane take off. and on top of that, well, she does think the people oppose the rwanda are just snobs. rwanda scheme are just snobs. what do you make of all of that? in news as well , what do you make of all of that? in news as well, boris in other news as well, boris johnson, guy. yes he's johnson, policy guy. yes he's submitted his dossier of evidence , thinks will evidence, thinks it will exonerate completely . he'll exonerate him completely. he'll be completely vindicated. be left completely vindicated. we'll and see any we'll have to wait and see any developments that we'll bring them and when they them to you as and when they drop. and yes. okay. as well, we've the rmt. this is good we've got the rmt. this is good news people. okay. so news for people. okay. so the rmt union overwhelmingly rmt union has overwhelmingly voted to stop the strike action to take a pay deal. it is yet another win for rishi sunak and finally as well are we a nation of chocolate voters? yes, that's right. apparently more people ever before are shoplifting. in fact, a lot of people have become addicted to it. why that? but am asking as well whether
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but i am asking as well whether or you've ever just nicked or not you've ever just nicked anything as a bit pathetic, maybe in your youth, perhaps get in all your views in touch with all of your views and ask yourselves locked in and you ask yourselves locked in big our . gb and you ask yourselves locked in big our. gb views a greedy is .uk is that email address ? you .uk is that email address? you think that the people who oppose the rwanda scheme are just snobs and yes, little bit more light hearted in your youth? nothing serious. people what is the most pathetic thing you've ever next? vaiews@gbnews.uk right now it's your headlines with polite . your headlines with polite. patrick thanks very much indeed. the latest news headlines on gb news today, the dup says it's going to vote against the government in this week's first parliament vote on new brexit deal parliament vote on new brexit deal. the prime minister rishi sunak agreed the new framework with the eu last month which aimed to resolve some of the concerns unionist have about the
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northern ireland protocol. party leader sir jeffrey donaldson acknowledged significant progress been made, but said the new proposal doesn't resolve fundamental problems. well i recognise the progress that has been made here and i've said so and i think, the prime minister has worked hard to bring about that progress . but there are that progress. but there are issues of concern that remain for us in terms of the application of eu law, in terms of how these are arrangements will work in practise. we have said we need greater clarity , said we need greater clarity, need reworking and change and we'll continue to engage with prime minister and the government to secure the progress that is needed . boris progress that is needed. boris johnson's written defence against he lied to parliament. the partygate scandal has been handed to the privileges . handed to the privileges. they'll now published their findings on whether mr. johnson was in contempt of parliament and make a on any sanctions . the and make a on any sanctions. the house of commons will make the decision and a spokesperson for bofis decision and a spokesperson for
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boris johnson said his position would be vindicated . the un would be vindicated. the un chief is calling on rich nations to their shift to net by 2040. that's after new report by the intergovernmental panel on climate change warned emissions must be halved by the mid 2030s if the world is to have any chance of limiting temperature rises to one and a half degrees. which is a key target outlined the paris agreement. the report which antonio guterres branded the survival guide for humanity says there is little time to lose . china's president has lose. china's president has called vladimir putin a dear friend as the pair sat down for talks in moscow. president xi jinping is in russia on his visit to the country since start of the invasion of ukraine. downing street said it hopes he'll urged president putin to stop the war. vladimir putin he's open to a negotiated
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process on ukraine but warned he will not accept any altimeter. meanwhile justice ministers from around the world meeting in london to discuss increasing support for the international criminal court. on friday, icc issued an arrest warrant for russia's president on charges war crimes. deputy minister dominic raab says 14 nations are unhed dominic raab says 14 nations are united behind one cause to hold those response atrocities in ukraine to account. president vladimir putin is accused of ordering the kidnapping and deportation of thousands of ukrainian children . the kremlin ukrainian children. the kremlin called the allegations outrageous and unacceptable . outrageous and unacceptable. here the home secretary told mps she is satisfied the provisions of the government's illegal bill are capable of being applied compatibly with the human rights convention . that comes after convention. that comes after suella braverman said migrants could be sent to rwanda by the summer. the agreement between
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the two countries has been expanded include all illegal migrants , not just asylum migrants, not just asylum seekers . and speaking in the seekers. and speaking in the house of commons , suella house of commons, suella braverman told mps the uk will work with france to secure cross—channel cooperation and she criticised labour for announcing their immigration plan on twitter. in the last ten days the prime minister and i have secured a big deal with the french to increase cross—channel cooperation . i've presented and cooperation. i've presented and we voted on measures to detain and swiftly remove migrants. and this weekend i met with refugees who have successfully been resettled in rwanda and seen the accommodation people will be using what's what the labour done. well the shadow home secretary has on twitter she's very good on twitter she tweeted in the last ten days labour's paltry excuse for a plan half of it stuff we're already doing the other half is plan for open borders and unlimited migration . what i suggest they do is get off twitter, get her rwanda and
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i'll show them how to stop the boats. members of the rmt in network rail have voted to an offer covering pay jobs and conditions . staff will receive conditions. staff will receive a pay conditions. staff will receive a pay rise of between 9.2 and 14.4% and increased back pay. the union says . its 20,000 the union says. its 20,000 members voted 76% in favour of the new. secretary of transport harper says he hopes the union its members train operation companies the same offer. its members train operation companies the same offer . and i companies the same offer. and i hope that the unions now put the rmt now put the fair and reasonable off a very similar pay reasonable off a very similar pay offer that they now put that to their members that are working for the train operating . they haven't had the chance . . they haven't had the chance. consider this pay offer and i hope their union gives the chance to consider it. and decide whether, like their network workers, whether they want to settle this dispute as well . and just downing street well. and just downing street says it is confident the uk
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banking remains safe and. well, after the state backed rescue of credit suisse . ubs agreed to . credit suisse. ubs agreed to. buy it swiss rival in a deal worth more than two and a half billion pounds. this morning, the footsie 100 did fall by 1. that's its lowest level in more than four months. but the markets have now steadied somewhat . shares markets have now steadied somewhat. shares in markets have now steadied somewhat . shares in credit somewhat. shares in credit suisse , however, have dived by suisse, however, have dived by more than % with gb news moody's more than% with gb news moody's it happens. now back to patrick - i och, welcome along, everybody . och, welcome along, everybody. to get through, let us crack on. and we start with the latest on the government's plans to send migrants to rwanda. massive data for the rwanda scheme. home secretary suella braverman has defended the proposals in a lively exchange house of lively exchange in the house of commons. was in the rwandan
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caphal commons. was in the rwandan capital, kigali, over weekend and watch it exclusive and you can watch it exclusive interview with her on the gb news youtube channel. so make sure you do check that out. she sat down with marc. why? there's quite a lot to stuck quite a lot to get stuck into here on diski here with this view on diski because did say that she because she did say that she believes anyway, there are a lot of people who disagree with they're are just virtue signalling snobs. the kind of people millions in the bank people with millions in the bank they schools. they send their kids to schools. they sizes they don't see classroom sizes going up. don't see you going up. they don't see you know impacts on public services, etc. really etc. their lives aren't really touched by the day to day in is in migrant numbers. touched by the day to day in is in migrant numbers . they live in migrant numbers. they live near a migrant hotel. interesting well today that it emerged that there are 369 asylum seeker hotels in england alone. i think really hammering home exactly why the government is trying to get planes to take off to rwanda. she was saying that the people who disagree with that they're being snobbish about rwanda itself and also maybe own lives aren't maybe their own lives aren't touched by realities of touched by the realities of illegal immigration into , this illegal immigration into, this country. what do you make of all of that? but the other big news was that the stumbling, arguably
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the final in the wall the final brick in the wall actually it to maybe actually when it came to maybe getting off the getting this thing off the ground, of course, the eu ground, was, of course, the eu judges, the european judges. i say know eu judges, say so sorry. know eu judges, european judges blocking the european judges blocking at the last of night last minute in the dead of night into office into some kind of office somewhere. plans , the somewhere. the plans, the flights be able to take off flights to be able to take off or supposedly they might be about to change that and allow these things to go ahead. well, it's get more on this big story. i am joined by rebecca, who is the deputy leader of ukip . the deputy leader of ukip. rebecca, thank you very much. look, looking at a lot look, i'm looking at a lot headunes look, i'm looking at a lot headlines here. judges said headlines here. euro judges said to the rwanda flies to back down on the rwanda flies . potentially we . this means that potentially we might be having lift off your views . well, my views are that views. well, my views are that obviously suella has been in parliament. she's been shouting at labour a while, as you going on twitter and your plans because i'm in rwanda. well, my is i'm not virtue signalling. i certainly have a problem with the rwanda plan. and because suella literally shown everybody exactly . they need to come to
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exactly. they need to come to britain because . we're going to britain because. we're going to give you a first class ticket to everyone's. i mean, does it look like a deterrent to me? i've shown people at work today the accommodation the standard accommodation and the standard of that they will of living that they will be provided rwanda. it provided for rwanda. and it looks absolutely lovely. in fact, actually, i think that her little tour has done nothing damage to the whole plan and the is useless anyway. it can only take right 200 people at a time when obviously see absolute record levels of people coming to this country. record levels of people coming to this country . she needs to be to this country. she needs to be a deterrent not say here. look how beautiful life that you can have if you try cross the channel and make this a horrifically awful journey. rebecca we need deterrent is to so you think the criticism the rwanda scheme would be that too nice and might actually encourage to come across the channelin encourage to come across the channel in the hope of being sent to rwanda which of course is the opposite of what a lot of people are saying because i mean the opposite. absolutely not. i mean have you the mean have you seen the accommodations that they have even said that she wanted to talk the designer
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talk to the interior designer whose so whose designed these homes. so there's no deterrence in this . there's no deterrence in this. you know, it looks like a really great plan for them to come if they are saying that their lives are not great at home, obviously, they are. then obviously, which they are. then this looks like a really good alternative to, you know, you can that can have a know can go that you can have a know potentially a lovely life. potentially a new lovely life. this deterrent. this is not a deterrent. a strong deterrent would be to stop from getting to our shores and basically send people back to they obviously to where they have obviously come if it is safe to do come from if it is safe to do so, if we need to be looking at more alternatives. but this rwanda plan is absolutely atrocious and it's filled with problems. so you think that it will not happen to this area? so what suella braverman is hoping clearly is this it does act as a deterrent. and what saying is, well, even if doesn't, it will just more to rwanda. just add more people to rwanda. so people will go and then so more people will go and then my answer is deterrence in turn . but you from what you've . but you think from what you've seen, not a deterrent all seen, it's not a deterrent all in it's actually quite in fact, it's actually quite lovely should they be doing lovely what should they be doing that sending that should they be sending people? moon . good
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people? west the moon. good knows where right now. but what i know is that actually charity begins at home and what we need to be is we need to be looking after the people, the united kingdom, and helping first before actually looking before we start actually looking the response the countries the response all the countries need to step up. other countries need to step up. other countries need to step up. other countries need to do more. fortunately, right not a lot we right now, there's not a lot we can because country is can do because our country is currently broke and the security systems let me i know this because i think it's a really interesting point that you've you've led is on. so actually there's an article today that is really somehow not really actually kind of emerged as a front since to story but i'm trying to make it one anyway so apparently private firms are absolutely raking in off of the migrant hotel business and it is now a business it's own cottage industry and one firm managed triple its pre—tax profits 2.1 million to 6.3 million. the 12 months up to february 20, 22. so what people will do is willy nilly the government will essentially contact and say, here's a load of money do you
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mind if this company comes in and as an asylum seeker and runs it as an asylum seeker hotel? and a lot of time hotel? and a lot of the time because have been because hotels have been struggling go struggling post—pandemic they go well thinks well all right and partly thinks fair enough, by the way, to the hoteliers, because if there is a choice between that and going out of business then. okay. all right. but there 363 of these hotels england , 20 in hotels in england, 20 in northern ireland, ten in scotland, just ten in scotland. lovely place scotland and two in wales, just two in wales as well . and when it comes to this staggering amount of people, there are 363 parts of england alone will have an asylum seeker hotel. the figures are out there now . do you hotel. the figures are out there now. do you think that hotel. the figures are out there now . do you think that that hotel. the figures are out there now. do you think that that just to exacerbate the idea that it is just snobby people who don't live anywhere, these hotels who are keen to keep as many people here as possible basically, and not back things like . the rwanda not back things like. the rwanda plan . well, the problem , the plan. well, the problem, the hotel situation once again, why on earth we are actually doing this plan is costing us £6 million a year. so no it's not a
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case of not backing the wrong plan. so for that reason, we shouldn't be putting people in hotels again. you know, there was once an asylum seeker who was once an asylum seeker who was discussing it and he was actually saying that, you know, got to do here. we got nothing to do here. we actually bus into town actually to get a bus into town it's time, for goodness sakes. you know , we're not here to you know, we're not here to provide you with a first class life. we supposed to be there to help people the absolute dire straits of needs and that is not the here. there are the case here. there are different companies peoples, agencies, your profit theory off the back of this situation , and the back of this situation, and that's where it's going wrong is supposed to be about humanity. and it's not is about people trying to rake in as much cash possible and not looking after. the people of the united kingdom. no, i don't think kingdom. so, no, i don't think it signalling it is about virtue signalling the slightest about protecting ourselves. about protecting ourselves. it's about protecting ourselves. it's about protecting our children and the rwanda plan for me , just not a smokescreen for me, just not a smokescreen of , you know, a completely of, you know, a completely ludicrous situation. but we should be using proper deterrents to actually solve this problem. and we just all
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distracted rwanda . yeah. okay. i distracted rwanda. yeah. okay. i get what you mean there. i suppose what they will be hoping is because the small boats crisis, people coming over in small boats accounted apparently for 5% of asylum applications , for 5% of asylum applications, 2022. so clearly is exacerbating the backlog and. if that was reduced to nil then that is a massive decrease on the amount of pressure that we would have today and a massive decrease the amount of money we would have to be spending on the asylum seeker hotels. i know that you're not in favour of the taxpayer forking for hotels. forking out for seeker hotels. i know in favour know you're not really in favour of money being spent of the money being spent in rwanda don't think it rwanda and you don't think it will in fact, you will be deterrent. in fact, you think it might encourage people to that they quite like the to take that they quite like the look rwanda. i mean, that look of rwanda. i mean, that will interesting for will be quite interesting for gary that, gary lineker to see that, wouldn't that in wouldn't it, people that in calais get on small calais about to get on small boats, desperately trying to come to the uk in the hope of being sent rwanda. we being sent to rwanda. there we go. you do instead go. so what would you do instead of the government is of doing what the government is doing? what is it that you would doing? what is it that you would do like ? people say we would
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do like? people say we would absolutely stop people from getting to show off we would getting to show off so we would convert containers into convert shipping containers into a that equal to a high a humane that is equal to a high security prison. so that people are actually deterred, you know , going to get to our shores. so on earth would you even try and then we would look at alternatives but would have alternatives but we would have the rwanda plan that they have come up and the accommodation style everything else . style and everything else. again, be something again, it wouldn't be something that it would be a safe alternative in a different country. but we let people come to this country can't cope. we've had enough we have to sort our own people out first. and then for me personally is not quite the ukip policy , but i quite the ukip policy, but i think that we have to have a block on on all aid the next block on on all aid for the next five years because we need to sort ourselves out before we can start at a decent of how start looking at a decent of how to actually let people come into this country. but right now it all has stop we have to be all has stop and we have to be a strong deterrent set people strong deterrent set of people from albania. i'm but before i go back we have to send them back to where they came from. it's not appropriate my
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it's not appropriate in my opinion. yes. i mean, a lot of people albania. people on holiday to albania. adams feel a and apparently it's absolutely peaceful. yesterday rebecca, thank you very much. rebecca, thank you very much. rebecca jane, that deputy leader of ukip, now of course, rebecca's view there is to go stronger on the deterrent. she doesn't think rwanda is a deterrence. looks deterrence. in fact, it looks not well. the problem, for not so well. the problem, for her caught a bit her part is caught between a bit of rock and a hard place here, of a rock and a hard place here, between making rwanda looking a place that we all want to go and live, should live, and therefore you should desperately to desperately try to get to britain illegally the hope britain illegally in the hope that we do send you to rwanda and actually trying to put up some of that's the juggling some kind of that's the juggling act, isn't that she's act, isn't it that she's got on the at the minute but yes the go at the minute but yes just emphasise new just going to emphasise some new figures, there are 363 figures, a drop. there are 363 asylum hotels in england, asylum seeker hotels in england, 20 in northern ireland, ten in scotland, two in wales and i would be really fascinated to know if you are in one of those areas, how do you about that? because when you do hear the likes of the kind of leftie lovelies that are banging on about our horrible little about our all horrible little racists and that we don't want
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people here and in people coming over here and in small boats out some of small boats out of some kind of racial i actually think racial grounds. i actually think it's this because it's because of this is because in there is every in your area now there is every chance that there is of chance that there is one of these hotels and there is every that the taxpayers that your money, the taxpayers money of around money to the tune of around 6 million quid a day is being spent on. this and is that not really why the government wants to try to get schemes like rwanda ground, not rwanda off the ground, not simply dislike simply because of the dislike people channel people coming across the channel there a huge, society to there is a huge, huge society to lend economic to what lend economic cost to what is currently this huge currently place. this is a huge story and we are going to get nigel farage his take on government's under plans a little later on in the but little later on in the show. but this have been going on this seems to have been going on forever. going be forever. but are going to be fresh developments in gates. that's right. boris johnson appear the privileges appear before the privileges committee on defend himself, committee on to defend himself, claims he lied to claims that he lied to parliament while johnson photographed at a number of events in downing there supposedly anyway broke the rules. but the former pm said the commons that lockdown rules followed. that is obviously one of the problems here. did he lie? did he not lie. well he has now his dossier of evidence. he
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thinks his legal team least thinks his legal team least think it will exonerate him . think it will exonerate him. he'll be completely vindicated . he'll be completely vindicated. look, to be honest with you, do you actually any more or should you actually any more or should you feel like we care because then we know whether or then we should know whether or not we were lied to in the first place. now by gb news place. i'm joined now by gb news is deputy political editor. so as first time then the as first time then is the promotion. harwood, there promotion. so tom harwood, there we so what is the latest? we go. so what is the latest? well afternoon well know now this afternoon that johnson has submitted that boris johnson has submitted this 60 page dossier to the privileges committee. it's now down to that committee in terms of when they publish it. but bofis of when they publish it. but boris team seem very confident that this dossier contains that will exonerate boris johnson from the charge before the house of commons . let's not forget the of commons. let's not forget the charge isn't whether or not he wants to a party broke social distancing rules . whether or not distancing rules. whether or not he broke covid rules . that was, he broke covid rules. that was, of course, decided by metropolitan police last on one occasion, boris did receive a
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fixed penalty notice for that cake around , the cabinet room cake around, the cabinet room table. and what not sure many people would see you to believe is a very exciting looking birthday party, but that for that event, boris johnson was fined the question therefore before parliament on wednesday is not whether or not boris johnson broke the rules, it's whether or not he knowingly misled parliament in terms of saying he believed the rules followed. now that is a crucial distinction because boris johnson says he was acting on the advice of his senior civil servants . they told him in their servants. they told him in their view no rules were broken. and therefore, when he that to parliament he was acting in good faith based on the he had at that time . that's the case he that time. that's the case he will be making. but no doubt there'll be lots of other employees disagree. we said that he knew was breaking the rules at the time and therefore he materially misled parliament and that could have grave consequences. okay. alright
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well, obviously boris johnson is going to be clinging for dear life political career, life to his political career, and as i know, there are and that's as i know, there are strong side. this strong views near the side. this we frankly going to days to we are frankly going to days to talk not least because talk about it, not least because it's kicking off on wednesday. so going move on from that so i'm going move on from that now. move on and now. i'm going to move on and talk more big news talk about some more big news that broke this afternoon and that broke this afternoon and thatis that broke this afternoon and that is regarding the strikes. they've country. they've been crippling country. rishi wanted to rishi sunak said he wanted to stop we're just stop the boats. we're just talking all of has talking about all of that has he stopped strikes tom tom? stopped the strikes tom tom? well, it's looking like we are edging that position. edging towards that position. of course, heard about course, last week we heard about the deal that had been reached between , all of different between, all of those different medical unions , which has now medical unions, which has now been recommend it in terms of passing the settlement and now the rmt one of the most militant unions on the railways has reached this agreement with with network. and this seems to be another step forward terms of solving of these big, big issues . it must be said that the
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government has always that they're sort of an arm's distance facilitator of negotiations here between the employers and the unions. so unlike in the role of the health, the government hasn't been directly negotiating here, but there always has been a sort of accusation of the unions that behind the scenes it was the government pulling strings. and it does seem that there has been movement on both sides in many different areas . i would be very different areas. i would be very surprised actually if we didn't see more sectors sort of announcing that there been big steps forward negotiations that are finally being reached sort of one by one over the coming days and weeks yeah, indeed. well, look, i think be good news, frankly, for everybody. both can probably claim a win on this and not usually means that it's a good deal. thank you very much. tom harwood that our deputy political editor said. right. of you i've right. look, those of you i've been touch, am been getting in touch, i am going to the inbox going to go to the inbox shortly. views at gb news uk shortly. gb views at gb news uk was whether or not you was asking whether or not you it's snobs. i know it is.
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it's only snobs. i know it is. and by way, don't you think he's only snobs are opposing this only snobs who are opposing this rule deal? also as well? rule and deal? and also as well? so something going so that's something we're going to later on to talk about later on apparently we're a of apparently we're a nation of shoplifters. now a little tea leaves supposedly leaves out there and supposedly we're nicking things much we're all nicking things much more we to do. i want more than we used to do. i want to know what the most to know what is the most pathetic nicked as pathetic thing nicked as a child? that's honest, child? because that's be honest, we've it. we've all done it. vaiews@gbnews.uk some absolute cool to cool because in there i'll to those first much those shortly but first much more matters . the dup more serious matters. the dup says that it will vote against the government in this week's first the first parliamentary vote on the new prime minister new brexit deal. prime minister rishi sunak agreed new rishi sunak agreed the new windsor with eu last windsor framework with eu last month sir jeffrey donaldson month dup sir jeffrey donaldson acknowledged progress has been made but said the new proposed deal doesn't with some fundamental problems . better to fundamental problems. better to talk about this with than former first minister of northern ireland is baroness arlene foster obe. good grief arlene. how you. i'm good. foster obe. good grief arlene. how you. i'm good . are you? yes, how you. i'm good. are you? yes, very well. thank but what do you make of this development then to the dup is going to vote against this brexit deal, the windsor framework. why well, first of
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all, the vote on wednesday is actually quite a technical technical vote on a statutory instrument on the stormont brake. that's part the windsor framework. you might recall this is quite complicated, but i think it is important to explain why is important to prime minister said he would give members of parliament a vote on the windsor framework. he has now turned the vote on a statutory instrument in westminster into vote on the windsor framework . as such, the windsor framework. as such, the dup up they cannot vote favour of this statutory because they haven't had clarity as to how the stormont is going to work. and i would imagine that most people like to have clarity on how something works before they vote on it . okay. all right. but vote on it. okay. all right. but how damaging this really going to be for the government, do you think he's really just to think he's really just going to plough regardless? plough ahead anyway, regardless? well think he has the numbers in parliament if he wants to plough ahead that the
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ahead, despite the fact that the foreign secretary and others had said they wouldn't go ahead said that they wouldn't go ahead and they were content with and mess, they were content with the deal. but we've been briefed that the foreign secretary is meeting with sefcovic, who's the vice president of the european commission , friday. so i would commission, friday. so i would imagine that they will sign off the deal friday. they won't have the deal friday. they won't have the support of the democratic unionist party . it will be unionist party. it will be interesting to find out tomorrow , patrick, whether they have the support members of the irg who are just tomorrow releasing what they believe is their legal opinion on the windsor framework so that comes out tomorrow morning as well. so have to watch this space as it to what they're going to say about of that. okay look , arlene, thank that. okay look, arlene, thank you very much as ever that is arlene foster. that arlene foster obe sorry , who is, of foster obe sorry, who is, of course, the former first minister of northern ireland, explaining why the dup going to vote against this particular
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elements of the brexit deal, why it matters, what it means that the government etc. so we've got loads your way. i'm loads more coming your way. i'm loving of the emails in by loving some of the emails in by the way of some of the emails. things you've nicked as a things that you've nicked as a child apparently are child is that apparently we are now of a new report now a nation of a new report suggests are nicking suggests that we are nicking things even more than we used do in the past and. yeah, i'm going to all these when to reveal all of these when i come back. but but some really us to coming. us to keep them coming. gbviews@gbnews.uk. have got gbviews@gbnews.uk. i have got a lot on we could lot more on the way we could apparently apparently be on the bnnk apparently apparently be on the brink global crisis. brink of another global crisis. i have more on shortly, but i will have more on shortly, but i will have more on shortly, but i do promise you that at some point will endeavour to keep point we will endeavour to keep it here this show. i'm it light here on this show. i'm patrick this is
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gb news, right? okay. welcome back. now to as you have been getting in touch gb views and i have been asking what is the most pathetic thing that you've ever stolen from the because from the shops? because apparently a nation of apparently we are a nation of shoplifters, figures we shoplifters, new figures that we are nicking than are nicking things more than ever before. thought i'd
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ever before. i thought i'd personally to on personally liable to spin on it. kirsty that her step kirsty says that when her step son was about ten, he stole a friday ball from the shop costs tempe because really tempe because he doesn't really have left message here other have left the message here other than that you the right than the fact that you the right thing clearly which is to take back the shop, him back to the shop, make him apologise and for he's apologise and pay for it he's never stolen anything again. michael, for your email michael, thanks for your email because but my kind of email is more this from guy called more like this from a guy called shaun. afternoon potato more like this from a guy called shaurwhen afternoon potato more like this from a guy called shaurwhen iafternoon potato more like this from a guy called shaurwhen i was noon potato more like this from a guy called shaurwhen i was aton potato more like this from a guy called shaurwhen i was at school, »tato gum. when i was at school, i shot in the eye with a shot somebody in the eye with a good shaun, surname sounds good shaun, who's surname sounds lot like connery, which have made worst. james bond made him the worst. james bond character in history. good i haven't in my life, but haven't stolen in my life, but when i was younger , i did steal when i was younger, i did steal a lottery ticket for behind the counter. although it never yet or i was running a pathetic shoplifting stories, if that's okay. shoplifting stories, if that's okay . gb views shoplifting stories, if that's okay. gb views a gb news keep coming in. we have loads more hours while downing street thou waving and the bank of england insisting the uk's banking system safe and sound, which should be reassuring for us, because this followed on from this morning as european bank shares dropped in the wake
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shares dropped again in the wake of the rescue of troubled bank credit suisse by ubs. now credit suisse by rivals ubs. now markets in london have steadied since but it follows a very turbulent ten days for many markets and banks across the globe following the collapse of the silicon valley bank in the us. the silicon valley bank in the us he's talking about while u.s. he's talking about while the potential global crisis will have to wait and see about all of that. but something else as well, i think, will pique your interest is economics interest is our economics business halligan business editor liam halligan went money money. okay went on the money money. okay liam. so bets on banks bet on something else . hit me with the something else. hit me with the bat. no real update if i'm honest, patrick. from when we spoke earlier this afternoon . spoke earlier this afternoon. credit suisse is one of the world's most important banks. or was it was a top 30 bank systemically . such is the systemically. such is the turmoil that was sparked when silicon valley bank a much much smaller bank failed in the us couple of weeks ago. the uk arm that of course was taken over under bank of england supervision by hsbc, a british bank.
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supervision by hsbc, a british bank . but since then there's bank. but since then there's been jitters across the world. and one of the really big thoroughbred of the world has now after 150, 160 years in existence , been wiped out, its existence, been wiped out, its deposits as its accounts have been taken by its long standing rival in switzerland ubs. so you've got absolute mega bank a bank whose balance she is even bigger than the country in which it resides and is not a particularly small economy. no, no . just mad, isn't it? yeah. no. just mad, isn't it? yeah. okay. all right. i know it's a little bit earlier about not necessarily getting too ahead of ourselves and thinking that we're staring down the barrel of a global which we're nowhere near this point. the 2008 near at this point. the 2008 financial crisis. mustn't financial crisis. we mustn't spread because as as spread panic because as as journalists, what i would , journalists, what i would, though the bank of though is that the bank of england, federal reserve, a england, the federal reserve, a lot of important central lot of other important central banks weekend , they banks over the weekend, they announced what they call a swap facility. that's basically a statement of intent, a global financial market and investors who fancy getting a bit naughty
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saying, look what central banks are going to stand together. we're to, you know, quickly give each other money in times of we're going to coordinate our response . so back off. yeah, response. so back off. yeah, because we are charge. okay. now, very quickly by the way, i'm going to get shouted out if i'm going to get shouted out if i'm not already, i'll stop caring at this point. i actually don't. kastor what's happening? so i was up in doncaster as soon as the budget was finished and. i wall and i spoke i did my video wall and i spoke to various presenters, i think on train and went doncaster on a train and went to doncaster and thursday night and and i spent thursday night and friday i spoke to friday doncaster and i spoke to a lot people about the a lot of people about the closure of doncaster to for closure of doncaster to air for a very long standing raaf base. it's been a civilian since 2005. a lot of promise there's a lot of discontent that what is now a city, doncaster, the airport has been closed and tomorrow i'm going bring gb news views and listeners a special report on doncaster airport and the campaign to save it, which is gathering pace. good so we love a campaign, right. more on that. be coming very shortly. liam,
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thank you very much. that our economics and business editor with on the money keep your emails in most emails coming in the most pathetic as pathetic thing he nicked as a child great is an early contender for victor from contender for a victor here from gary. much. i have to gary. thank very much. i have to admit to nicking my parents cigs and alcohol. there you go. gaynon and alcohol. there you go. gaynor. clearly lady own gaynor. clearly a lady after own heart. good stuff, right? heart. that good stuff, right? there's come there's loads more to come in today's show nicholas time today's show with nicholas time as leader almost over as the snp leader almost over and husband stepping down as and her husband stepping down as , will , their chief executive will will an expert take on snp sir mo look, i'm basically going to condense that say it's snp condense that and say it's snp madness. north of border and madness. north of the border and we'll stuck right into it. we'll get stuck right into it. is donald trump really about to be arrested? he believes he might be taken away in handcuffs i'll a leading i'll be asking a leading republican. you republican. but first, as you have as probably probably have as we've probably probably . patrick thank you the headunes . patrick thank you the headlines this are the dup says it will vote against the government in this week's first parliamentary vote on the new brexit. the prime minister rishi sunak agreed the new windsor
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framework with the last month. it aims to resolve some of the concerns unionist hold around the northern ireland protocol. party leader sir jeffrey donaldson acknowledged significant progress has been made, but said the proposed deal doesn't cover some fundamental problems . doesn't cover some fundamental problems. members of the at network rail have voted to accept an offer covering paid jobs and conditions. staff will receive a pay rise of between 9.2 and 14.4% and increased back pay- 9.2 and 14.4% and increased back pay. the union says its 20,000 members voted 76% in favour of the new deal china's president has called vladimir putin a dear friend as they both down to talk in moscow president xi jinping in moscow president xi jinping in russia. on his first visit to the country since the start of the country since the start of the invasion in ukraine. downing street said it hoped president would urge president putin stop the war. vladimir putin says he's open to negotiate writing on ukraine but warned he
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wouldn't accept any ultimate to the un chief is calling on rich nafions the un chief is calling on rich nations to urgently accelerate their shift to net zero by 2040. that's after a new report by the intergovernmental panel on climate change warned emissions must be halved by the mid 2030s if the world is to have any chance of limiting temperature rises to one and a half degrees and a key target from the paris the report antonio guterres has branded survival guide for humanity says there is little time to lose those your latest news headlines. i'm back at the top of hour now. well, patrick, all well, some of you might be wondering why i've been asking you to get in touch with the most things that you've nicked as a child okay
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gbviews@gbnews.uk , i want to gbviews@gbnews.uk, i want to lighten the show up a little bit, also be because of this bit, but also be because of this story. once described as story. we were once described as a l story. we were once described as a , shopkeepers, a nation, shopkeepers, but experts now claiming that britain is a nation of shoppers . right. are . that's right. shoppers are reportedly resorting to nicking everyday essentials from the shelves. they partly shelves. now, they partly saying, well, this is to keep their families going after the steep price rises over past yeah steep price rises over past year. experts actually that year. but experts actually that people addicted to people are becoming addicted to it a shoplifting it and getting a shoplifting high. so i want to know what's behind the thieving, frankly? i also just to go now quickly to a couple points here. i'm couple of your points here. i'm not to people on this not going to name people on this in the old bell come for in case the old bell come for you years the event. okay. you years after the event. okay. so you much for only so thank you very much for only beginning such a shameful. he beginning in such a shameful. he had nicking had a thing for nicking stationery. was nine stationery. when i was nine years but when i was ten years old, but when i was ten i moved up to nicking album covers with in them. yeah, with no records in them. yeah, that weird. that is a bit that is weird. that is a bit weird to my eternal shame. separate email. now this individual that they stole individual says that they stole . they purchased £70 of ice cream and shampoo for the kids. i've got a lot of question. can
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i've got a lot of question. can i be? your kid? maybe if that's on the. but there we go. and they next are shovels spoons from harrods. so i would just as a law about you that email a lot you. just one more quick one here patrick. when i was ten i did a paper and, i stole a cadbury's creme egg put it cadbury's creme egg and put it in back pocket. but i was in my back pocket. but i was wearing skinny jeans. it was visible. still feel bad for visible. i still feel bad for five years ago and it melted it. anyway, there go. anyway, so anyway, there we go. i know whether or not i want to know whether or not people wean themselves off people can wean themselves off or got a buzz out it. or why they got a buzz out it. i'm joined now by psychotherapist emma kenney. emma, to have emma, great stuff. great to have you show. so people are you on the show. so people are becoming shoplifting becoming addicted to shoplifting . well, people always have . why? well, people always have shoplifting potentially. we've got better figuring out when they do mean only out of one out of 150 people ever get caught for shoplifting. but i guess the cost of living certainly is going part it higher going to be part of it higher rates dependency, because if rates of dependency, because if you're a user, going to you're a user, you're going to need steal to kind of feed need to steal to kind of feed you habit. also there is a high to some, so people get a dopamine kick when they steal. and obviously when you get away
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with it, there's no reinforcement consequences. so that do more. that encourages you to do more. but also very fact that a lot of people don't see commercial stealing the in stealing in the same way in contexts. would a home invasion, for example, they for example, because they contextualise they're contextualise that as they're insured and they're big business. so that's one of the mental disassociation ins that my make. yeah, indeed. my people make. yeah, indeed. and i've seen some really shoplifting things. i was in boots once and someone automatic doors opened , they just came in. doors opened, they just came in. the rucksack was and they just swept a load of the kind of night packs that you can get you know there's kind of power packs. they just swept them all into a bag and off and it was donein into a bag and off and it was done in about 10 seconds and that was it. so it actually quite easy for people to do really. but do people get some kind of proper psychological buzz out of it? is that is there a bit of that, not just the people who are doing for quite some quiet necessity? yeah. so you've got two there. so you've got two levels there. so you've got two levels there. so you've people who you've got people who are genuinely so that genuinely kleptomaniac. so that means psychological means that have a psychological classification where, they just
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cannot but you cannot help themselves. but you also people who basically also have people who basically the kick that they get like anything like drinking, like like gambling. anything like drinking, like like gambling . it enables you to like gambling. it enables you to feel that you've got this immediate buzz. so dopamine is in that way and that means that unless you get into some kind of negativity response, you're not going necessarily stop . so going to necessarily stop. so certainly that there is a certainly we see that there is a psychological that also psychological issue that also people ocd, there is a particular syndrome of that very rare, but typical syndrome where people are addicted to the fitual people are addicted to the ritual of stealing . so certainly ritual of stealing. so certainly there can be psychological conditions that lead to it. i think still a lot of think there's still a lot of reasoning that people do because they feel that they want to get away because they away with something because they haven't necessarily got the economy. not necessarily economy. so it's not necessarily about that they can't about the fact that they can't for that they can't get for it is that they can't get away with it. and the truth is, humans like that. i i've never met a human yet who doesn't like thinking that can get over thinking that they can get over on it's not because on something. it's not because they're individual. they're a callous individual. it's sense of ooh, i got it's just a sense of ooh, i got away it. another big reason away with it. another big reason why an is self why there's an increase is self tools. i mean, it's very easy to
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get away with stealing. so the consequence of that is you get to steal. and also it's a security got going to run after you because risking a lot of their selves to do that and they're not getting paid enough. so again, the feedback and response that big the response isn't that big for the company. there there company. there are there are very, serious elements very, very serious elements to this course, people this story. of course, people shouldn't making stuff on shouldn't be making stuff on security, in the days shouldn't be making stuff on sepeople in the days shouldn't be making stuff on sepeople carrying in the days shouldn't be making stuff on sepeople carrying knives days of people carrying knives everywhere you go, know, everywhere you go, you know, security guards want to get involved stuff. involved and people do stuff. they victimless they think it's a victimless crime take crime because, oh you take something tesco's something from tesco or tesco's is yeah, alright, i is in short. yeah, alright, i get it. but it's not really. the point is. it and we do have law and or at least we should and order or at least we should do this country, but at the do in this country, but at the same time as there are same time as well there are interesting, fascinating elements like quite a lot elements to it. like quite a lot of people actually elements to it. like quite a lot of justieople actually elements to it. like quite a lot of just for)le actually elements to it. like quite a lot of just for some:ually elements to it. like quite a lot of just for some kind of nicking just for some kind of psychological you said, psychological rush, as you said, you kind person you know, kind of person who might chutney might nick some fake chutney from waitrose. emma, thank from waitrose. but emma, thank you much. and mackenzie you very much. and mackenzie diaries, like the diaries, just like the therapist. great stuff. yeah, loads you getting here loads you getting in touch here on the most thing you on the on the most thing you nicked a kid. this nicked when you were a kid. this is actually a contender is actually a good contender this richard 1935. my
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this from richard in 1935. my dad age ten. he sold a dad was age ten. he sold a turnip from a field. but the local was hiding local policeman was hiding in the hedge him . it the hedge and called him. it sounds like the start of a really bad joke this he was sent to a magistrates court and fined back day when law and back in the day when law and order away with order ruled he get away with that turnip. these when that turnip. these days when all just stop policeman, just stop the policeman, i suppose loads you getting in suppose loads of you getting in touch is actually touch it is actually quite fascinating some of fascinating as well. some of these you've names. i these ones that you've names. i didn't that so many of didn't realise that so many of our viewers like, pam, i'll name you because you're a you pam because you're a disgrace. takes a tip popper disgrace. she takes a tip popper point smith's point pencil from w.h. smith's and arrested cautioned and got arrested and cautioned grief mean nowadays someone could into your house and could break into your house and assault your nan and police assault your nan and the police would have rock. so there we go anyway. moving on today it didn't national happiness day. yes. no, honestly it really let me know what makes you happy people like we are going to do that very, very shortly. i patrick christys of this is dvd
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okay, welcome back. let's get an extra ordinary story now involving donald trump who said there's going to be arrested this week. trump made the comment on his truth social platform on saturday and the case surrounds hush money payments allegedly made to star. stormy daniels before the 2016 presidential election. so quite literally has it all the story doesn't say, but i am joined now by greg swanson, who's the chairman of republicans overseas. greg, thank you very much. will donald be much. will donald trump be arrested led away in arrested and led away in handcuffs? don't think so , handcuffs? i don't think so, right? not he very well right? not likely. he very well could be indicted, but there's a difference between being indicted and having your lawyers make some arrangements and being walked in handcuffs . i think walked off in handcuffs. i think he would love to be arrested. it would a disgrace for. the new would be a disgrace for. the new york d.a. for alvin and the democratic . but it's a disgrace democratic. but it's a disgrace because the case has absolutely no merit i mean, they've they've tried to tie this payment into campaign finance to the feds.
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you know, the justice department turned it down because they didn't think there was any merit it. alvin bragg's predecessor, cyrus turned it cyrus vance jr he turned it down, said there was no merit for it. so, you know, bragg ran as a get trump candidate. that was his whole strategy. the progressive in especially in new york , who just really hate trump york, who just really hate trump , wants him to do this. so he finally buckled and went ahead , finally buckled and went ahead, but surely this will just galvanise . who dislikes joe galvanise. who dislikes joe biden quite likes donald trump all the interest the republican would play into that narrative that no doubt about it. i mean i think the democrats understand they don't want to run against ron desantis in a general election so they'll do anything to elevate trump after the mara lago raid , trump's numbers over lago raid, trump's numbers over desantis went from plus nine to plus 39. wow. so you know, he had an enormous pickup from . had an enormous pickup from. mara lago, they know that's coming . that's why they're going coming. that's why they're going through with this ridicule . through with this ridicule. kasich would survive on kasich would never survive on appeal. kasich would never survive on appeal . so kasich would never survive on appeal. so you think this is
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seriously chance to boost trump in polls to make it more likely that he runs again as the presidential candidate , which presidential candidate, which makes it more likely that the democrats will win? absolutely because there's no basis for this case know they can't win the case. they've had six years of indicted months and impeachments and lawsuits and investigations, none of which have worked . i would argue if have worked. i would argue if you don't trump, then use the ballot box. that's the proper way to win elections. not to not chase your opponents with , you chase your opponents with, you know, with with the criminal justice. so, you know, it's really atrocious that they're doing it. but i think know, it's worth it if they can elevate trump and ensure that wins the nomination. and we're essentially on the clock, aren't we, when it comes whether or not trump is going to get indicted, arrested, whatever he said tomorrow, everything right ? he tomorrow, everything right? he said tomorrow. i don't know where he gets the information but but there there are a lot but but there is there are a lot of that it's the indicted of that it's that the indicted has pending and it could very well week. greg, thank
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well be this week. greg, thank you much. good ever. you very much. good as ever. appreciate in for us appreciate you coming in for us as those once and is as well. those once and that is the chairman republicans uk the chairman of republicans uk now on you concerned now moving on are you concerned about sex education classes at your schools because last month lessons at a school on the isle of man was suspended after a drunk queen told 11 year olds that it was 73 genders and now a mother has claimed her transgender teenage daughter , transgender teenage daughter, who identifies as a boy , was who now identifies as a boy, was influenced by sex education. and this is really the bit i'm keen to drill down on people because she told the telegraph that she thinks gender is , the thinks gender dysphoria is, the new anorexia for girls. and i think this is going to be a vital importance to anyone out there watching now he's got kids or thinking of having kids joining. me is alan joyce. he's the of. the advocacy the director of. the advocacy at sex is gender, the new anorexia for girls ? in part, yes. until for girls? in part, yes. until about ten years ago, they weren't really teenage girls who said that they identified boys or as anything else. it wasn't something that affected teenage girls. and now the group that it
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affects most we know affects most. we also know that's group that's prone to that's a group that's prone to social contagion. you know not just anorexia but cussing and self—harm grooming. things self—harm grooming. these things have and there have suggested and groups there suggested online both of suggested an online both of those are true for gender those things are true for gender dysphoria but unfortunate gender dysphoria but unfortunate gender dysphoria also taught schools dysphoria is also taught schools they don't mean to be teaching it, but when they tell that what makes you a boy regardless how you feel and you should examine yourself your feelings and yourself and your feelings and yourself and your feelings and your behaviour decide your behaviour is and decide whether boy or a girl whether you are a boy or a girl on that and it's nothing to on that and that it's nothing to do your biology. are do with your biology. they are children at ease in children who feel ill at ease in their bodies for maybe other reasons, you know, for example like being autistic spectrum or , you know, just being unusual or being sad or lonely, or just being sad or lonely, anything they're teaching those children the solution may children that the solution may be do with this nebulous idea be to do with this nebulous idea of gender. we've never this before that basically a social, socially created illness is being sold in school by teachers as well by peer groups as well as well by peer groups as well as by medical profession, as well as on the online sites
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where children congregate . so where children congregate. so we're seeing really a perfect storm of spreading this idea that really fascinating. and for want of better phrase, entirely manmade. in your view. want of better phrase, entirely manmade. in your view . yeah do manmade. in your view. yeah do think so. i think there are people who would feel ill at ease in their bodies anyway without being suggested to them, but far fewer than are seeing now. and the figures on the demography this of demography this this rise of teenage is so suggestive of a social contagion. i just really want to drill down in this because obviously was never because i obviously was never a teenage although teenage girl, although days presumably cosplay presumably i could just cosplay one loads of money on one and make loads of money on social there we go and social media but there we go and but but yes they are in your view or in terms just evidence i suppose what more susceptible to social trends. so yeah, a variety of different things and anorexia i believe was a massive probably is still a huge problem with teenage i would have thought and the concern is that gender dysphoria we're being told that maybe they were into their own body is dropped into their own body is dropped into their minds as a very vulnerable
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age by a school system that thinks it might be doing them a favour and b be nice is then backed up by a medical community backed up by a medical community backed up by a medical community backed up social media backed up by a lot of people who think that people should be cancelled if they don't think that that is the right potentially even the right view potentially even backed by like backed by things like the fashion now fashion industry which now appears literally advertising appears be literally advertising us. not on the tube the us. we're not on the tube the other for someone who'd had other day for someone who'd had a mastectomy , for a double mastectomy, for example. you think it is example. so you think it is a perfect form young and perfect form for young girls and maybe out there should maybe parents out there should be thinking, be watching and just thinking, look, daughter could look, your daughter could be vulnerable here? absolutely. and i don't think that parents can solve this on their own because unfortunately, by the time you realise that your child has been caught that child has caught up this that child has already basically self in already spent basically self in doctrine chasing online and with friendship and the things that you to your child will sound like negativity and rejecting them, but also you're backward and bigoted. so when you say things like, look, there were only two sexes, your child isn't primed to hear you, your child
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is primed to hear you're a girl, you must stay in the kitchen, can never achieve anything. you know, they hear what know, they don't hear what you're hear you're actually saying, hear what told. people what they've been told. people older are back older people who are back reflect. and if you say, have you seen some of those videos onune you seen some of those videos online as well of there's a guy who name he sits there, who i won't name he sits there, stares straight camera stares straight down the camera and your parents are and goes, your parents are wrong. go. no wrong. you need to go. no contact with your parents. excuse , are you joking? and excuse me, are you joking? and you're charging money as well for vulnerable children to be able you in a in a one able talk to you in a in a one on one sense. i think there's a name for those kind of people on one sense. i think there's a nanly for those kind of people on one sense. i think there's a nani wouldn'te kind of people on one sense. i think there's a nani wouldn't possibly people on one sense. i think there's a nani wouldn't possibly thatle on one sense. i think there's a nani wouldn't possibly that to but i wouldn't possibly that to say television just say on national television just yet i pressed time but yet i am pressed for time but i'm very glad that it came on because i think lot of people because i think a lot of people get a lot out of that, actually, and should very and they should be very concerned a lot, concerned about well, a lot, especially daughters especially the way our daughters are, told about this are, maybe being told about this and dysphoria schools. and gender dysphoria schools. how thank you very, very how then? thank you very, very much. i enjoyed that. the director at sex matters director of at sex matters right. that very right. look, that was a very heavy topic, but it was important having it today. heavy topic, but it was imjl)rtant having it today. heavy topic, but it was imjl thought ving it today. heavy topic, but it was imjl thought we'd it today. heavy topic, but it was imjl thought we'd lighten oday. heavy topic, but it was imjl thought we'd lighten up|y. so i thought we'd lighten up a little international day of little is international day of happiness, although you wouldn't
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know would you? but it's know it would you? but it's international day of happiness and. to create and. the day aims to create a happier and kinder by happier and kinder world by encouraging to adopt encouraging people to adopt simple which simple daily practises, which inspire the of the inspire joy. and with the of the world. at the moment i decided to see the increasingly popular practise of yoga might practise of laughing, yoga might bnng practise of laughing, yoga might bring me some happiness, and i have got a yoga expert joining me right now. it's is lotter mickelson, who has over 20 years experience right there. okay you very much what is laughing ? oh, very much what is laughing? oh, thank you so much for asking and thank you so much for asking and thank you so much for having me here. laughter yoga is just a way of laughing and not on jokes and comedy , even having a great and comedy, even having a great sense of humour. and if you think about all of this is what sometimes make people stop laughing because not everybody has the same sense of humour and we can still laugh without it. and you know, it's happiness
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just like say and the thing is, we don't laugh because we are happy. we don't laugh because we are happy . we're happy because we're happy. we're happy because we're oh , not, we don't . oh what can oh, not, we don't. oh what can you do? except laugh at yourself ? i so glad i've met you . it's. ? i so glad i've met you. it's. it's bad to. so how does it how doesit it's bad to. so how does it how does it work? what you do? do you sit in a room and just laughed. do you sit in a room and just laugh to each other? what is it. well, you do some exercises maybe, i also have exercises maybe, but i also have groups where. i phone up and we just five or 10 minutes just laughing, no talking, laughing . laughing, no talking, laughing. but we always do because that's what helps do it in the morning. just you see in the video . so just you see in the video. so for example in the morning you'd wake up, maybe walk past a mirror on the way to your bathroom. and when you look in the mirror and just go . it's not the mirror and just go. it's not real laugh at that time, but you
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know what? we're kick off that j'oy know what? we're kick off that joy cocktail . and, you know, joy cocktail. and, you know, instead of going shoplifting maybe to get that into laughter instead , the theory is the instead, the theory is the theory is that that by essentially forcing yourself to laugh it just makes you happy . laugh it just makes you happy. yeah you release joy cocktail, which is endorphins our happy chemical serotonin are natural dopamine , which motivates and dopamine, which motivates and drives us and also oxytocin , our drives us and also oxytocin, our love hormone. so all these chemicals just flood body when we're laughing even it's without having any particular like jokes and other people to make us laugh it's about tapping into that and doing it for ourselves because it's so healthy for us and basically mentally and emotionally healthy right so and if it doesn't work for you to 90, if it doesn't work for you to go, just flush your head up like you've lost your teeth . oh, i you've lost your teeth. oh, i
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love you. love best. i love that. so thank you very much. laughs i'm going to have to i'm going to get going too much fun for one segment here but laughs lots of mickelson has over 20 years experience in laughing yoga just google she is the laughter expert not laughter yoga expert hey why not put a smile on my face anyway this is the best place gone for coverage of the government's plans migrant crisis very plans to end migrant crisis very soon. i will be telling you what i'm asking him as well. what nigel farage thinks about sending people to rwanda. i'm patrick christys and join me and nigel on gb news in a matter of seconds seconds .
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yes. hello everybody . it's just yes. hello everybody. it'sjust on 5:00. i'm patrick christys and this is gb news. i've got a big wall coming your way. okay. because it's been a massive day for the rwandan to deal. we all thought would never take off,
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thought it would never take off, but apparently it might be about to actually off the has to actually lift off the has been rwanda the been in rwanda and the developments she thinks developments are that she thinks that pesky european judges that those pesky european judges are back down and are going to back down and frankly allow the flight to take off. she also thinks people who oppose the deal are actually just virtue signalling snobs. what do you make of that? i will have nigel farage with me in a matter moments to talk about that, but it is going to an extra big hour for news people because dominic is talking because dominic raab is talking live we'll be taking that in live and we'll be taking that in about time. there's an about 5 minutes time. there's an update on whether or not vladimir is going to be vladimir putin is going to be arrested by the international community. so make sure you stay tuned that. i'll have more tuned for that. i'll have more detail way. surely detail coming your way. surely big, and gents, be big, our ladies and gents, be that. big, our ladies and gents, be that . get your big, our ladies and gents, be that. get your e—mails coming in, gb views at gb news dot uk. do you think that those people who oppose rwanda migrant plan are actually just out of touch snobs want to know what you think about all of that and yes, ihave think about all of that and yes,
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i have been asking in light of the fact we now supposedly a the fact we are now supposedly a nafion the fact we are now supposedly a nation of shoplifters, not shopkeepers, what is the most ridiculous, thing you ridiculous, pathetic thing you ever as a child? some call ever stole as a child? some call because in the gb views our gb news don't get them coming in. but now there is headlines but now there is you headlines with . patrick. thank you with polly. patrick. thank you good evening to you. the news just after 5:00. is that the dup says it's going to vote against the government in this week's first parliamentary vote on the brexit deal, the prime minister agreed the new windsor framework with the eu last month and it aimed to resolve some of the concerns unionists had about the northern ireland protocol. well, party leader sir jeffrey donaldson acknowledged significant has been made, but said the new proposal doesn't resolve fundamental problems . resolve fundamental problems. well i recognise the progress that has been made here and i've said so and i think the prime minister has worked hard to bnng minister has worked hard to bring about that progress but there issues of concern that
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remain for us in terms the application of eu law , in terms application of eu law, in terms of how these arrangements will work in practise. we have we need greater clarity. we need reworking and change and we'll to engage with the prime minister and the government to secure progress that is needed . secure progress that is needed. bofis secure progress that is needed. boris johnson's against claims he lied to parliament over the party scandal has been handed to the privileges they're going to pubush the privileges they're going to publish their findings on whether mr. johnson was in contempt of parliament and then make a recommendation on any sanctions. the house of commons will make the final decision , a will make the final decision, a spokesperson for boris johnson said . his position would be said. his position would be vindicated the un chief is calling on rich nations to accelerate their shift to net zero by 2040. that's after new report by the intergovernmental panel on climate change warned emissions must be halved by the mid 2030s if the world is to have any chance. limiting
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temperature rises to 1.5 degrees, a key target in the paris agreement . the report, paris agreement. the report, which antonio guterres has branded the survival guide for humanity, says there's time to lose china's president, has called vladimir putin a friend as the pair sat down. talks in moscow . president xi jinping is moscow. president xi jinping is russia. on his first visit to the country since the start of the country since the start of the invasion of ukraine. downing street said it hopes will urged the president to stop the war. vladimir putin says he is open to negotiating but warned he wouldn't accept any altimeter . wouldn't accept any altimeter. meanwhile, justice ministers from around the world are meeting in london to discuss increasing support for the international criminal court on friday, icc issued an arrest warrant for russia's president on charges of war crimes. the deputy prime minister dominic said the 40 nations are united behind one cause to those
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responsible for atrocities is in ukraine to account . president ukraine to account. president vladimir putin is accused ordering the kidnapping and of thousands ukrainian children. the kremlin's called the allegations outrageous and unacceptable . here the home unacceptable. here the home secretary has told mps she's satisfied the provisions of the government's illegal migration bill are capable of being compared simply applied to the human convention. it comes suella braverman said. migrants could be sent to rwanda by the summer . the could be sent to rwanda by the summer. the agreement could be sent to rwanda by the summer . the agreement between summer. the agreement between the two countries has been expanded to include illegal migrants and not just asylum seekers . speaking in the house seekers. speaking in the house of commons told mps the uk will now work with france to secure cross—channel co—operate . and cross—channel co—operate. and she criticised labour for announcing their immigration policy on twitter. shadow home secretary has been on twitter . secretary has been on twitter. she's very good on twitter , she she's very good on twitter, she
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tweeted. in the last ten days, labour's paltry for a plan. half it stuff we're already doing the other is that plan for open borders and unlimited migrant . borders and unlimited migrant. what i suggest they do is get off twitter, get a rwanda and i'll show them how to stop the pirates. members of the rmt network in network rail have voted to accept an offer covering paid jobs and conditions . staff are going to conditions. staff are going to receive a pay rise of between 9.2 and 14.4% and increased back pay- 9.2 and 14.4% and increased back pay. the union says its 20,000 members voted 76% in favour of the new. secretary of transport harper says he hopes the union gives its members at training operation companies the same . operation companies the same. and i hope the trade unions now put the rmt now put the fair and reasonable pay off a very similar pay offer that they now put that to their members are working for the trade operating
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companies . they haven't had the companies. they haven't had the chance to consider this pay offer. and i their union gives them the chance to consider it and decide whether like their network rail workers whether they want to settle this dispute as well . downing says it's as well. downing says it's confident the uk banking system remains safe and well after. the state backed rescue of the bank credit suisse. ubs to buy its west rival in a deal worth more than two and a half billion pounds while this morning in reaction the footsie hundred fell by 1% to its lowest level in more than four months. but the markets have now steadied . the markets have now steadied. shares in credit, the markets have now steadied. shares in credit , however, have shares in credit, however, have dived by more than % today. dived by more than% today. that's the latest news. i'm back in half an hour with headlines, then.
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all right . in then. all right. in just loads to get through. let's get cracking. we start with the latest on the government's plans. send migrants to rwanda. home secretary suella braverman has defended the proposals. was defended the proposals. it was a lively exchange in the of lively exchange in the house of commons earlier, it's been a commons earlier, but it's been a big for the rwanda scheme because the problem was actually in the rwandan capital kigali over an over the weekend. we've an exclusive interview with her and our own mark white our very own mark white available on our youtube channel. make sure you out channel. make sure you that out but and basically things but problem and basically things she been able to get she might have been able to get there judges back down and there as judges to back down and so allow the flights to take which was seen as maybe the final brick in the wall when it comes to getting the illegal migration bill for want of a better phrase, off the ground. also she has come out swinging saying that people oppose the deportation . rwanda deportation schemes. rwanda a process schemes to rwanda are process in schemes to rwanda are basically touch leftie basically out touch leftie snobs. let's out now what gb news this presenter nigel farage makes of it all. nigel is with me. yes, there is good stuff.
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okay what do you make of the latest when it comes to suella braverman migrant rwanda push euro judge is set to back down. do you believe that ? i believe do you believe that? i believe it when i see it. you know, i don't. i mean, let's face it over course of the last three years, we've had government tell us again and again that they found a solution to the boats crossing the english channel to all these young undocumented males, coming into our country, and thus far, we've seen are and thus far, all we've seen are the numbers . look, know, the numbers. so, look, you know, let's hope she's right. let's hope the in strasbourg relent . hope the in strasbourg relent. although i have to say as a brexit here, i don't really want judges in strasbourg having any say over our border migration and policy. we're getting lot of optimism from suella braverman . optimism from suella braverman. well, the proof of the pudding will be in the eating. yeah. the other relevant story that she said to me. why about the fact that some of the people who opposed rwanda deal, they've opposed the rwanda deal, they've not rwanda themselves. not been to rwanda themselves. and that snobbish and actually that snobbish in their life aren't impacted
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their own life aren't impacted as a result of . frankly, mass as a result of. frankly, mass immigration as a whole but by illegal migration . in your view illegal migration. in your view is nigel yeah. illegal migration. in your view is nigel yeah . look, you know, is nigel yeah. look, you know, generally what you find that mass migration, rising population in the people it hits the worse in our society are those who were the poorest. you know generally , people living in know generally, people living in formerly impound homes. know generally, people living in formerly impound homes . chelsea formerly impound homes. chelsea don't have too much of a with this because it just means they get cheaper to work in their kitchens. but even if the rwanda plan by this summer started to work , bear this in mind we work, bear this in mind we already have a minimum of 450 hotels around the country that have been filled. are getting on for 60,000 young men in these hotels and look where i am now i'm at scampton where the former ambassador's base is about become a migrant centre that . become a migrant centre that. we're going to do our to stop . we're going to do our to stop. so even if rwanda kicks this summer, we already have on our shores a massive existing problem . and just very finally .
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problem. and just very finally. nigel, because i know you've got two fantastic shows for prepared it will be great and fantastically well viewed as well because it's such an important. but when it comes to the polling data, not the latest polling data, not good for which to show good for our poll which to show that just 16 one 6% of people strong disagree with the government's illegal migration . government's illegal migration. but you wouldn't know that looking at twitter, would you? how out of touch do you reckon social media is? the life? i tell you what love gary lineker to come to scampton today, to come and knock on doors in the street of this village. i think you'd find out that lineker is podcast pals and his mates at the bbc are , a very small the bbc are, a very small minority and probably a fifth of the country. think what's going is acceptable. there is a huge silent majority out there whose voice is not yet being heard. and we are gb news is going to give them every chance to do that. good stuff , nigel farage. that. good stuff, nigel farage. we'll be live and unleashed as well from scotland later on this
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evening. thank you very, batus. nigel. great stuff as ever. make sure you tune into that people. okay? will great. now, okay? it will be great. now, look, did raise a point look, nigel, did raise a point there the majority there about the silent majority people. and yet the latest polling data that i seen polling data that i have seen says that people in the says that 52% of people in the country , 52% of people are country, 52% of people are strongly support just oppose the government's plan to a get through on the floor of the ground but also be banned people who tried illegally enter the uk from ever being to apply for asylum again. so really, really what that means is they support the government's illegal migration bill. that was 52% of that poll that took place that just 16% strongly disagree with it . so there is a massive it. so there is a massive disconnect between some people with massive followings , with massive followings, twitter, for example. and you could argue silent majority. well, one of the key points that emerged was what the problem is. visit to rwanda is this if rwanda is such a great to be sent to as our home secretary claims. the policy act claims. how can the policy act as deterrent ? she's in claims. how can the policy act as deterrent? she's in a claims. how can the policy act as deterrent ? she's in a rock as a deterrent? she's in a rock and a hard place. energy so
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blessed because she's out on that saying, well, this is that saying, well, look, this is a deterrent . and then at a real deterrent. and then at the time, saying, the same time, she's saying, look lovely . i want to look at this lovely. i want to get name whoever did get the name for whoever did interior of this place interior design of this place that sending these people so it is a of a sticky wicket for is a bit of a sticky wicket for it. joining me now is give it. but joining me now is give that thought steve valdes that thought is steve valdes simmons, who's a refugee and migrant rights programme director migrant rights programme directo as well by migrant rights programme directoas well by hudson, who is joined as well by hudson, who is a researcher migration what i a researcher at migration what i will with steve if that's will with you steve if that's all look israel under all right look israel under deterrence or not because from what see it looks lovely . what i can see it looks lovely. well thus far it clearly isn't to deterrence, and i don't expect it to be a deterrent, not because it is a lovely place. amnesty has been following this country for many. it has a shocking human rights abuse. it has a totally totalitarian regime with a president who supposedly has polling results of 19 9% favour or ability in elections and an a regime that is currently engaged in stoking
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if not actively involved in refugee producing conflict in this drc , which it is being this drc, which it is being shockingly engaged for years and decades. shockingly engaged for years and decades . okay. all right. i'll decades. okay. all right. i'll come back to you, steve. obviously on that. but jeremy, i'll bring you in now because i was actually quite fascinating i mean, tony blair was talking about a very similar scheme , about a very similar scheme, rwanda and in fact, the eu already sent people over to rwanda. i don't remember having too much a clamour about all of that. it'sjust too much a clamour about all of that. it's just bad when do it, is it? exactly. it seems to me this is a case of, quote , you this is a case of, quote, you countries are interested in these kinds of schemes, just strikes if the uk can pull it off and ultimately we're facing a global situation and where immigration levels are pretty much on precedented. there's a lot of people around the world want to leave their country and want to leave their country and want to leave their country and want to embrace someone better. and if we do something about it, then the numbers that we've seen in recent years will. well, it could comparison to the could pale comparison to the future come.
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future numbers that will come. okay. alright, stephen, i'll bnng okay. alright, stephen, i'll bring back . now, now bring you back. now, look, now the cynic in me potentially say would say that actually as long as people are crossing the channel and as long as people are risking their lives and as long as it can be told that they're going to be deported to some human rights some kind of human rights hellhole, like hellhole, then charities like amnesty do rather well with donations. if that isn't donations. but if that isn't the case that said case and actually that said somewhere nice and quite somewhere quite nice and quite a good and also acts as good policy. and it also acts as a to stop people a deterrent to stop people coming across the channel and basically everyone's a winner then really have then amnesty doesn't really have anything for the uk anything to live for in the uk when to the channel. so when it comes to the channel. so all you just out all you just pumping out negativity frankly keep negativity frankly to keep yourself business business. yourself in business business. no amnesty's , been in business no amnesty's, been in business for decades long before this was ever imagined by the present government or indeed schemes imagined by previous governments. there's plenty human rights work to be done both in the uk and elsewhere in the world and quite frankly, amnesty would prefer to focus on that than have to be addressing a dreadful policy by what could
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be and should be a country that leads on human rights respect rather than leaps for the gutter and encourage is other countries to do likewise . how do you to to do likewise. how do you to that jeremy i've seen things that jeremy i've seen things that we're for the gutter here. i think that's a ridiculous thing to say, to be honest. the policy such as amnesty, maybe amnesty particular, but certainly the open borders groups seems to be more safe and legal routes from in the world in unlimited quantity and with with no end and. i think when you look at how many people to the uk illegally last year and asylum having come illegally where do you draw the line . where do you draw the line. 45,000 not enough. should we be taking in 100,000 a year. it's you've to draw a line in the sand somewhere and if don't draw it now the numbers aren't going to. keep higher and to. keep getting higher and higher and higher. steve, how would you respond the charge would you respond to the charge that people who that a lot of people who disagree with the rwanda scheme
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or the government's illegal migration as a whole are just loud virtue signalling people who actually are out of touch the reality of the country because the opinion would appear to suggest that that is the. well, to be frank , i'm i'm as well, to be frank, i'm i'm as loud as permitted to be. i don't have tv station to make my views known. i rely upon such as yours, to them. and i will do so if given the opportunity . if given the opportunity. frankly, i'm concerned that much of the noise generate it much by the government, which has much more opportunity to make noise , more opportunity to make noise, amnesty or anyone that i might support does is detracting from very serious things. not least let's for example take the legislation that is currently proposed by the government that say is largely supported by the british government, by british people , by perhaps a small people, by perhaps a small majority. do they know , for majority. do they know, for example, that that very would mean that the british trafficked
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into this country or a british person who was born to someone trafficked into this country would be deprived of their citizenship that and permanently excluded from their own country . do they know that? no because we have so much nonsense and noise by the government over trying to do something which frankly is disgraceful in many ways , not least the way i just ways, not least the way i just described . it's very difficult described. it's very difficult for people you to have sufficient voice to be able to displace that. but i'll keep trying. well. well, there go. for what it's worth, steve know, we might disagree on a lot of stuff. i'm very glad that you do come on and talk about it because it enables it to have debates like this and so we are very grateful for for you very grateful for you for you coming on a little bit over to you, jeremy, do you think the british fully understand british public fully understand this? that if they this? do you think that if they knew detail on it, steve knew more detail on it, as steve was saying, that they will be more to, ultimately, more opposed to, it ultimately, the public are sick of seeing as increased numbers increase on their local communities and the government trotting out plans year that
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year after year after year that ultimately nothing address ultimately do nothing to address the challenge. this the scale. the challenge. this is time the government the scale. the challenge. this is actually1e the government the scale. the challenge. this is actually come government the scale. the challenge. this is actually come out 'ernment the scale. the challenge. this is actually come out with|ent the scale. the challenge. this is actually come out with at have actually come out with a plan actually create plan that might actually create sufficient deterrence sufficient levels of deterrence to in the uk, to stop immigration in the uk, or least significantly or at least significantly reduces and then something reduces and then do something about well . i think that's about it as well. i think that's what people about they might not know specific and outs know the specific and outs of every single line in. the reasonably long bill, but they certainly seem to agree with the gist it and that's what most gist of it and that's what most polling alright, polling shows. okay. alright, look of you, thank you very, very great stuff of very much. great stuff is of course steve that . he's course steve symons that. he's refugee and migrant rights program director, uk. program director, amnesty uk. i'm hudson , researcher i'm jeremy hudson, a researcher at migration watch. it's pretty straightforward this isn't to do you bought this bill not and even with steve outlining of the potential pitfalls of it there do you back it. i am do you still back it. i am looking at absolutely looking here at some absolutely devastating of migrant hotels and i'm very pleased that these figures have been brought to us 363 migrant hotels in england, 20 northern ireland, ten in scotland. so all this lovely refugees welcome brigade north of border that well actually
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they don't particularly fairly and two in wales okay so we go and two in wales okay so we go and this is costing the taxpayer around point £3 million a day and the rest companies that are being tasked with willy nilly taking over some of these hotels to have them as migrant holding centres essentially , asylum centres essentially, asylum seeker hotels, they are cleaning it in profits are trebling year on year as a result of this cottage industry that we have now. but it's all well and good for people to sit here and go, wow, know, gosh, what do we do about what this is the reality of it. 363 local community is in england alone will have at least one migrant hotel in their area and they might not like that they might feel less safe a result and they want something about is this not about that. and is this not really reason why the government is outsource things to is trying to outsource things to rwanda reduce the burden on rwanda to reduce the burden on all public services to reduce cost taxpayer? although i cost to the taxpayer? although i am that it cost quite a bit to send them to rwanda, but certainly reduce ongoing certainly reduce the ongoing cost to taxpayer. does cost to the taxpayer. does a
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government a duty do government not have a duty to do that argument now that and the argument now appears for be a of appears to for be a lot of people i would wonder if the deterrent. won't be deterrent. it won't be a deterrent. it won't be a deterrent. because looks deterrent. why? because it looks nice. lot of those people nice. and a lot of those people are the same people are arguing that we can't send to that we can't send them to rwanda it's human rwanda because it's a human rights so go figure. rights aspect. so go figure. anyway, views coming anyway, i get your views coming gbviews@gbnews.uk. but on for a little vladimir putin little while is vladimir putin really be arrested for war really going be arrested for war crimes? we will be. bringing you live very dominic raab live on this very dominic raab and. he's going to have a press conference about this. the families that we go. i'm patrick christys is gb news i christys this is gb news i
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okay welcome back . it's fair to okay welcome back. it's fair to say the snp are in turmoil in the last few their leader is resigned that chief has stepped down and now the policy chief executive has also gone one of the leadership candidates apparently shouldn't be anywhere near politics because she also has religious beliefs which she says wouldn't interfere with politics. and then another guy
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has religious beliefs which potentially lies about so that you can get on in politics but has been demonstrably awful in every he's had is every political role he's had is the to win it's chaos. the favourite to win it's chaos. nicola sturgeon husband, peter murrell, was chief executive of the party since 1999, which in itself, of course, a all above obviously . but he's now quit obviously. but he's now quit after a row membership numbers. let's talk brian monteith. he's a former member of the scottish parliament. brian stuff thank you very much for joining us. what's going with nicola sturgeon's husband . well nicola sturgeon's husband. well nicola sturgeon's husband. well nicola sturgeon's husband, peter murrell had actually taken over as chief executive back in 99. he's been the running the party all time and nicola sturgeon and didn't marry to something like 2010. but what we have heard effectively since she became minister is a situation in which her husband and wife team are
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running the government running the party of government . now can the party of government. now can you imagine the outrage that would have been had boris and carrie johnson had been running the uk government and running the uk government and running the conservative party. naturally, people would think that would conflict of interest and the potential for good governance . but this really was governance. but this really was never an arrangement that the sturgeon's or the morals, if we might call them that were challenged on by the scottish press. but we have seen since nicola sturgeon resigned and a can of worms open up about the conduct , the election process conduct, the election process which will of course produce a first minister for, although nicola sturgeon hasn't backed anyone herself. the feeling was that the party under peter murrell was actually backing humza yousaf . yeah and but why humza yousaf. yeah and but why
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doesit humza yousaf. yeah and but why does it matter that now. supposedly it was hidden from perspective candidates that the snp has lost 30,000 members. i mean, why why was they hated and what does it matter? well, that's a question. obviously, parties don't like to admit that they are losing members, but it makes me wonder , for instance, makes me wonder, for instance, is there a relationship in the sense of losing 50,000 members since last general election and relevant to the cash flow problems that the parties had that led to the chief executive actually having to give a loan of £107,000? is that a relief ship? well, you certainly think that membership income could be a factor. that question doesn't seem to be getting asked . seem to be getting asked. certainly the parties are would be hit badly by the drop even in the last six months or so of 30,000 members going away because of it tells its own story. but rejecting the snp ,
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story. but rejecting the snp, well, it does well , i suppose. well, it does well, i suppose. i mean, it's a bit shocking whichever way you dress it up. look, i of wonder whether or not one day you and i might end talking about a developing which would appear to at the idea that maybe they've been a bit of a rocket run north of the border . rocket run north of the border. what was the certainly a rocket another sense of the constant the constant grievance culture . the constant grievance culture. we never stop hearing under nicola sturgeon which i have to see. alex salmond was always a glass half full, an optimist, because scotland up as the reason to have independence versus nicola sturgeon's route to market to talk britain down and that's not be it we're going to. we'll leave it this election. we'll leave it that just the sound was a bit about it also a bit time but i think we got the gist and we brought the full member of the scottish
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parliament. fascinating. so do not take your eyes off what's on north of the border. is north of the border. that is absolute chaos for the snp, the many the membership. many losing the membership. senous serious question mark since the snp's and of course he snp's finances and of course he was in charge of that and why some of the money may have gone and calibre of candidate is and calibre of candidate that is about over from nicola about to take over from nicola sturgeon well. it is an sturgeon as well. it is an absolute shocker of comic absolute shocker one of comic proportions lows still to come as we now on pm, we will hear from dominic raab big stuff this because putin was slapped with an international arrest warrant. dominic going be dominic raab is going be addressing the press on this. we will that live on this will take that live on this show. it is the latest show. but first it is the latest headunes show. but first it is the latest headlines we're polly middlehurst . patrick, thank you middlehurst. patrick, thank you . top stories this hour, the dup says it's going to vote against the government in this week's first parliamentary vote on the new brexit deal. the prime minister agreed new windsor framework with the eu month aiming to resolve some of the concerns. unionist unionists have, particularly the stormont
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brake within northern ireland protocol. party leader sir jeffrey donaldson acknowledged progress had been made, but said the new proposed deal cover fundamental problems . also in fundamental problems. also in the news today , members of the the news today, members of the rmt and rail have voted to accept an offer covering pay and conditions . staff will receive conditions. staff will receive a pay conditions. staff will receive a pay rise between 9.2 and 14.4. and back pay the union. its 20,000 members voted 76% in favour of the new deal deal . favour of the new deal deal. china's president has called vladimir putin a dear friend as the sat down to talks in. president xi jinping is in russia on his first visit to the country since the start of the invasion of ukraine. downing street says it hopes will urge president putin to stop the war. president putin to stop the war. president putin to stop the war. president putin says he's open to negotiation, but warned he accept ultimatum ultimatum . the
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accept ultimatum ultimatum. the un chief is calling on rich nafions un chief is calling on rich nations to urgently accelerate their shift to net zero emissions by 2040. that's after a new report by the panel on climate change warned emissions must be halved by the mid—20th thirties. if the world is to have chance of limiting temperature rises to 1.5 degrees. and that's a key target from the paris agreement. the report, which antonio guterres has branded the survival guide for humanity, says there's time to lose . and those are your to lose. and those are your latest news headlines. i'm back at the top of the hour. see that okay ladies and gentlemen, very shortly, i'm going to be whizzing you over to lancaster house where dominic raab is going to be talking in relation
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to vladimir putin being issue with that essentially international arrest warrant system set for alleged war crimes, etc. so i'll bring you up on we're going to up to on that. we're going to throw it over. i've just got a couple of seconds i want to delve into inbox and liven things up a bit because i was asking on in of the asking you earlier on in of the fact new figures fact that new figures have revealed apparently we're a nafion revealed apparently we're a nation shoplifters nation of shoplifters now. people are getting people people are getting addicted left, addicted to shoplifting left, right centre. i thought, right and centre. i thought, what's the most effective experience you've ever had with nicking stuff as a kid? really oh, believe. there you go. oh, i believe. there you go. talking are criminals. talking of things are criminals. we now to we are going to go now to dominic. he's talking about vladimir the icc vladimir putin and, the icc arrest let's to that arrest warrant. let's to that now . i arrest warrant. let's to that now. i believe arrest warrant. let's to that now . i believe we're going there now. i believe we're going there now. i believe we're going there now. yes. to how we can. and from the netherlands, with whom i co—hosted and we a successful day. the chief prosecutor made his his shopping list. if like of the areas of support that needs to do the job particularly in to ukraine but also his wider mandate. we also were lucky enough to hear from president zelenskyy directly and i can
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tell you that we raised over £4 million in additional contributions and a whole range of non—financial technical support for the work . the icc support for the work. the icc from disaster victim identification , the danish have identification, the danish have offered through to forensic experts from the dutch friends and the belgians , the czechs, and the belgians, the czechs, the list of support that we provided investigative support, but also with witnesses and as well as that at there is an interesting offer from ghana for a relocation for victims and witnesses and whole range that's just a sense of the of some of the highlights but given the indictment of president putin on friday i think it was really important that we matched our words with deeds and showed the practical to give effect to the icc mandate . so that just gives icc mandate. so that just gives you a flavour of what we discussed dealing over to overture. if there's anything
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else you'd like to i think else you'd like to add. i think that covers it all. i would just like you because like to thank you because without effort listen to without your effort listen to not possible to be here with so many countries . and just again many countries. and just again focusing on core issue today and how do we prevent and how do we help victims. so thank you again . and i think you covered it all. great well, i'm open to questions if we got david from the here . david thank you very the here. david thank you very much. david wallace from the bbc. mr. raab , can the uk do to bbc. mr. raab, can the uk do to that vladimir putin faces ? well, that vladimir putin faces? well, i think there's a number of things. first of all, i think hosting this event just a few days fortuitously after that indictment, bringing countries we've always said our of global britain is as a force for good in the world using our soft power, convening power. of course we do it with our dutch friends who host international criminal court. i think that's
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very powerful. having over 40 countries come here and pledge new, practical support, which is the kind of nuts bolts that a criminal court, an international criminal court, an international criminal court, an international criminal court needs to do the job. remember, it stuck out there in the hague as a court but you think of all the other wrap around support that they just system would have from investigators relocation. investigators to relocation. that's practical things that's the kind practical things that we can do . and if you're that we can do. and if you're asking can aid putin, will putin inevitably sit it out? well, i remember as a young war crimes lawyer in the hague in 2004, negotiating a sentence enforcement agreement with the un for the yugoslavia tribunal, and 17, like eight years later, karadzic ended up in a jail in british jail as result of it, charles taylor ended in jail. milosevic was brought to trial . milosevic was brought to trial. so i think we've got justice on our side. and i think we've got history on our side, but we'll to be patient and. can we take a question from marie from afp ?
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question from marie from afp? marie hello . can you give more marie hello. can you give more details about ? the £4 million details about? the £4 million additional support that you talked about, where do they come from ? which countries? thank you from? which countries? thank you . i don't know if you were keeping the dutch because the dutch in the uk put it in, but there are or three different areas for support. i didn't i was keeping an overall tally. i didn't the full breakdown. but i would say that actually a quite a few countries put in what they can. of course there's the regular budget, the icc to be funded on a regular basis. but actually, particularly given the workload in ukraine. i think it's right that those us that it's right that those of us that can up with some extra can step up with some extra support. remember any of support. do you remember any of the well, you know , the others now? well, you know, everybody they could so everybody did what they could so . that's one hand, giving . that's on the one hand, giving expertise sending people over from the military , the police from the military, the police from the military, the police from different areas because very important that we ensure that we have the evidence .
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that we have the evidence. that's right . the that we have the evidence. that's right. the in ukraine and of course, a few of the countries said we have additional funds and that will go on one hand to the diversity fund and on the other hand to. right okay. i think we can all agree that's quite enough of that. so. yes, welcome back , that. so. yes, welcome back, everybody. now, that was deputy prime minister and justice dominic raab. he was holding a news conference after that meeting, which was in support of the international court the international criminal court and. that of course was in relation vladimir putin essentially issued with an essentially being issued with an international arrest warrant . international arrest warrant. but we are to talk now to an individual in what really this could mean for vladimir putin. okay. global sanctions and war crimes specialist. it sara elizabeth dale, sara , you very, elizabeth dale, sara, you very, very much. yes. okay now, it's fair to say that that press conference was news, though, but there is a serious point underlying all this, isn't it? which is essentially whether or not vladimir putin is going to be any time soon. what be arrested any time soon. what do you think. i think the
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chances of that are extremely slim . this is very symbolic slim. this is a very symbolic that the icc prosecutor engaged in or it's intended to send a message. the fact that this is only the third time in history that we've had a head of state indicted it. and if you look at the case of sudan, you have bashir who still not been brought before the icc and i think it's highly unlikely and especially given how much putin isolated himself in months that we won't see him before the icc any time soon. no. okay. alright. so what is now just international posturing, just look, vlad, we don't like you very much. one day, all one day we will come and put you in. i think it's definitely an attempt by the icc send a strong message that they are going be pursuing prosecutions . however a number prosecutions. however a number of challenges to this, aside from arguments that president putin put up, if he is ever brought the court, is the jurisdiction immunity a head of state immunity ? there's also
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state immunity? there's also u.n. security council has the possibility russia could put forward a month suspension of the icc investigation in the interests , international interests, international security and peace . and whilst security and peace. and whilst the icc prosecutor put forward a message that wants to send a message that wants to send a message to others that will be pursuing things. i it also calls into question the legitimacy the icc as you look at other long investigations where, you don't have arrest warrants yet where you don't have indictments. and so was a very, very quick so this was a very, very quick indictment, an warrant and i think it will be interesting how it poses problems for even pursuing between russia and ukraine. well, that was interesting. i said, look, brian's on. and brian says, it's not worth the paper. it's written on this icc arrest warrant. think lot of people warrant. i think a lot of people will sympathetic to the a lot will be sympathetic to the a lot of other people will be saying, well, vladimir looks a lot well, vladimir putin looks a lot like war criminal. like a war criminal. his behaviour have be behaviour would have had to be that criminal. and so that of war criminal. and so maybe a good thing to have maybe this a good thing to have some legal validation and to not argue but alluded that to the idea more
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idea that what make it even more difficult get some kind of peace deal do you think why is that. i think this the world it's a think at this the world it's a it's been very imbalanced posture and you have sanctions put forward on a regular from the us from other places , the us from other places, attempts to isolate russia diplomatically which whether that's going to be successful given the comments from the chinese president morning in reaction to this as well as russia's other ties around the world but . it russia's other ties around the world but. it is questionable whether putin have any incentive at this point to come to the table. but even the risks he now faces in being arrested, if he steps into 124 different countries in the world who are supposed to be bound to arrest him if he's within their jurisdiction. it limits kind of the dialogue. he may want to engage i seen engage in. i have seen interesting the 20 interesting arguments the 20 years since the iraq war and people saying well, there wasn't a huge amount of international when albeit despotic but sovereign nation was carpet bombed by ourselves on america .
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bombed by ourselves on america. and people may be saying that it's a little bit too faced to be putin in the way that we are right now. what do make of that when it comes to a war crimes kind of bent on this ? oh oh, kind of bent on this? oh oh, well, i was about time as a loser, wasn't though. again, i can promise you that we will being censored in any way, shape or form. but there you go. that was global sanctions, war crimes especially elizabeth especially sorry, elizabeth dell, a little dell, at least for a little penod dell, at least for a little period i'm going to period of time. i'm going to into the inbox now gb views of gb i have been asking gb views uk. i have been asking you okay, so the you jovially. okay, so the course what is the course this year what is the most pathetic thing that you have a nick as a candidate? why i'm asking that is because apparently a serious apparently and this is a serious element. is the element. shoplifting is on the rise. used a nation of rise. we used to be a nation of shopkeepers. supposedly we shopkeepers. now supposedly we are ladies and are a of shoplifters. ladies and gentlemen, just because gentlemen, it's not just because of deal of people struggling deal with the of living crisis. no, the cost of living crisis. no, it's more to it than that. apparently people are getting to the of shoplift supposedly
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the buzz of shoplift supposedly and see some and some people see as some kind of victimless because of a victimless crime because they tesco's and all they think well tesco's and all these and massive these shops and massive stores they're not going to know all day and who's really out of pocket a of that. but pocket as a result of that. but i was asking you what you think the pathetic you have the most pathetic you have a nick as was and you have nick as a kid was and you have later jasmine up some laterjasmine served up some absolute caucus pantry. this is my favourite it's from dave patrick. i was aged 11 and i stole a mars bar behind the counter of my local chippy. you animal, you animal. and when the star and i went back in, i ran. i felt so guilty i dug a hole and buried in the woods a fantastic i mean, there's so much going on that day. suppose you go behind the counter , you go behind the counter, nicked you like that you felt guilty instead of just destroying the evidence by, eating the mars bar, you've thought wall. will thought utterly wall. i will bury in the woods. there we go . bury in the woods. there we go. got a couple of others. i won't name you on this one. my daughters , seven son daughters, seven year old son was caught sweets in his was caught with sweets in his pocket on occasions. mean
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pocket on two occasions. i mean , the kids a kid, it's kids today anyway. she to take him to the police if he did it again. so she him in the shop so she caught him in the shop again so gone for again stealing. so he's gone for the trick of nicking stuff the hat trick of nicking stuff here asking for it. she put here is asking for it. she put him in the car, took him to the local police station, and the police they simulated an police were they simulated an arrest sentencing and. arrest and a sentencing and. he's sold anything again. he's never sold anything again. yeah enough. love it and yeah fair enough. i love it and is obviously good way to is obviously quite a good way to teach kids a lesson. teach your kids a lesson. i would wonder, though, whether or not actually he's getting better at don't notice. at stealing and don't notice. but very much. but anyway, thank you very much. has in touch on has been getting in touch on this keep those vs gb this major. you keep those vs gb views news dot uk today views gb news dot uk but today today ladies and gentlemen is in national day of happiness. although have although you would not have known if been watching some known it if been watching some of this show , let me what of this show, let me know what makes happy . well, i'm going makes you happy. well, i'm going to why in to be delving into why in happiness day is so important. i'm fortunate. this is gb news. hello. it'sjacob i'm fortunate. this is gb news. hello. it's jacob rees—mogg. tune in tonight at 8:00 for state of the nation. i will be here live in the studio . my here live in the studio. my venerable panel, consisting of england's favourite socialist,
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mr. stephen, and the esteemed historian, dr. david starkey. of course , want to hear from you. course, want to hear from you. the british people don't forget to email me mailmogg@gbnews.uk . to email me mailmogg@gbnews.uk. all that and much coming up at 8:00 on state of the nation
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yes. welcome back, everybody . yes. welcome back, everybody. now, it's potentially quite a big day , a really big period of big day, a really big period of time this fall. we wanted to deal time this fall. we wanted to deal. i was actually broadcasting one evening when we had the camera shots of the plane due to take from the plane due to take off from the airport all the lights on, airport with all the lights on, people on destined for and people on board destined for and live air. the lights went live on air. the lights went off. people were led off the plane. the lights of the airport went off. and all of the camera crew went home. and we thought, well, that? it emerged, well, why that? and it emerged, of there was an of course, because there was an overnight last decision from a foreign and european judge , a foreign and european judge, a dark room somewhere here. we
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will never really know who decided that in this country were not allowed . remove people were not allowed. remove people that we in this country didn't want here anyway. will now grief about a year on from that always suella braverman has just got back from rwanda and the house of commons and rishi sunak well as trying to get his illegal migration bill through. now what is fascinating is that around latest polling shows that around 52% of people so it is a majority , 52% of people actively majority, 52% of people actively support the principles behind that bill is being able to deport people and not allowing anyone who illegally enters this country to go on to repeat claim asylum . so 50% of people. so asylum. so 50% of people. so you're on social media and you see a very vocal group of people saying that they don't like it. well actually, they represent get this, just 16% of people. so another reminder that twitter is not real life . but one of the not real life. but one of the key things is, well, the problem and now that she do and that and now that she can do and that can do as a nation is stay within the echr and still deport
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people . what's changed? well, people. what's changed? well, supposedly this is the big news. supposedly the european judges have backed down on is known as rule 39. so rule 39, which allowed these last minute stoppages, supposedly they going to roll back on that . and this to roll back on that. and this is absolutely massive news. it might mean that we're not going to blocked by european to get blocked by european judges and the illegal migration bill could work. and this was one of the reasons why a lot of people were voting against it, which is they thought, well, look, i it in look, in principle, i it in principle we be principle i agree. we be stopping small boats. in principle, this principle, i agree all of this but won't work anyway because but it won't work anyway because it will just get bogged down by the european and certainly the european court and certainly a hard line tories a lot of the hard line tories european research they european research group, they were saying i'm were the ones were saying i'm going against this going to vote against this because get held because it's going to get held up. but now if they are actually going to end up being able to do it the media with it through the media with european could well european courts, that could well be thing. so that be a good thing. so that was a big development but something else that really else dropped today that really piqued it's piqued attention and is it's been think this is been ignored. i think this is the scale of the migrant the sheer scale of the migrant hotels that currently being
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hotels that are currently being used country . all used in this country. and in all of this of far right in all of this talk of far right in all of this talk of far right in all of this talk of far right in all of this talk of racism and, all this talk, 1930s, germany what has been lost in all of this is really the genuine reason why schemes like rwanda need to work, because we've only one hotel in the whole of the uk was being used to house people coming here across, the channel. then we have a problem, then we wouldn't have a problem, would we and wouldn't would we and people wouldn't mind. £7 million mind. but around £7 million worth taxpayers money single mind. but around £7 million woriis taxpayers money single mind. but around £7 million woriis going)ayers money single mind. but around £7 million woriis going)ayerthese ey single mind. but around £7 million woriis going)ayerthese asylum e day is going into these asylum seeker and the seeker hotels and now the numbers have dropped 363 of them in england, 20 in northern ireland, just in scotland. by the case you're the way, in case you're wondering in wales as 45% of wondering too in wales as 45% of all asylum applications , 2022 all asylum applications, 2022 all asylum applications, 2022 all asylum applications in 2022 were from people who came across channelin were from people who came across channel in small boats . and when channel in small boats. and when you look at the scale of that that and you look at the amount of cost it is and you look at the amount of local and local residents who will worried residents who will be worried and concerned about public safety right across england. but the rest of the uk . well, is it
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the rest of the uk. well, is it not imperative that people get round of scheme going and does it not hammer home another key line? that's what the problem is. talking which is this and this is fascinating she says only snobs really don't support everyone to deal. she was of course alluding to carolyn and i do think this is a point that's worth a of people worth making. a lot of people who in very secure million who live in very secure million pound housing, who can afford to send their kids very often very expensive boarding and maybe even decide that they want sue that boarding school when that child doesn't get the grades that they were to as that they were to get as a result of them paying for their children's go to that boarding school, of course can be eluding to here people maybe to anybody here people who maybe don't the don't necessarily always pay the huge tax that they huge amounts of tax that they could into country could be paid into this country as well people don't really see the impacts of mass immigration, as well people don't really see the iilegals of mass immigration, as well people don't really see the iilegal and mass immigration, as well people don't really see the iilegal and illegalnmigration, as well people don't really see the iilegal and illegal andjration, as well people don't really see the iilegal and illegal and who n, both legal and illegal and who don't live anywhere near a migrant those people tend migrant hotel. those people tend to be the ones who are opposed to be the ones who are opposed to the rwanda plan. no, you're an average common man and woman on street. and that's a on the street. and that's a story that's well, was trying
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story that's well, i was trying to say so that's i think we to say so that's why i think we are at with this at the moment. but and doesn't say just but it just and doesn't say just finally this to where rishi finally on this to where rishi sunak and the government is in general if illegal migration bill and if they manage bill passes and if they manage to keep it in the echr the same time as getting those flights, taking rwanda. and taking off to rwanda. and if people are starting to say, well, actually rwanda does look quite well, actually rwanda does look quhe bad well, actually rwanda does look quite bad thing quite nice, it's not a bad thing that people going there. and the answer that is that right? and that people going there. and the answer tthats that right? and that people going there. and the answer tthat to hat right? and that people going there. and the answer tthat to at right? and that people going there. and the answer tthat to a list|ht? and that people going there. and the answer tthat to a list of? and that people going there. and the answer tthat to a list of other you add that to a list of other things rishi sunak may well things that rishi sunak may well have in last three have achieved in the last three and half weeks. such stopping and a half weeks. such stopping the getting an the strikes, such getting an international deal when it comes to. for example, the to. orcas, for example, the defence money defence putting more money into the spending and then the defence spending and then yes, french of yes, giving the french a bit of as hopefully stop the as well to hopefully stop the channel crisis. is it channel migrant crisis. is it all the economy the way not all on the economy the way not being as disastrous and cataclysmic we're expecting cataclysmic as we're expecting is coming up rishi anyway is it all coming up rishi anyway watch i suggest watch this space i suggest because we're going to you because we're going to keep you abreast i like abreast of it all i do like your views views views on this gb views gbnews.uk. and paul says labour are touch. all they do is are out of touch. all they do is bang on about these poor people who pay thousands to get into
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the uk. the fundamental the uk. but the fundamental thing is they miss out is illegal. and again people talking well, talking only about well, so—and—so , a refugee in his so—and—so, a refugee in his house and you know, they were vetted. and then the argument to that they're all that is, well, they're all vetted don't they. we'll get the genuine ones are people who've actually received asylum in this country received status actually received refugee status in this country. yeah are but not the ones are just not all the ones who are just rocking and saying an asylum rocking up and saying an asylum seeker them seeker hotels hundreds of them don't margaret tried to don't blame margaret tried to get i most they're get here i trust most they're probably to get probably people who want to get away from anthony this plan away from anthony says this plan is so badly needed we can't just keep accepting large excessive numbers of illegal migrants into country. the snobs who don't like it are either blind to the situation or do not care at all. so some of your views are to up for this show. i joined in the studio now though by the wonderful michelle dewberry. but james, how are eyes? i'm all right. i'm a confused . why right. i'm a bit confused. why is a table of pie? i'm is there a table of pie? i'm glad you asked . what is this glad you asked. what is this thing on? it's international day . happiness oh, how for
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. happiness out. oh, how for a happy day? yes, that's correct . happy day? yes, that's correct. okay. handful of pie . yeah, i okay. handful of pie. yeah, i got my. anyway, right. there we go. so are you particularly today. i imagine this is terrible. by the way, i am sorry. yes, i'm all. i actually i woke up in a bad mood. but why dare i ask? i don't know . just dare i ask? i don't know. just have those days. sorry, but i was. i was very moody today. but now alright so looking now i'm alright so looking forward tonight. what forward to my show tonight. what are we? oh, what's on the agenda? 20 years, of course. yes. uk followed the us yes. that the uk followed the us into after just yes. that the uk followed the us into afterjust said you guys then talking about the icc and about putin there's lots of people many of my viewers perhaps that will be saying that actually the person that should have been delegated and perhaps the is none other than the impasse is none other than tony blair. i agree. is that right or not? love one of his former advisers on my tonight as well so interested in his view of course as well rwanda what's going on and will it ever work thatis going on and will it ever work that is the million question, isn't it? well, multiple million multiple dollar multiple million dollar questions . so basically tune in questions. so basically tune in to £1,000,000 that. michelle,
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thank you very much. ever it's going to be box office . i've going to be box office. i've been christys. thank been patrick christys. thank you very i'll see at three very much. i'll see at three tomorrow and i'm alex deakin and this is your latest weather update from the met office plenty through plenty of weather around through this , but drier and this week, but drier and brighter spells in between, well, a huge amount of brightness there a brightness out there today. a lot around but it is lot of cloud around but it is pretty mild because between two weather systems this is a warm sector. quite warm air sector. so some quite warm air in here and where we've seen bit of temperatures have of brightness, temperatures have been up into the middle, been jumping up into the middle, even high in a few places. but we do weather from those weather fronts pushing in fronts pushing scotland in through northern ireland and another spell of rain coming into the southwest. a into wales in the southwest. a few showers further east, many places evening. this places dry this evening. so this rain works way to the rain band works its way to the east . behind that, east overnight. behind that, there'll be a few breaks in the clouds, spells. but the clouds, clearer spells. but the mild persists overnight . so mild air persists overnight. so temperatures staying at nine or ten celsius in some towns cities. as for tomorrow well, overall, it's a similar kind of day but should be a bit brighter. i suspect. some early
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rain across eastern england staying pretty down because the northern for much the northern isles for much of the day and then we'll see some showers for south scotland, northern england spreading to. the east could even see one or two heavy ones, maybe even thunderstorm, most likely over the pennines for the south and west not too many west though. not too many showers better. chance tomorrow of sunshine , blue of seeing some sunshine, blue sky air is mild. so sky and the air is mild. so temperatures will be up into the teens once more. 1516 is possible. cooler is the breeze starts to pick up and more rain pushes into ireland come the afternoon that is a spell of wet and windy weather. swing across all areas during tuesday night, some brighter there in the west there will be some heavier bursts of rain, at least for time this rain. then around on wednesday , clearing away from wednesday, clearing away from scotland , although lingering in scotland, although lingering in shetland and clearing away the southeast the afternoon to southeast by the afternoon to many places, then brightening up again through wednesday with some sunshine. few some spells sunshine. but few showers likely develop showers are likely develop through the day. quite a gusty on blustery on wednesday. a blustery boisterous kind of day and not
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as mild. but still temperatures to 13 or 14 celsius. good bye .
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hello there. it's 6:00 michelle dewberry and this is dewbs& co on tuesday night i gave the order for british forces to take part in military action in iraq . tonight, british servicemen and women are engaged from air, land and sea. their mission to remove saddam hussein from power and disarm iraq of its weapons of mass destruction . now that of mass destruction. now that was 20 years ago to the day. can you believe that? was it the right decision, though? the announcement there to send our troops into iraq to topple saddam hussein? what was the
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legacy ? many people to

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