tv Mark Dolan Tonight GB News August 19, 2023 9:00pm-11:01pm BST
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on >> it's 9:00 on television, on radio and online in the united kingdom and across the world. this is mark dolan tonight. with me, leo kurz. and my big opinion after two venues cancel comedian graham linehan at the edinburgh fringe should the puritanical censors leave comedy alone as a biological meal, wins a women's weightlifting competition? is this a war on women ? we'll be this a war on women? we'll be speaking to one of the runners up and with king charles set to call a royal summit, can the royal family keep the commonwealth intact . so it's a commonwealth intact. so it's a busy two hours to come. so put something cold and fizzy in the fridge or fire up the kettle and let's make a night of it. first, though, the headlines with tatiana sanchez . leo thank you tatiana sanchez. leo thank you and good evening. >> this is the latest from the gb newsroom. lawyers representing the families of two of lucy libby's victims have called the independent inquiry
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inadequate. government inadequate. the government ordered a non—statutory investigation after the former nurses conviction yesterday. it will look at the circus sentences surrounding the deaths, including how concerns raised by clinicians were dealt with. the prosecution's key medical expert has told the observer police should investigate hospital bosses for corporate manslaughter, calling them grossly negligent for not acting on fears about letby . s acting on fears about letby. s actions at the time. she was found guilty of the murder of seven babies and the attempted murder of six others. she'll be sentenced on monday . a 50 year sentenced on monday. a 50 year old man has been charged with possessing documents or records likely to be useful to terrorists. and the possession of articles for use in terrorism . he'll appear in court on monday . that is in relation to monday. that is in relation to last week's psni data breach, where the details of 10,000 police officers and staff were published online by mistake . published online by mistake. it's after police officers in northern ireland revealed they're also investigating the loss of an officer's laptop and
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notebook, which fell from a moving vehicle that contained the details of 42 officers and staff of criminal gangs have been condemned by maritime experts for pushing small boats out into the english channel dunng out into the english channel during storm betty coastguard and border force vessels have been called to deal with reports of migrant boats in the sea in treacherous conditions . at least treacherous conditions. at least three were intercepted in uk waters this morning. gb news understands around 100 people were . on board. and finally the were. on board. and finally the prime minister has told the lionesses the whole nation is rooting for you ahead of tomorrow's world cup final. in a letter , rishi sunak wished letter, rishi sunak wished england boss sarina wiegman good luck for the final saying you've made us proud. england taking on spain, playing to win the trophy for the very first time. lauren james, who served a two match suspension following her red card against nigeria, could start tomorrow. meanwhile, the prince of wales has apologised for not being able to attend in person. a video posted on
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person. in a video posted on social media, he and princess charlotte wish than is good luck. >> lionesses . we want to send >> lionesses. we want to send you a huge good luck for tomorrow. we're sorry you can't be there in person, but we're so proud of everything you've achieved and the millions you've inspired the inspired here and around the world. so out there tomorrow world. so go out there tomorrow and enjoy yourselves. world. so go out there tomorrow and luck enjoy yourselves. world. so go out there tomorrow and luck , njoy yourselves. world. so go out there tomorrow and luck , lionesses;elves. world. so go out there tomorrow and luck , lionesses . lves. good luck, lionesses. >> this is gb news across the uk on tv , in your car, on digital on tv, in your car, on digital radio, and on your smart speaker by simply saying play gb news now it's back to mark dolan tonight with . leo tonight with. leo >> welcome to mark dolan tonight with me, leo kearse and my big opinion after two venues cancel comedian graham linehan at the edinburgh fringe . should the edinburgh fringe. should the puritanical censors leave comedy alone? and the big story should property investors be getting rich off the public purse by housing migrants? and later this hour, housing migrants? and later this hour , as a biological male wins hour, as a biological male wins a women's weightlifting
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competition, is this a war on women? we'll be speaking to one of the runners up and it might take at ten. why britain's mass immigration policy is hurting the third world. and we'll be live to ali. after ten with king charles set to call a royal summit, can the royal family keep the commonwealth intact? and this show is the home of the papers with tomorrow's front pages from 10:30 pm. sharp. i'll be in the studio with three top pundits who haven't been told what to say and who don't follow the script tonight , we follow the script tonight, we have ashley horgan , wallace, have ashley horgan, wallace, benedict spence and mike, porky parry . and tonight i'll be parry. and tonight i'll be asking the pundits . three asking the pundits. three questions are in partial news organisations failing to practise what you preach and as the family of former prime minister william gladstone apologises for its historical role in slavery , are the right role in slavery, are the right two. and as angela rayner has it large in the balearics is 43 too old to go clubbing in tabitha plus your emails , even the spicy plus your emails, even the spicy ones send them into gb views gb
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news. so we've got a busy two hours to come, but we start with my big opinion. hours to come, but we start with my big opinion . comedian green my big opinion. comedian green linehan was the latest victim of cancel culture this week after his edinburgh fringe venue banned him from performing , banned him from performing, saying the reason they gave for this is that they're an inclusive venue. i don't think they fully understand the meaning of the word inclusive banning people for the sake of inclusion is like sending farmers to the gulag for the sake of crop yields, which is actually usually the next step for socialists. after banishing comedians , the replacement venue comedians, the replacement venue also cancelled them. so the show went ahead on the steps of the scottish parliament, which , to scottish parliament, which, to be hosts, clowns, all year be fair, hosts, clowns, all year round. all this cancelling was done by people who insist that they're the most marginalised people in society. man, i wish i was so marginalised that i could silence anyone i wanted and force everyone to go along with what i think these people aren't
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marginalised. they're the opposite. in fact, everything we're told by the left is the opposite marginalised people can force us to bend to their every whim. diversity means the only one opinion is allowed in. collusion means that people are excluded . equality means some excluded. equality means some people's thoughts and feelings are more important than other peoples. this is another nail in the coffin of the edinburgh fringe two. it's not a fringe anymore. there's nothing edgy or countercultural about it. it's a monotone enforcement of establishment orthodoxy. there's nothing you'd see at the fringe that's edgier than anything you'd see in an advert for oven chips. the fringe is supposed to give a platform to underrepresented marginalised voices, but it's a total myth that trans or queer or leftwing voices are marginalised . they're voices are marginalised. they're the establishment now represented across government , represented across government, media, business, and especially the arts. take a walk through the arts. take a walk through the edinburgh fringe. almost every poster is a drag queen on roller skates, pulling flags out of their bum genuinely underrepresented, marginalised
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voices would be brexiteers or tories or gender realists like graham linehan. bizarrely comedians such as jo caulfield supported the cancellation of a fellow comedian. you'd have to be very sure that you're always going to be on the right side of accepted opinion to crow about this. the signs of acceptable opinion can shift quickly beneath our feet. just a few years ago, jk rowling and graham linehan were perfect lefties with perfect opinions . then with perfect opinions. then suddenly left wing dogma changed to say that men can be women by changing the pronouns. and any child who expresses the slightest bit of gender confusion to confusion should be referred to a gender clinic and boom, suddenly disagree on these suddenly by disagree on these points, j.k. rowling and graham linehan are witches who must be excommunicated from the flock. ironically, i'm not even gender critical anymore. i think that if left wing people want to transition their children, who am stop them ? company are am ito stop them? company are my we'll a problem my kids and we'll have a problem . your own kids, you go . but with your own kids, you go for have my full for it. you have my full support. am to warn you support. who am ito warn you about potential unforeseen
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about the potential unforeseen consequences sterilising consequences of sterilising and maiming your children? just maiming your children? you just go and remove your dna go ahead and remove your dna from gene pool and then from the gene pool and then someone revealed that jo caulfield herself has expressed distinct terf opinions in the past , such as distinct terf opinions in the past, such as this distinct terf opinions in the past , such as this tweet where past, such as this tweet where she said there are certain things, no matter how hard you try, you will never completely understand because you are not a woman. i'm sorry, but that is a fact.i woman. i'm sorry, but that is a fact. i wish it wasn't, but it is. so please do yourself a favour and shut your mouth. it just shows there but for the grace of god, go all of us in front of the mob. maybe we should show a bit of tolerance and not cancel people. the good news is that graham may be able to sue the venue that cancelled them because of his views under them because of his views under the equality act, gender critical are protected as critical views are protected as another fringe venue. they stand found out when they cancelled. joanna cherry for her similar opinions. he doesn't actually have views . i've seen have despicable views. i've seen him perform. it does. very funny jokes pizza, but even if jokes about pizza, but even if he did, why not let them have a platform? sunlight is the best
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disinfectant. well, it's not, but still, maybe when they came up with that, seeing they hadn't invented damascus, it's already a incite violence or a crime to incite violence or see anything genuinely harmful . see anything genuinely harmful. comedy doesn't need to be policed . comedians perform in policed. comedians perform in front of a jury or the audience. if members of the public are willing to buy a ticket, who is anyone to stop them? i'm anyone else to stop them? i'm more about people more worried about the people who what i'm who dictate to me what i'm allowed see and listen to allowed to see and listen to than i am about a comedian having an opinion. i disagree with . with. okay. what do you think? do you agree? do you disagree? email into gb views. gb news and i'll get to your emails after the break. reacting to my big opinion today are my brilliant panel of tv personality and entrepreneur ashley horgan wallace, political commentator benedict spence and fleet street legend mike porky parry. what do
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you make of this? i mean, what do you what do you think about graham linehan getting cancelled? well to me, it's obvious that graham linehan is a genius . genius. >> okay. yeah. in the terms of what he's done, one of the other people who've been rubbed out is j.k. rowling. she's a genius. so do they pick on those who are right at the top of the pyramid? because when they decide to bnngin because when they decide to bring in their very obtuse views on what people can say on what people can't say , they don't people can't say, they don't pick on the guy who's doing the back street show at the fringe . back street show at the fringe. you've done the french. i've done the fringe. i don't anybody else here has. okay and let's face it , you go there basically face it, you go there basically because it's a platform to exercise what you think inside yourself rather than going for glory. if you say what i mean, if a bit of glory comes along, that's great. but they pick on these huge people who, when the
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huge people come back and i'm so delighted to see that. graham linehan has hit back by starting his own show outside of the edinburgh fringe area . right. edinburgh fringe area. right. when they come back , the support when they come back, the support seems to drift away. isn't it amazing ? isn't it amazing that amazing? isn't it amazing that what they've done is , is they've what they've done is, is they've created a culture and atmosphere that if you support anybody , that if you support anybody, right, like graham lennon , if right, like graham lennon, if you support j.k. rowling, you are then banished from the culture of a g committee median performance and it feels like cultural, totalitarian ism. >> instead of having a diversity of opinions, a range of opinions, you know , everybody's opinions, you know, everybody's got to think the same thing. yeah, yeah. >> i can't stand cancel culture. it's very george orwell , >> i can't stand cancel culture. it's very george orwell, big brother for me, you know, in the book where they have like secret cameras that fly by you and watch what you're saying, you
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can't say anything that goes against what they want. >> say. but i'd have to >> you to say. but i'd have to disagree with you because they actually cancel . friend actually cancel. a friend of mine , he's a small time comedian mine, he's a small time comedian and a stand up comedian. and he's part of the lgb . he's part of the lgb. >> you can't say lgbt lgb community, but he said something along the lines of if a man is if somebody is born a man , they if somebody is born a man, they can't grow a womb. >> something along those lines because he said logical fact, then , well, there you go. so then, well, there you go. so yeah , they cancelled him. and yeah, they cancelled him. and you know, it really, really affected his mental health quite badly because , you know, he's badly because, you know, he's not he's not transphobic. >> he just he just had that statement. but he went on to fight back and found loads of venues that would book him and actually has had a sell out tour store and say, yeah , tour. so store and say, yeah, tour. so yeah, i just i'm just totally against cancel culture. if you're not inciting violence. as
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you're not inciting violence. as you said . yeah. or hate , you're you said. yeah. or hate, you're allowed to have your opinion come on. >> and a comedian who's nothing he wouldn't get very far. i mean if you went up in stage and tried to stage some sort of rally, i don't think he'd sell many tickets for a club. many tickets for a comedy club. >> yeah, think it depends where. >> i suppose depends what >> i suppose it depends what country it's in. >> i think it's interesting you mentioned opening mentioned this in your opening monologue, which was that graham linehan rowling, they linehan and j.k. rowling, they were lefties before linehan and j.k. rowling, they we|of lefties before linehan and j.k. rowling, they we|of this lefties before linehan and j.k. rowling, they we|of this happened. before linehan and j.k. rowling, they we|of this happened. ibefore linehan and j.k. rowling, they we|of this happened. i mean, all of this happened. i mean, linehan particular was linehan in particular was notorious after notorious for going after people, twitter people, especially on twitter and pretty vile. i think and being pretty vile. i think j.k. didn't that sort j.k. rowling didn't do that sort of she gave a of of thing, but she gave a lot of money very sort of left wing money to very sort of left wing causes. and it's curious now that this position, which ten years would have years ago would have been considered a really fringe issue, the issue, has been moved into the centre as lot of the causes centre as a lot of the causes that people gremlin hand that people like gremlin hand and as a and j.k. rowling pushed, as a lot those become more lot of those have become more mainstream the mainstream and accepted. the activists on that side have gone well. away with more. well. we can get away with more. we even more. now we can push even more. but now you've got a stage where you've got to a stage where pretty people, you know, pretty normal people, you know, even on the i would say sort of
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centre left like j.k. rowling or people once the not people who were once on the not far left, you know, they far left, but, you know, they were pretty rabid, graham were pretty rabid, like graham linehan, able to linehan, they are not able to sort overlook the fact that, sort of overlook the fact that, as is biological as you say, this is biological fact, that has to sort of you fact, that has to be sort of you just to rip it up and you just have to rip it up and you have to take the dogma. and they're not prepared to do that. and that actually, they what and for that actually, they what will, their side go will, once their own side go after with same sort of after them with same sort of viciousness that they went viciousness that they once went after and the after the centrists and the centre they decried centre right, who they decried as. you people like as. and now you see people like graham he's sort of not graham linehan, he's sort of not had a complete volte face, but he accepting the he is entirely accepting of the fact this actually fact that, wow, this actually this awful. this is awful. >> yeah. i actually find >> yeah. i can't actually find what specifically he said that was offensive. that he was so offensive. i know that he he seen in this is he never has seen in and this is the thing with jk rowling you asked people never she asked people never did she specifically she was trying. >> nobody can say they say >> nobody can say is they say no, we think she might or we think tell what she's think we might tell what she's thinking. think know what thinking. we think we know what she thinking. but some she might be thinking. but some people would see some people would values of every would say the values of every right who they want. right to book who they want. >> a commercial >> it could be a commercial decision. even though graham
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lennons sold out, it lennons show had sold out, it was of tickets was shifting a lot of tickets for venue. they're going to for the venue. they're going to shift a lot of booze at the bar. yeah, their clientele, they yeah, the their clientele, they have the year. >> they on a commercial >> they have on a commercial basis, can we know that basis, they can we all know that the works on the basis. the fringe works on the basis. how tickets sell? how many tickets can you sell? but they put out a message but when they put out a message saying, oh, not accepting saying, oh, we're not accepting this particular person from our professional because we professional class because we actually don't like what they think , that's crossing the line. think, that's crossing the line. they quickly retracted that message. >> it was interesting . that was >> it was interesting. that was that was the reason they put up on instagram. then they quickly tookit on instagram. then they quickly took it down when they realised that they were liable to be to be prosecuted. exactly equality act. because as i'm >> exactly. because as i'm repeating myself, i don't repeating myself, but i don't actually know what he's specifically said, but hasn't specifically said, but he hasn't said anything. specifically said, but he hasn't saiithat'sling. specifically said, but he hasn't saiithat's the whole point. >> that's the whole point. >> that's the whole point. >> didn't a chance to say >> he didn't get a chance to say anything because he was saying, we're sitting there waiting we're all sitting there waiting for say something for him to say something transphobic. come on, graham, give it to us. >> think this bloke might say >> we think this bloke might say something which might be offensive people something which might be of1edinburgh. people something which might be of1edinburgh. so people something which might be of1edinburgh. so we've people something which might be of1edinburgh. so we've decided in edinburgh. so we've decided to cancel him. >> comedy about sort of reflecting real life issues and
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what's going on in the world. >> that is one of the things you talk about. one of the reasons why lennon shows were why graham lennon shows were so successful. file successful. the it crowd file the brilliant. also, the ted brilliant. also, motherland is because they were very perceiving things motherland is because they were very he perceiving things motherland is because they were very he perhaps ng things motherland is because they were very he perhaps nothings that he was perhaps not necessarily party to, but he's very good at observing and very good at observing truth and relaying is relaying it in a way that is quite dark. >> this is part of comedy is cutting all all the cutting through all the all the nonsense, you know, the social niceties and the pieties and cutting to actual cutting through to the actual truth, the of the truth. truth, the born of the truth. >> back in history, johnny >> go back in history, johnny speight. you know, a left speight. okay. you know, a left wing writer who expose wing comedy writer who expose the prejudices of the working classes in the famous alf garnett production. okay. i've got the name back. >> yeah . >> yeah. >> yeah. >> you know, on. yeah, yeah, yeah. because if you expose it and you make it look as though it's funny to take the mickey out of the prejudices, it works doesn't it . doesn't it work if
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doesn't it. doesn't it work if you bring comedy into exposing prejudice and people laugh at it, isn't that a better way of doing it? >> famously, famously monty python with life of brian went up against the church who were being very po faced and they poked at it. and of course poked fun at it. and of course that was when the establishment was very on the was very much on the conservative side. >> yeah, >> yeah, yeah, yeah. >> yeah, yeah, yeah. >> so need we need people to >> so we need we need people to be poking niceties and the be poking the niceties and the pieties the leftist pieties of the leftist establishment coming pieties of the leftist est nexthment coming pieties of the leftist est next and nt coming pieties of the leftist est next and the coming pieties of the leftist est next and the big coming pieties of the leftist est next and the big story, coming up next and the big story, should property investors be getting public getting rich off the public purse by housing migrants? i'll see you
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>> you're listening to news radio . radio. >> welcome back to mark dolan tonight with me, leo carlson. let's see some of your emails. carol says so pleased grimshaw went ahead. the edinburgh fringe is now a must miss. if you believe in free speech, how the fringe has changed . alastair fringe has changed. alastair says only the mentally weak make a big deal over mere words. great point. and lindsay says, what i want to know is why didn't the other comedian stand with graham linehan on the steps
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of the scottish parliament? they should have been there showing solidarity. and so many solidarity. and yet so many comedians came out and didn't support linehan and support graham linehan and instead his instead celebrated his cancellation , which is so short cancellation, which is so short sighted , the turkeys voting for sighted, the turkeys voting for christmas and also so many of them were terrible comedians. i mean, it's always nice to know what somebody who couldn't sell out the back seat of a nissan micra thinks about one the micra thinks about one of the greatest comic of all greatest comic voices of all time now it's time time anyway now it's time for the tonight criminal the big story. tonight criminal gangs condemned for gangs are being condemned for sending the channel sending boats into the channel dunng sending boats into the channel during storms. despite the death of six people in the channel last week , the unremitting flow last week, the unremitting flow of across the channel of migrants across the channel continues . meanwhile, continues unabated. meanwhile, property investors in this country are set to profit off the carnage. there are thousands and thousands of people coming into this country by the boatload , literally from war boatload, literally from war torn countries . torn countries. >> and you can make loads of money just by housing them. the councils are paying an absolute fortune housing association, fortune to housing association, to house these sorts of people and obviously is and that's obviously is a massive problem. the best and that's obviously is a massiaboutblem. the best and that's obviously is a massiabout item. the best and that's obviously is a massiabout it is|. the best and that's obviously is a massiabout it is they'lle best and that's obviously is a
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massiabout it is they'll do est and that's obviously is a massiabout it is they'll do all thing about it is they'll do all the management, they'll cover all maintenance, all the maintenance, they'll cover utilities bills, cover all the utilities bills, no bills no matter how high the bills get, they'll guarantee the rent. on of that, they'll do on top of that, they'll do really long so free for really long leases. so free for five, even ten year leases. it's an absolute no brainer. and it's making profit investing much more profitable . more profitable. >> credit to my colleague darren grimes for the video he wrote to the supposed property investor on social media. he said, you'll be offered an above market deal paid for by the taxpayer to make a profit. meanwhile the british people struggle to get housing. the response your government is funding it. maybe take it up with them or something. you big headed, shiny headed news guy , headed, shiny headed news guy, unfair there, but i'm sure darren has been called worse to discuss this, i am joined by broadcaster ingrid tarrant. ingnd broadcaster ingrid tarrant. ingrid thanks for joining us tonight . tonight. >> hello, leo. how lovely to work with you. >> thank you very . you do. >> thank you very. you do. >> thank you very. you do. >> and do you think these property investors are morally sound to be to be seeing this as an opportunity to gouge money
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from the taxpayer ? from the taxpayer? >> no, absolutely immoral. and i speak from a position of i really can speak only because i am a landlord myself and i have am a landlord myself and i have a property in portsmouth so that is a very, very hot spot for housing immigrants. and i was inundated and i would say in undated with letters , oddly, undated with letters, oddly, they were handwritten , they were handwritten, beautifully handwritten. i must say , in spain, in laying out say, in spain, in laying out everything what i would get and all the things that that awful shiny had to get to, whatever he was called was saying just a minute ago. um and i thought, no, absolutely no way . i no, absolutely no way. i wouldn't do this because it is immoral. it's immoral for very many reasons. prime merrily because we have a problem in this country and we have to look after our own first charity begins at home and i'm not being
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racist. i'm not being horrible. i'm not being unkind. i'm not sort of, you know, don't get me for the human rights things or anything. but that's absolutely where on quite where i stand on this. quite apart that, road where apart from that, the road where ihave apart from that, the road where i have this little property, it's only a small one, is residential . and there's a lot residential. and there's a lot of people that have lived there for years and years and years. and i think it would be very unkind and inconsiderate to actually have a whole load of people of a complete different culture ram them culture because they ram them in. it's only a three bedroom, it's small, three bedroom, but there's a little front room as well, which they were made into another bedroom so they could have eight. and have actually slept eight. and you guarantee that would you can guarantee that would have been more anyway. have been more than that anyway. so wrong . it's so no, absolutely wrong. it's their conscience. if they don't have a conscience and they're just greedy , which they are, if just greedy, which they are, if they're going to do that, then fair enough. but i really think that they should think twice about it and have a conscience about it and have a conscience about it and have a conscience about it . about it. >> but could be saving the >> but it could be saving the taxpayer money instead of putting the migrants up in four
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star hotels , they could put them star hotels, they could put them in these hmo . in these hmo. >> well, i suppose that that thatis >> well, i suppose that that that is an argument. i mean, what would really save a lot of money is they've got their act sorted, got together and stop them coming in in the first place. i just don't know. i place. but i just don't know. i really don't know the answer. i think i know that it costs an absolute fortune. i think it's 167, 167,000 a year per person per immigrant to look after. i don't know how that they work that out in in in terms of hotel or property. so maybe property is cheaper. but they are providing so much with the property they would do everything, every single bill, everything, every single bill, every single improvement that needed to be done. so i imagine that landlords will be creaming that, oh, i need a new roof. okay, we'll put on a new roof. so maybe it gives out. i don't know. but it's wrong . in my know. but it's wrong. in my opinion it's wrong and i absolutely wouldn't go there .
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absolutely wouldn't go there. and my morally i wouldn't go there. my conscience wouldn't allow me to at all. >> and we're seeing we're seeing people dying in the channel what do you think could be done to actually stop this problem? it seems like the government's been hammering away at it for months. if not years, and has been stymied at every point . stymied at every point. >> yeah, it's been going for on years. i mean, think they've paid 168 million now, haven't they, to the french to stop them at the borders. i think they're making some effort and the local mayor has been sort of like saying things, you know, sort of like we've got too many miles to control. the thing is, it's they shouldn't get as far as france . shouldn't get as far as france. let's work backwards. let's work completely backwards. and first of all, boots on the ground in the country that they want to claim that they're sort of like asylum to other countries and to get out . and there are genuine
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get out. and there are genuine cases. get out. and there are genuine cases . so why can't we get out. and there are genuine cases. so why can't we in get out. and there are genuine cases . so why can't we in the cases. so why can't we in the british embassy and all the other embassies that are represented in these these countries help them there in the first place. but when you think of all the countries that they go through before they even get to france, where they should be stopped, if they were to do part land and sea . so from pakistan , land and sea. so from pakistan, it's iran, turkey, and then from turkey by sea to greece. this is why i get those awful pictures. do you remember that little child? yeah that got washed up on the beach. that was in greece. so that's the one sea crossing. so you've got pakistan, iran, turkey, greece, all those places or if they went overland, the whole place , overland, the whole place, bulgaria, hungary, germany , why bulgaria, hungary, germany, why aren't they stopped at the first safe country and dealt with their separately pakistan is not going to take them. imran khan said that he's not willing to because he's already dealing with 3 million refugees and so that's a well, you know, we're not far off sort of like if you
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add it in the cumulative says maxton, they where they could go. they've got an armed border, they're not letting them in there really strict on this and that actually they've they're in a better position to take these people and the culture is much more similar to ours. >> but people want to people want to come to britain because annoys me. >> people want to come to britain. they don't want to go to turkmenistan and trying to find work there. >> easy street . yeah, exactly . >> easy street. yeah, exactly. >> easy street. yeah, exactly. >> and all these places they've got on borders. and you're not coming here? no, you're not. welcome. you know, shove off. and it's like, yeah, well we won't even. they know that . so won't even. they know that. so they don't even attempt to go there. they come straight for england . england. >> but do you think do you think so ingrid, do you think so easy on ingrid, do you think to reduce the burden on the taxpayer because we do pay a hand over fist. >> i'm sure if it's £167,000 >> i'm not sure if it's £167,000 a year for each migrant. i think that's that might be what we pay other take them .
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other countries to take them. but i mean, it's certainly a lot of money, especially when you consider all the lawyers and legal 69,000 per person per year i >> -- >> i've got this look on my little notes. oh, wow. that's sort of that's me convinced. >> but do you think to reduce the burden on the taxpayer , some the burden on the taxpayer, some people see asylum seekers should should work . at the moment they should work. at the moment they can't work for a considerable amount of time after they've arrived and started seeking asylum . asylum. >> oh, leo, this is so messy. of course they should work because they shouldn't be living for nothing. but if they work , then nothing. but if they work, then you just. then you create another problem. you're taking work people , from, you work away from people, from, you know, people , citizens of know, people, citizens of britain who should be able to work. i mean, students come out and they're going, we're not working. they end up going on the building sites, which is a lot of these people are doing. so, know, you solve one so, you know, you solve one problem, then you create problem, but then you create another one. >> and course, if it's >> and of course, if it's eafien >> and of course, if it's easier, if it's easier for them to then just to work, then you're just incentivising more to
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come. >> so it's not solving the problem. but ingrid, thanks so much joining us tonight. much for joining us tonight. it's to the insight it's great to have the insight all all the way from all the way all the way from norway. yes norway. i believe. yes brilliant. thanks much. brilliant. thanks so much. anyway, still to come. but anyway, more still to come. but first, we've got the weather with greg. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers. proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. weather on. gb news. >> hello there. i'm greg dewhurst and welcome to your latest gb news weather forecast . as we move through into the second part of the weekend, we'll see further showers, particularly across the north—west of the uk and sunny spells towards the south—east. and this area of low pressure still brings in the showers and brisk winds towards the northwest. but further south and east, high pressure builds in for the rest of the evening and overnight, we still have a few showers across northern ireland, parts of scotland, 2 for parts of scotland, 1 or 2 for western parts of england and wales, largely dry for most wales, but largely dry for most of especially of clear skies, especially towards the east of the uk. temperatures overall, generally
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15 or 16 celsius in towns and cities , a little lower in the cities, a little lower in the countryside . so a fairly warm countryside. so a fairly warm start to sunday morning . plenty start to sunday morning. plenty of sunny spells, a few showers across western areas and then as we go through the day, many will have a fine day to come. plenty of sunny spells, just a few showers bubbling up as we move through afternoon . showers through the afternoon. showers most across parts of most frequent across parts of scotland and northern ireland. 1 or of them could be heavy or 2 of them could be heavy here, still breezy around here, still rather breezy around the temperatures reaching the coast. temperatures reaching the coast. temperatures reaching the 20s, perhaps 25 towards the low 20s, perhaps 25 towards the low 20s, perhaps 25 towards the far southeast into monday . the far southeast into monday. little change for england and wales. 1 or 2 showers around, though. we will see more persistent rain returning across parts of northern ireland into western scotland as we move through the day. of this through the day. some of this rain turning at times. the through the day. some of this rain tstarting at times. the through the day. some of this rain tstarting to at times. the through the day. some of this rain tstarting to pick times. the through the day. some of this rain tstarting to pick up1es. the through the day. some of this rain tstarting to pick up two the through the day. some of this rain tstarting to pick up two and wind starting to pick up two and temperatures in the low 20s, tuesday and wednesday , largely tuesday and wednesday, largely dry. showers in the dry. just a few showers in the north and temperatures above average . average. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers proud sponsors of weather on . gb news.
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weather on. gb news. >> welcome back to mark dolan tonight with me, leo. kirsten, let's have another couple of your emails. geraldine says leo isfime your emails. geraldine says leo is time to set up a new festival, edinburgh on fringed indeed. we need a whole parallel society with with universities, schools , sports organisations, schools, sports organisations, arts and cultural awards, tv and films , etcetera. i like the films, etcetera. i like the sound of that , evan says. let's sound of that, evan says. let's use our foreign aid budget to help the eu stop the flow of migration in italy . that's migration in italy. that's a great point. at the moment our foreign aid budget, instead of going to help genuinely needy people, starving in the third world, is being spent on on migrants in this country , sue migrants in this country, sue says. we could start by stopping illegal immigrants accessing legal aid and the only an emergency is paid for by the british taxpayers. so some some thoughts about how to save the taxpayer some money. they are anyway. coming up next with the punst anyway. coming up next with the pundits are impartial news organiser nations failing to practise preach as the
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practise what they preach as the family of former british prime minister william gladstone apologises for its historical role in slavery . are they right? role in slavery. are they right? and as angela rayner has it large in the balearics , is 43 large in the balearics, is 43 too old to go clubbing in ibiza? i'll see you
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you're listening to news radio. >> back with me now and joining me throughout the show are tv personality and entrepreneur ashley horgan wallace , political ashley horgan wallace, political commentator benedict spence and fleet street legend mike porky parry . how did fleet street legend mike porky parry. how did you get that nickname ? porky nickname? porky >> i worked on talksport radio for ten years with mr alan brazil, who's three times the size of me . and every time size of me. and every time i pointed out his weight, he said, you're not so slim yourself. poor key, shut your mouth right . porky parry has kept ever since. >> right. did you call him nuts
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, sir? >> in today's tale cuts, charles moore argues that impartial news organisations cannot be chief arbiters of the truth if they're unable to debate certain political issues. >> bbc broadcaster nick robinson says britain has moved on from a typical model of broadcasting impartiality to a broader definition of what it really is. our impartial news organisations failing to practise what they preach know impartiality in news. i know gb news news. we get accused of being biased or partial on twitter a lot, but it seems to me that we're just providing alternative viewpoints that you wouldn't get on on the bbc. >> i think yeah. but bbc. >> i think yeah . but they are >> i think yeah. but they are kind of , you know focus more >> i think yeah. but they are kind of, you know focus more on what you believe which is which is fine because that's what gb news is known for . is fine because that's what gb news is known for. but i think it's hard to stay sort of impartial these days because everything's about clickbait . so everything's about clickbait. so if you're going to sensationally lies ahead in to get the
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clickbait, then you know that's what they've got to do. it's their job what they've got to do. it's theirjob really. but you're not you're not declaring the truth , you're not declaring the truth, are you? you're just doing like, for example, i had story come for example, i had a story come out me to today or out about me to today or yesterday, and it said that i was banned from instagram for being too sexy . being too sexy. >> congratulations by the way. >> congratulations by the way. >> you. but that's obviously for the clickbait because i wasn't actually banned from instagram . actually banned from instagram. >> i was banned from doing live snorting . but there you go. so snorting. but there you go. so as i say, it's just clickbait. so to get the numbers to bbc impartial and we saw we saw simon jack reporting on farage. >> he's a bbc reporter and he just uncritically relayed what senior senior executive coutts bank had told him or at natwest told him. and it turned out to be nonsense. so that shows his bias in not questioning and not digging deeper to verify. >> does it show his bias or just >> does it show his bias orjust that he didn't do his job very well? >> that's what i was going to
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say. >> we i think there is a desire to sort of see sometimes bias where it can also just be put down to incompetence. that is also an option as well, just because you've risen very far at the bbc does not necessarily mean are brain mean that you are brain of britain. we need to britain. i think what we need to remember actually human remember actually is that human beings impartial. there beings are not impartial. there is always going to be bias and that doesn't matter how professional when professional you try to be when it to the news business, it comes to the news business, i think it's more about objectivity is there objectivity actually. is there is point what is is there a point to what it is that you're pursuing? and i think is a far better think that that is a far better thing for people to pursue. i mean, take channel 4 news, for example, because we're example, because obviously we're talking news. we're example, because obviously we're talking about, news. we're example, because obviously we're talking about, youiews. we're example, because obviously we're talking about, you know, ile're talking about, you know, slightly slanted media talking about, you know, slightly 4 slanted media talking about, you know, slightly 4 news|nted media talking about, you know, slightly 4 news has! media talking about, you know, slightly 4 news has beeniia talking about, you know, slightly 4 news has been around channel 4 news has been around for long time. everybody for a very long time. everybody is aware that leans is very aware that it leans quite the left. but i'm quite hard to the left. but i'm okay with that. and i've been okay with that. and i've been okay with that actually for a very time because i knew very long time because i knew that. so i knew if you can that. and so i knew if you can sort of at it through that sort of look at it through that prism, could take prism, you could actually take their journalism. they prism, you could actually take theirjournalism. they did their journalism. and they did fantastic across many fantastic journalism across many parts places parts of the world that places people bbc did not want people like the bbc did not want to and think that that
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to touch. and i think that that is contributed to the rise of alternative sources, the alternative sources, media, the fact itv , fact that the mainstream itv, bbc didn't go to those sorts of places, touch those sort places, didn't touch those sort of you might come of stories. okay, you might come at slightly more left at it with a slightly more left wing or a slightly more wing attitude or a slightly more right wing attitude. is the story think that's the story true? i think that's the key the issue the key thing. the issue with the bbc likes to pretend that bbc is it likes to pretend that it impartial it is quite it is impartial when it is quite clear it's a lot of its clear that it's a lot of its correspondents pick and choose what things they to what sort of things they like to go.the what sort of things they like to go. the disinformation correspondent that goes correspondent that only goes after disinformation, after right wing disinformation, for entirely for example, but is entirely oblivious wing oblivious to left wing disinformation. you disinformation. it's when you see coming see things like that coming through. think actually through. do you think actually i'd the i'd like you to drop the pretence of being impartial? just objective. just give me objective. >> people. the >> but also people. the journalists are not doing as much research as they to. much research as they used to. they're things as they're just taking things as gospel. the first time they gospel. just the first time they see definition truth anymore. >> that's the problem since harry meghan on harry and meghan got going on all is no definite all truth. there is no definite line of truth. that truth these days can be my truth or your truth or the truth. there's no truth. charles moore's piece in the telegraph this morning. i've got a paragraph here. many powerful media organisations ,
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powerful media organisations, asians today regard lgbt+ and some other issues such as climate change and aspects of race as matters about which the normal idea of impartiality is completely suspended . completely suspended. >> so you have to just follow the party line. you have to follow the absolute consensus, even if there isn't a scientific consensus and even if the consensus and even if the consensusis consensus and even if the consensus is manufactured . consensus is manufactured. >> absolutely. >> absolutely. >> how many times on this station, nowhere else do we talk about climate change. i've got my own views on climate change based on the facts that i've got going back a thousand years, that climate change has been cyclical . that's all. yeah, it's cyclical. that's all. yeah, it's been cyclical. and, you know, for instance, when the romans were here, when was that 400 bc. we used to have vineyards b.c. we used to have vineyards along hadrian's wall, so it must have been very hot then. okay. and it's now got colder up there. but the problem is that's only the way i see it. nobody
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will accept science facts if it gets in the way of the ideology that the planet is heating. i mean, and of course , science can mean, and of course, science can be steered by by grants and funding and also fame. >> we can see we can see scientists didn't want to be on tv. >> they want to get their moment in the spotlight. >> what's wrong? sensationalising that's right. >> i'm a genius. i'm telling >> i'm a genius. and i'm telling you world is burning. you now the world is burning. >> one thing, one thing, though, that i feel slightly less that i do feel slightly less sure about, though, is the idea of and i know i'm of politicians. and i know i'm on understand that on gb news. i understand that there prominent politicians on gb news. i understand that therehave prominent politicians on gb news. i understand that therehave promiown politicians on gb news. i understand that therehave promiown shows. ans on gb news. i understand that therehave promiown shows. 11s who have their own shows. i don't that that's okay. don't think that that's okay. actually, equally, i don't think it's to have journalists it's okay to have journalists still journalists still working as journalists whilst become still working as journalists whils which become still working as journalists whils which is become still working as journalists whilswhich is also become still working as journalists whilswhich is also somethinge mps, which is also something that's lot less that's talked about a lot less because journalists because obviously journalists don't bring that don't want to bring that to people, well, well, he does people, go well, well, he does happen, but i think that there needs to be line drawn as needs to be a line drawn as guests, as commentators, write the ed or there as the odd op ed here or there as a guest give your opinion, but guest to give your opinion, but actually entirely running actually to be entirely running the line the show. the editorial line of the show. there journalists that there are great journalists that can anyway. i think that
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can do that anyway. i think that that blurs the line. and i understand a lot of tory mps think going to lose think that they're going to lose in election and needs in the next election and needs to sort of find an alternative vehicle. you vehicle. you can wait, you can wait months say this, not wait six months to say this, not a bit soon, aren't they? >> and also arlene saying that she's alien sometimes. she's feeling alien sometimes. >> saying >> yeah, actually saying that she's barred from television. >> you see, two sexy. doesn't that give us an opportunity to start tv channel? start a two sexy tv channel? right >> i mean, we're not saying that we are pitching for it, but, you know, i mean. i mean , i know, i mean. i mean, i qualified. i i'm talking of politicians. >> the family of one of britain's historical prime ministers will travel to the canbbean ministers will travel to the caribbean this week to apologise for their family's role in slavery, as well as making an official apology for william gladstone's ownership of the africans 21st century descendants have agreed to pay reparations and will fund further research into the impact of slavery . are the family of of slavery. are the family of the former prime minister right to apologise ? to apologise? >> it depends what the context of this is, because actually, as
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far as i'm aware, william gladstone didn't own slaves . i gladstone didn't own slaves. i was at the university of it was his father. i was at the university of liverpool. gladstone is of course from liverpool this a big liverpool and this was a big story there were as a story because there were as a whole residents whole of residents named after him activist students, him that some activist students, because have much because they don't have much to do with university. yeah, well they have lot to do they don't have a lot to do whilst they're that whilst they're at that particular so particular university. so they found which let's found a cause which was let's rename some activists rename this after some activists rather, gladstone rather, because gladstone profited trade. profited off the slave trade. now there is an argument to be made that his father did facilitate pursuit of facilitate his pursuit of politics. you need sort politics. that you need is sort of wealthy patronage then. of wealthy patronage back then. but did he but he himself did not. he himself the himself played a role in the abolition of slave trade, abolition of the slave trade, and people always ah, and people always then say, ah, but know, was trying to but you know, he was trying to get compensation for slave owners. that was a way of owners. yes, that was a way of facilitating getting people to agree end well. exactly agree it would end well. exactly it it would it was either that it would have been bloodshed, it would have been bloodshed, it would have been shooting people and making them by force. them give people up by force. you it politics is you know, it was politics is what apologising on what it was apologising on behalf of the family. i think you you that's that's what you do. you that's that's what you do. you that's that's what you sleep at night. you need to sleep at night. that's but this this
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that's fine. but this this conversation about gladstone in particular, it has been blown out of proportion for some time because the wrongful because of the wrongful assumption slaves assumption that he owned slaves and he didn't know, did and he didn't know, but he did later downplay it. >> know, at first he was >> you know, at first he was really embarrassed about it and then later on downplay it then later on he did downplay it and wasn't that bad. and say it wasn't that bad. >> i think liberal, the >> i think the liberal, the liberal, liberal movement in liberal, the liberal movement in liverpool, was liverpool, george canning, was also it. also part of it. >> the famous abolitionist that was the heartlands, was actually the heartlands, that the that liberal movement of the abolitionist movement. >> push for >> he was also a push for reparations and not not just from family , but from from this family, but from from the british taxpayer. from this family, but from from the and sh taxpayer. from this family, but from from the and britain. ayer. know, >> and britain. you know, although it played a role in the transatlantic slave trade, we were to end were the first country to end slavery , not only responsible slavery, not only responsible for for the the ending, not only which we paid for, not only will be the first country when we decided we passed in parliament that slavery was out, royal that slavery was out, the royal navy was then deputed to end slavery around the world. so british men died between 20, 30 and 2050. >> the royal navy commandeered a
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leased 1500 boat. that's a year coming out of africa and freed 150,000 people that is what we did for the to world release the world from slavery. and in south in america , the southern states in america, the southern states of america , the civil war in of america, the civil war in america , everybody thinks was a, america, everybody thinks was a, you know, a consensus between slavery, non slavery. abraham lincoln realised that if so much wealth was contained by about 100 men in the south of america who controlled people, they didn't have to pay to work the economy would collapse. yeah. so you had to free people to start an economy and free economic progress. >> that's really what drove it rather than. >> yes, that's right. i'm not very good. no, it was you know, absolutely. we have to move on. but coming up next, as a biological meal wins a women's weightlifting competition, is this a war on women? >> we'll be speaking to one of the runners
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transgender. >> athlete . and andres stepped >> athlete. and andres stepped onto the podium in first place at the women's canadian power lifting regional championships. this month. the six foot two athlete born a biology male stormed the competition and won by lifting £470 more than the runner up . however, if an runner up. however, if an competed against men, they wouldn't even rank in the top 6000. is this a war on women? i'm joined by record breaking powerlifter april hutchinson , powerlifter april hutchinson, who is a runner up to an april. thanks for joining who is a runner up to an april. thanks forjoining us who is a runner up to an april. thanks for joining us tonight . thanks for joining us tonight. >> thank you so much for having me. >> and so what's going on? >> and so what's going on? >> i mean, it seems it seems ridiculous that a biological male can come into women's sports and then break records by such insane margins. >> yeah, basically here in
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canada, my federation , the canada, my federation, the canadian powerlifting union , has canadian powerlifting union, has created a trans inclusion policy after we sent so many letters in and even myself, legal letters, they did not create a policy to protect women and study basically created a trans inclusion policy. >> so basically yourself, you could walk in tomorrow or my boyfriend could walk in tomorrow and just identify as a female. if they're feeling like a female that day . walk on in, crush some that day. walk on in, crush some records and then come back the next day and say, i'm a man again. so it's pretty sad. >> so there aren't even the requirements to take hormones or transition or have surgery . i transition or have surgery. i could literally just say, hey, my pronouns are she her? i'm a woman, and then go in there and smash them. i could actually lift as much as you, april, but in theory , yeah. in theory, yeah. >> well, no, that's the thing. people, they don't even have to declare. so what happened on
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sunday? all these people clapping and one woman on the podium had no idea that an was a man because part of the inclusion policy states that you don't even have to declare that you're transgender. and definitely no hormone therapy or testing or anything like that. no testing at all. >> and did you know that an was was born a man ? was born a man? >> yeah. so i know he was born a man because i actually used to be friends with him about four years ago we would chit chat on facebook and all the long he would call himself a shy boy. and i was like, well, what's a boy?i and i was like, well, what's a boy? i wasn't really down with the then we were the lingo. and then we were talking about laura hubbard. one day, transgender day, the olympic transgender athlete. and i said, oh, he should not be competing in the olympics. and said, well, i'm a man. did you not know that i transitioned after 20 years old and i said i had no idea. and i said, you should not be in women's sports. definitely. and then he blocked and deleted me. and since then i've known and
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i've been writing my federation for years, i was a very alone in my fight. this was like 3 or 4 years ago. and finally, people are catching on and going, wow. like i've actually had people like riley gaines helped me . like riley gaines helped me. olympic athletes reach out and actually fund me to get a lawyer. and it's been it's been a long battle. but this year, people are opening up their eyes, which is wonderful. >> and how did it feel losing to a biological male and standing on that podium knowing that you would have been a rank higher ? would have been a rank higher? well i will never, ever compete against an i actually was supposed to compete against an at the nationals in february . at the nationals in february. >> so i think everyone thought i was going to show up, but i didn't. the day of the competition, i wrote my federation and i said i will not be showing up if there's a biological men in the competition. and then about 20 women support showed up at women in my support showed up at the nationals and protested and said, some people would say ,
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said, some people would say, well, these transgender women , well, these transgender women, although, i mean, this doesn't seem to be a transgender woman who's put much effort in, but a transgender woman needs somewhere to compete. >> what would you think would be a solution to the dilemma ? a solution to the dilemma? >> yeah, and you know what? i think everyone should have the right to lift everyone person should have the right to compete in sports . i definitely agree in sports. i definitely agree with that. but i mean, when it comes to i mean , sports comes to i mean, sports specifically , i'm just talking specifically, i'm just talking sports related, there needs to be separate categories because i mean, an transitioned after 20. so he has still has the muscle mass , the lung capacity bone mass, the lung capacity bone density fast twitch fibres the list goes on. he has he has actually stated himself that he has an advantage and still goes through with it. and so , i mean, through with it. and so, i mean, we all we ask for as a separate category and if we cannot create a separate class, thanks so much for joining us. >> we've forjoining us. >> we've sadly, we've sadly got to cut break. but thank you to cut to a break. but thank you
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so much best luck. and so much and best luck. and coming up next, my take at ten. >> looks like things are heating up. boilers , proud up. boxed boilers, proud sponsors of weather on gb news. hello there. >> i'm greg dewhurst and welcome to your latest news weather forecast . as we move through forecast. as we move through into the second part of the weekend, we'll see further showers, particularly across the north—west of the uk and sunny spells towards the south—east. and this area of low pressure still brings in the showers and brisk winds towards the northwest. further south and northwest. but further south and east, high pressure builds for in the rest of the evening and overnight, we still have a few showers across northern ireland, parts scotland, 2 for parts of scotland, 1 or 2 for western of england and western parts of england and wales, but largely dry for most of skies , especially of clear skies, especially towards the east of the uk . towards the east of the uk. temperatures overall, generally 15 or 16 celsius in towns and cities, a little lower in the countryside. so a fairly warm start to sunday morning. plenty of sunny spells, a few showers across western areas. and then as we go through the day, many
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will have a fine day to come. plenty of sunny spells just a few showers bubbling up as we move through the afternoon. showers frequent across showers most frequent across parts scotland and northern parts of scotland and northern ireland. 1 or 2 of them could be heavy here, still rather breezy around coast. temperatures around the coast. temperatures reaching 20s, perhaps 25 reaching the low 20s, perhaps 25 towards far southeast into towards the far southeast into monday . little change for monday. little change for england and wales. 1 or 2 showers around, though . we will showers around, though. we will see more persistent rain returning across parts of northern ireland into western scotland as we move through the day. some of this rain turning heavy at times. the wind starting pick and starting to pick up two and temperatures in the low 20s, tuesday wednesday, largely temperatures in the low 20s, tuesjust wednesday, largely temperatures in the low 20s, tuesjust a wednesday, largely temperatures in the low 20s, tuesjust a fewiednesday, largely temperatures in the low 20s, tuesjust a few showersy, largely temperatures in the low 20s, tuesjust a few showers in.argely temperatures in the low 20s, tuesjust a few showers in thezly dry. just a few showers in the north temperatures above north and temperatures above average . looks like things are average. looks like things are heating up . heating up. >> boxed boilers proud sponsors of weather on .
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gb news, it's 10:00 on gb news, it's10:00 on television, on radio and online in the united kingdom and across the world. >> this is mark dolan tonight with me, leo kearse in my ticket ten why britain's mass immigration policy is hurting the third world with king charles set to call a royal summit, can the royal family keep the commonwealth intact ? keep the commonwealth intact? and mark dolan tonight is the home of the papers with tomorrow's pages from tomorrow's front pages from exactly 10:30 pm. sharp . so a exactly 10:30 pm. sharp. so a busy hour to come . so something busy hour to come. so something cold and fizzy in the fridge , cold and fizzy in the fridge, fridge or fire up the kettle and let's make a note of it. but first, the headlines with tatiana sanchez . tatiana sanchez. >> leo, thank you. this is the latest from the gb newsroom. lawyers representing the families of two of lucy levy's victims have called the independent inquiry inadequate. the government ordered a non—statutory investigation after the former nurses conviction yesterday . it will
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conviction yesterday. it will look at the circumstances surrounding the deaths, including how concerns raised by clinicians were dealt with. the prosecution's key medical expert has told the observer police should investigate hospital bosses for corporate manslaughter, calling them grossly negligent for not acting on fears about levy's actions at the time she was found guilty of the time she was found guilty of the murder of seven babies and the murder of seven babies and the attempted murder of six others. she'll be sentenced on monday . a 50 year old man has monday. a 50 year old man has been charged with possessing documents or records likely to be useful to terrorists and the possession of articles for use in terrorism. he'll appear in court on monday. that's in relation to the last week's psni data breach, where the details of 10,000 police officers and staff were published online by mistake. that's after police officers in northern ireland revealed they're also investigating the loss of an officer's laptop and notebook which fell from a moving vehicle on thursday that contained the details of 42 officers and staff
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. pakistani police are seeking to arrest the father of saira sharif in connection to her murder. the ten year old's body was found at her home in woking last thursday morning after police received a phone call from irfan sharif from pakistan. police believe he travelled to islamabad with sara stepmother, uncle and five children a day before her body was discovered. detective say she'd suffered extensive injuries over a sustained period of time . sustained period of time. criminal gangs have been condemned by maritime experts for pushing small boats out into the channel during storm betty, coastguard and border force vessels have been called to deal with reports of migrant boats in the sea in treacherous conditions . at least three were conditions. at least three were intercepted in uk waters this morning. gb news understand around 100 people were . on board around 100 people were. on board and king charles has told the lionesses to roar to victory ahead of tomorrow's world cup final . ahead of tomorrow's world cup final. england taking on spain
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to win the trophy for the very first time. lauren james, who served a two match suspension following her red card against nigeria, could still start tomorrow. meanwhile the prince of wales has apologised for not being able to attend that final in person . he and princess in person. he and princess charlotte wish the team good luck. >> lionesses want to send you a huge good luck for tomorrow with sorry you can't be there in person. it was so proud of everything you've achieved and the millions you've inspired here the world. so go here and around the world. so go out tomorrow really out there tomorrow and really enjoy luck, enjoy yourselves. good luck, lionesses . lionesses. >> this is gb news across the uk on tv in your car, on digital radio and on your smart speaker by simply saying play gb news now it's back to . leo now it's back to. leo >> welcome back to mark dolan tonight with me, leo kearse will be live from italy shortly with king charles set to call a royal summit . can king charles set to call a royal summit. can the king charles set to call a royal summit . can the royal king charles set to call a royal summit. can the royal family keep the commonwealth intact? and mark dolan tonight is the
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home of the papers with tomorrow's front pages from exactly 10:30 pm. sharp. plus, we'll have tonight's headline, heroes and back page zeroes, big stories , big guests and always stories, big guests and always big opinions. stories, big guests and always big opinions . here is my take. big opinions. here is my take. at ten. britain is a country of mass immigration. last year, we issued over a million visas to people who wanted to come and live here. we're generally a warm and welcoming country. as long as people follow the proper routes to get here, instead of hopping on something that floats and uninvited, and barge in uninvited, the number in britain is number one rule in britain is don't ever jump number one rule in britain is don't everjump a queue. our economy has become dependent on importing cheap labour and our pubuc importing cheap labour and our public services are dependent on importing skilled professionals. but we look at the impact but when we look at the impact of mass migration , we tend to of mass migration, we tend to just look at the impact in our country. the hundreds of thousands arrivals each thousands of new arrivals each year strain on year puts a huge strain on pubuc year puts a huge strain on public services such as the nhs. downward pressure working downward pressure on working class and increases demand class wages and increases demand for housing because when people
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come into country, they come into the country, they don't a semi—detached don't bring a semi—detached house there also house with them. there are also issues with integration with each bringing young men each dinghy, bringing young men with ideology and with mediaeval ideology and views on women, gays and freedom that just aren't compatible with a western liberal democracy . but a western liberal democracy. but we tend not to look at the impact of mass migration on the countries these migrants are coming probably because we coming from. probably because we don't live there. a report this week revealed the scale of the brain drain countries such as brain drain on countries such as nigeria and zimbabwe. are nigeria and zimbabwe. they are losing skilled professionals such nurses and doctors to such as nurses and doctors to the uk. now i can fully understand the incentive for health professions to emigrate to uk. zimbabwe is a country to the uk. zimbabwe is a country that's falling apart. we're nurses make only £120 a month. if they come and work for the nhs, they can double that, but it's had a huge impact. 75,000 nurses have left nigeria over the past few years, leaving the country with only one doctor for every 5000 patients and nigeria is an african success story . is an african success story. with a strong economy and relatively well funded public
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sector. other countries are suffering even worse brain drain. we are stealing the best and the brightest from countries who have invested in them and trained them up. countries that desperately need to keep these professionals if they're to have any chance of a strong, prosperous, stable future. also, it might not be the best for us. i'm just seeing a medical qualification issued in zimbabwe might not meet the exacting standards of the west. we're undermining other countries self—sufficiency and leaving them dependent on our foreign aid. meanwhile, we are dependent on them for skilled professionals . now, wouldn't it professionals. now, wouldn't it be a better system if we just had enough children and trained enough of our own doctors and nurses and teachers instead of poaching them from other countries? then we wouldn't be so dependent on immigration. i've always maintained that the number one route into this country should be through a birth then we can help birth canal. then we can help other countries modernise instead of stealing future instead of stealing their future
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and what do you think? do you agree ? do you disagree? send agree? do you disagree? send your comments in to gb views gb news and i'll get to your emails after the break. reacting to my take at ten tonight, our tv personality and entrepreneur ashlyn wallace, political commentator , sir benedict spence commentator, sir benedict spence and fleet street legend mike porky party mike, what did you what do you make of this? i mean, do you have you ever thought of the impact that we're having on other countries by sucking in all these people? >> think the >> well, let's think about the impact on our country first. okay excuse i mean, look , okay excuse me. i mean, look, we're a very welcoming country. we have but you've we always have been. but you've got understand that if people got to understand that if people from other cultures come here, then when they present a problem to the culture we have here, you mentioned in your monologue there that people come with different views and different opinions to the way we run our civilised society. so if we've
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grown up for 50 or 60 years in a town like chester, where i was born and brought up and all of a sudden people are coming there with a different view of the way life should be run, with a different culture, with different culture, with different aspirations . that's different aspirations. that's bound to cause problems. and that's why i think we've got to be much, much more careful about how many people we admit into the country and add the skills they have to offer to improve our society . of all those our society. of all those countries, by the way, that you've mentioned, are being drained of their own people. south africa is now becoming one of the biggest problems in africa itself because because it's falling apart politically. the man who wants to become the next president of south africa and there's an election next yearis and there's an election next year is holding rallies and telling people we'll do what zimbabwe did. we'll seize white farm, kill them, we'll kill the
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white farmers. >> i mean, that'sjulius white farmers. >> i mean, that's julius malema till the bulls kill the bulls fairness. he's only he's third in the polls. i mean, it's still obviously significant. he's got no chance of. >> but what i'm saying is what i'm saying is just emphasise i'm saying is just to emphasise your point, are the sort your point, these are the sort of where people are of countries where people are now coming here now leaving and coming here because a great civilised because we're a great civilised society. okay why would people come here if we were worse than what they already live in? they come here because we're a great society and that's what we've got to be very careful about. we're welcoming. we have the resources as a rich country to help people. but if we help two, many are society will collapse, but they're not helping in this situation. >> we're poaching people that have got the doctors education and bringing them over here or we or are they just coming ? we or are they just coming? >> well, that's what that's what the monologue was about, the people that we're taking. >> most immigration into the >> so most immigration into the country, mean , know country, i mean, i know the small boats very visible. we small boats are very visible. we see the news. most see them on the news. but most immigration million immigration like 1.1 million visas, last year. visas, were issued last year. and of to that's
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and some of to that's humanitarian aid, helping ukrainians or people from hong kong or their official through lines. well, a lot of people i mean, the nhs is recruiting from from from overseas. mean, the nhs is recruiting from froryeah,1 overseas. mean, the nhs is recruiting from froryeah, sorry seas. mean, the nhs is recruiting from froryeah, sorry .aas. >> yeah, sorry. >> yeah, sorry. >> no, it's a tricky one because there are issues with both sides because you've got a lot of people that say we need we need to be bringing these people in because we do have shortfalls. and you have other people saying, as you just did, that there's moral because there's a moral quandary because we effectively we are strip mining effectively human the thing human capital. but the thing that really want that we don't really want to discuss country is that discuss in this country is that actually not poaching the actually we're not poaching the brightest best the brightest and best because the brightest and best because the brightest want to brightest and best don't want to come they want to to come here. they want to go to the united states and they want to to canada because they get to go to canada because they get paid lot more there, because paid a lot more there, because actually an increasingly actually we are an increasingly poor we're poor country. so we're comparison the second comparison to putting the second brightest second. that's the thing. approaching thing. we are approaching poaching the middle class, if you we're not actually you like. we're not actually poaching or poaching the great engineers or the great brains. and only the great brains. and you only need look silicon valley need to look at silicon valley because you focussed on sub—saharan there. sub—saharan africa just there. but second largest sub—saharan africa just there. but albanians, second largest sub—saharan africa just there. but albanians, the :ond largest sub—saharan africa just there. but albanians, the second gest after albanians, the second largest people into largest influx of people into this illegally are
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this country illegally are people now people coming from india. now india developing india is a rapidly developing country and actually a lot of its prices and no longer need to leave but the ones leave india. but the ones that do, the united do, they go to the united states. they don't come the states. they don't come to the uk anymore. states. they don't come to the uk and nore. states. they don't come to the uk and are. states. they don't come to the uk and a friend, radu, so he's >> and a friend, radu, so he's from romania and he's comedian. >> he's a hilarious, hilarious comedian. he says, you know, he's not here because he's i'm not here because because no british dream. you know, i'm here because >> you know, i'm here because i couldn't into america. couldn't get into america. i think it's rishi sunak to think it's rishi sunak chose to go to before he became go to america before he became prime minister >> rishi sunak absolutely. is somebody who has a far more international outlook. and he actually would feel at home in many but many different places. but i think do need to remember, as think we do need to remember, as you say, the impact that it has on other countries . we're not on other countries. we're not just talking about keeping them poon just talking about keeping them poor. is what this poor. and that is what this system requires. it requires accepting be accepting that you will be keeping poor because keeping countries poor because their and best, but their brightest and best, but also classes will also the middle classes will leave. creates more leave. it creates more instability because actually it stops industries from starting. it stops jobs from starting. and what you have in countries is taking example, taking the taking the example, taking the people form the middle
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people who would form the middle class, management class, class, the management class, the bureaucrats keep economy. class, the management class, the bureaucis:s keep economy. class, the management class, the bureaucis a keep economy. class, the management class, the bureaucis a very keep economy. class, the management class, the bureaucis a very keep yexample nigeria is a very good example of where right now there nigeria is a very good example of an where right now there nigeria is a very good example of an islamic right now there nigeria is a very good example of an islamic insurgencythere nigeria is a very good example of an islamic insurgency inzre nigeria is a very good example of an islamic insurgency in the is an islamic insurgency in the north the country , boko north of the country, boko haram, not going haram, it's not actually going anywhere. population anywhere. and the population continues to expand. you see this countries like this in other countries like pakistan this is where pakistan as well. this is where the instability starts. actually, nigeria's actually, what is nigeria's biggest , its oil, its biggest industry, its oil, its things and this is things like that. and this is another of the issue another part of the issue because want about because we want to talk about bringing the world toward net zero all that sort of thing. zero and all that sort of thing. you're never to build you're never going to build nuclear plants africa you're never going to build nucl
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to news radio. >> welcome back to mark dolan tonight night with me, leo carlson. ladies of a couple of your emails . carlson. ladies of a couple of your emails. so carlson. ladies of a couple of your emails . so patrick says the your emails. so patrick says the carefully crafted narrative of the left would go unchallenged if not for gb news. thanks for that, patrick. megan says meals can never be females. no matter what. mutilating surgery you 6my what. mutilating surgery you apply to a bloke's body . jill apply to a bloke's body. jill says the edinburgh fringe cancelling comedy is like woodstock and glastonbury without rock music. great point, terry says . why don't we just terry says. why don't we just have more kids to break our dependency on migration ? two dependency on migration? two child cap on benefits policy, cost of living crisis, the omni shambles that our country has become is not exactly an appealing environment to have kids, and i totally agree. terry. just of kids just have kids, that will work out fine. i did it and i can't even look after a fan anyway , it's time
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after a fan anyway, it's time now for us news with the queen of american showbiz royal and political reporting , kinsey political reporting, kinsey schofield . kinsey, are you there schofield. kinsey, are you there ? you? hi kinsey. >> how are you? thank you. yeah so good to see you. >> i'm so happy to be reunited with you. >> it's great to see you. and let's let's start off with the royal family. and they're say it to crunched talks this week to be crunched talks this week regarding future. can regarding its future. what can you tell kinsey ? you tell us, kinsey? >> it exciting? >> oh, isn't it exciting? >> oh, isn't it exciting? >> leo reports from the mirror are that the king is holding what's called historic what's been called a historic royal summit. >> is going be mixing >> this is going to be mixing business pleasure as the business with pleasure as the meeting take during meeting will take place during an to balmoral . an upcoming trip to balmoral. his is expected to tell his majesty is expected to tell the prince and princess of wales his goals and to define his expectations for the future of the monarchy. you know, it's being said that he's hoping to use the, you know, the prince and princess of wales, their star quality to help unite the commonwealth. according to these reports, his majesty has said to
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want kate and william to be at the heart of cementing their own future and that of the monarchy at large, which i think a lot of us have gotten a sense of. you know, even their presence at the second coronation, we really felt that way, that he was so proud of these two and wanted to put them front and centre. but to according the mirror, the king excitingly is planning to carry out a number of overseas visits next year in order to just see those relationships with those territories. so canada and australia, those are some of the places we look forward to seeing the king and hopefully queen consort camilla as well. but you know, i think that they're looking forward to the future and excited to excited to brainstorm at balmoral. >> and do you think the future of the royal family and the future of the commonwealth really hinges on kate and william because they're the they're the only popular members of the royal family. we've got left pretty much okay. >> leo, you are so bad , but you
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>> leo, you are so bad, but you know you're accurate. and that's why i enjoy watching you on television . no, i do think that television. no, i do think that i think that the king and the queen there is certainly a huge amount of people that support the king and queen and admire them. but i do think that people love the youth and the glamour of prince william and princess catherine. they are there's something so loving and wonderful about watching them engage with their children. and they are just so stoic and sophisticated . obviously, people sophisticated. obviously, people really love william and catherine, but i don't think that there's necessarily a huge chunk of people that feel negatively about about king charles anymore. i think that there's been a really great evolution and maturity in him, and people recognise that that's great and prince william talking of him is not going to attend the england women's world cup final tomorrow, but he has sent them a message of support which we have here.
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>> it is lionesses. >> it is lionesses. >> it is lionesses. >> i want to send you a huge good luck for tomorrow. we're sorry you can't be there in person, but we're so proud of everything you've achieved and person, but we're so proud of eve millionsou've achieved and person, but we're so proud of eve millions you've chieved and person, but we're so proud of eve millions you've inspiredand the millions you've inspired here world. so go here and around the world. so go out tomorrow and really out there tomorrow and really enjoy . good enjoy yourselves. good luck, lionesses enjoy yourselves. good luck, liordo;es think the criticism of >> do you think the criticism of prince william has been unfair for not flying out to watch the game ? game? >> you're if you do . you're if >> you're if you do. you're if you don't. we would have had all of the republicans raging about, you know, his foot, his climate footprint if he had gone. and then anybody that is irate over him not going, you know, we don't own these people. they don't own these people. they don't owe us anything . you know, don't owe us anything. you know, we can't tell them when to jump on a plane and go to a specific location. that's insane. we don't know what's going on in their personal lives. perhaps something important is happening back home. i'd say leave them be. obviously, they're supporting their team as best as they're capable of doing today and have a little compassion and empathy moving on to the
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empathy and moving on to the incredible soap opera that is american politics. >> is donald trump expected to attend next week's republican debate ? debate? >> leo, is this not the most brilliant strategy you've ever seen in your life ? donald trump seen in your life? donald trump has said, no, i'm not going to participate in this debate too many. he would probably tell you there are too many losers on stage. if being honest stage. if we're being honest with other . he stage. if we're being honest with other. he instead he's with each other. he instead he's going to go do a one on one interview with tucker carlson. tucker carlson, who was recently fired from fox news, absolutely dominate on social media, receives more views on his brand new social media, like one of a kind show. then cable news does, or than he did when he was on cable news, then cable news typically does. people are tuning in to tucker carlson. the people that voted for donald trump are already tuning in to tucker carlson. he's going to have the stage one on one. he's not going to have to share any attention and he's not going to be dog piled on by a bunch of people that are barely even registering with the american
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voters. i think more people will watch tucker and trump then we'll watch the debate on fox news and, you know, i think that probably ron desantis is going to be in the line of fire because he's the second best. so you think the dog polling will happen on ron desantis ? i think happen on ron desantis? i think he better wear his big boy pants because they're to going they're going go after they're going to go after him. they're going to go after him. they're going after him the going to go after him the hardest there hardest because he's there and he's going he's going to he's going to be he's going to take a of hits. take a couple of hits. i definitely still think they're all going to trounce on trump, too. i think trump's going too. but i think trump's going too. but i think trump's going to the winner because to walk away the winner because more are going watch more people are going to watch him tucker he's not him on. tucker and he's not going to he just doesn't want to be bothered those people that be bothered by those people that aren't registering with aren't even registering with voters. i don't i looked at the list of everyone debating. i didn't even recognise some of the people. like, i think there's a mayor from miami who is guy ? is this guy? >> britney spears >> and finally, britney spears has broken her silence after being freed from her marriage to sam asghari . what did she have sam asghari. what did she have to see? >> yeah, she okay, so leo, this
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is really sad. she said she was just tired of hurting and there are so many wild rumours going back and forth when it comes to this. break—up know there were cheating allegations released by tmz. other people , britney's tmz. other people, britney's camp are saying that those aren't true . those cheating aren't true. those cheating allegations were just to protect sam sam's reputation going forward . but britney posted on forward. but britney posted on instagram that she was struggling . she would be okay, struggling. she would be okay, but she is heartbroken over this situation. and you know, i think that if the rumours are true that if the rumours are true that sam is trying to renegotiate his prenup and has threatened to release embarrassing information about britney if she doesn't, i think that this is a really nasty person. and so hopefully those rumours that that was page six that reported that as well as tmz, that sam wants to renegotiate that prenuptial agreement . agreement. >> i mean, that sounds like blackmail to say i'm going to release embarrassing footage and i don't know how it could be
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more embarrassing. >> the stuff that britney puts up herself, but that sounds like criminal blackmail threaten criminal blackmail to threaten that. criminal blackmail to threaten tha it's extortion. >> it's extortion. >> it's extortion. >> exactly. leo we're looking at extortion here, but tmz reports that ultimately sam just wants her to write the check . it's her to write the check. it's just a threat because they do think that britney will write a check to make it go away. so i hope she doesn't do that because that's just gross. >> well, thanks so much for filling kenzie. it's filling us in, kenzie. it's great speak you. filling us in, kenzie. it's gre goodspeak you. filling us in, kenzie. it's gre good to�*ak you. filling us in, kenzie. it's gre good to see you. 1. filling us in, kenzie. it's gre good to see you. leo >> good to see you. leo >> and there's plenty more to come, but next up, we've got the weather with greg. >> a brighter outlook with boxt solar proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. on. gb news. >> hello there . i'm greg >> hello there. i'm greg dewhurst and welcome to your latest gb news weather forecast . so as we move through into the second part of the weekend, we'll see further showers, particularly across the northwest of the uk and sunny spells towards the southeast. and this area of low pressure still brings in the showers and
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brisk winds towards the northwest. but further south and east, high pressure builds in for the rest of the evening and overnight, we still have a few showers across northern ireland, parts scotland, or 2 for parts of scotland, 1 or 2 for western of england and western parts of england and wales, but largely dry for most of especially of clear skies, especially towards the east of the uk. temperatures overall, generally 15 or 16 celsius in towns and cities , a little lower in the cities, a little lower in the countryside . so a fairly warm countryside. so a fairly warm start to sunday morning . plenty start to sunday morning. plenty of sunny spells, a few showers across western areas and then as we go through the day, many will have a fine day to come. plenty of sunny spells, just a few showers bubbling up as we move through the afternoon . showers through the afternoon. showers most parts of most frequent across parts of scotland and northern ireland. 1 or of them could be heavy or 2 of them could be heavy here, still rather breezy around the temperatures reaching the coast. temperatures reaching the coast. temperatures reaching the perhaps 25 towards the low 20s, perhaps 25 towards the low 20s, perhaps 25 towards the far southeast into monday . the far southeast into monday. little change for england and wales. 1 or 2 showers around, though. we will see more persistent rain returning across parts of northern ireland into
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western scotland as we move through the day. some this through the day. some of this rain turning at times. the through the day. some of this rain tstarting at times. the through the day. some of this rain tstarting to at times. the through the day. some of this rain tstarting to pick times. the through the day. some of this rain tstarting to pick up1es. the through the day. some of this rain tstarting to pick up two the through the day. some of this rain tstarting to pick up two and wind starting to pick up two and temperatures in the low 20s, tuesday and wednesday , largely tuesday and wednesday, largely dry. showers in the dry. just a few showers in the north temperatures above north and temperatures above average . a brighter outlook with average. a brighter outlook with boxt solar >> proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. >> coming up, we've got the papers at 10:30 pm. sharp with full panel reaction. plus, tonight's headline, heroes and back page zeros. see you in a
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radio show . radio show. >> welcome back to mark dolan tonight. with me, leo, kirsten, we've got a couple more emails from you . graham says, leo, you from you. graham says, leo, you summed it up in your big opinion when the tide changes again, as it will, where are the heaters going to go exactly ? well, they going to go exactly? well, they tend go whatever tend to just go with whatever the prevailing opinion says that they should follow. and steve says, why are there no members
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of the royal family at the world cup? disgrace. they're cup? it's a disgrace. they're supposed represent the supposed to represent the country. appears they do what country. it appears they do what they want . harsh words there they want. harsh words there from steve for the royal family. anyway, it's 10:30 pm. it's time for a look at tomorrow morning's newspapers. hot off the press, the independ leads with families demand full public inquiry into killer nurse babies . parents joined doctors who blew whistle on lucy letby and want to know why did hospital potentially facilitate a mass murderer ? the observer has now murderer? the observer has now investigate hospital bosses betrayal expert urges police . betrayal expert urges police. the sunday telegraph has doctors wage war on nhs managers after letby this . so that was a sunday letby this. so that was a sunday telegraph. the sunday times has killer letby was offered role at top children's hospital after the which they described as a witch hunt. of course they also have charles to be caretaker monarch for william and waitrose is free lattes for police to cut
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theft. that's a way of luring police into the store . the police into the store. the sunday express has bought crisis as revenge for brexit. they're saying the boots crisis is down to sulky european chiefs , to sulky european chiefs, prolonging the crisis . the prolonging the crisis. the mirror has cheery words for the for the lionesses and their game tomorrow. lioness we can nation roars are heroines on as team promise game of their lives so good luck to them. and finally the daily star on sunday says they think it's all hang over. i think this is about the amount that's going to be drunk tomorrow. 30 million pints are going to be sunk on super sunday. and the nation is set to bunk off for monday. and i think i think the pubs are going to be opening early. people are certainly going to be drinking , certainly going to be drinking, drinking early anyway . still drinking early anyway. still with me are tv personnel and entrepreneur ashley horgan wallace, political commentator benedict spence and fleet street
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legend mike porky parry. coming up, we've got more from the papers next, but let's have a chat about these. i mean, it looks as though the lucy letby inquiry, the focus is now on the hospital executives who i mean, some people are saying they're they're liable for manslaughter i >> -- >> it's an absolute disgrace. it is an absolute and utter disgrace that top doctors went to the managers in the national health service and rang the alarm bells after three deaths of babies. for more babies died. after that, corporate manslaughter has to be an option here. supposing you run a coach company and the driver went to the boss and said, do you know what? on my last trip, the brakes weren't working very well. i think you should change the brake pads. well. i think you should change the brake pads . and if the owner the brake pads. and if the owner of that company said, no, no, no, just do another couple of trips. and on the next trip, the coach crashes and seven people on coach die . that's on the coach die. that's corporate manslaughter . and this corporate manslaughter. and this
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is exactly the same . the people is exactly the same. the people running the counties of chester hosphal running the counties of chester hospital, which incidentally was where i was born, strangely enough, i come from chester, were told repeatedly there's a dangerous killer within our baby unit. do something about it. and they did nothing. >> well, in fact, the whistleblowers were ordered to write letters of apology to it. reminds me of the grooming gang scandal where the whistleblowers came forward and said, we've got this issue and they were told there's no issue. and they were sent on diversity training or fired held from fired or held back from promotions. >> outrage. i cannot >> absolute outrage. i cannot stand why? you know, the executives were so banned by the idea that what a nurse in this hospital for vulnerable babies killing them. no, it's important. i can imagine them thinking that. but after time and time again , senior doctors , and time again, senior doctors, you know, top professors went to them and said, no, it's happening . they still chose happening. they still chose little put the head in the sand
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and not address the problem. and you've got personal experience in this hospital. >> what was it? >> what was it? >> i was born and you remember this is like for you as far as you remember it, it's good. no, no, no. >> funny enough, my dad also died a heart attack. there 57 died of a heart attack. there 57 years later. so i know the hospital. yeah yeah, it's interesting, isn't it? >> because i put a post up about how angry i was with her because as a woman and a mother of a lot of angel babies. so i've lost a lot of babies. you know, i was just. just broken and appalled. so i put a very angry post up and i had a lot of dms saying, but it's the hospital that needs to be held accountable. >> so i think i think obviously she is accountable and she's the one that has done this horrific , disgusting act over and over again. >> but definitely the hospital needs to be taken . needs to be taken. >> i think i saw somebody on somebody on twitter, but you're more in this country to more likely in this country to be to lose your job in the nhs if try to the whistle if you try to blow the whistle on somebody breaking the rules
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than if you break the rules yourself. is a culture yourself. and this is a culture that know is actually existed that we know is actually existed in nhs for a very time. in the nhs for a very long time. they're very to cover they're very keen to cover themselves because a themselves up because actually a lot it's lot of, you know, it's understandable people understandable why people go into hospitals actually because they ill they're they are ill and they're vulnerable and often they vulnerable and very often they do don't want you do die. you don't want and you have america where the have this in america where the system very different, system is very different, where doctors sued for doctors can be sued for anything. want to anything. you don't want to accept because all accept liability because all sorts of people die under all sorts of people die under all sorts circumstances. they sorts of people die under all sort more ircumstances. they sorts of people die under all sort more ircu you ances. they sorts of people die under all sortmoreirchou understandiey get more ill. you understand why, but it has to change. the thing really concerning thing i find really concerning about it's not the first about this is it's not the first time somebody in the nhs has used their state given position of murder people. we of power to murder people. we had shipman, course, had harold shipman, of course, in how can it in this country. so how can it be there was this attitude be that there was this attitude that possibly be that it couldn't possibly be happening? happened happening? it has happened before lessons before and unless lessons learnt, say this learnt, we always say this unless i learned, unless the lessons i learned, somebody point try somebody at some point will try and again. and do it again. >> and by the way, and you're absolutely right at least absolutely right here at least five of those senior executive have on other have either moved on to other jobs in other health authorities or on golden pensions of or retired on golden pensions of up to £18 million. pension
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pots. it's an absolute disgrace. and they should be dragged back to court and asked to account for the fact that they stood around doing nothing and for the hundreds of millions of pounds that we spend on management in the nhs . the nhs. >> i'm amazed that the data didn't just flag up. i mean, this a real aberration, real this is a real aberration, real out of ordinary. these are babies . out of ordinary. these are babies. that's fair enough. they're premature. they're fragile. but the vast majority of them survive to have so many day like this. >> well, apparently everybody everybody sort of pays any attention nhs that attention to the nhs knows that its system automated , its online system is automated, systems other systems are behind other competing countries . competing countries. >> there is so >> why? because there is so much obstinacy of nhs obstinacy about the idea of nhs reform . now, not for reform. now, i'm not for a second saying the nhs is a lack of reform in the nhs led to this happening. of course it didn't. it was an individual behaving on their motive. but if you their own motive. but but if you do have this culture not do have this culture of not being prepared move forward, being prepared to move forward, not reflect on not being prepared to reflect on things that have gone wrong in the might go the past, or that might go wrong, you are going wrong, ultimately you are going to situations people to have situations where people fall through the cracks
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accidentally this case, accidentally or in this case, people the system rare, people abuse the system rare, but happen. but it can happen. >> we've lionesses >> and we've got the lionesses playing tomorrow and there is going to be a lot of drinking at an early times. >> of course, the is being >> of course, the game is being played are you going >> of course, the game is being pl.bed are you going >> of course, the game is being pl.be getting are you going >> of course, the game is being pl.be getting up are you going >> of course, the game is being pl.be getting up toe you going >> of course, the game is being pl.be getting up to watch going >> of course, the game is being pl.be getting up to watch theg game? >> well, i mean, any excuse to dnnk >> well, i mean, any excuse to drink at 11 am. we might as well. i know you know, you don't say that, but i don't get this. >> one newspaper >> there's one newspaper headune >> there's one newspaper headline saying bunk headline here saying people bunk off no i'm sorry. you off on monday. no i'm sorry. you must be talking about amateur drinkers. if you start if you start at 11 on a sunday, no reason why you can't get it all together for the following morning. if it was a night game , if it was a night game, it was done. but hang on. you're going to start drinking at 10 am. on sunday. you should be. >> we've all we've all been drinking . it doesn't it doesn't drinking. it doesn't it doesn't work out like that. >> you think you start you're going stop no, you end up going to stop and no, you end up at drinking. at time drinking. >> journalistic life >> most of my journalistic life for i knew i know for 40 years. but i knew i know when it gets to about 7 pm, i think. yeah i might just take it easy you know?
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think. yeah i might just take it easwould,you know? think. yeah i might just take it easwould, of| know? think. yeah i might just take it easwould, of course, like to >> would, of course, like to remain viewers drink remain viewers to drink responsibly. i'm sure you're all well. yeah. and we've also got this this story about sadiq this this story here about sadiq khan to silence scientists khan tried to silence scientists who claim ulez has little impact on pollution . yeah, i mean, this on pollution. yeah, i mean, this is this is incredible. on pollution. yeah, i mean, this is this is incredible . we're is this is incredible. we're supposed to follow the science, but here's sadiq trying to silence the science. >> what do you expect? we all know that ulez is a money making scheme, which is going to make millions of people very miserable. i live in stockbroker belt surrey on the border between greater london and. sorry. okay. some old people there are not going to be able to take their cars off their driveway onto the road . if they driveway onto the road. if they do, they'll be charged £12, 50. they can't go and see their old friends have been better. lunch they can't go to the bridge club that they use literally half a mile away. it's to going make people isolated and depressed andifs people isolated and depressed and it's going to close business down. sorry to keep going on, but. >> but you are doing my job for the fantastic.
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>> the guy who came and fitted new carpets for me just three months ago. >> okay. and my penthouse apartment has told me, no, no , apartment has told me, no, no, he's going to have to close his business down because he lives the other side of the border. so what i mean, so to come to me, he had cross the border, he had to cross the border, right? 1250 a day to go to right? 1250 a day just to go to work a new van costing £30,000. >> the thing is, i mean, the ulez makes sense in the centre of london where there is pollution, there is suggestion and also there are there's pubuc and also there are there's public transport options. >> the tube the >> there's the tube and the buses whatever . buses and whatever. >> but in the suburbs and this is i mean, it's not just a london issue. >> this is looking at being rolled out to other cities, of course, other suburbs as well. >> it is the suburbs. >> it is the suburbs. >> there's no there's not anywhere near the same of anywhere near the same level of pollution. and people need pollution. and also, people need their got their cars. they've got families. the families. they don't have the pubuc public transport. >> one of the things one of the things that isn't being touched upon, is that of upon, of course, is that all of our cities are constricted our major cities are constricted by belt, which means by the green belt, which means that they can't expand out.
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which means if you are not which means that if you are not already enough to live already fortunate enough to live essentially area, essentially or in this area, you are to have drive to are going to have to drive to commute. because actually in most the country, most parts of the country, pubuc public transport is not reliable. it's the case of reliable. if it's in the case of the buses and it's not reliable and it is also unaffordable in the the trains. so this the cases of the trains. so this is not just a tax on people who live inside the cities already. it is those unfortunate enough to too late to be to have been born too late to be able afford their houses able to afford their own houses in areas who will in these urban areas who will necessarily drive necessarily have to drive in because not build on the because we will not build on the green belt, which is where people need to live. and there are of other places that are plenty of other places that we to make up we could plant trees to make up for you know, this is the for that. you know, this is the thing. it is a lack sort of thing. it is a lack of sort of sensible planning. >> blanket rid of all >> it is a blanket rid of all the green countryside around our cities. >> no, no, we're not saying that. >> but how many people when you go to durham, you see walking go to durham, do you see walking along, boom, boom? along, going boom, boom, boom? >> round is terrible. >> the air in durham is brilliant. but durham was the first take on all mad first to take on all the mad traffic policies, which started in there's a fantastic book >> there's a fantastic book that's moment which that's out at the moment which talks lost rainforests of
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talks about lost rainforests of britain and where they used to be. less than this be. we have less than 1% of this country now covered in country is now covered in temperate rainforest. it used to be but the point that it be 20. but the point that it makes where these makes is that where these forests to the least forests used to be are the least populated parts of the uk, all along the seaboard, along the western seaboard, rural western rural wales, rural western seaboard scotland, places seaboard of scotland, places where live. where people don't need to live. but is endless potential but there is endless potential to plant trees, bring back forests there, would then forests there, which would then allow take away some of allow you to take away some of the green belt on. it's the green belt to build on. it's actually, far actually, you know, there's far more land there that could be developed into national developed into green national parks it's that kind of lack cities. it's that kind of lack of sensible thinking going no, no, to all of no, we're going to leave all of that barren for the sheep that are unprofitable right now. and we're let anybody we're not going to let anybody build houses places build any houses in the places that to so that their that they want to so that their house prices become even more unaffordable. that. >> people want to live in cities. >> we should we should be developing brownfield developing the brownfield sites. >> post—industrial sites are also public sector. also the public sector. >> nhs, transport >> the nhs, transport for london. big government london. all these big government organisations have buildings that converted and that could be converted and we're death of we're seeing the death of the high we could could high street. we could we could convert unused shops, but convert these unused shops, but that's big thing. that's a big thing. >> that's another part
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that's a big thing. >>the that's another part that's a big thing. >>the war that's another part that's a big thing. >>the war against nother part that's a big thing. >>the war against notrmotorist. of the war against the motorist. >> street is dying >> the high street is dying because no parking because there's no parking spaces for people to pull up outside the butcher and go in and get your joint of beef for tomorrow, because tomorrow, sunday, because they've just decided we'll have wide pavement . we'll have wide pavement. we'll have a cycle path or something like that. no cars as far as they're concerned. driver or demons. >> and what about these ? we've >> and what about these? we've seen people going out the blade runnenl seen people going out the blade runner, i believe he's been he goes out of it and shops don't love him. >> i do not. >>- >> i do not. >> i do not. >> i do not. >>- >> i do not. >> they're literally my heroes . >> they're literally my heroes. >> they're literally my heroes. >> whoever's chopping all the cameras, town exactly. >> but but of course, you're not endorsing criminality, are you? >> made you've already been banned from instagram once . banned from instagram once. >> i know they've already taken it all away. >> his own carbon >> takes his own carbon footprint as seriously. >> it does. the ulez charge. >> it does. the ulez charge. >> you know what i mean? >> you know what i mean? >> he go in a convoy of >> doesn't he go in a convoy of three range rovers, free range rovers. >> range rovers. >> free range rovers. >> free range rovers. >> one for him, one for his security detail, and for, security detail, and one for, i don't for shoes. don't know, for shoes. >> saw a leicester newspaper
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>> i saw a leicester newspaper yesterday khan yesterday saying that sadiq khan arrived at some official function three and 4x4 range function in three and 4x4 range rovers. okay insane dream of having that electric. >> i mean, we saw this in scotland when the snp had the claim at summit. they had all these electric vehicles, but they didn't have facilities they didn't have the facilities to it. to charge it. >> so january following >> so january was following them. nicola sturgeon used to travel a convoy three travel in a convoy of three campervan from places . campervan from places. >> the same as the >> well, that's the same as the countryside. >> we've got more >> coming up, we've got more from the papers next. the mail on sunday has just dropped and there's message king. there's a message from the king. plus, tonight's headline heroes plus, tonight's headline, heroes and back zeros. see you in and back page zeros. see you in and back page zeros. see you in a of
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post welcome back. and still with me, our tv personality and entrepreneur ashley horgan wallace , political commentator wallace, political commentator benedict spence and fleet street legend mike porcupine . and let's legend mike porcupine. and let's have a look at a couple of your emails. so steve says, if we did not have a continuous
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unsustainable increase in the uk population, overwhelmingly due to massive inward legal and illegal migration, then we would not need a hugely bloated nhs having to bring in thousands of foreign workers to fill the growing gaps , linda says. isn't growing gaps, linda says. isn't it terrible that whistleblowers are more likely to be sacked? yes, absolutely is, particularly given the history of whistleblowers in the public sector , carol says it's sector, carol says it's disgraceful . it was our one sector, carol says it's disgraceful. it was our one big cut. it was one big cover up. i totally agree. they should be in jail with the money. and it's looking as though they are going to face some sort of charge. and raymond says about the nhs, the management are not appointed on clinical excellence . other clinical excellence. other countries have medical people at the top, which makes a lot of sense. no, we've got the meal in sunday in which says no roar to victory lionesses by order of the king sounds like he's going to behead the lionesses >> do you know what this front page says to me? the mail on sunday. the complete contrast
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between the joy and the uplifting moments are going to have tomorrow with the lionesses and the world cup final right alongside the picture . of one of alongside the picture. of one of britain's greatest ever or not great start . the word most great start. the word most terrible killers . lucy, let me terrible killers. lucy, let me just look at the contrast between those two stories. joy and sheer despair. >> yeah. and both . both women. >> yeah. and both. both women. yeah unusually. but yeah. william says he's sorry you can't get to the world cup final , but it's father and the prime minister have urged england stars to bring the cup home. do you think do you think england's going to going to win this, though? >> be first time since >> it'll be the first time since when? 1966. >> and really want the women >> and i really want the women to do it. >> ever heard an english really want one. so yeah, don't want the one. so yeah, i don't know. want the one. so yeah, i don't knoi'. want the one. so yeah, i don't knoi mean , what do you mean? >> i mean, what do you mean? >> i mean, what do you mean? >> be terribly british. >> it would be terribly british. it would be terribly british to lose. >> so i think we all have to downplay it. no, no, no. >> then that positive affirmation, was so positive affirmation, he was so positive that england were to going win the euros. >> then italians
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the euros. >> then the euros. >:was then italians and the euros. >:was already italians and the euros. >:was already crushing.s and it was already crushing. >> that was mentally chill. >> but that was mentally chill. oh, that's true. >> i'm nervous about this >> i'm so nervous about this because very team. because spain. very good team. i'm wait until i'm not going to wait until 11:00 tomorrow morning to get on i'm not going to wait until 11:0�*grog. orrow morning to get on i'm not going to wait until 11:0�*grog. i'll»w morning to get on i'm not going to wait until 11:0�*grog. i'll be norning to get on i'm not going to wait until 11:0�*grog. i'll be on ning to get on i'm not going to wait until 11:0�*grog. i'll be on at|g to get on i'm not going to wait until 11:0�*grog. i'll be on at the» get on the grog. i'll be on at the moment i get into not to prepare me for it, you know, in case it happens. i hope it happens. but the with us english is , the problem with us english is, is that we, you know, go punching the air and all that. we're the best and all that. let's be rational about it. spain, good team, i hope. spain, a very good team, i hope. very much we do it. >> but yeah, come on, let's just be good energy be positive. have good energy for them. good affirmations. let's not be british about it. let's not be british about it. let's not be british about it. let's not agree we're going to win. and i want us to be brilliant. >> yes, i agree. >> yes, i agree. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> and let's have a look at what angela rayner has been up to. we'll speaking comedian matt we'll speaking to comedian matt ford edinburgh fringe. ford at the edinburgh fringe. the labour deputy leader angela rayner her rayner opened a window into her private and revealed private life and revealed that she proud have partied she was proud to have partied for 12 hours on a recent holiday. tabitha sewell is 43 too old to go clubbing ? too old to go clubbing? >> oh my gosh , can i have
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>> oh my gosh, can i have a speaker box? >> because i need to stand on it. and a bigger microphone? how dare that even be a question . dare that even be a question. i'm 44. >> i will party till i hit the floor in ibiza or any country that i choose . that i choose. >> and i can do it better now because i've got more money so i can, you know, hydrate myself for longer before before you're joking , aren't you? joking, aren't you? >> no, i am. >>- >> no, i am. >> nothing like it. >> nothing like it. >> no, it's impossible. >> no, it's impossible. >> i just. >> no, it's impossible. >> ijust. i don't. i hope you're saying i look younger, not old. i don't understand where you get the energy at that age, too. i'm in awe. i'm going to prodigy in november, to see the prodigy in november, and i'm actually dreading it. i've already the next two i've already booked the next two days because know i'm days off because i know i'm going need to be in bed for going to need to be in bed for it. don't you hit 30s? it. why don't you hit you? 30s? that's me? no way, dude, that's it for me? no way, dude, what amateur you are. what an amateur you are. >> things about >> what are the things about getting as you don't have getting older as you don't have to go nightclubs anymore? to go to nightclubs anymore? >> i mean, it seems >> but is this. i mean, it seems is this a particularly leftwing thing? she's the deputy labour leader. >> oh, i think she's funny. she's good. but this this is she's good. but this is this is a this isn't this isn't, you
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a bit this isn't this isn't, you know, nights. yeah. know, phoenix nights. yeah. >> local high >> she's not at the local high street she's ibiza. street clubbing. she's in ibiza. >> my politician. >> she's my hero politician. she's saying she gets up she's saying that she gets up because the night before by because of the night before by 4:00 and then goes on the lash on big cocktails at 4:00. on big vodka cocktails at 4:00. and he's there to see the sun come up the following morning . come up the following morning. this heroine of mine, this woman is a heroine of mine, absolute heroine . absolute heroine. >> i know people in ibiza that still party and they're in their 80s. so come on. >> i'm sorry. you believe when she says she didn't have any chemical enhancement apart from a bit of vodka? no no, i don't know. >> i don't know if i do. >> i don't know if i do. >> another part of the story by the way, is that oh, no, i take that back i get sued. please. >> once she's back home in britain, she's got vodka bombers for comes round and for anybody who comes round and joins her at so i want to joins her at home. so i want to beianed joins her at home. so i want to be invited around. >> deputy future prime minister, ladies know ladies and gentlemen, i know it's for our headline it's time now for our headline heroes back page zeros . heroes and back page zeros. >> and who's your >> ashley. and who's your headune >> ashley. and who's your headline of course, >> ashley. and who's your heagoing of course, >> ashley. and who's your heagoing to of course, >> ashley. and who's your heagoing to be of course, >> ashley. and who's your heagoing to be the of course, >> ashley. and who's your heagoing to be the lionesses, it's going to be the lionesses >> for tomorrow. >> good luck for tomorrow. >> good luck for tomorrow. >> and bring it home for us, please. >> because the men can't do it .
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>> because the men can't do it. >> because the men can't do it. >> well, we did in 1966. yeah that's me. >> i mean, i'm scottish . >> i mean, i'm scottish. >> i mean, i'm scottish. >> it's nothing to do with me. >> it's nothing to do with me. >> point, i was going to >> at some point, i was going to say, going have to talk say, we're going to have to talk about this. >> how you feel about the >> how do you feel about the lionesses >> well, actually, my parents are mostly quarters are mostly like three quarters english. four english. i don't know, four parents, but my dad's half scottish. so it's like maths and the going, a second. >> i used to i used to support whoever was playing england, but no, i feel quite anglicised. no, no, i feel quite anglicised. >> i support england as well. >> i support england as well. >> yeah, fair enough. >> so yeah, fair enough. >> so yeah, fair enough. >> who's your, who's your headune >> who's your, who's your headline hero. >> it's gillian keegan. the >> it's gillian keegan. it's the education sector. this is education sector. and this is unusual i don't actually unusual because i don't actually think good at think she's usually very good at her was it was the her job, but she was it was the a—level results this weekend. a lot people didn't get the lot of people didn't get the results wanted they results they wanted because they were for once. were marked properly. for once. >> tweeted, look, in ten >> and she tweeted, look, in ten years time, years time, years time, 20 years time, people aren't going to ask you about people aren't going to ask you aboand thought was actually >> and i thought it was actually very refreshing to hear an education secretary honest education secretary be honest about this, because for so long we've focus on we've just had this focus on you've get to university you've got to get to university to this degree that it's to get this degree that it's going to then put you a going to then put you in a
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£25,000 job in pr, which £25,000 a yearjob in pr, which most don't actually need. most people don't actually need. but there's just focus this pushing people getting to pushing on people getting to university. don't, university. and if you don't, you're failure. just you're a failure. and it's just not i really do think not true. and i really do think that we need radically alter that we need to radically alter how we view university education and also the futures of people who don't get the a—level apprentices. >> apprenticeships often lead to apprentices. >.higher3nticeships often lead to apprentices. >.higher paideships often lead to apprentices. >.higher paideshipwho'si lead to apprentices. >.higher paideshipwho's youri to a higher paid job. who's your who's your headline here? >> it was angela even >> it was angela rayner even before about before we started talking about . but i mean, imagine her as deputy prime minister next year. i mean, and his party's at i mean, boris and his party's at downing street. it's going to be nothing rayner gets nothing when angela rayner gets in it . in there giving it. >> boris johnson >> this isn't boris johnson doing that johnson lose his doing with that johnson lose his job. well i looked a bit dodgy your back piece zero. >> even want to say her >> i don't even want to say her name, to honest. i know her name, to be honest. i know her name. obviously it's every name. obviously it's on every front but nurse, i'd front page. but the nurse, i'd rather, know, talk about rather, you know, talk about the babies but babies and their names, but yeah, easy one for me. it's her. yeah, i've got two because i couldn't decide. >> one is elon musk because he's saying that they're going get saying that they're going to get rid block function on rid of the block function on twitter, which, you a lot twitter, which, you know, a lot of people blocked me and
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of people have blocked me and it's to going make their lives a lot worse. i got to tell you, on behalf of all of those people, it's a idea. and the it's not a good idea. and the other is alastair campbell, other one is alastair campbell, just because. other one is alastair campbell, just becampbell because some sort >> mr campbell because some sort of crazy. just of there's crazy. i just feeling, i just feel that of there's crazy. i just fee should i just feel that of there's crazy. i just fee should neveszt feel that of there's crazy. i just fee should never feelsal that of there's crazy. i just fee should never feels we 1at of there's crazy. i just fee should never feels we should we should never feels we should all things we should be all these things we should be responsible leading responsible for, for leading us into iraq. >> exactly . mike who's >> yeah, exactly. mike who's your william? your prince william? >> william should be in >> prince william should be in australia to . australia to. >> okay. australia to. >> it's|y. australia to. >> it's outrageous that he's not you know, all women are to going win that world. yes, that's the future. should be there to future. king should be there to greet them as they walk off the pitch. >> yes. it'll all end in tears. >> yes. it'll all end in tears. >> i know it. >> i know it. >> oh, i'm such a pessimist. >> oh, i'm such a pessimist. >> and not not anybody else. >> and not not anybody else. >> well, rishi, rishi rishi sunak. >> well, rishi, rishi rishi sunak . yeah. sunak. yeah. >> yeah , yeah. >> yeah, yeah. >> yeah, yeah. >> but you know, william , let's. >> but you know, william, let's. unless we forget , >> but you know, william, let's. unless we forget, has been president of the football association for the last ten years. >> watching tonight headliners is up next for a run through tomorrow's paper. >> so stay tuned for that. good night. >> good night.
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>> good night. >> the temperatures rising . boxt >> the temperatures rising. boxt solar proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. on. gb news. >> hello there. i'm greg dewhurst and welcome to your latest gb news weather forecast . as we move through into the second part of the weekend, we'll see further showers, particularly across the north—west of the uk and sunny spells towards the southeast. and this area of low pressure still brings in the showers and brisk winds towards the northwest. further south and northwest. but further south and east, high pressure builds in for the rest of the evening and overnight. we still have a few showers ireland, showers across northern ireland, parts scotland , 1 or 2 for parts of scotland, 1 or 2 for western parts of england and wales, dry for most wales, but largely dry for most of clear skies , especially of clear skies, especially towards the east of the uk . towards the east of the uk. temperatures overall, generally 15 or 16 celsius in towns and cities a little lower in the countryside. so a fairly warm start to sunday morning, plenty of sunny spells, a few showers across western areas. and then as we go through the day, many will have a fine day to come.
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plenty of sunny spells, just a few showers bubbling up as we move through the afternoon. showers most frequent across parts scotland and northern parts of scotland and northern ireland. 2 of them could be ireland. 1 or 2 of them could be heavy here. rather breezy heavy here. still rather breezy around temperatures around the coast. temperatures reaching the low 20s, perhaps 25 towards the far south—east into monday . little change for monday. little change for england and wales. 1 or 2 showers around, though. we will see more persistent rain returning across parts of northern ireland into western scotland as we move through the day. some of this rain turning heavy wind heavy at times. the wind starting to up, too. and starting to pick up, too. and temperatures in the low 20s, tuesday wednesday, largely tuesday and wednesday, largely dry. few showers in the dry. just a few showers in the north and temperatures above average . average. >> the temperatures rising . boxt >> the temperatures rising. boxt solar proud sponsors of weather on gb news .
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sanchez. >> good evening. i'm tatiana sanchez . this is the latest from sanchez. this is the latest from the gb newsroom. lawyers representing the families of two of lucy libby's victims have called the independent inquiry inadequate. the government ordered a non—statutory investigation after the former nurses conviction yesterday. it look at the circus sentences surrounding the deaths, including how concerns raised by clinicians were dealt with the prosecution's key medical expert has told the observer police should investigate hospital bosses for corporate manslaughter , calling them manslaughter, calling them grossly negligent for not acting on fears about letby actions. at the time, she was found guilty of the murder of seven babies and the attempted murder of six others. she'll be sentenced on monday . a 50 year old man has monday. a 50 year old man has been charged with possessing documents or records likely to be useful to terrorists. and the possession of articles for use in terrorism . he'll appear in in terrorism. he'll appear in court on monday. that's in relation to last week's psni data breach, where the details of 10,000 police officers and staff were published online by mistake . it's after police
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